Health

​Congo records one-day record for confirmed Ebola cases

Congo confirms 14 new cases of Ebola virus, highest one-day increase since outbreak declared in August.
A mother of a child, suspected of dying from Ebola, cries near her child's coffin in Beni, North Kivu Province of Congo, in December 2018. (Goran Tomasevic/Reuters)

Congo on Wednesday confirmed 14 new cases of Ebola virus in its eastern borderlands, the largest one-day increase since the current outbreak was declared in August.
 
In all, the hemorrhagic fever is believed to have killed 439 people and infected another 274 in the eastern provinces of North Kivu and Ituri. 

It is surpassed only by the 2013-2016 outbreak in West Africa, which involved over 28,000 cases and 11,000 deaths and led to substantial investments in a vaccine and treatments for the virus.
 
Health officials have struggled to bring the current outbreak, Congo's tenth since 1976, under control, largely due to widespread militia violence in eastern Congo which has hampered the response.


 
The health ministry said in a daily bulletin that nine of the new cases were in the health zone of Katwa, just outside Butembo, a city of several hundred thousand people near the Ugandan border that has emerged as the outbreak's new epicenter. 

One other case was in Butembo.
 
The ministry also announced six new deaths of confirmed cases as well as the recovery of one patient. 

Earlier this week, drugmaker Merck said it will ship another approximately 120,000 doses of an experimental Ebola vaccine to Congo by the end of next month.

 Associate Vice-President Lydia Ogden told the World Economic Forum that the company is committed to having a ready stockpile of 300,000 doses and already has shipped 100,000 to the World Health Organization.

Health officials have called the experimental vaccine highly effective against the virus.

Congo's health ministry says more than 63,000 people have received the vaccine in the outbreak that was declared on Aug. 1 in the country's densely populated northeast near Uganda and Rwanda.

Carrying out vaccinations is also complicated by poor infrastructure and in some cases hostility from communities that have never faced an Ebola outbreak before.

With files from Associated Press