A global search for a pharmaceutical fix is now underway. The WHO has convened experts who recommended prioritizing three candidate treatments—the monoclonal antibodies MBP134 and Maftivimab, and the antiviral remdesivir—for clinical trials .
As of May 29, 2026, the official tally paints a picture of an epidemic whose true scale is still unknown :
A critical detail is in the math. The massive gap between suspected and confirmed cases (over 900 unverified) points to the outbreak's central crisis: extremely limited laboratory testing capacity . Health officials acknowledge the virus likely spread for weeks before being detected, meaning the actual number of infections is almost certainly much higher
.
Geographically, the outbreak is concentrated in three eastern DRC provinces: Ituri (the epicenter), North Kivu, and South Kivu. Imported cases have also reached Uganda's capital, Kampala .
Amid the grim statistics, the outbreak reached a significant, hopeful milestone on May 27, 2026. The World Health Organization confirmed that the first patient with a laboratory-confirmed case of this strain had fully recovered and been discharged from a hospital in the DRC . The patient, who received two negative test results, was released back into the community
. WHO spokesperson Anaïs Legand noted that while this was the first confirmed recovery, authorities expect there have been other recoveries among unconfirmed cases
.
The WHO's level of alarm was made clear on May 17, 2026. Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus declared the epidemic a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) . What made this extraordinary was the process: for the first time ever, a Director-General invoked Article 12 of the International Health Regulations to declare a PHEIC before convening an Emergency Committee, citing the urgent need for action, rapid spread, and cross-border risk
. The Emergency Committee met later and issued formal temporary recommendations on May 22
. This is only the third time an Ebola outbreak has been designated a PHEIC
.
Following the declaration, Dr. Tedros announced his intention to travel to Kinshasa to meet directly with DRC government officials and personally assess the unfolding response .
Externally, assessments from organizations like the WHO and CIDRAP have been stark, with one report stating the outbreak shows "no sign of containment" . The WHO has assessed the national and regional risk as "very high"
. However, DRC Health Minister Samuel Roger Kamba has publicly pushed back on the narrative that the situation is spiraling out of control, emphasizing that containment is still achievable and that teams are scaling up community outreach, contact tracing, and isolation measures
.
The epicenter, Ituri province, is arguably the worst possible place for an outbreak with no medical fix. Health workers face a nearly impossible combination of obstacles :
Adding to the operational complexity, Uganda announced it was closing its border with the DRC to curb cross-border spread, a move that carries its own humanitarian and economic consequences .
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