🟡 Preliminary Evidence
Confirmed Ebola cases in the Democratic Republic of the Congo represent only the “tip of the iceberg” as ongoing violence hampers surveillance efforts, according to Dr. Yap Boum II, head of emergency preparedness at the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention. The outbreak, which emerged in mid-May in North Kivu province, has killed more than 30 people in attacks on nearby villages, with multiple victims beheaded just days before health officials arrived.
Key takeaways
- Current Ebola cases likely underestimate true outbreak scope due to violence disrupting surveillance
- More than 30 people killed in beheading attacks near Ebola treatment centres in Beni
- Community trust remains the critical challenge for outbreak response teams
Violence Undermines Disease Surveillance
Dr. Boum, who also serves as regional incident manager for the Ebola response, witnessed firsthand how violence affects outbreak control during his visit to Beni in early June. “Better to die from Ebola than the attacker who would come and cut my head off,” his driver told him upon arrival, according to an interview with The BMJ.
The security situation has fundamentally altered the response strategy. “When you listen to that, you change your perspective on what your role is in the response,” Boum told The BMJ. “The most important thing we have is the trust of the community—which is not a given.”
Outbreak Response Challenges Mount
The current outbreak emerged in mid-May 2024 in North Kivu, a province already destabilised by decades of conflict. Health officials face the dual challenge of containing viral spread while operating in an active conflict zone where global health interventions are viewed with suspicion.
Africa CDC’s assessment that confirmed cases represent only the “tip of the iceberg” suggests the true outbreak scope remains unknown. Traditional surveillance methods require community cooperation and safe access to affected areas—both compromised by ongoing violence.
Confirmed Ebola cases represent only the “tip of the iceberg” due to violence disrupting surveillance efforts in North Kivu province
— Dr. Yap Boum II, Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (The BMJ, 2024)
What this means
Frequently asked questions
How does violence affect Ebola outbreak control?
Violence disrupts case detection, contact tracing, and community engagement—all essential for containing viral spread. When communities fear for their physical safety, they may avoid health facilities or refuse cooperation with outbreak response teams.
Why are confirmed cases considered the “tip of the iceberg”?
Many cases likely go undetected due to limited access to affected areas and disrupted surveillance systems. Without comprehensive case finding, the true outbreak scope remains unknown.
What makes community trust critical in outbreak response?
Effective outbreak control requires community participation in case reporting, contact tracing, and preventive measures. In conflict settings, communities may view outside health interventions with suspicion, making trust-building essential.
The intersection of epidemic disease and violent conflict creates unprecedented challenges for global health security. As the DRC outbreak demonstrates, traditional disease surveillance systems fail when communities cannot safely access healthcare or cooperate with response teams. Success will depend on whether health officials can build sufficient community trust while ensuring the safety of both responders and affected populations.
Source: Ebola: Outbreak cases are “tip of iceberg,” says Africa CDC official at centre of epidemic
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