Health officials in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) said an outbreak of Ebola haemorrhagic fever, which claimed the lives of 21 of the 26 people infected in the Kasai Occidental province, is now over.
"We can say today that the Ebola epidemic has been completely brought under control," Health Minister Makwenge Kaput told reporters on 19 November.
He said authorities had waited 42 days since the last Ebola-related death in Kampungu village before making the announcement – double the time of the 21-day incubation period of the virus.
Some 264 people had fallen ill in Kampungu since April, including 187 fatalities, but experts confirmed only 26 cases of Ebola, according to Eugene Kabambi, communications officer for the UN World Health Organization in DRC.
Vital Mondonge, the officer in charge of disease control and prevention at the health ministry, said the Ebola epidemic had coincided with outbreaks of typhoid, Shigella (a bacterial infection) and malaria, which share some symptoms with the deadly virus.
Ebola is characterised by fever, diarrhoea, severe blood loss and intense fatigue. It is transmitted through direct contact with the bodily fluids of infected persons or of other primates. There is no cure, and health experts say between 50 and 90 percent of victims die. The best way of halting its spread is through prevention, prompt detection and the isolation of suspected cases.
The DRC has experienced Ebola epidemics in 1976 in Yambuku, Orientale province, in Kikwit, Bandundu, in 1995, where at least 250 deaths were reported, and in Watsa, Orientale, in 1999.