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Pandemics and Biosecurity
5JUL

WHO cuts the count, cases keep climbing

3 min read
10:12UTC

WHO recalibrated the Bundibugyo headline count on 8 June, cutting suspected cases from around 1,000 to 116 and reporting 534 confirmed; the confirmed line is still rising fast.

ScienceDeveloping
Key takeaway

The headline number fell to 534, but confirmed DRC cases rose 321 to 515 in five days.

The World Health Organization (WHO) recalibrated the Bundibugyo Ebola headline count in its 8 June outbreak notice, cutting suspected cases from around 1,000 to 116 and moving to a confirmed-only basis: 534 confirmed cases and 93 deaths, a CFR (case-fatality ratio, the share of confirmed cases WHO die) of 17.4% 1. WHO is the United Nations health agency that declares public-health emergencies and publishes the Disease Outbreak News bulletins this count appears in. The earlier briefing carried 1,040 cases ; WHO has since worked through a testing backlog and reclassified most suspected cases as either confirmed or as other febrile illness.

That drop from 1,040 reflects method, not improvement. The residual of just 116 suspected cases suggests most of the cleared backlog was never Ebola, which sharpens the confirmed signal rather than softening it. Readers comparing today's 534 with the prior 1,040 will read a fall where the confirmed trajectory is climbing: DRC (the Democratic Republic of the Congo) confirmed cases rose from 321 to 515 in five days, with Uganda accounting for the other 19.

That five-day jump of 194 cases is the line to hold, not the lower headline. The CDC's modelling, published the same week, was calculated against this corrected confirmed-only baseline rather than the inflated total, which is why the two developments are methodologically linked: the count correction is what the reproduction-number estimate rests on.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

When an Ebola outbreak is first detected, health workers list anyone with fever and other symptoms as a 'suspected case' while they wait for laboratory test results. This one had about 1,000 suspected cases on the books. When WHO worked through the testing backlog , the pile of samples waiting to be processed , most turned out not to be Ebola at all. The real count of confirmed Ebola cases now stands at 534. That sounds like good news, but it isn't: the confirmed count rose by 194 in just five days in the Democratic Republic of the Congo alone, and there are still thousands of contacts being traced. The 17.4% death rate among confirmed cases means roughly one in six people who test positive for this strain of Ebola does not survive.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The testing backlog that required this revision accumulated because Ituri's reference laboratory network was not scaled to a 500-plus confirmed-case outbreak. The INRB Bunia sub-unit has a throughput constraint that forced WHO to hold samples until capacity expanded , a structural gap in DRC's laboratory infrastructure that the ARILAC programme (launched 6 May with Africa CDC) is designed to address over a four-year horizon, not in the current response window.

The 1,040-to-534 recalibration also reflects a positive signal obscured by the headline: the majority of the ~900 suspected cases that were cleared tested negative, confirming that the community fever burden in Ituri is not entirely Ebola. This has clinical triage value but was not foregrounded in the WHO communication.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    The confirmed-only recalibration provides a cleaner epidemiological baseline, but the +194 DRC confirmed cases in five days shows the trajectory has not improved since DON605 (ID:3822) , the numerics changed, the outbreak dynamics did not.

  • Risk

    The North Kivu 64% CFR anomaly (25 cases, 16 deaths) remains unexplained and may indicate under-ascertainment of cases in that province , if so, the confirmed total understates the true outbreak size in the M23-controlled east.

First Reported In

Update #6 · Ebola outbreak gets an R0, and a fork

World Health Organization· 9 Jun 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Germany (evacuation recipient)
Germany (evacuation recipient)
Germany received the Bundibugyo outbreak's third international medical evacuation on 13 July, a US humanitarian worker infected in Bunia on 10 July. The evacuation, following a French doctor's 24 June departure and May's first US case, tests whether isolation and biocontainment protocols scale beyond DR Congo's own borders.
Pennsylvania Department of Public Health
Pennsylvania Department of Public Health
PDPH retested and retracted a false-positive measles wastewater signal on 6 July, then confirmed and publicised a real airport exposure from 4 July, with commissioner Palak Raval-Nelson stressing there is no broad threat to the general public. The national count, 2,231 cases across 42 states by 9 July, is on pace to beat 2025's 2,289-case record before September.
World Health Organization
World Health Organization
WHO published its first dedicated Blueprint on fungal disease and antifungal resistance on 1 July, estimating more than 300 million people suffer serious fungal disease annually. The Blueprint names the gap in WHO's own AMR strategy rather than waiting for an external audit to force the admission.
Africa CDC
Africa CDC
Africa CDC issued a formal 11 July appeal for responder protection, training and psychosocial support after health-worker infections tripled from 34 to 112 in a month. The appeal repeats June's unmet call for a rapid Bundibugyo diagnostic test, showing the ask has shifted from tools to basic safety and pay.
Front-line health workers, Ituri Province
Front-line health workers, Ituri Province
Health workers in Ituri Province walked off the job or threatened to strike over unpaid hazard pay and delayed salaries, even as responder infections tripled to 112 with 35 dead. Their absence narrows the isolation workforce the CDC's model says must reach 70% coverage to avoid a 20,000-case worst case.
ECDC
ECDC
ECDC co-published the isolation and contact-tracing figures behind WHO's DON612, tracking Ituri's isolation rate rising from 35 to 44 percent while still rating EU/EEA import risk as very low. Brussels backs the WHO line against travel restrictions, the position France's own contact-tracing response, not the US entry ban, actually validated.