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Ebola: Te Bundibugyo virus is back

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dc.contributor.author Kenyi, Edward Eremugo
dc.contributor.author Adwok, John
dc.contributor.author Bakhiet, Charles
dc.contributor.author Bogle, Richard
dc.contributor.author Adwok, Nyakomi
dc.contributor.author Tongun, Justin Bruno
dc.contributor.author Lumori, Boniface A.E
dc.contributor.author Ayrton, James
dc.contributor.author Tibbut, David
dc.date.accessioned 2026-07-06T05:43:38Z
dc.date.available 2026-07-06T05:43:38Z
dc.date.issued 2026-05
dc.identifier.uri http://ir.mu.ac.ke:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/10289
dc.description.abstract On 17 May 2026, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the new outbreak of Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), a public health emergency of international concern.[1] As of 22 May 2026, there were 750 suspected cases, and 177 deaths had been reported in the DRC; two cases (with one death) had been reported in Kampala, Uganda. New cases and deaths are expected to rise as the virus spreads. Tis is the 17th EVD outbreak in the DRC since the frst in 1976.[2] Tis outbreak is caused by a rare strain of the Ebola virus, the Bundibugyo type, which had previously caused only two outbreaks: the 2007 outbreak in Bundibugyo province in western Uganda[3] and the 2012 outbreak in Isiro, Pawa, Dungu, and Province Orientale in the DRC.[4] Tere are two other types of the virus that caused most of the last outbreaks: the Ebola (Zaire) and Sudan viruses. First transmitted from wild animals to humans, the virus can spread from person to person through close contact with an infected person’s body fluids, leading to symptoms, appearing after two to 21 days, including fever, fatigue, myalgia, vomiting, diarrhoea, headache, and internal and external bleeding with high mortality up to 50%. Although two vaccine types have been approved for the Zaire strain of the virus, there is no vaccine for the Bundibugyo virus. We need one urgently. Although the current outbreak is not considered a pandemic, the threat of serious regional spread of this virus is very high, thus necessitating the declaration of an international emergency. DRC and Uganda have activated their national disaster/ emergency management mechanisms and establish emergency operation centers. Te WHO and Africa CDC have sent teams into the countries to provide support. South Sudan has raised its emergency and surveillance levels amid ongoing monitoring of the situation in the DRC. But why does the Ebola virus keep coming back? Is it because of the endemicity in fruit bats, which act as the reservoirs, and eating these bats allow the virus to cross into humans, makes it difcult to control? Te DRC regions involved are rife with conflict, poverty, isolation, and inadequate health infrastructure. How can we conduct community prevention and disease surveillance more effectively in such conditions? As the health authorities respond to the emergency, the outbreak reminds us to continually evaluate our work and develop new out-of-the-box, multipronged approaches to tackle this disease. Perhaps then we can break the cycle. en_US
dc.publisher South Sudan Medical Journal en_US
dc.subject Ebola; Bundibugyo;Virus en_US
dc.title Ebola: Te Bundibugyo virus is back en_US
dc.type Book chapter en_US


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