Scale of Ebola virus outbreak likely under-estimated – Oxfam

Published: 15th June 2026

Humanitarian response lags behind a month into the largest Bundibugyo Ebola outbreak on record. 

Only one in five health facilities in Ituri, one of the epicenters of the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), has access to enough clean water, according to new Oxfam field data. The findings raise urgent concerns about the spread of the Bundibugyo Ebola virus —access to clean water remains the first line of defense against transmission— raising fears that the true scale of the outbreak is underestimated.

Oxfam’s field data shows that in Mongbwalo, a town of nearly 140,000 people and one of the outbreak's epicenters in Ituri province, only 20 percent of people have access to clean water while just 25 percent have access to functional sanitation and hygiene infrastructure. Many families are forced to use water contaminated by chemical runoff from mining operations. 

These findings highlight a wider crisis across the Ituri province: contaminated water sources, collapsed handwashing infrastructure, and healthcare centers struggling to safely dispose of infectious waste, while many frontline workers still lack basic protective equipment. These conditions are hampering efforts to contain the spread of the virus.

Oxfam’s Field Response Coordinator in Ituri Province, Manel Rebordosa, who is based in the epicenter of the Ebola outbreak in eastern DRC, said:

"Water —the absolute first line of defense in any public health emergency— is simply not available. Miners working in the surrounding areas have no toilets and handwashing stations, then they return home to communities already battling the virus. Clean water costs two dollars for 20 liters. For most families here, that is far beyond what they can afford." 

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has confirmed this is now the largest Bundibugyo outbreak on record. The DRC Ministry of Health has reported 781 confirmed cases and 182 deaths across 25 health zones, but Oxfam warns the real toll is likely far higher. Unlike the 2018 outbreak, there is no licensed vaccine or approved therapeutic for the Bundibugyo strain, making clean water and sanitation a critical component of the fight against this virus. 

Contact tracing, the backbone of any Ebola response, has fallen to just 43 percent coverage. This sits far below the 79 percent recorded one month into the 2018-2020 outbreak in the same region.

“One month into the 2018 outbreak, health care workers achieved contact tracing rates where nearly eight in ten known contacts were successfully monitored. Today, following the withdrawal of US funding for disease surveillance and severe funding shortfalls, contact tracing is reaching fewer than half of the contacts. That gap is not just a statistic, it is a painful reality that allows the virus to spread undetected through communities,” said Rebordosa.

"Water —the absolute first line of defense in any public health emergency— is simply not available. Miners working in the surrounding areas have no toilets and handwashing stations, then they return home to communities already battling the virus. Clean water costs two dollars for 20 liters. For most families here, that is far beyond what they can afford." 

Manel Rebordosa, Oxfam’s Field Response Coordinator based in the epicenter of the Ebola outbreak in eastern DRC
Oxfam

With only 0.2 doctors per 1000 people and more than 70 health facilities destroyed by conflict, the DRC’s health authorities are struggling to identify new infections fast enough to interrupt transmission. In North Kivu, deaths are being reported in communities before patients are ever identified as Ebola cases. More families are caring for sick relatives at home, unknowingly exposing others to the virus.

Global humanitarian funding for the DRC has been slashed by 46 percent —from $2.58 billion in 2024 to $1.4 billion in 2026 — the lowest coverage rate in a decade, forcing aid agencies to drastically scale back. Local organizations, often the primary responders during outbreaks, have received less than 6 percent of recent humanitarian funding according to the DRC NGO forum.

The aid cuts have forced organizations to reduce outreach community teams stripping away a critical pillar of the response. Furthermore, the severe shortage of personal protective equipment, sanitation facilities and clean water infrastructure continue to constrain response operations, making it increasingly difficult to combat both misinformation and the spread of the virus.

“When trusted community outreach teams disappear, rumors spread faster than the virus. People now fear healthcare facilities, which they see as deathtraps. Families are turning to traditional remedies, which risks delaying treatment and allowing the virus to spread further. Every day without funding, the virus takes more lives,” said Rebordosa.

Tibakanya Mireille, a mother of five in Ituri, said: “I brought my child to the hospital when I noticed she had a fever and she is now being tested. We are very worried. Here, two houses have been quarantined, and one family lost several relatives after caring for a sick relative, which caused others to be sick. The disease has already killed several people in our community of Shari, in Bunia.”

Oxfam is working with partners and has scaled up its response to the Ebola outbreak, mounting an initial $11.6 million six-month intervention to provide clean water and hygiene kits to 200,000 people in Ituri province and to support community-led awareness. However, this falls far short of what is needed.

Notes to editors

  • According to WHO and DRC’s Ministry of Public Health the contact tracing rate was at 43,2% on 8th June, 2026 whereby it was at 79% one month into the 2018 Ebola outbreak in DRC (in French).
  • According to DRC’s Ministry of Health, as of 13 June, there are 781 confirmed cases and 182 confirmed deaths.
  • The outbreak is caused by a rare Bundibugyo version of the Ebola virus, which has no approved vaccine or therapeutics. The current Bundibugyo outbreak is the largest of its kind and the third largest Ebola outbreak on record according to the CDC, only behind the 2018-20 Kivu Ebola epidemic in the DRC and the 2014-16 West African epidemic.
  • Humanitarian funding requirements for the DRC fell from $2.58 billion in 2024 to $1.4 billion in 2026, (nearly 46 per cent).
  • According to the Conseil National des Fora des ONG humanitaires et de Développement in DRC (CONAFOHD DRC), less than 6 percent of resources for the Ebola response has been allocated to local organizations in DRC.
  • According to World Bank Data, DRC has approximately 0.2 physicians per 1,000 people
  • Uganda has now recorded 19 confirmed Ebola cases, including eight newly confirmed infections and one death. Oxfam is providing protective equipment and supporting with infection prevention and community engagement efforts.

Contact information

Fatuma Noor | Fatuma.Noor@oxfam.org | +254 723 944 682

Yves Kalwira in Goma | Ykalwira@oxfam.org.uk | +243 814043637  

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