No less than 18 people possibly infected with Ebola fled hospital after it was attacked multiple times by grieving families.
No less than 220 people have died of the virus within the Democratic Republic of Congo since an outbreak was declared earlier this month.
Attacks by residents on makeshift hospitals in Ituri province, the centre of the outbreak, have risen within the last week.
Some 18 Ebola patients escaped Mongbwalu general referral hospital on Saturday as people burnt tents arrange by Médecins Sans Frontières.
Of them, 4 lab cases have come back; three were negative and one was positive.
Dr Richard Lokodu, medical director of the power, told Reuters: ‘We’ve got one confirmed case of Ebola that continues to flow into locally and evade the response.’
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He added that the hospital was attacked 4 times on Sunday in attacks plotted by the family of a Christian religious leader who died of Ebola.
A suspected patient who was in critical condition died within the second attack while attempting to flee from his bed.
The attackers, Dr Lokodu said, desired to take the bodies of the Ebola victims by force for burial.
Ebola might be contracted through contact with the bodily fluids of a dead person; the virus has spread during mourning and funeral proceedings in previous outbreaks.
An analogous incident happened last Thursday, which saw a grieving family burn hospital tents down in Rwampara Hospital after medical professionals refused to release a young footballer’s body.
Local officials say the attacks are right down to a ignorance, with some seeing Ebola as a ‘white man’s invention’ or a cash-grab by hospitals.
Ebola outbreak ‘outpacing’ response
The Ebola epidemic is now outpacing health officials and aid groups, the pinnacle of the World Health Organization said today.
WHO’s director-general, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, told African leaders today: ‘We’re urgently scaling up operations, but in the mean time the epidemic is outpacing us.’
Neighbouring Uganda reported two more Ebola cases, bringing its total variety of cases to seven, Dr Ghebreyesus added.
The brand new cases are each Ugandan medical experts in a non-public medical institution within the capital, Kampala.
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He said a delay in detecting Ebola cases meant responders were now ‘playing catch-up’.
The sort of Ebola virus behind the outbreak, generally known as Bundibugyo, is rare. There is no such thing as a vaccine or approved treatment.
The primary known case involved a healthcare employee whose symptoms began on April 24 and who later died at a medical facility in Bunia.
The hotspots are Rwampara, Mongbwalu, Nyankunde and Bunia in Ituri. The province is popular amongst migrating labourers for its gold mines, while many civilians have been displaced by conflict.
Cases have also been reported in North Kivu. M23, a rebel group that controls territory in eastern Congo, confirmed a death in South Kivu.
While the US has cautioned Americans against visiting the DRC, the UK Foreign Office only advises against travel to the border of Likouala.
Uganda has restricted travel to and from Congo and suspended all flights to and from the country.
As test results proceed to are available in, health officials expect this number to rise to as many as 1,000 – if it’s not already that top.
What’s Ebola?

Ebola is an illness attributable to a bunch of related viruses, generally known as orthoebolaviruses.
Infections are available in two parts – dry and wet.
The so-called dry symptoms, which include fever, aches, pains and fatigue, can progress to ‘wet’ ones comparable to diarrhoea, vomiting and bleeding.
As the primary round of symptoms, which show inside 21 days, resemble the common cold or flu, many Ebola cases go undiagnosed.
Ebola is principally spread through contact with the bodily fluids of an infected, sick or dead person, or contaminated objects like clothing.
It doesn’t spread through particles that linger within the air. As an alternative, infected fluid must directly enter the body through a gap, just like the mouth.
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