Saa Sabas an Ebola Survivor |
There is no cure or vaccine to treat
Ebola, but the aid agency MSF has shown it doesn't have to be a death sentence
if treated early. Ebola typically kills 90% of patients but the death rate in
this outbreak has dropped to roughly 60%.
One man who survived the disease
describes how the virus took hold.
How did you contract Ebola?
I am an agronomist
and I have two children, one boy and one girl. I work in the pharmacy at the
health center of Gueckedou in southern Guinea. When my father was
hospitalized at the health center I naturally volunteered to be at his bedside
so other family members would not have to make the daily trek of tens of
kilometers, traversing the trails between their village and the facility. I cleaned
him when he vomited and also did his laundry. I also often gave him food and
drink. He had diarrhea at least eight times per day but I did not know he was
suffering from Ebola.
Five days after being hospitalized,
[my father] passed away. After his death the medical staff realized he had
presented Ebola symptoms and as I had close contact with him, it meant that I
was at risk. So they told me that I needed to be followed up for 21 days and if
ever I felt a small fever I had to come to the health center. The countdown
then started for me: after nine days I got fever and this persisted until the
11th day. Finally I went to the treatment center -- where I did an Ebola test
which was positive.
What were the symptoms? How
did you feel while you were ill?
I first got a fever which persisted.
My body temperature reached nearly 40C (104 degrees Fahrenheit). After that I
had diarrhea, vomits, dysentery and hiccups [all symptoms of Ebola]. I went to
the toilet several times a day and I felt so tired and uncomfortable.
I received medical assistance at the
Ebola treatment center, put in place at the health centre of Gueckedou. The
medical staff provided me with oral medications and infusions. They also
provided me with food. I suffered at lot in the beginning with diarrhoea and
hiccups but with the treatment I started to feel better.
What was the initial
reaction in your home village after you recovered?
Joy, for my family because everyone
thought that I would not survive this disease as many others people had died.
However before the medical staff released me to go back to my family they
tested me three times to make sure that I really had recovered. Afterwards they
gave me a certificate of discharge. They also visited my family, the leaders
and elders of my community to inform them that I had recovered and I was no
longer contagious. Despite this, I was stigmatized. Some people avoided me in
the beginning but now, over time, they have learned to accept me. Now they call
me "anti-Ebola."
Some people avoided me in the beginning but now, over time,
they have learned to accept me. Now they call me 'anti-Ebola'
Saa Sabas
Saa Sabas
You're now working with Red
Cross volunteers in Guinea
to raise awareness of the disease: what lessons are passing on?
I am part of a team of Red Cross
volunteers, visiting communities, raising awareness on how to prevent the
spread of the disease. One of the messages I try to pass on to the communities
is to go early to the health center when sufferers first feel symptoms. The
treatment is free of charge. People there will give you food and clothes and you
can get a chance to survive.
What's your message for the
outside world about Ebola? How can they help?
Everyone should be mobilized. We
need to educate people and increase the sensitization. This is the key to stop
the dangerous disease Ebola.
Many people have already died, that
is why I participate in activities [to educate people]. I urge people to go the
isolation and treatment centres if they experience the earliest symptoms of the
disease, to increase their chance of being cured and surviving.
Source: CNN
1 comment:
this is a miracle.
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