World Health Organization spokesman Tarik Jasarevic said, "This is not a general mass immunization, as is being done for some other diseases. We are looking into people who have been in contact with those who tested positive for Ebola". Pixabay
World Health Organization spokesman Tarik Jasarevic explained the campaign, which began this week in the rural communities of Bikoro and Iboko.
"This is not a general mass immunization, as is being done for some other diseases," he explained. "We are looking into people who have been in contact with those who tested positive for Ebola, and their contacts. So we make a ring around the person who contracted the virus."
That is careful work and involves much more than medicine, said UNICEF field worker Jean Claude Nzengu.
He said workers go to the households to talk about the vaccination that stops transmission, the advantage of the vaccination, what the residents need to do, how to behave, and finally take them to be vaccinated.
Congolese health authorities first reported the Ebola outbreak in early May. This is not Congo's first encounter with the often-deadly virus, which causes an acute, serious illness. The WHO puts the survival rate around 50 percent.