Mpox surge in DR Congo: hospital overwhelmed with patients as virus vaccine demand rises
- Goma’s Nyiragongo hospital faces a mpox surge with 16,000 cases and a critical vaccine shortage
An ever-growing number of patients have been flocking to a Goma hospital in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, where a rapidly-spreading epidemic of mpox has erupted in recent months.
Five to 20 people are walking each day into Nyiragongo General Referral Hospital in North Kivu to consult overburdened medical teams at an outdoor isolation centre, fearing they are ill with the virus.
The disease can spread from animals to humans, but also human-to-human through sexual or close physical contact.
Doctor Tresor Basubi inspected the breathing and heartbeat of a calm little girl whose body was covered in skin lesions caused by the disease, which has killed 548 people in the DRC so far this year.
Cases have now surfaced in all provinces of the DRC, a country of 100 million people.
“This is just the start, the child is not asthenic, she does not show severe symptoms, she can walk on her own,” said Basubi as he examined the girl.