
A new Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DR Congo) is once again raising fears of a deadly health crisis in Africa. The World Health Organization (WHO) says there are now around 600 suspected cases and 139 suspected deaths, with numbers expected to rise further as investigations continue. Officials warn that the outbreak may have been spreading unnoticed for months before being detected. Yet despite more than a decade having passed since Dr. Matthias Rath argued that micronutrients deserved urgent attention in fighting Ebola, remarkably little work has been done in researching their potential role. While experimental vaccines and drug treatments continue to dominate the response, published scientific studies examining vitamins against Ebola remain virtually nonexistent.
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The latest outbreak involves the Bundibugyo species of Ebola virus, a strain that has not been seen for more than a decade. Unlike the more familiar Zaire species, for which vaccines and treatments have been developed, Bundibugyo presents fresh challenges. There is currently no approved vaccine specifically targeting this form of the virus, and no drugs designed to treat it directly. Health authorities are therefore scrambling to contain the outbreak as cases rise in eastern DR Congo and spread across borders into neighboring Uganda.
According to the WHO, 51 cases have so far been laboratory confirmed in DR Congo, with two confirmed infections reported in Uganda’s capital, Kampala, both linked to travel from Congo. One Ugandan patient has already died. But the true scale of the outbreak is believed to be far larger than official numbers suggest. WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus says the delay in detecting the virus means many infections may have gone unnoticed, allowing the disease to spread silently for weeks or even months.
Has the Outbreak Been Circulating Undetected?
The epicenter of the outbreak lies in DR Congo’s eastern Ituri province, particularly around the gold-mining town of Mongwalu and the provincial capital Bunia. Cases have also been identified in North Kivu province, including the rebel-controlled city of Goma, where years of armed conflict and insecurity complicate efforts to trace contacts and provide medical care. Healthcare workers are among those reported to have died, a troubling sign because infections among medical staff can further weaken already strained health systems.
The Bundibugyo strain of Ebola has caused only two previous outbreaks in recorded history. During those outbreaks, roughly one-third of infected people died. Although this death rate is lower than that associated with some other forms of Ebola, the virus still poses a grave threat, especially in regions where poverty, conflict, overcrowding, and weak healthcare systems create ideal conditions for rapid spread.
One reason Ebola outbreaks remain so frightening is that the virus initially resembles far more common illnesses. Early symptoms such as fever, weakness, vomiting, and body aches can look much like malaria or typhoid, both widespread diseases in DR Congo. By the time Ebola is suspected and confirmed, the virus may already have infected many others. This delay in diagnosis helps explain why health officials believe the current outbreak had been circulating undetected for several months.
For many observers, however, the latest crisis also raises a troubling question: why, after repeated Ebola outbreaks stretching back decades, has so little effort been made to investigate the role nutrition may play in helping patients survive?
Are Relevant Studies Being Ignored?
Back in 2014, during the devastating West African Ebola epidemic, Dr. Matthias Rath argued that the world was overlooking an important scientific question. He pointed to evidence that animals known to carry Ebola viruses often avoid severe illness and that most of these animals synthesize vitamin C in their bodies in huge amounts. He also highlighted the striking similarities between Ebola’s severe bleeding symptoms and the blood vessel weakness seen in advanced vitamin C deficiency.
At the time, his ideas were essentially ignored by mainstream public health institutions. Instead, the global response focused overwhelmingly on pharmaceutical approaches such as vaccines, antiviral drugs, and emergency containment measures. While these interventions undoubtedly play an important role, twelve years later it is striking how little scientific research has explored whether nutritional support could improve Ebola survival.
A search of published medical literature reveals only a handful of relevant studies. One investigation from the 2014-2015 West African Ebola outbreak found that vitamin A supplementation was associated with reduced mortality among Ebola patients. Researchers reported that people receiving vitamin A had a lower risk of death than those who did not receive the nutrient, suggesting nutritional interventions may deserve far more attention than they currently receive.
Another study found that early multivitamin supplementation was associated with lower overall mortality from Ebola. Patients who received multivitamins shortly after treatment began appeared more likely to survive compared with those who did not. Although such findings do not prove vitamins alone can overcome Ebola, they raise important questions about whether nutritional support could strengthen the body’s ability to cope with severe viral infection.
Yet despite these encouraging signals, no large-scale clinical studies would appear to have followed. A search of the biomedical database PubMed reveals surprisingly few investigations testing vitamins against Ebola. In a world where billions are spent on vaccine research and drug development, this lack of attention is difficult to justify.
History Repeating Itself
The neglect is especially surprising given the broader scientific understanding that vitamins and micronutrients play vital roles in immune function. Nutritional deficiencies weaken the body’s defenses, impair healing, and reduce resilience to infection. In poorer regions where Ebola outbreaks often occur, malnutrition and inadequate dietary intake are common realities. This raises an obvious possibility: could strengthening nutritional status help improve outcomes in Ebola patients?
Clearly, vitamins alone do not represent a complete answer to Ebola. Outbreak control measures, infection prevention, and supportive medical care all remain important. But dismissing nutrition as irrelevant, while barely studying it at all, is not a credible scientific response. Science advances through investigation, not assumption.
As DR Congo confronts its seventeenth Ebola outbreak, the world again faces images of fear, overwhelmed healthcare systems, and rising death tolls. But alongside emergency responses, there is also an opportunity to rethink old assumptions. Twelve years after Dr. Rath urged health authorities to consider natural medicine approaches, the scientific community still knows remarkably little about whether vitamins could save lives during Ebola outbreaks.
This situation urgently needs to change. Carefully designed studies testing vitamin C, vitamin A, multivitamin combinations, and other immune-supporting nutrients could help determine whether inexpensive nutritional interventions might improve survival, especially in low-resource settings where advanced medical treatments are often unavailable. If even modest benefits were confirmed, such measures could become a valuable addition to future Ebola responses.
For now, however, history appears to be repeating itself. Ebola has returned, the world is once again reacting to a growing emergency, and one potentially important avenue of research remains largely unexplored. The question is no longer whether Ebola deserves serious global attention – it clearly does. The real question is why, after all these years, so little effort has been made to investigate whether strengthening the body’s natural defenses might help save lives.
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This article was originally published on Dr. Rath Health Foundation.
Executive Director of the Dr. Rath Health Foundation and one of the coauthors of our explosive book, “The Nazi Roots of the ‘Brussels EU’”, Paul is also our expert on the Codex Alimentarius Commission and has had eye-witness experience, as an official observer delegate, at its meetings. You can find Paul on Twitter at @paulanthtaylor
He is a regular contributor to Global Research.
Featured image is from Envato via / Dr. Rath Health Foundation
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