Critical obstacles to ending the epidemic in Guinea and Sierra Leone |
A spike in the number of Ebola victims in Guinea has citizens and health officials in West Africa concerned about a possible return of the deadly disease.
One of several obstacles
to ending the epidemic in Guinea and Sierra Leone is the climate. It's the
start of the rainy season in West Africa, when roads turn to mud, making it
hard to get medicine and supplies to those with Ebola.
Voice of America report continues:
Another problem is
attitude. People in these countries have been living in the midst of an Ebola
crisis for more than a year, and that can make a deadly virus seem normal, said
Dr. Bruce Aylward of the World Health Organization.
"Over time, people
get used to Ebola," he said. "In these communities, we're seeing
people trying to treat Ebola at home, when they know it's Ebola — trying to
take precautions, wearing gloves and things like that. And at a different
level, internationally, people are getting used to hearing about Ebola, which
is really, really, scary."
Stigma, fear and denial
are associated with the disease. In a webcast from Doctors Without
Borders (Médecins Sans Frontières), Ella Watson-Stryker said Ebola "is a
disease that creates fear and everyone’s afraid — whether it’s the leader of a
small village, whether it’s the president of a country.
The doctors and nurses
who respond are afraid. The health promoters, who are there — trained to talk
about Ebola — are afraid. And our patients are terrified. And so, I think
that’s the biggest barrier that we have to overcome, and when people are
afraid, denial becomes a very good fallback."
Finding out who had
contact with a sick person is as crucial in controlling Ebola as getting people
into treatment centers. Sophie Sabatier, also with Doctors Without Borders,
told VOA from Conakry, Guinea, that "as long as there is one case of
Ebola, the epidemic is not finished."
Another obstacle: poor
public health systems. Many West African hospitals lack running water and
electricity. Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia are asking the international
community to help them build modern health facilities.
Dr. Tom Frieden of the
U.S. Centres for Disease Control and Prevention emphasized this need in a
speech at the World Bank in March. "The public health infrastructure is
crucial to get to zero [cases] and to stay at zero," he said.
Frieden said a good
national health system will always be able to respond faster than the
international community can at the beginning of an epidemic.
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