Ebola Outbreak in Congo: Will it reach the United States?

After the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the end to the global COVID-19 emergency in May 3, 2023, many of us cannot think about going thru another pandemic. First we heard about the hantavirus outbreak in a cruise ship in April. The federal government is keeping a close watch on the Americans that were on board the cruise. Now, we have a ebola outbreak in Congo.

WHO has declared the Ebola outbreak spanning the Democratic Republic on Congo (DRC) and Uganda a global health emergency as of May 2026, citing accelerating transmission and mounting cross-border risk. With the outbreak now ranking as the third-largest on record -750 cases and 177 deaths- officials say the pace of the spread in eastern DRC is outstripping early containment efforts. The declaration has intensified international concern over whether fragile health systems and insecurity in affected areas can sustain a coordinated response.

The Ebola current situation

As of May 23, 2026, health authorities report nearly 750 cases and 177 deaths, alongside more than 600 suspected cases and 139 suspected deaths till under investigation. Confirmed infections have been recorded across Sud-Kivu, Ituri, and Nord-Kivu provinces, underscoring the outbreak’s widening geographic footprint in eastern DRC. Officials say more than 1,400 contacts are currently under monitoring, with surveillance teams prioritizing high-risk exposures and cross-border movement. Epidemiological summaries indicate most cases are among adults aed 20-39, with a majority of patients female -a pattern experts say may reflect caregiving roles and exposures in community settings.

Will the Ebola outbreak reach the United States?


Bases on current information, the risk of the Ebola outbreak reaching the U.S. is considered low. Here are the key points:

Current U.S. Status:

  • Zero cases in the United States as of May 23, 2026
  • No cases linked to this outbreak have been detected in the U.S.
  • Why the risk is low:

  • The WHO assesses the global risk as low (though regional risk in Africa is high)
  • Ebola is not airborne and doesn’t spread as easily as respiratory viruses like COVID-19
  • It requires direct contact with bodily fluids from someone who is symptomatic
  • U.S. Protective Measures Already in Place:

  • Enhanced travel screening implemented in DRC, Uganda, or South Sudan within the last 21 days
  • Monitoring of travelers from affected areas
  • CDC is actively supporting containment efforts in Africa
  • Key Challenge:

  • The FDA-approved Ebola vaccine does not work against the Bundibugyo strain causing this outbreak, so containment relies on traditional public health measures rather than vaccination.
  • While health officials are taking the outbreak seriously and maintaining vigilance, the combination of travel restrictions, screening measures, and the nature of how Ebola spreads means the likelihood of it reaching and spreading in the U.S. remains low.

    Image Source

    • Ebola: Canva

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *