| 06 Novembre 2018
1 November 2018 - The increase over the past four weeks in confirmed case incidence  (Figure 1), most notably in the city of Beni and communities around  Butembo, is concerning. Security incidents continue to severely impact  both civilians and frontline workers. Moreover, pockets of community  resistance or reluctance continue to hamper timely detection of new  cases and the effectiveness of response operations. Nevertheless, the  response to the Ebola virus disease (EVD) outbreak has seen significant  improvements over the past weeks, including strong performances by field  teams conducting case investigations, vaccinations, and community  engagement and risk communication in priority areas.
 
 Since the last Disease Outbreak News (i.e. during 24–30 October), 32 new  confirmed EVD cases were reported: 24 from Beni, and seven from Butembo  and one from Vuhovi. The seven new cases reported from Butembo reside  in suburbs and villages within and surrounding the city. Of the newly  reported cases, 14 were known contacts of previously confirmed cases at  the time of reporting, one was linked retrospectively to a transmission  chain, and 17 remain under investigation. Four health workers, from  various health posts and hospitals around Beni, were among the newly  infected; 25 health workers have been infected to date, of whom three  have died.
 
 As of 30 October 2018, 279 EVD cases (244 confirmed and 35 probable),  including 179 deaths (144 confirmed and 35 probable)1, have been  reported in eight health zones in North Kivu Province and three health  zones in Ituri Province (Figure 2). Over the past week, 14 additional  surivors were discharged from Ebola treatment centres (ETCs) and  reintegrated into their communities; 81 patients have recovered to date.
 
 With ongoing transmission in communities in North Kivu, the risk of the  outbreak spreading to other provinces in the Democratic Republic of the  Congo, as well as to neighbouring countries, remains very high. Over the  course of the past week, alerts have been reported from the Tanganyika  Province, Republic of the Congo, South Sudan, Uganda and Yemen. To date,  EVD has been ruled out for all alerts from neighbouring provinces and  countries.
 
 Figure 1: Confirmed and probable Ebola virus disease cases by week of illness onset, data as of 30 October 2018 (n=274)*
 
 
 Figure 2: Confirmed and probable Ebola virus disease cases by health  zone in North Kivu and Ituri provinces, Democratic Republic of the  Congo, data as of 30 October 2018 (n=279)
 
 
 *Data in recent weeks are subject to delays in case confirmation and  reporting, as well as ongoing data cleaning - trends during this period  should be interpreted cautiously.
 
 Public health response
 
 The Ministry of Health (MoH) continues to strengthen response measures,  with support from WHO and partners. Priorities include coordinating the  response, surveillance, contact tracing, laboratory capacity, infection  prevention and control (IPC), clinical management of patients,  vaccination, risk communication and community engagement, psychosocial  support, safe and dignified burials (SDB), cross-border surveillance and  preparedness activities in neighbouring provinces and countries.
 
 Surveillance: A review of surveillance activities highlighted a number  of challenges in case and contact detection and investigation, as well  as in data management. WHO is working closely with the MoH at the field  level, with remote analytical support provided by Regional and  headquarters teams to address these. At the field level, strategies and  standard operation procedures (SOPs) are being revised and staff  retrained, to optimise systems and processes, better integrate  activities of contact tracing and vaccination teams, enhance active case  searching, and improve data management. Investigations continue around  the latest confirmed cases not originating from known transmission  chains. As of 30 October, over 15 000 contacts have been registered, of  which 5813 remain under surveillance2. Follow-up rates over the past  week ranged from 85-92% across all health areas.
 Vaccination: As of 31 October, 154 vaccination rings have been defined,  in addition to 37 rings of health and frontline worker. To date, 52 298  eligible and consented people have been vaccinated, including 8916  health and frontline workers and 6578 children. Overall, vaccination  teams have reached an additional 3345 eligible and consenting people in  the past week.
 
