Children in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo are once again facing a deadly Ebola outbreak.
As of 1st June 2026, health authorities reported over 1000 suspected Ebola cases - with 321 confirmed cases and 48 confirmed deaths. The numbers are rapidly increasing and the true number is likely to be even higher than those officially recorded given ongoing challenges with tracing and testing. Children under the age of 15 years old make up at least 25% of confirmed deaths due to Ebola in DRC. Seven cases have also been confirmed across the border in Uganda.
This outbreak is spreading through communities in the DRC where families are already facing conflict and displacement and healthcare is severely limited, making it harder to trace contacts and contain transmission.
Children are not only at risk of infection, but a whole multitude of knock-on effects– family separation, psychological distress, being cut off from routine healthcare and protection services, dropping out of school, child labour and early marriage.
There is currently no specific vaccine or treatment available for this Ebola strain, increasing the urgency of rapid contact tracing and prevention tactics.
Basic, lifesaving supplies—like protective equipment, disinfectant, and safe isolation spaces—are concerningly scarce in some areas. At the same time fear and misinformation risk accelerating the spread further.
Save the Children is working alongside health authorities and local partner NGOs in the DRC and Uganda, rapidly mobilising to protect children and their families.
Donate now to our Children’s Emergency Fund, to help stop this outbreak, protect children, and save lives—before it spreads further. Children here cannot afford another crisis.
Our response.
We're working alongside health authorities and local partner NGOs in the DRC, rapidly mobilising to protect children and families by:
- Supporting safe and functioning health facilities with PPE, infection control, and training up staff.
- Providing lifesaving information and hygiene kits to communities to stop transmission.
- Protecting children through child protection services, psychosocial support, and family tracing.
- Keeping children safe and learning through safe schools or alternative education and training up teachers on prevention and reporting.
We’re also in Uganda, working across high-risk areas, to:
- Share trusted information, strengthen support systems, and prevent further spread, working hand-in-hand with communities.
- Deliver vital awareness campaigns, together with government, UN agencies and partners.
- Ensure that schools and communities are safe for children and their families, and that they can continue to access essential services.
We’ve already allocated $600,000 from our Children’s Emergency Fund to kickstart our response in the DRC, as well as $125,000 for our teams in Uganda. But we must urgently scale up.
Time is critical. We’re already in a game of catch up. Every delay increases the risk of further spread, more deaths, and greater long-term impact on children.
With your support, we can scale up interventions in the worst-impacted areas and be prepared to adapt quickly as the situation evolves.
A mother washes her hands at a health centre following guidance on Ebola prevention. Save the Children
RELATED
Latest News on Ebola
27 May 2026
DRC: One in four confirmed Ebola deaths are children underscoring the urgent need to protect them
Latest government figures released on Wednesday show that children make up 25% of the 17 confirmed Ebola deaths - although the number of real cases is likely to be significantly higher
19 May 2026
EBOLA OUTBREAK: “We are in a game of catch-up. Unless a collective effort is made, this crisis is going to get worse” – Save the Children
As Save the Children prepares to launch a large-scale response to support local health systems and help Ebola-impacted families and children, the aid agency is calling for an urgent global effort to contain the virus.