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More than 70 Congo medics infected with Ebola since outbreak started, WHO says

Health workers get dressed in personal protective equipment (PPE) at the Evangelical Medical Center, one of the facilities at the forefront of the response to the Ebola outbreak, as agencies intensify efforts to contain a new Ebola outbreak caused by the Bundibugyo virus strain, in Bunia, Ituri province, Democratic Republic of Congo, May 31, 2026. 
Health workers get dressed in personal protective equipment (PPE) at the Evangelical Medical Center, one of the facilities at the forefront of the response to the Ebola outbreak, as agencies intensify efforts to contain a new Ebola outbreak caused by the Bundibugyo virus strain, in Bunia, Ituri province, Democratic Republic of Congo, May 31, 2026.  Photo : REUTERS/Gradel Muyisa Mumbere/Files

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A senior World Health Organization official said on Friday that 75 medics in the Democratic ​Republic of Congo had been infected with Ebola and 17 ​of them had died since the current outbreak started ⁠there.

Ebola was thought to be circulating months before the outbreak was ​first declared by Congolese officials on May 15, meaning many ​medics were exposed to the disease before they even knew it was present. Even now, health officials say supplies of the basic gear to protect themselves ​like gloves and masks are running short.

"It is a really ​high price that the system, the healthcare system, is paying, because we don't ‌have ⁠enough of healthcare workers in DRC," a WHO emergency director, Marie Roseline Belizaire, told a press conference by video link from eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.

Congo has one of the lowest densities ​of healthcare workers ​relative to ⁠the population, with only about 11 per 10,000 people, WHO data shows. Belizaire said China and ​Uganda were sending medical teams to the country.

The ​WHO is ⁠giving psychological support to some medics who were too scared to treat patients, having watched many of their colleagues fall ill, she ⁠added.

"When ​they are explaining to you how ​they live it, how they were infected ... (it) can break your heart."

 

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