Congo Official Says 2nd Ebola Victim in Goma Has Died
A man who became the second confirmed Ebola case in the Congolese city of Goma has died, an official said on Wednesday.
The city of more than two million people had its first confirmed case earlier this month, with the second-deadliest Ebola outbreak in history declared a rare global health emergency days after the first Goma case was announced.
The Ebola response coordinator, Jean-Jacques Muyembe, who confirmed the death on Wednesday morning, a day after the case was announced, said there appeared to be no link between the case and the previous one in Goma announced two and a half weeks ago.
The man arrived in Goma on July 13 from a mining area in northeastern Ituri Province, but it was not clear what he did after he started showing symptoms on July 22, officials said. He was isolated at an Ebola treatment center on Tuesday.
Ebola symptoms can start to occur between two and 21 days from infection, health experts say.
More than 1,700 people have been killed despite the widespread use of an experimental but effective Ebola vaccine.
Containing the outbreak faces unprecedented challenges amid attacks by rebel groups and resistance by wary community residents in a region of Congo that had never experienced an Ebola outbreak before.
Goma is on Congo’s heavily traveled border with Rwanda and has an international airport. For months health officials had feared that an Ebola case would be confirmed there. Days after the first Goma case was announced, the World Health Organization declared the Ebola outbreak a rare global emergency.
Muyembe and other officials on Tuesday sought to reassure both Goma residents and neighboring countries that measures were being taken to strengthen surveillance for Ebola at border posts and elsewhere. Neighboring Rwanda, Uganda and South Sudan began vaccinating health workers weeks or months ago. WHO says the risk of regional spread remains “very high.”
The declaration of a global health emergency — the fifth in history — brought a surge of millions of dollars in new pledges by international donors but some health workers say a new approach is needed to combat misunderstandings in the community. Far too many people in this outbreak are still dying at home, they say.
There is no licensed treatment for Ebola and survival can depend on seeking treatment as quickly as possible. And yet many people in the region don’t believe that Ebola is real, health workers have said.
The first confirmed Ebola case in Goma was a 46-year-old preacher who managed to pass through three health checkpoints on the way from Butembo. The city is one of the communities hardest hit by this outbreak, which is second only to the 2014-16 Ebola epidemic in West Africa that left more than 11,300 people dead.
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