 Clinical management and IPC: Activities are ongoing in both clinical  management and IPC and are supported by several partners in the field.  Almost all newly confirmed patients admitted to ETCs receive  therapeutics. There remains ongoing challenges with delayed recognition  of cases and referral to ETCs, which are often occurring only after a  patient has visited a number of health facilities. Some patients die  before reaching ETCs or shorty after arrival due to late presentation in  illness course. In rare instances, therapeutics may need to be withheld  due to a very poor prognosis. Breaches in various aspects of IPC  practices remain an important reason for continuing transmission.  Several activities are ongoing in the field to address these concerns.
 
 Risk communication, community engagement, and social mobilization  activities continue to focus on community ownership of the response and  are integrated closely with other response pillars. The risk  communication and community engagement (RCCE) teams are supporting  community-based surveillance activities by reinforcing the reporting of  alerts by community focal points and traditional healers. Safe and  dignified burial and vaccination teams are also supported by RCCE in  engaging families in dialogue to improve the acceptance of response  interventions. Door-to-door house visits, community dialogue sessions,  community sensitization activities and mass communication via local  radio stations continue.
 
 Safe and dignified burial (SDB) Capacity is provided both by Red Cross  (RC) and Civil Protection (CP) teams. RC teams are operational in  Mangina, Beni, Butembo, Tchomia and Bunia. CP teams are operational in  Beni and Oicha. In addition, RC has trained teams in Goma and Mambasa  that can be activated as needed. As of 30 October, a total of 384 SDB  alerts were received, of which 328 (85%) were responded to successfully.  Due to access restrictions to certain areas, briefing sessions are  planned to sensitize all RC volunteers in North Kivu and Ituri about  EVD. Similar sessions will be hled by the International Committee of the  Red Cross for the Police services and Armed Forces. In addition, a harm  reduction approach to community burials in hard-to-reach communities  (whether because of security or geographical constraints) is planned so  that access to information and materials to perform burials in a safer  manner is available if SDB teams cannot access the burial location.
 
 Point of Entry (PoE): As of 30 October 2018, health screening has been  established at 65 PoEs. Over 11.9 million travellers have been screened,  17 467 means of transport have been decontaminated and 92 alerts have  been notified (14 were validated and one was confirmed for EVD). The  International Organization for Migration (IOM), US Centers for Disease  Control and Prevention (US CDC) and WHO continue to support the Border  Health programme of the MoH in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.  With the support from IOM, a revised PoE Supervision Checklist has been  validated in the field and will be rolled out starting 1 November. IOM  will conduct operational research on the effectiveness of PoEs in the  Democratic Republic of the Congo during EVD outbreaks.
 
 Laboratory capacity: Diagnostic testing capability has continued to  expand as cases spread to new geographic areas. Five field Ebola  laboratories providing near-patient testing have been established in  Beni, Mutembo, Goma, Mangina and Tchomia; these are in addition to the  national laboratory in Kinshasa. Testing volumes have increased in the  past week; 438 samples tested in the week ending 28 October which is 30%  more than the previous week.
 
