Map of suspected cases and deaths of Ebola virus disease by health zone, as of September 4, 2025.
Image credits: WHO
Africa CDC has launched an emergency response to support the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s (DRC) 16th outbreak of Ebola virus disease (EVD), confirmed in Kasai Province. As of September 7, 28 suspected cases and 15 deaths have been reported, including four among health-care workers. The index case was a 34-year-old pregnant woman who presented with fever, hemorrhage, and diarrhea on August 20 and died on August 25 of multiple organ failure. Laboratory testing confirmed the Zaire strain of Ebola virus.1
Africa CDC Director General Dr Jean Kaseya visited the DRC to coordinate directly with the Ministry of Health. Experts have been deployed to strengthen surveillance, contact tracing, laboratory capacity, and infection prevention and control in affected health zones. Investigations into the outbreak source remain ongoing.1
Kasai Province last reported an Ebola outbreak in 2008. Current response priorities include enhanced digital surveillance, protection of frontline health workers, and targeted vaccination. Africa CDC emphasized early detection, effective case management, and coordination with national and international partners as essential to containing the outbreak.1
World Health Organization (WHO) Update (September 4–5, 2025)
What You Need To Know
28 suspected cases and 15 deaths, including 4 health workers, have been reported in Kasai Province, Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Africa CDC and WHO have deployed experts, medical supplies, and 2000 doses of the Ervebo vaccine to support containment efforts.
The outbreak is a new zoonotic spillover event, with national risk rated high and global risk low.
On September 4, DRC health authorities formally declared the outbreak following confirmatory testing at the National Institute of Biomedical Research in Kinshasa. At that time, 28 suspected cases and 15 deaths had been reported across the Bulape and Mweka health zones, with a case fatality ratio of 54%.2
Patients presented with fever, vomiting, diarrhea, and hemorrhage. Genomic sequencing indicates a new spillover event rather than continuation of prior outbreaks. Approximately 80% of suspected cases are in individuals ≥15 years of age.2
WHO deployed experts in epidemiology, infection prevention and control, and case management as part of a rapid response. Crisis committees have been activated, patients isolated, and contact tracing initiated. WHO has delivered two tonnes of medical supplies, including PPE and mobile laboratory materials. The DRC has 2000 doses of the Ervebo vaccine in Kinshasa, which will be mobilized for ring vaccination of contacts and frontline workers.2
WHO has assessed the overall public health risk as high nationally, moderate regionally, and low globally.This is the DRC’s 16th Ebola outbreak since 1976 and the first confirmed outbreak in nearly three years. The most recent occurred in North Kivu in 2022, with a single fatal case. Kasai Province previously reported outbreaks in 2007 and 2008.3
The outbreak is occurring amid concurrent epidemics of mpox, cholera, and measles, alongside political and economic instability that strain response capacity. Ebola virus disease is a rare but often fatal illness transmitted through contact with infected animals and between humans via direct contact with blood, body fluids, or contaminated surfaces. The average case fatality ratio is approximately 50%.3
“Containing the outbreak will require rapid deployment of clinical care, surveillance, and vaccination measures in the affected health zones,” WHO stated. “Given the country’s concurrent epidemics and limited resources, international coordination and support will be critical to preventing wider spread.”2