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Pandemics and Biosecurity
16JUN

Bundibugyo Ebola: 831 cases, 186 dead

3 min read
10:26UTC

WHO's Disease Outbreak News 603 logged 831 cases and 186 deaths from Bundibugyo Ebola on 21 May, a tripling in four days that owes more to counting than to spread.

ScienceDeveloping
Key takeaway

A 24% fatality rate measured against 21% contact tracing is a floor, not a measurement of the outbreak's true severity.

WHO's Disease Outbreak News 603, published 21 May, recorded 831 total cases (85 confirmed, 746 suspected) and 186 deaths from Bundibugyo Ebola in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) 1. That is roughly triple the 246 cases on the books when WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus declared the Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) four days earlier , the first such declaration ever made for this Ebola species. Bundibugyo is one of six Ebola virus species, with no licensed vaccine or treatment of its own.

Read the jump with care. Most of the rise is case-finding catching up after the declaration, not the virus accelerating. The outbreak ran undetected in Ituri province for more than four weeks , so surveillance teams are now logging deaths that occurred before anyone was looking, rather than recording a sudden burst of new infections.

The suspected case-fatality rate sits near 24%, with 96% of cases in three Ituri health zones: Mongbwalu, Rwampara and Bunia 2. The figure that should worry a reader more is the 21% contact follow-up rate: insecurity keeps tracing teams away from most named contacts 3. A 24% fatality rate measured against a 21% tracing rate is a partial count of a poorly observed outbreak, not a settled verdict on how lethal it is.

The sharpest signal is at Mongbwalu General Referral Hospital, where four healthcare workers died in four days 4. Clustered staff deaths point to a breakdown in infection prevention and control, the gowning, isolation and barrier-nursing routines that stop Ebola spreading inside the hospitals treating it. Hospital amplification of this kind turned the 2014 West Africa outbreak from regional to catastrophic; when the people running isolation wards begin dying, the wards stop being safe.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Bundibugyo (bun-dee-BOO-gyo) ebolavirus is one of six known Ebola species. It had only 169 recorded cases in its entire history before this year. There are no approved vaccines or treatments for Bundibugyo; the medicines that worked in previous DRC Ebola outbreaks target a different species and do not work here. The jump from 246 cases to 831 in four days is partly alarming and partly explained: when the WHO declared a global health emergency, more health workers started looking. But four hospital staff dying in four days at one facility in Mongbwalu, a gold-mining town in northeastern DRC, shows the virus has found its way into a hospital where protective equipment and isolation rooms are sparse. Only one in five known contacts is being monitored, because armed groups control the roads into many affected areas.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Ituri Province's gold-mining economy drives constant cross-border population movement between DRC, Uganda and South Sudan through informal routes that bypass formal health checkpoints. The Djugu and Irumu territories at the outbreak core have experienced persistent armed conflict involving the ADF (Allied Democratic Forces) and CODECO militia, which physically prevents contact tracers from operating. That is why contact follow-up stands at 21% despite a PHEIC declaration.

Bundibugyo ebolavirus had only 169 combined cases across two prior outbreaks before 2026, meaning clinical staff in Ituri had no institutional memory of managing it. The four-week undetected silent phase meant the outbreak was already seeded across three health zones before isolation protocols were triggered, creating the nosocomial amplification the DON603 figures capture.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If Mongbwalu General Referral Hospital cannot be stabilised as an IPC environment, the nosocomial chain will seed additional health zones as patients seek care at facilities with no Bundibugyo protocol.

  • Consequence

    The 21% contact follow-up rate means the outbreak model cannot reliably estimate R-effective; containment decisions are being made on incomplete transmission data.

First Reported In

Update #4 · Ebola triples, response misfires

World Health Organization· 24 May 2026
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Different Perspectives
Indian Council of Medical Research
Indian Council of Medical Research
ICMR deployed a team to Kerala within hours of the 11 June Nipah confirmation in Kozhikode, tracing roughly 100 contacts including 58 healthcare workers; three days without fresh positives suggest containment of a pathogen with no licensed vaccine and a case-fatality rate of 40 to 75 percent.
ECDC / European Union
ECDC / European Union
ECDC's Week 23 Communicable Disease Threats Report carried four simultaneous non-Ebola signals including the first peer-reviewed evidence of Dermatophilus congolensis sexual transmission, local mpox clade Ib European spread, and the Dermatophilus rapid risk assessment due 23 June. European import risk for Bundibugyo is assessed as very low.
United States (HHS / State Department)
United States (HHS / State Department)
Washington committed $270 million bilaterally to the response on 12 June while its 30-day entry ban on DRC, Uganda and South Sudan nationals, extended to green-card holders on 5 June, expired around 17 June unresolved. The CDC's R0=2.51 modelling is the sharpest analytical contribution to the response from any national agency.
World Health Organization
World Health Organization
DON607's publication on 13 June provides the 695-case international reference and attributes the treatment trial design to national leadership rather than WHO advisory consensus; the WHO co-authors the Continental Strategic Plan with Africa CDC but holds no enforcement lever over the US entry ban expiring 17 June.
Uganda Ministry of Health
Uganda Ministry of Health
Diana Atwine's ministry traced the 14-imported-case Uganda cluster using protocols rehearsed in the 2022 Sudan ebolavirus containment of 142 cases in 113 days; Uganda co-authorises the treatment trial and Bwera border lab reduces cross-border confirmation to same-day. Nineteen confirmed cases with five from onward Kampala transmission test whether the Sudan playbook transfers.
DRC Ministry of Health
DRC Ministry of Health
Kinshasa's 14 June bulletin counted 782 confirmed cases with 45.9 percent isolated, a figure DRC's health minister has linked directly to ongoing attacks on treatment facilities rather than community resistance. DRC co-leads the clinical trial now under national authority, a regulatory posture that keeps Geneva's timeline advisory, not binding.