WHO cuts suspected Ebola cases in Congo to 116

Summary

WHO said suspected Ebola cases in Congo fell to 116 after many patients tested negative for the virus.

Why this matters

The updated figures show how outbreak counts can shift sharply as testing rules out suspected cases. That matters for tracking the spread of Ebola in Congo and Uganda and for understanding the limits of early surveillance data.

The World Health Organization said Tuesday that suspected Ebola cases linked to the outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo had fallen to 116 as of May 31, down from 906 reported late last week.

The agency said 321 cases had been confirmed in Congo, including 48 deaths. In neighboring Uganda, it said nine cases had been confirmed, including one death.

The outbreak was declared May 15 in Ituri province in northeastern Congo, though the virus is believed to have been spreading for weeks before that, according to the WHO.

The Bundibugyo strain behind the outbreak can initially cause symptoms similar to flu, malaria, or typhoid, which can delay detection.

The WHO’s earlier figures had also included 223 deaths suspected of being caused by Ebola, but its latest update no longer listed that category.

The WHO also said six people confirmed to have had Ebola had recovered. No vaccine or approved treatment is available for the Bundibugyo strain, and containment efforts rely mainly on preventive measures.

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