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Shortages stall Ebola testing in three DR Congo labs

Officials say health authorities must gain the trust of communities to combat Ebola in DR Congo. (AP PHOTO)

Three laboratories in Democratic Republic of Congo ‌have run out of supplies to test for Ebola, the World Health Organisation says as the outbreak ‌of the dangerous Bundibugyo species of the virus continues to grow.

In the latest situation report, dated June 7 and released on Tuesday night, the agency said laboratories in Bukavu and Lwiro in South Kivu province, and Goma in North Kivu, had run out of stock.

It said that the labs were awaiting ‌the arrival ‌of reagents - substances required ⁠to run the tests - to resume work on backlogged samples.

The WHO ​did not immediately respond to requests for comment about how many samples were awaiting testing or if supplies have arrived since the data was collected.

There have been almost 600 confirmed cases in the Ebola outbreak, and more than 115 deaths, the DR Congolese government announced on Tuesday evening.

There have also been 19 ⁠cases and two deaths in neighbouring Uganda linked to the ‌epidemic, ​which WHO has declared an international public health emergency.

Testing began slowly because the widely available Ebola tests ​did not detect ‌the Bundibugyo virus.

But it has ramped up since, led by experts at the Institut National ​de Recherche Biomédicale in Kinshasa, although challenges with access remain due to insecurity and armed conflict in the worst-hit provinces.

Professor Jean-Jacques Muyembe, director of INRB, said that testing capacity was now ​much ​improved, increasingly available in regional laboratories, which ​were able to report results on the same day.

At ‌an online briefing on Wednesday, he said other parts of the response were not keeping up, particularly around the necessity of working with and gaining the trust of the affected communities to help them protect themselves - a lesson learned, he said, after tackling 16 other Ebola outbreaks in the country.

"For the ​moment I am a bit disappointed because I don't see in practice these experiences on the ​ground," he said.

"It seemed we ⁠have to learn again how to involve the community in this outbreak."

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