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WHO Declares Ebola Outbreak in Congo, Uganda a Global Health Emergency

WHO Declares Ebola Outbreak in Congo, Uganda a Global Health Emergency

However, the outbreak has not met the criteria of a pandemic.

I guess the World Health Organization (WHO) discovered it couldn’t hype up the hantavirus outbreak aboard a cruise ship.

WHO declared the Ebola outbreak in Congo and Uganda a global health emergency due to 300 cases and 88 deaths.

The majority are in Congo. Only two cases have appeared in Uganda.

However, the outbreak has not met the criteria of a pandemic.

WHO wrote on X:

Highlights from Disease Outbreak News on #Ebola disease caused by Bundibugyo Virus Disease, Democratic Republic of the Congo & Uganda – 16 May 2026:

🔴 As of 15 May, a total of 246 suspected cases and 80 deaths (4 deaths among confirmed cases) have been reported. 65 contacts have been listed, with 15 identified as high-risk.
🔴 Most of the suspected cases are between 20 and 39 years old, with females accounting for over 60%, suggesting significant risks associated with household and caregiver transmission.
🔴 Insecurity in the affected areas and movement restrictions are hampering the surveillance and follow up efforts. Several listed contacts became symptomatic and died before they could be isolated.
🔴 Ituri province’s role in #DRC as a commercial and migratory hub and proximity to #Uganda and South Sudan increases the risk of regional exportation and cross-border transmission.

The CDC ramped up its response to the outbreak:

The agency plans to deploy additional staff to the affected countries and will provide technical support including laboratory testing, contact tracing and surveillance through its country offices, said Satish Pillai, the CDC’s Ebola response incident manager, on a call with reporters Sunday. It has also activated its emergency response center.

“The risk to the United States remains low,” Pillai said. The outbreak is caused by the Bundibugyo ebolavirus strain and has no approved vaccine or treatment. Infected people can transmit Ebola when they are symptomatic, he added.

We’ve seen Ebola outbreaks through the years in Africa, especially in Congo and Uganda.

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Comments

Global? Please stop.

healthguyfsu | May 18, 2026 at 11:18 am

Ebola seems horrible but mercifully it does not seem to have asymptomatic carriers which significantly lowers the transmission rate. Sounds like this is a cluster for a quarantine and as much humanitarian aid as feasible.

    texansamurai in reply to healthguyfsu. | May 18, 2026 at 11:54 am

    ebola (especially zebov) is a pathogen of a much higher order than wuhan–agree quarantine in situ but also close airports to international travel for a given time as feasible–containment, palliative care and natural attrition the only known counters to the virus

It could possibly become global if those countries do not close their borders.

Hello? McFly?! Anybody home??

    diver64 in reply to LB1901. | May 19, 2026 at 6:20 am

    Never forget that these are places Biden sent tax payer planes to so that they could be loaded up and dropped all over America like little plague bombs.

It’s pretty much just Townshend and Daltrey now… 🙂

Horrible, painful way to go

My heart is full for these people

If you’ve been to Africa, you understand whether real poverty is

Just clean running water, no where to be found

UnCivilServant | May 18, 2026 at 11:54 am

How do I put this?

No.

We’re not doing this. You know, I know, we all know Ebola outbreaks burn quickly and don’t spread far as a result. There is a regional issue, but not a global one. You’re trying to stir up panic to relive the days when people mistook you for relevant.

Get lost.

Say, what if the U.S. put strict controls on any visitors from affected countries and patrolled our borders against illegals?

It’s kind of crazy but it just might work!

2014 Obama forgot to block air traffic and an infected Liberian (Thomas Eric Duncan) boarded a plane for Dallas. Disembarked and then wandered around until he became seriously ill. He died in hospital.

But the CDC has it all under control. Except when it doesn’t.

“On October 10 (two days after Duncan died), Vinson flew commercially from Dallas to Cleveland, Ohio, to visit family and plan her wedding. She had a low-grade fever (99.5°F) and called the CDC beforehand; she was cleared to fly. She returned to Dallas on October 13 and was diagnosed shortly after. This led to contact tracing for passengers and significant media scrutiny, though her family emphasized she was “in no way careless.”

    Tiki in reply to Tiki. | May 18, 2026 at 12:34 pm

    Amber Vinson (29 years old): The second infected nurse.

    Nina Pham (26 years old): The first Dallas healthcare worker to contract Ebola. She reported a low-grade fever on October 10 and tested positive on October 11–12.

E Howard Hunt | May 18, 2026 at 12:41 pm

There go my vacation plans.

WHO declares ebola outbreak in the Congo?

I dunno.

Lucifer Morningstar | May 18, 2026 at 2:36 pm

WHO declared the Ebola outbreak in Congo and Uganda a global health emergency due to 300 cases and 88 deaths.

Then the United States needs to prohibit anyone from coming to the United States that resides in the Congo or Uganda and anyone that has traveled to those countries. No exceptions. And thus we don’t run the risk of importing ebola into this country.

Great Maker, just how hard is that to figure out.

destroycommunism | May 18, 2026 at 3:19 pm

Ebola declares WHO a disease

You could be in a room with an ebola patient and as long as you didn’t touch them or get close enough to pick up any bodily fluids, you’ll be okay. Since it can’t be passed along via airborn transmission and because it has such a high death rate, it’s a nasty, nasty, virus that poses a limited risk to the population.

    GWB in reply to Sanddog. | May 18, 2026 at 6:36 pm

    If you go up and hug and kiss their dead body, though, you could be in real trouble.

    (This is behavioral common sense, but not in some cultures.)

Ebola is believed to be of zoonotic origin. While it is virulent its transmissibility human to human is low largely because the virus is not well adapted to the human body environment. Contrast this to COVID-19 which was both virulent and highly transmissible (well adapted to the human body environment) which makes one question those who to this day deny the likelihood of a lab origin.

It is not even a global health emergency.
There’s no emergency, as this happens every dang year, just about.
There’s no “global”, as this is always limited to this area of Africa, with an occasional “leaker.”

Now, if this were the Motaba strain we might need to talk about bombing some California towns….

Whee! Here we go. Who knew Africa was such a popular destination.

“I know you didn’t die from the last hysteria but this time YOU GONNA DIE. Mr. Trump, can we have some money now to prevent the total destruction of America from this deadly disease”?