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Countries around the world are strengthening travel restrictions, airport checks and border health checks as concerns grow over the latest Ebola outbreak in Central Africa.

Global travel measures intensify as governments take steps to contain the spread of Ebola
Governments on several continents are stepping up health surveillance and tightening travel protocols as concerns grow about the worsening Ebola outbreak in parts of Central Africa. From enhanced screening at airports to stricter entry requirements, countries are taking precautionary measures aimed at preventing cross-border transmission as health authorities work to contain the virus at its source.
The United States, Canada, the Bahamas, Bahrain and Jordan have introduced some of the strictest measures yet, including temporary entry bans, strengthened screening at airports and mandatory quarantine requirements for travelers arriving from Ebola-affected regions. Meanwhile, countries including India, Kenya and Thailand have stepped up surveillance at airports and border checkpoints, while urging citizens to avoid non-essential travel to high-risk areas.
Health authorities remain particularly concerned because the current outbreak involves the rare Bundibugyo strain of Ebola, for which there is currently no approved vaccine. The virus has already caused hundreds of suspected cases and deaths across the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda, and experts warn that conflict, displacement and overstretched health systems are complicating containment efforts.
Despite increasing restrictions, public health organizations, including the WHO and the Africa CDC, have warned against relying solely on travel bans, arguing that stricter outbreak control measures at the source remain the most effective way to prevent wider transmission. Both agencies continue to emphasize that Ebola spreads through direct contact with infected body fluids and not through the air, keeping the overall risk to the general public relatively low when proper precautions are followed.
