ABSTRACT Background The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) faces a “triple burden” of public health threats which includes climate change, protracted armed conflict, and the under‐recognized spread of arboviral diseases. Arboviruses, such as dengue, chikungunya, Zika, and yellow fever, are transmitted by Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus mosquitoes. Certain factors, like environmental changes, population displacement, and inadequate vector control, have created conditions that favor sustained transmission. Methods The narrative review was conducted to compile evidence on factors influencing arbovirus spread in the DRC and to identify the priority causes of prevention. A comprehensive literature search was done in PubMed and Google Scholar for studies, NGO reports, and government documents published between 2019 and 2025 in French or English, focusing on human populations in the DRC or similar contexts. Results Key findings demonstrate that yellow fever remains endemic, with recurrent outbreaks and a case fatality rate of up to 21.3% in past years. Seroprevalence studies show significant dengue exposure (up to 41% in Kinshasa), multiple chikungunya epidemics which affected millions, and intermittent Zika virus exposure. On the other hand, adverse climate change alters vector ecology and increases transmission potential through drought, floods, rising temperatures, and deforestation. Armed conflict proved to play a major role in the large‐scale displacement of people into overcrowded, unsanitary environments. This, as a result, disrupts the surveillance and control programmes and increases vulnerability to arboviruses. Conclusion The convergence of climate change, armed conflict, and arbovirus transmission poses a growing public health threat in the DRC. Strengthening integrated and reinforced surveillance, augmenting diagnostic capacity, applying sustainable vector control, and advocating climate and security considerations in health policy are essential and mandatory. Without coordinated and multidisciplinary action, the silent and hazardous spread of arboviruses will remain consistent to weaken and compromise health system resilience.
Donnang et al. (Sun,) studied this question.