KINSHASA: A new Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo that has caused scores of deaths has a "very high lethality rate" and no vaccine or specific treatment, the country's health minister warned Saturday.
"The Bundibugyo strain has no vaccine, no specific treatment," Kamba told a press briefing in Kinshasa.
"This strain has a very high lethality rate, which can reach 50 percent," Samuel-Roger Kamba said in Kinshasa.
Earlier on Saturday, ministry officials said the death toll had already reached 80, up from 65 initially reported the previous day.
BACKGROUND
Tests showed the victim in Uganda was infected with the Bundibugyo strain, first identified in 2007
The strain has also claimed one life in neighboring Uganda, officials said on Saturday, that of a DRC national.
That correlated with an announcement by Uganda's Health Ministry, which said a 59-year-old man from the DRC had died in Kampala after being admitted earlier in the week. His body was repatriated the same day.
Tests showed the victim in Uganda was infected with the Bundibugyo strain, first identified in 2007.
Vaccines are only available for the Zaire strain, which was identified in 1976 and has a higher fatality rate of 60-90 percent.
African health officials confirmed the latest outbreak on Friday in Ituri province in northeastern DRC, which borders Uganda and South Sudan, according to the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Adding to concerns about the spread are significant cross-border population movements in the affected region.
According to Kamba, patient zero was a nurse who reported to a health facility in the provincial capital, Bunia, on April 24, with symptoms suggesting Ebola.
Symptoms include fever, haemorrhaging and vomiting.
The officials warned of a high risk of spread, with initially 65 deaths reported in the 17th outbreak to hit the DRC.
The country's Health Ministry said the number of fatalities had risen to "246 suspected cases notified and 80 deaths."
"It is a large outbreak," said Jay Bhattacharya, acting director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The previous outbreak of the highly contagious hemorrhagic fever, which has killed some 15,000 people in Africa over the past 50 years, despite advances in vaccines and treatment, occurred last August in the central region.
That episode killed at least 34 people before being declared eradicated in December.
Nearly 2,300 people died in the deadliest outbreak in the DRC between 2018 and 2020.
Ebola, believed to have originated in bats, is a deadly viral disease spread through direct contact with bodily fluids.
It can cause severe bleeding and organ failure.
According to the World Health Organization, outbreaks over the past half-century have had mortality rates among those affected ranging from 25 percent to as high as 90 percent.
The virus spreads from person to person through bodily fluids, including blood, and an infected person becomes contagious only after they develop symptoms.
The incubation period can last up to 21 days.
"Given the uncertainties and severity of the illness, there is concern about the scale of transmission in affected communities," the WHO stated as it prepared to airlift some five tonnes of material, including infection prevention gear, from Kinshasa.
Large-scale transport of medical equipment is a challenge in a country of more than 100 million people, which is four times the size of France, with a poor communications infrastructure.










