MSF has established an Ebola training centre in Nairobi to prepare health workers for the fastest-growing outbreak in DR Congo, which has claimed at least 600 lives since mid-May 2026. The facility simulates high-risk field conditions, including personal protective equipment use, community engagement, and safe burial practices, addressing challenges such as armed conflict and misinformation.
Training began in mid-June, targeting up to 100 participants monthly from MSF, the Kenyan Ministry of Health, and other NGOs to mitigate the high infection rates among medical staff and improve response capabilities in the volatile region.
An Ebola training facility set up by Doctors Without Borders in Kenya is a chance for health workers to prepare for one of the most complex emergencies they are ever likely to face.
The outbreak in Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) is the fastest growing ever, according to African health officials, and has claimed at least 600 lives since it was declared in mid-May.
It is happening in a region plagued by extreme poverty and multiple armed groups, while misinformation about the disease has led some locals to avoid treatment, ignore safeguards, and even attack health workers.
Health workers make up 112 of the 1,759 confirmed cases in DRC, and 35 have died.
To help prepare for this extremely challenging environment, global charity Doctors Without Borders (known by its French acronym MSF) has set up a training centre on the outskirts of Nairobi.
Equipped with beds, mannequins, a mock laboratory, and protective gear, the simulation centre prepares doctors, nurses, and clinicians for deployments in DRC, or from regional countries at risk from the spreading disease.
“Often, you come from a hospital and a university, you have knowledge and you think you can handle it,” said one of the trainees, Cisse Papa Ndiaga, 43, an MSF community health worker from Senegal, soon to be deployed in DRC.
“But once you’re in PPE (personal protective equipment), it’s a different story,” he said.
Community engagement –
Trainees learn how to deal with the community — who are often scared by the sudden influx of health workers in full protective gear — as well as how to conduct safe funerals, and prevent the stigmatisation of those who have recovered.
“We need to put more attention on the acceptance of these centres in the communities — it’s something so bizarre for a community to see people dress the way that we’re dressed,” said Diana Corben, 37, a doctor with MSF’s mission in Central African Republic.
“One of the key things is to be able to get the communities to engage, to understand. But also to make sure that we have empathy and we… take the time to sensitise them,” she added.
It is also about knowing your own limits, said Corben.
“We need to be very much aware of how much we can tolerate… what we’re going to be put through,” she said.
“This is a simulation… the reality is going to be that much more intense.”
The centre began training in mid-June, and is running through to August and perhaps beyond, training around 100 people per month.
Most have been MSF staff so far, but the centre will also train Kenyan Ministry of Health officials and staff from other NGOs.
Ndiaga said he was somewhat more confident about his imminent deployment after the training.
“I’m not sure I’m ready… but I’m less scared,” he said.
