A French humanitarian doctor WHO spent 31 days treating Ebola patients in Ituri Province, eastern DR Congo, left the country in good health on Friday 19 June and tested positive for Bundibugyo ebolavirus in France on Wednesday 24 June 1. It is the first confirmed Ebola case outside Africa in this outbreak. Africa CDC Director-General Jean Kaseya confirmed the worker "left DRC in good health" 2, which is precisely the problem: there was nothing for a screener to find.
Exit screening reads temperatures and symptoms at the airport gate. It cannot detect a pathogen still in its incubation period, the gap between infection and first symptoms, which for Bundibugyo runs up to three weeks. The doctor departed inside that gap. Bundibugyo ebolavirus is a rare Ebola species first identified in Uganda in 2007, with no approved vaccine or treatment, and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) rates the risk to the wider EU population as very low because the patient is in full isolation.
The control that closes the incubation gap is active monitoring of returning responders after they land, not a check at departure. France is now running exactly that, tracing the patient's flight co-passengers and hospital contacts through the full three-week window. The case arrived three days after the United States renewed its border restriction on nationals of three Ebola-affected states , an order that would never have stopped a French citizen. For European responder cohorts deployed to Ituri Province, the lesson is that returnee surveillance, not border screening, is the layer that catches this class of importation.