 Partners
 
 To support the MoH, WHO is working intensively with a wide range of  multisectoral and multidisciplinary regional and global partners and  stakeholders for EVD response, research and urgent preparedness,  including in neighbouring countries. Among the partners are a number of  UN agencies and international organizations including: European Civil  Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operation (ECHO); International  Organization for Migration (IOM); UK Public Health Rapid Support Team;  United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF); UN High Commission on Refugees  (UNHCR); World Bank and regional development banks; World Food Programme  (WFP) and UN Humanitarian Air Service (UNHAS); UN mission and UN  Department of Safety and Security (UNDSS); Inter-Agency Standing  Commission; United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian  Affairs (OCHA); and the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA); Africa  Centres for Disease Control; US CDC; UK Department for International  Development (DFID); United States Agency for International Development  (USAID); Adeco Federación (ADECO); Association des femmes pour la  nutrition à assisse communautaire (AFNAC); Alliance for International  Medical Action (ALIMA); CARITAS DRC; CARE International; Centre de  promotion socio-sanitaire (CEPROSSAN); Cooperazione Internationale  (COOPE); Catholic Organization for Relief and Development Aid  (CORDAID/PAP-DRC); International Medical Corps; International Rescue  Committee (IRC); Intersos – Organizzatione Umanitaria par l’Emergenza  (INTERSOS); MEDAIR; Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF); Oxfam International;  Red Cross of the Democratic Republic of Congo, with the support of the  International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC)  and International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC); Samaritan’s Purse;  Save the Children (SCI); Global Outbreak Alert and Response Network  (GOARN), Emerging and Dangerous Pathogens Laboratory Network (EDPLN),  Emerging Disease Clinical Assessment and Response Network (EDCARN),  technical networks and operational partners, and the Emergency Medical  Team Initiative (EMT). GOARN partners continue to support the response  through deployment for response and readiness activities in non-affected  provinces and in neighbouring countries and to different levels of WHO.
 
 WHO risk assessment
 
 This outbreak of EVD is affecting north-eastern provinces of the  country, which border Uganda, Rwanda and South Sudan. Potential risk  factors for transmission of EVD at the national and regional levels  include: transportation links between the affected areas, the rest of  the country, and neighbouring countries; the internal displacement of  populations; and the displacement of Congolese refugees to neighbouring  countries. The country is concurrently experiencing other epidemics  (e.g. cholera, vaccine-derived poliomyelitis, malaria), and a long-term  humanitarian crisis. Additionally, the security situation in North Kivu  and Ituri at times limits the implementation of response activities.  WHO’s risk assessment for the outbreak is currently very high at the  national and regional levels; the global risk level remains low. WHO  continues to advise against any restriction of travel to, and trade  with, the Democratic Republic of the Congo based on currently available  information.
 
 As the risk of national and regional spread is very high, it is  important for neighbouring provinces and countries to enhance  surveillance and preparedness activities. The IHR Emergency Committee  has advised that failing to intensify these preparedness and  surveillance activities would lead to worsening conditions and further  spread. WHO will continue to work with neighbouring countries and  partners to ensure that health authorities are alerted and are  operationally prepared to respond.
 
 WHO advice
 
 International traffic: WHO advises against any restriction of travel and  trade to the Democratic Republic of the Congo based on the currently  available information. There is currently no licensed vaccine to protect  people from the Ebola virus. Therefore, any requirements for  certificates of Ebola vaccination are not a reasonable basis for  restricting movement across borders or the issuance of visas for  passengers leaving the Democratic Republic of the Congo. WHO continues  to closely monitor and, if necessary, verify travel and trade measures  in relation to this event. Currently, no country has implemented travel  measures that significantly interfere with international traffic to and  from the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Travellers should seek  medical advice before travel and should practice good hygiene.
 
 Vaccination: WHO convened a meeting of the Strategic Advisory Group of  Experts (SAGE) on Immunization from 23-25 October. The group noted that  the risk of adverse effects from administering the live virus vaccine,  rVSVΔG-ZEBOV-GP, to pregnant women remains largely unknown given the  limited amount of data. SAGE recognized that the decision on whether to  offer the vacicine to pregnant women is a complex matter and that  inclusion of pregnant women in a research protocol depends on the local  National Regulatory Authority and local Ethics Review Committee and,  more importantly, on informed consent of the pregnant woman. SAGE  therefore encourages researchers to seek opportunities to gather more  data on the benefits and risks of administering this vaccine to pregnant  women, particularly under conditions permitting close and sufficiently  long follow-up of vaccinees to completely document outcomes. Such  evidence may be available in the near future. The experts also  encouraged research efforts to assess whether the vaccination of other  contacts provides an effective ring of protection around pregnant women  who do not receive the vaccine.