Kenya Strengthens Ebola Preparedness in Talks With Africa CDC

10, Jun 2026 / 2 min read/ By Livenow Africa

Kenya has moved to tighten its regional health partnerships as concerns around Ebola preparedness and outbreak response continue to shape public debate.

Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale on Thursday held talks with senior officials from the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC), including Deputy Director General Dr Raji Tajudeen. The discussions centred on how to strengthen coordination in disease surveillance, emergency response, and broader health security across the region.

The Ministry of Health said the meeting reaffirmed Kenya’s commitment to continental health frameworks aimed at improving preparedness for epidemics and other cross-border health threats.

“Kenya will continue working closely with Africa CDC and partners to advance shared health priorities,” the ministry said in a statement, adding that the country is positioning the Eastern Africa Regional Coordinating Centre as a hub for “health security, preparedness and coordinated emergency response.”

No Ebola cases have been confirmed in Kenya. Still, officials say surveillance has been stepped up. Border screening has been tightened. Emergency response teams have been placed on alert. Public health messaging has also been expanded in recent weeks.

Duale stressed the importance of the Eastern Africa RCC, which is hosted in Kenya, describing it as central to training health workers and improving coordination during outbreaks.

The ministry said Kenya has also reaffirmed commitments made under earlier agreements signed with Africa CDC during the World Health Summit. These include plans to expand regional capacity in outbreak response, workforce development, and local production of essential medical supplies.

“Kenya continues to champion efforts aimed at expanding Africa’s production capacity for essential medicines, vaccines, diagnostics, and other critical health commodities,” the ministry added.

The talks come at a sensitive moment. In recent weeks, discussions around Ebola preparedness have triggered public concern in parts of the country, particularly over proposed isolation and monitoring arrangements linked to regional response plans.

Kenya has defended its approach, saying any cooperation with international partners is guided by national law and public health safeguards. Officials have also pointed to long-standing collaboration with Africa CDC and other partners in managing infectious disease threats across the region.

The latest engagement also follows public praise from United States officials, who have acknowledged Kenya’s role in regional health security efforts as part of broader Ebola response planning in East and Central Africa.

For now, authorities say the focus remains on readiness, not response to an active outbreak. But the conversations in Nairobi underline a wider shift. Health security is increasingly being treated as a regional, not national, concern.

Tags