Monday, June 8, 2026 - The US CDC on Friday, June 5, urged strong public health interventions against the current Ebola outbreak, citing their models that show it could otherwise rival the scale of the 2014 West Africa outbreak.
That eruption of the virus resulted in more than 28,000
cases and more than 11,000 deaths.
“That scale is possible,” said Jason Asher, director of
CDC’s Center for Forecasting and Outbreak Analytics, during a press briefing.
The US projections from the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention were part of Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report documents
published Friday.
The worst outcomes could be avoided if “a larger proportion
of patients were identified, isolated, and treated,” the agency said in its
reports.
But “the public health response to control this outbreak
will likely need to be of similar magnitude to the response for the 2014-2016
West Africa Ebola outbreak.”
Asher emphasized the models were “not a forecast” but “a
planning tool.” “They’re designed to support action, not to generate alarm.”
They are based on four possible intervention scenarios
ranging from poor (20 percent) to extremely high (95 percent) levels of
isolation and treatment.
If isolation levels are what the CDC would consider poor,
with no other interventions there is a 65 percent chance cases will top 20,000
within three months, according to the agency.
Satish Pillai, the CDC manager for the Ebola response, said
“the total individuals that are infected and requiring isolation remains
unclear.”
But he said the situation on the ground would indicate
levels of isolation are currently on the lower end.
Also on Friday the World Health Organization and the African
Union’s public health agency said $518 million was needed across the next six
months to combat the deadly Ebola outbreak in the DR Congo and its neighbors.
The outbreak was declared on May 15 in northeastern DR Congo, but the rare Bundibugyo species of the Ebola virus is believed to have spread for some time beforehand.
According to the WHO’s latest figures, there are 381 confirmed cases in the DRC, including 64 deaths.
The outbreak has hit three provinces, with the epicenter in
Ituri, which the Africa CDC says accounts for 90 percent of confirmed cases and
76 percent of confirmed deaths.
Across the northeastern border in Uganda, there have been 16
confirmed cases, including one death. Seven Ebola patients in the DRC and two
in Uganda have recovered.

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