The World Health Organisation has cautioned that the true scale of the Ebola outbreak in Africa may be dramatically underestimated, with actual case numbers potentially reaching four times higher than officially reported. According to current data, the epidemic in Congo has claimed 625 lives and infected 1,792 people, but WHO officials fear these figures represent only a fraction of the actual impact. The discrepancy between reported and actual cases suggests that many infections are going undetected or unrecorded, particularly in remote areas with limited healthcare infrastructure. This significant gap in data collection raises serious concerns about the true extent of the public health crisis unfolding across the region. The organisation’s warning underscores the critical importance of improving surveillance systems and case reporting mechanisms to better understand and respond to the outbreak’s full scope.
Source: Maariv — Original article in Hebrew.



