PARIS, FRANCE / EuroWire / – France confirmed its first Ebola case on its territory after a doctor returned from a humanitarian mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where a major outbreak continues. The French Health Ministry said the patient tested positive after returning from an area with high transmission. Health officials isolated the doctor and transferred the patient to a specialized facility. Authorities said the patient was in stable condition.

The case marks the first confirmed Ebola infection identified in France. During the 2014 West Africa outbreak, France treated patients who had received diagnoses abroad. This case differs because officials identified the infection on French soil. Health authorities said they activated precautionary measures after the doctor arrived. They also began an epidemiological investigation to trace people who may have had contact with the patient.
Officials said the risk to the wider European public remains very low. Ebola spreads through direct contact with blood or other bodily fluids from an infected person who has symptoms. It does not spread through casual contact in the same way as airborne respiratory viruses. France is monitoring contacts under established procedures. People identified as contacts face a 21-day observation period, which matches the upper limit of the Ebola incubation period.
Health officials trace contacts
The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control said the French case was the first imported Ebola case recorded in the European Union and European Economic Area during the current outbreak. It also noted one other imported case linked to the same outbreak. That case involved a U.S. citizen who received treatment in Germany after exposure while caring for patients in Congo.
The outbreak in Congo involves the Bundibugyo virus, a type of Ebola virus that causes severe illness. As of the latest regional update, Congo had 1,094 confirmed cases and 277 confirmed deaths. Ituri province accounts for most of the confirmed cases. North Kivu and South Kivu have also reported infections. Uganda has reported 20 confirmed cases and two deaths linked to the same regional outbreak.
Congo outbreak drives concern
The World Health Organization has said the outbreak remains concentrated in eastern Congo and Uganda, with health care settings and cross-border movement linked to exposure risks. Public health teams in affected areas are using testing, isolation, contact tracing, infection control and community outreach. The response faces pressure in places affected by conflict, population movement and limited health infrastructure.
There is no approved vaccine or specific treatment for Bundibugyo virus disease. Care focuses on early detection, isolation and supportive treatment for symptoms such as fever, severe weakness, vomiting, abdominal pain and bleeding in serious cases. French authorities said they are following strict biosafety measures. The case has drawn attention because it connects a domestic diagnosis in France to a fast-moving Ebola outbreak in Central Africa.
