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Second Ebola patient dies in Northwestern CongoWHO

by Haruna Gimba
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By Asmau Ahmad with agency report

A second Ebola patient has died in northwestern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DR Congo), the World Health Organisation (WHO) said, days into a fresh outbreak of the deadly disease.

Genetic testing showed an infection confirmed last week in the city of Mbandaka was a new “spillover event,” a transmission from an infected animal, and not linked to any previous outbreaks, said the country’s National Institute of Biomedical Research.

The second fatality was a 25-year-old woman who was the sister-in-law of the first case, the WHO said on Twitter. She began experiencing symptoms 12 days earlier, it said.

The first patient began showing symptoms on April 5, but did not seek treatment for more than a week. He died in an Ebola treatment centre on April 21.

The lag time has health workers rushing to identify contacts who may have been infected, the WHO said.

At least 145 people came into contact with the confirmed cases and their health is being closely monitored, the WHO said, noting later that one of the first cases was a health worker.

Mbandaka, a trading hub on the banks of the Congo River, is a city of over one million where people live in proximity with road, water and air links to the capital Kinshasa.

WHO emergencies director for Africa, Ibrahima Soce Fall, said there was a risk the disease could spread to neighbouring Central African Republic and Congo Brazzaville.

“This is concerning but taking into account the capacity builds up and experience in Congo we believe it can be contained,” Fall said at a press conference in Geneva.

Congo has seen 13 previous outbreaks of Ebola, including one in 2018-2020 in the east that killed nearly 2,300 people, the second highest toll recorded in the history of the haemorrhagic fever.

The most recent outbreak ended in December in the east after six deaths. Mbandaka, the capital of Equateur province, has also contended with two previous outbreaks in 2018 and in 2020.

The country’s equatorial forests are a natural reservoir for the Ebola virus, which was discovered near the Ebola River in northern Congo in 1976.

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