Ebola in Congo: Why health workers bear the brunt of the crisis

Mongbwalu, CongoMon Jun 08 2026
The Ebola outbreak in eastern Congo keeps getting worse, partly because health workers are underpaid and overworked. Dr. Lokudu, who runs Mongbwalu Hospital, says he hasn’t received his full salary for months. Neither have many of his colleagues. Without steady income, their motivation drops even as the number of sick people rises. The outbreak began in Mongbwalu, a mining town where gold diggers share crowded camps and muddy pits. Close contact in these tight spaces helps the virus spread quickly. People often ignore safety rules, refuse to go to clinics, or believe the disease is fake. Every time a patient dies, families sometimes hide the body, making it harder to track who else might be infected. Officials recently reported 488 confirmed cases and 86 deaths. More cases appear every day. Outbreaks of this kind are tricky because there are no approved vaccines yet. Staff can only treat symptoms, not cure the illness directly. At least five people have survived, but that’s a small number compared to those still falling ill.
Health services were already weak before this crisis. Years of underfunding mean hospitals lack basic supplies like masks and gloves. Nurses like Alice Bamuhinga work nonstop with almost no rest, sometimes eating only once a day. Their efforts save lives, yet they get little support or recognition. Some families only realize the danger when it’s too late. Asero Jeanne lost two children before she caught Ebola herself. She watched twenty people die in her neighborhood before recovering. Stories like hers show how fear can slow down the response and make the outbreak harder to control. The World Health Organization has asked for $518 million to fight the disease. The plan depends on money, trust from communities, and strong leadership. But in eastern Congo, armed groups also turn towns into battlefields. Violence stops health teams from reaching sick people, leaving more cases unchecked. Frontline workers feel helpless when they can’t travel to investigate alerts. Dr. Lokudu says teams are ready, but lack vehicles and fuel to get to remote areas. The outbreak spreads faster than the health system can handle, turning a tough job into an impossible one.
https://localnews.ai/article/ebola-in-congo-why-health-workers-bear-the-brunt-of-the-crisis-f9211854

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