public health emergency – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Tue, 02 Jun 2026 10:40:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png public health emergency – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Congo re-opens airport at centre of Ebola outbreak https://artifex.news/article71052005-ece/ Tue, 02 Jun 2026 10:40:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article71052005-ece/ Read More “Congo re-opens airport at centre of Ebola outbreak” »

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Bunia airport in Ituri province after authorities in Democratic Republic of the Congo reopened services amid efforts to contain the Ebola outbreak.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has reopened ​the airport in the capital city of the province ⁠hit hardest by the ongoing Ebola outbreak, a government statement said, reversing a move that some residents said had cut them off from critical supplies.

The government ‌in Kinshasa announced last month that it was suspending passenger flights to Bunia, the main airport in Ituri, where ‌the first Ebola cases were confirmed. Humanitarian and medical flights continued ‌, subject ⁠to approvals. In a statement published late on Monday (June 1, 2026), ⁠Congo’s Transport Ministry said conditions were now in place “to allow a gradual and safe resumption of air transport activities” and that the airport would re-open immediately.

The Ministry said all ​passengers would have their body temperatures ‌screened before boarding and on arrival, that passengers were required to wash their hands before boarding and that any passenger with a fever would not be allowed to board.

The Africa Centres for ‌Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) announced the outbreak of the Bundibugyo ​strain of Ebola, Congo’s 17th Ebola outbreak, on Friday (May 15, 2026) and the World Health Organization (WHO) swiftly declared it a ⁠public health emergency of international concern. The outbreak, already the third-largest on record, persisted for weeks undetected, say health officials, who are now behind the curve ‌and struggling to bring it under control.

Confirmed cases rise to 321

The decision to re-open the airport in Bunia followed a visit from WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who told reporters on Monday (June 1, 2026) he saw some encouraging signs in the response, including five certified recoveries. But he also noted the need to ramp up testing and treatment ‌capacity and promote trust in health workers. There have been 321 confirmed Ebola cases including ​48 confirmed deaths, according to the latest government figures on Monday (June 1, 2026).

Ebola has reached 15 of 36 health zones ⁠in Ituri, and cases have also been reported in North and South Kivu ⁠provinces and in neighbouring Uganda.

The International Rescue Committee warned on Monday (June 1, 2026) that the outbreak was probably significantly larger and more ‌advanced than official figures suggested.

The aid agency said the virus might have been spreading for up to three months before the first ​official cases were detected in mid-May. 



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U.S. surgeon general declares gun violence a public health emergency https://artifex.news/article68331406-ece/ Tue, 25 Jun 2024 10:38:34 +0000 https://artifex.news/article68331406-ece/ Read More “U.S. surgeon general declares gun violence a public health emergency” »

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U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy.
| Photo Credit: AP

The U.S. Surgeon General on June 25 declared gun violence a public health crisis, driven by the fast-growing number of injuries and deaths involving firearms in the country.

The advisory issued by Dr. Vivek Murthy, the nation’s top doctor, came as the U.S. grappled with another summer weekend marked by mass shootings that left dozens of people dead or wounded.

“People want to be able to walk through their neighbourhoods and be safe,” Dr. Murthy told The Associated Press in a phone interview.

“America should be a place where all of us can go to school, go to work, go to the supermarket, go to our house of worship, without having to worry that that’s going to put our life at risk.” To drive down gun deaths, Dr. Murthy calls on the U.S. to ban automatic rifles, introduce universal background checks for purchasing guns, regulate the industry, pass laws that would restrict their use in public spaces and penalise people who fail to safely store their weapons.

None of those suggestions can be implemented nationwide without legislation passed by the Congress, which typically recoils at gun control measures. Some state legislatures, however, have enacted or may consider some of the surgeon general’s proposals.

Dr. Murthy said there is “broad agreement” that gun violence is a problem, citing a poll last year that found most Americans worry at least sometimes that a loved one might be injured by a firearm. More than 48,000 Americans died from gun injuries in 2022.

His advisory promises to be controversial and will certainly incense Republican lawmakers, most of whom opposed Dr. Murthy’s confirmation — twice — to the job over his statements on gun violence.

Dr. Murthy has published warnings about troubling health trends in American life, including social media use and loneliness. He’s stayed away from issuing a similar advisory about gun violence since his 2014 confirmation as surgeon general was stalled and nearly derailed by the firearm lobby and Republicans who opposed his past statements about firearms.

Dr. Murthy ended up promising the Senate that he did “not intend to use my office as surgeon general as a bully pulpit on gun control”. Then-President Donald Trump dismissed Dr. Murthy in 2017, but President Joe Biden nominated Dr. Murthy again to the position in 2021. At his second confirmation hearing, he told senators that declaring guns a public health crisis would not be his focus during a new term.

But he has faced mounting pressure from some doctors and Democratic advocacy groups to speak out more. A group of four former surgeon generals asked the Biden administration to produce a report on the problem in 2022.

“It is now time for us to take this issue out of the realm of politics and put it in the realm of public health, the way we did with smoking more than a half century ago,” Dr. Murthy told the AP.

A 1964 report from the surgeon general that raised awareness about the dangers of smoking is largely credited with snubbing out tobacco use and precipitating regulations on the industry.

Children and younger Americans, in particular, are suffering from gun violence, Dr. Murthy notes in his advisory called “Firearm Violence: A Public Health Crisis in America”. Suicide by gun rates have increased significantly in recent years for Americans under the age of 35. Children in the U.S. are far more likely to die from gun wounds than children in other countries, the research he gathered shows.

In addition to new regulations, Dr. Murthy calls for an increase on gun violence research and for the health system — which is likely to be more amenable to his advisory — to promote gun safety education during doctor visits.



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