France has confirmed its first Ebola case, involving a doctor who recently returned from a humanitarian mission in an outbreak-hit region of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
According to the health ministry of the country, the patient was transferred to a specialist facility and is in a stable condition.
The ministry said in a statement, “All precautionary measures, including the patient’s isolation, were taken upon his arrival in the country, with transfer to the hospital under secure conditions to prevent any risk of contamination.”
Authorities are tracing the patient’s contacts, who will have to isolate at home for 21 days. The ministry said the risk to the general European public was very low.
The outbreak is centred on Ituri province in north-eastern DRC, where authorities are battling to contain the spread of the virus.
There had been 1,048 confirmed cases and 267 deaths as of 21 June, according to the Congo’s health ministry’s latest data, while 112 people have recovered. Neighbouring Uganda has recorded 20 cases and two deaths.
The World Health Organisation (WHO) declared the outbreak on 15 May, and two days later declared a public health emergency of international concern. Experts, however, believe the virus was circulating in the Democratic Republic of the Congo undetected for weeks before and that the scale of the outbreak there is likely to be much larger than the confirmed cases suggest.
The humanitarian response has been complicated by aid cuts and conflict in North and South Kivu provinces, to the south of Ituri, where the Rwanda-backed M23 rebel group operates and Ebola cases have also been detected.
The outbreak has the largest number of confirmed cases within the first month of any Ebola outbreak, the WHO official Abdirahman Mahamud said on Tuesday.
He said local resistance to the response in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, which had included hospitals and treatment centres being burned down, was waning.
“More and more communities are aware of the risk of Ebola and are asking for tools to support and protect themselves,” he said.
The current strain of the disease is the rare Bundibugyo virus, which has no vaccine or approved treatment.
Modelling by the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention suggested the current outbreak could be the biggest on record. The previous largest outbreak was in west Africa from 2014 to 2016, during which more than 28,000 people were infected and more than 11,000 died.
It is the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s 17th outbreak of Ebola, which was first detected in the central African country in 1976. Scientists believe it spreads to humans from infected African fruit bats, and is then passed between humans through direct contact with the blood or body fluids of an infected person or someone who has died of the disease.
Initial symptoms include fever, exhaustion, muscle pain, headaches and a sore throat. These may progress to vomiting, diarrhoea, abdominal pain, rash and impaired kidney and liver function.
A US citizen who was treated for Ebola in Germany recovered and was discharged earlier this month having tested negative for the virus after 30 May.
The US government wants to build an Ebola quarantine facility for its citizens in Kenya, which has never recorded any Ebola cases. The country’s health minister said on Tuesday that construction of the highly controversial facility would stop, however, after a high court order that authorities had initially disregarded.