Health humanitarians addressing the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo emphasized on Tuesday that rebuilding public trust is essential to containing the disease. UN News Health reported that some community members in affected areas are questioning the reality of the virus, creating significant barriers to outbreak control efforts.
The skepticism poses a major challenge to response teams working in DRC’s Ebola-affected regions. Without community cooperation and trust in health authorities, disease containment measures—including testing, treatment, and isolation protocols—face substantial resistance that could allow further transmission.
Health officials are prioritizing community engagement and transparent communication strategies to address vaccine hesitancy and misinformation. Authorities are working to establish credibility through localized messaging and involvement of trusted community leaders in outbreak response efforts. This is a developing story.
Source: ‘Some question if Ebola is real’: how trust is central…
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