#19,206
Just over a month ago (May 15th) the Africa CDC Convened an Emergency Meeting After Reports of a Large Outbreak of Non-Zaire Ebola In the DRC. Since then we've learned this is the 3rd outbreak of the Bundibugyo virus, and according best estimates (see IJID: Regional Signals Preceding the 2026 Bundibugyo Virus Disease Outbreak), it probably began sometime in February or March.As if June 11th, the WHO reported:
695 confirmed cases; 676 from the Democratic Republic of the Congo and 19 from Uganda; and 138 deaths including two from Uganda, have been reported from both countries, while at least 37 people have recovered from the disease.
But this is believed to be only the tip of the iceberg. Much of the affected area is a conflict zone, and has only limited public health capacity.
Ten days ago, in CDC MMWR: Modeled Scenario Projections for the Ebola Disease Outbreak Caused by Bundibugyo Virus, 2026, we saw an analysis which stated:`The scope of the outbreak is likely larger than that represented by available data and might prove challenging to contain and control.'
Yesterday CIDRAP reported Africa CDC head warns Ebola outbreak could be worst ever. The 2014-2016 West African outbreak infected at least 28,000, killing > 11,000.
Today the ECDC has released a 7-page assessment of recent modeling, one of which estimates the current outbreak is likely much (3x to 10x) larger than reported, but warns this is based on limited data.
The brief overview follows, but you'll want to follow the link to read the full report.
Overview of available modelling evidence to inform the scale and potential spread of Bundibugyo virus in the current Ebola disease outbreak
17 June 2026
This assessment presents an overview and critical appraisal of the available modelling evidence to inform the scale and potential spread of Bundibugyo virus (BDBV) in the context of the ongoing Ebola disease outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Uganda.
Key findings
- So far in the current outbreak of Ebola disease caused by Bundibugyo virus, international modelling efforts have focused on estimating the outbreak size and near-term trajectories, as well as the risk of regional and international spread.
- Multiple modelling groups suggest that the true size of the outbreak is larger than reported. One model estimated that cumulative infections as of 13 June were between 3.0 and 10.2 times the reported number of cases (90% credible interval).
- Epistorm estimated the relative risk of importation to be highest for Rwanda, Tanzania and Kenya, which together account for approximately 54% of the relative risk. ECDC has estimated the risk of importation into the EU/EEA to be low.
- The United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published scenario modelling analysis results that estimated a 65% probability that the outbreak will exceed 20 000 cases within three months under a scenario where 20% of individuals with Bundibugyo virus infection were isolated and no other interventions were implemented.
As we've discussed often (see Flying Blind in the Viral Storm), we've seen a noticeable decline in surveillance and reporting of infectious diseases around the world since COVID.Publication file
- Current modelling estimates are highly uncertain due to data limitations. Multiple epidemic trajectories remain compatible with the available surveillance data, limiting confidence in estimates of outbreak size and future trends.
Overview of available modelling evidence to inform the scale and potential spread of Bundibugyo virus in the current Ebola disease outbreak
While all WHO member states have pledged to report disease outbreaks with epidemic potential (ideally within 48 hours), many still lack the capability to fully investigate cases (see Lancet Preprint: National Surveillance for Novel Diseases - A Systematic Analysis of 195 Countries).
And some nations - and for a variety of political or economic reasons - appear to selectively ignore this reporting obligation, since there are few tangible penalties for doing so (see From Here To Impunity).
Although Ebola Bundibugyo remains a regional crisis, spillovers to neighboring countries seem likely, which increases the risks of seeing sporadic exported cases around the world.

