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WHO Chief Warns Ebola Outbreak Is ‘Outpacing Us’ as Global Health Threats Escalate

GENEVA — The World Health Organization issued a stark warning regarding a rapidly escalating Ebola outbreak in Central Africa, as global health officials concurrently monitor an international outbreak of hantavirus linked to a luxury cruise liner. WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus announced that he is traveling directly to the Democratic Republic of Congo to assess the unfolding crisis at ground zero. With suspected cases now topping 900 and the suspected death toll reaching 220, Tedros warned that the fast-moving epidemic is currently outrunning global containment operations.

Responders face severe hurdles on the ground due to localized conflicts, community mistrust, and active attacks on healthcare facilities, which have severely hindered contact tracing and medical response teams. The outbreak, identified as the Bundibugyo strain of Ebola, has also breached borders, with neighboring Uganda reporting at least seven cases. In response to the growing global threat, high-volume entry airports in the United States, including Atlanta International and Washington-Dulles, are expanding enhanced health screenings for inbound travelers originating from Central Africa. Meanwhile, an American physician, Dr. Peter Stafford, remains under intensive treatment in Germany, where his condition is reportedly improving daily while his family remains asymptomatic under quarantine.

Simultaneously, European health authorities are dealing with the fallout of an early-May hantavirus outbreak aboard the Dutch cruise ship MV Hondius. Spain's Ministry of Health confirmed Tuesday morning that a Spanish citizen has tested positive for the rare Andes hantavirus strain and is currently held in an isolation unit at the Gómez Ulla Military Hospital in Madrid. The patient was a close contact of others on the vessel and had already been placed under preventive quarantine, which officials state does not alter the overall public health risk to the wider population. The cruise ship outbreak has caused three deaths so far. Dozens of American passengers who were aboard the MV Hondius remain in mandatory quarantine at the National Quarantine Unit in Nebraska as health teams continue active contact tracing.

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By: NBC Palm Springs

May 26, 2026

Ebola Bundibugyo outbreak DRCTedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus WHOMV Hondius hantavirus MadridPeter Stafford Germany Ebola treatmentairport health screenings US 2026
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WHO Chief Warns Ebola Outbreak Is ‘Outpacing Us’ as Global Health Threats Escalate