Tracking the 2026 Ebola outbreak
The ongoing Ebola outbreak in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo has alarmed global public health experts for the ferocity of the spread in the remote and heavily populated region. Since the World Health Organization declared a public health emergency in mid-May, there have been hundreds of confirmed cases and dozens of deaths from the Bundibugyo species of the virus.
Subscribe to read this story ad-free
Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content.
While global health workers race to contain the epidemic raging in Congo, there’s growing backlash to the Trump administration’s decision to send Americans exposed to the virus to a quarantine facility in Kenya, which has no cases of Ebola.
The plan, a departure from prior Ebola outbreaks, has sparked violent protests in the country, including in the central town of Nanyuki, which is set to host the 50-bed quarantine facility. A Kenyan court extended a temporary suspension of the plan to monitor Americans at the Laikipia Air Base. An administration official said Friday that the U.S. is working with the Kenyan government and others to plan for the facility.
White House officials said earlier that if more Americans contract Ebola and need medical care, they’d be sent to Europe rather than flown to the U.S. An American surgeon who caught Ebola while treating patients in the Ituri province was evacuated to Germany for treatment.
The “speed and scale” of the outbreak in Congo is causing worry about potential spread to other areas or countries as conflict and fighting within the region has escalated and because the area is a mining zone with “high levels of population movement,” according to WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.
