When Holding An Orphaned Baby Can Mean Contracting Ebola

Coyote

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Apr 17, 2009
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I was listening to this on the radio on the way to work...

It's hard to find words to express the feelings for these people. We freak out after one case in a nation that's super well equipt to handle disease outbreaks. These people have no options. The epidemic has also resulted in a huge number of orphans. One interview I heard was with young man who was one of the few survivors of an outbreak that killed his entire family. He was volunteering in the ebola clinics because it was the only way he felt he could atone for his survival.

...One of the many difficult aspects of working around the disease is not being able to comfort people who are grieving, Purfield and Dynes explain during a visit to StoryCorps in Atlanta. (Ebola is spread through contact with bodily fluids.)

"You can't touch anyone," says Purfield, 37. "You can't comfort them."

"Imagine losing 10 members of your family, and no one giving you a hug," replies Dynes, 39, a nurse epidemiologist.

One day, an Ebola-infected mother brought her baby into a hospital, Purfield recalls. The mother died, and the baby was left in a box.

"They tested the baby, and the baby was negative," says Purfield. "But I think the symptoms in babies and the disease progression in babies is different than adults.

"So the nurses would pick up and cuddle the baby. And they were taking care of the baby in the box," she continues.

Twelve of those nurses subsequently contracted Ebola, Purfield says. Only one survived.

"They couldn't just watch a baby sitting alone in a box," Dynes says.

The toll on Sierra Leone's local health care workers has been high. "By the time we had arrived," Dynes adds, "more than 20 nurses had died from Ebola. And nearly all of the phlebotomists had died. ... They've taken care of their own colleagues and watched them all die."

"And they still go back into the wards," says Purfield.

"It just hits you really hard, because you realize we're only here for five weeks, six weeks," Dynes says. "They're here for the long haul."
 

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