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WHO official: Test shortages hinder the fight against Ebola virus in Congo

A World Health Organization official stated that limited testing capacity is slowing the response to the Ebola outbreak.

According to the WHO, there are at least 500 suspected Ebola cases and 130 suspected Ebola deaths. The disease has spread into Uganda.

We have shipped 12 tons of supplies. Six more are expected to arrive today. Anne Ancia said that the samples included personal protective equipment (and) for frontline healthcare workers.

Ancia stated that there is "great uncertainty" about the scope and scale of the Bundibugyo Ebola outbreak, and increased surveillance, testing, and contact tracing are underway.

She stated that testing for the Bundibugyo was limited, with only six possible tests per hour. She said it took weeks for the outbreak to be detected, in part because the tests used at the outbreak site were designed for the Zaire strain.

She added, "The capacity for surveillance and investigation is very limited in the region as a whole."

Ancia stated that funding shortages had a huge impact on WHO's capability to fight Ebola.

Ancia?said that the United States officially left the WHO at the end of January, and President Donald Trump has cut global health spending. However, the U.S.'s cooperation in fighting the outbreak is working "very well".

She said, "We understand we can't receive funding. It's okay. But we want to continue talking, exchanging information and collaborating."

OCHA, the U.N.'s humanitarian office, said it had received only 34% of the $1.4 billion funding requested for its appeal in the Democratic Republic of Congo for this year. It added that more than half of that money came from Washington.

(source: Reuters)