US Ebola patient in Berlin hospital not critically ill, family tests negative


A convoy with an ambulance believed to be carrying an American health worker, who has been brought to Germany for treatment after contracting Ebola in the Democratic Republic of Congo, arrives at the Charite University Hospital in Berlin, Germany, May 20, 2026. REUTERS/Axel Schmidt

BERLIN, May 22 (Reuters) - ⁠A U.S. citizen who contracted Ebola in the ⁠Democratic Republic of Congo, where an outbreak of ‌a rare strain has killed over 130 people, is not critically ill and his wife and four children have tested negative, the ​Berlin hospital where the family is ⁠being treated said on ⁠Friday.

"Because the course of the illness can change, he remains ⁠under ‌close observation and is receiving treatment," Charite university hospital said in a statement. "He is being ⁠cared for in the high-security area of the ​specialized isolation ‌unit."

The patient's wife and four children "are currently asymptomatic ⁠and quarantined ​in a separate part of the unit - an initial PCR test detected no Ebola virus infection."

The patient, identified by the ⁠Serge Christian mission organization as medical ​missionary Dr. Peter Stafford, contracted Ebola while treating patients in the DRC, where he had been living with his ⁠family.

The White House said Stafford and his family had been brought to Germany because it is 12 hours closer to the DRC than the United States.

Charite said ​in its statement that the patient ⁠room had been made as child-friendly as possible, adding ​that the children were able to ‌see their father "through a glass ​partition, and family members can communicate via an intercom."

(Reporting by Friederike Heine; editing by Matthias Williams)

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