Today on Mamamia, Médecins Sans Frontières’ anthropologist Pierre Trbovic describes his experience with the Ebola outbreak in Monrovia, the capital of Liberia.
Finding the treatment centre full, health staff overwhelmed, and sick people queuing in the street, Dr Trbovic has been tasked with the heartrending job of turning people away.
Dr Trbovic writes:
Soon after arriving in Monrovia, I realised that my colleagues were overwhelmed by the scale of the Ebola outbreak. Our treatment centre – the biggest Médecins Sans Frontières has ever run – was full, and Stefan, our field coordinator, was standing at the gate turning people away.
On an Médecins Sans Frontières assignment you have to be flexible. This wasn’t a job that we had planned for anyone to do, but somebody had to do it – and so I put myself forward.
For the first three days that I stood at the gate it rained hard. People were drenched, but they carried on waiting because they had nowhere else to go.
The first person I had to turn away was a father who had brought his sick daughter in the trunk of his car. He was an educated man, and he pleaded with me to take his teenage daughter, saying that whilst he knew we couldn’t save her life, at least we could save the rest of his family from her. At that point I had to go behind one of the tents to cry. I wasn’t ashamed of my tears, but I knew I had to stay strong for my colleagues – if we all started crying, we’d really be in trouble.
Other families just pulled up in cars, let the sick person out and then drove off, abandoning them. One mother tried to leave her baby on a chair, hoping that if she did, we would have no choice but to care for the child.
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Thank you for what you do - an amazing champion for courage and care. Let's start a campaign to support mamamia! On a crowd funding page?!!!
The people in these treatment centres are truly amazing, doing what they do despite the great personal risks involved shows great compassion and bravery given as of last month more than 240 health care workers have developed the disease in Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone, and more than 120 have died. With reports in some areas the number of infected people are doubling every three weeks Some agencies are predicting around 20,000 + people infected by the end of this year. Should the world be sending medical people to help or given the risks involved should it be voluntary only?, should we be more focused on preventing more people from becoming infected than the ones that already are? (both would be ideal), or given the spread on the CDC map should we be focusing more on containment?