Ebola outbreak likely started in gold-mining town, WHO says
A single-source report from NPR indicates that the Ebola outbreak in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo likely began in the gold-mining town of Mongbwalu, according to the World Health Organization, though this has not been fully confirmed. The town, with about 130,000 residents in Ituri province, saw a string of mysterious deaths with bleeding before the government declared an outbreak. The illness spread to Bunia, North Kivu, South Kivu, and Uganda. The first suspected case was a nurse who developed fever and vomiting on April 24 and died in Bunia but was buried in Mongbwalu. The government declared an outbreak on May 15 after genomic sequencing confirmed the rare Bundibugyo species of Ebola. As of June 20, the town and surrounding area had 220 of 1,003 confirmed cases nationwide, though aid workers believe official numbers understate the crisis due to avoidance of care, superstition, and testing delays.
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Sources: NPR
