The World Health Organization has reported that the Democratic Republic of Congo's ongoing Ebola outbreak has produced the largest number of confirmed cases recorded in the first month of any Ebola episode, a WHO official said at a Geneva briefing on Tuesday.
Officials identified the outbreak as the Bundibugyo strain. Since the outbreak was officially announced on May 15, more than 1,000 people have been infected and 267 have died, according to WHO statements delivered at the briefing.
WHO representative Abdirahman Mahamud characterized the outbreak's early trajectory as a key factor in its scale. He said the virus had been circulating undetected for months prior to the formal declaration, and that early confirmed cases emerged within urban centers, including Bunia and the mining town of Mongbwalu. Those urban detections contrasted with the pattern in many previous outbreaks, which typically began in rural areas and often subsided relatively quickly.
Mahamud also set out developments within the response effort. In the two weeks preceding the briefing, Ebola treatment capacity expanded rapidly to more than 500 beds. He added that community resistance and episodes of violent opposition to Ebola responders, which had complicated earlier containment efforts, were beginning to ease.
The WHO official placed the current outbreak in context by noting the two largest prior Ebola episodes. One struck West Africa between 2014 and 2016, affecting Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia and causing about 11,000 deaths. Another significant outbreak occurred in Congo in 2018.
Beyond the immediate case and fatality totals, the briefing highlighted a sequence of factors that officials say help explain why this episode has grown quickly: months of undetected transmission, early spread into urban locations, and initial community resistance to response teams. At the same time, authorities have scaled treatment infrastructure and report a reduction in violent resistance, which officials view as positive for ongoing containment and care efforts.
Note on information: The details in this report are based on statements made by a World Health Organization official at a public briefing and on figures provided during that briefing.