
More Fighting Ebola With Nothing but Hope..
Crouching towards a dirt road strewn with pebbles, Emmanuel Boyah, a Liberian physician assistant, grips a box of enormous yellow rubber boots with both hands.
Black shirt tucked into snug black pants, his role is made transparent by the bright yellow embroidery across his chest: “InternationalRescuses .Commitee.” Stacks of clean brown boxes surrounding him hold Bleach, latex gloves, and masks—weapons against Ebola. These supplies will be distributed to medical facilities across Lofa County, one of the hardest hit region in Liberia, where Reports News show more than 624 peoples deaths.
The supplies are reason for celebration, or at least a mini one, as evidenced by the half smile on Boyah’s round face. But peering more closely at the photograph, taken this week August, his weary brown eyes reveal a darker truth. In mere days these supplies will be gone, smeared with the contaminated blood, urine, semen, and saliva seeping out of victims, living and dead. More dangerous then useful, they will be sterilized. Burned. Discarded. Some lives will have been saved, but not enough. And there’s no way to know when the next shipment arrives.
Underneath the yellow boots image of Boyah, posted on his personal Facebook, a friend says “thank you” for his efforts. “We are trying to fight for the survival of our people. Ebola is very dangerous,” Boyah writes in reply. “But we have to fight.”
According to a report released this week by the World Health Organization, an estimated 240 health care workers have been infected with Ebola in West Africa. Of that number, at least 50 percent are already dead. For an international relief worker, contracting the virus likely means becoming the focus of headlines about high-tech aircrafts and secret serums. For a West African doctor in the same position, it means simply one less health care worker on a continent in desperate need of more.
For an international relief worker, contracting the virus likely means becoming the focus of headlines about high-tech aircrafts and secret serums. For a West African doctor, this means simply one less Health Care worker on a continent in desperate need of moreSee More News
