The second-largest Ebola outbreak on record is over after nearly
two years and more than
2,200 deaths, Democratic Republic of Congo said on Thursday, even as a separate flare-up of the virus continued elsewhere in the country.
2,200 deaths, Democratic Republic of Congo said on Thursday, even as a separate flare-up of the virus continued elsewhere in the country.
Despite effective vaccines
and treatments that dramatically boosted survival rates when
administered early, the outbreak dragged on as first responders
struggled to gain access to virus hotspots in Congo’s restive eastern
borderlands.
As that outbreak neared its end, another
one was declared on June 1 in the western city of Mbandaka, more than
1,000 km away. Genetic testing revealed the two epidemics were not
connected.
“The health ministry intends to capitalise
on the lessons learned and the success factors from this long epidemic
to assure the most effective response possible in Mbandaka,” Health
Minister Eteni Longondo told reporters.
There were
3,463 cases confirmed and probable cases recorded over the course of the
outbreak in eastern Congo, including 2,277 deaths, Longondo said.
The
largest Ebola outbreak occurred in West Africa from 2013-2016, when
more than 11,300 people died from the disease in Guinea, Liberia and
Sierra Leone.
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