Two Months Into DRC's Ebola Outbreak
Ebola

Two months into DRC's Ebola outbreak, MSF demands a faster international response

Key Takeaways

  • More than 2,000 confirmed Ebola cases and 750 deaths have been recorded two months after the outbreak was officially declared in DRC, making it the third largest and fastest-growing Ebola outbreak on record.
  • Caused by the Bundibugyo virus, confirmed cases tripled from 650 to over 2,000 in under five weeks, while deaths increased more than fivefold, from 130 to over 700.
  • Ituri province, the outbreak's epicentre, accounts for approximately 90 per cent of all confirmed cases.
    MSF currently runs seven Ebola Treatment Centres and more than 15 isolation units across Ituri, North Kivu, South Kivu and Tshopo provinces, with over 430 beds combined, and has admitted more than 968 patients as of 14 July.
  • Doctors Without Borders (MSF) is calling for an urgent, coordinated scale-up of international resources across surveillance, testing, patient care, survivor support, and community engagement, warning the response is still "chasing the outbreak instead of staying ahead of it."

DRC Ebola outbreak overview: A rapidly escalating epidemic

BUNIA, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), the DRC Ebola outbreak has entered its second month. The disease outbreak was officially declared in DRC, with more than 2,000 confirmed cases and 750 deaths. Doctors Without Borders (MSF) is calling for an urgent scale-up of the medical response. The epidemic continues to spread at an unprecedented pace and into new areas, while efforts to control it remain insufficient.

"Every delay costs lives. We are still chasing the outbreak instead of staying ahead of it. More people become infected, more families lose loved ones, and the epidemic becomes harder to contain. We need stronger, more coordinated international action to move faster and improve access to both Ebola care and other essential health services," says Trish Newport, MSF Emergency Program Manager.

Two Months Into DRC's Ebola Outbreak
MSF teams are finalising the renovation of an Ebola Treatment Centre in Munigi, Goma
Tracy Makhlouf/MSF

Outbreak Scale: the fastest-growing Ebola epidemic on record

In just two months, the current Ebola disease outbreak, caused by the Bundibugyo virus, has become the third largest Ebola outbreak and the fastest-growing on record. In less than five weeks, the number of confirmed cases has tripled, from 650 to more than 2,000 as of 12 July, while the number of deaths has increased more than fivefold, from 130 to over 700. The epidemic has already exceeded half the number of cases recorded during DRC's 2018–2020 Ebola outbreak, which lasted almost two years.

Geographic spread and access barriers

The situation is particularly alarming, as the outbreak continues to expand geographically. Limited access to medical care, an overstretched surveillance system, and increasing pressure on treatment centres mean that entire communities outside of major urban areas remain without adequate support.

MSF is therefore calling on health authorities and humanitarian actors to swiftly increase resources across all aspects of the Ebola response, including community engagement, surveillance, testing and diagnosis, patient care, survivor support, and the safe and dignified management of bodies and burials, while ensuring that other urgent health needs are also addressed.

Ituri province, the epicentre of the outbreak, accounts for approximately 90 per cent of all confirmed cases.

Two Months Into DRC's Ebola Outbreak
MSF teams conducted training for staff at Kyeshero Hospital in Goma on how to work in an Ebola environment. 
Maria Elena del Carre/MSF

On-the-ground accounts from MSF medical teams

"In Mongbwalu, we are seeing the deadly human consequences of these gaps every day. At the Ebola Treatment Centre, we continue to see patients arriving in critical condition, with little chance of survival. Since MSF started its Ebola response activities, we have treated 57 survivors, but more than 110 patients have died. Increased national and international resources would help prevent further transmission and loss of life," says Ayokunnu Raji, medical doctor and MSF Medical Program Manager, on conditions at the Mongbwalu Ebola Treatment Centre

"In Bunia, the 90-bed Elikiya Ebola Treatment Centre is almost always operating at full capacity. People regularly tell us they prefer to wait at home and come only when a bed becomes available. As a result, we continue to receive patients who arrive late and are already critically ill. It is devastating to know that many of these deaths could have been prevented through earlier diagnosis and timely access to care and treatment," says Sylvie Kaczmarczyk, MSF Emergency Coordinator in Bunia, on capacity at the Elikiya Ebola Treatment Centre.

Two Months Into DRC's Ebola Outbreak
MSF staff are being trained at the Brussels HQ before their deployment in Ebola-related contexts. 
Pierre Fromentin/MSF

Bringing the response closer to communities

While other medical organisations are working alongside the Ministry of Health in eastern DRC, significant gaps remain.

DRC's surveillance system is designed to detect cases early through strong community networks and the local health system. However, the current Ebola disease outbreak, combined with multiple other disease threats, has pushed the system to its limits.

The key to slowing and ultimately stopping the spread of the epidemic is to bring the response closer to communities while boosting the medical response and surveillance system, so that cases can be identified and isolated as early as possible. Efforts to expand testing, contact tracing and community engagement must also continue.

Movement restrictions, including border closures, self-monitoring requirements, and measures affecting humanitarian personnel applied by authorities in DRC and other countries, are creating additional challenges for the deployment and rotation of specialised Ebola staff.

Two Months Into DRC's Ebola Outbreak
MSF teams are finalising the renovation of an Ebola Treatment Centre in Munigi, Goma. 
Miora  Rajaonary/MSF

MSF's current response footprint

MSF currently runs seven ETCs and more than 15 isolation units across Ituri, North Kivu, South Kivu and Tshopo provinces, with a combined capacity of more than 430 beds. Since the beginning of the outbreak and up to 14 July, MSF teams had admitted more than 968 patients, including 357 confirmed cases. MSF has also supported the recovery of 116 survivors following treatment and care. In addition, MSF supports the Ministry of Health with surveillance and detection activities, community engagement, training, and efforts to ensure safe access to other essential healthcare services.

Ebola: a Crisis amid multiple emergencies

The Ebola outbreak is unfolding in a context of armed conflict, displacement and multiple concurrent health emergencies. Insecurity continues to restrict access to some communities, while MSF teams are simultaneously responding to other urgent medical needs, including cholera and malaria. The approaching rainy season is also expected to drive a surge in malaria cases, placing further strain on an already overstretched health system.

It is crucial to accelerate efforts to improve access to Ebola care while ensuring the provision of other basic humanitarian assistance, including healthcare, water and sanitation.

Two Months Into DRC's Ebola Outbreak
MSF staff wearing full personal protective equipment (PPE) walk towards the isolation area at Mongbwalu General Referral Hospital in Ituri province, DR Congo. Strict infection prevention and control procedures are followed when caring for suspected Ebola patients.
Anna SCHÖNHOFER/MSF

Trish Newport, MSF Emergency Program Manager, on the need for expanded international support. "We cannot continue responding to the epidemic with the same limited resources while it continues to outpace us. Only a robust, adequately resourced medical response that truly reflects the scale of needs on the ground can prevent this outbreak from becoming a crisis beyond our ability to contain. To achieve that, expanded international support is urgently needed."