Summary
In May 2026, the World Health Organization declared a Public Health Emergency of International Concern after Bundibugyo virus disease re-emerged in Ituri Province, Democratic Republic of the Congo, with cross-border transmission to Uganda. The suspected index case was a healthcare worker, and at least four healthcare workers had died before the outbreak was confirmed. The outbreak is unfolding in a region characterised by armed conflict, mass displacement, fragile governance and disrupted clinical infrastructure — a setting in which the high-containment infection prevention measures developed for filovirus disease in well-resourced facilities are difficult to implement reliably. In this narrative, evidence-informed review we propose an achievable infection prevention bundle for filovirus outbreaks in conflict-affected settings, framing personal protective equipment, training, supervised doffing, supply chains, staffing, environmental controls and facility organisation as interdependent components of a single coherent system rather than as alternatives. We summarise outbreak situation reports, operational documentation and simulation evidence; identify operational failure modes in austere conditions; and propose an eight-element bundle prioritised by implementation urgency. The bundle is anchored in WHO core IPC programme guidance. Most of the available evidence base is filovirus-general or Zaire ebolavirus-derived; extrapolation to Bundibugyo virus is reasonable but limited, and the bundle should be understood as a framework for decision-making rather than as a validated intervention package.
Source: Journal of Hospital Infection, https://www.journalofhospitalinfection.com/
Link: https://www.journalofhospitalinfection.com/article/S0195-6701(26)00266-5/abstract
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