Families torn apart by Ebola

Families torn apart by Ebola

Shadow

JF-Expert Member
Joined
May 19, 2008
Posts
2,897
Reaction score
677
Families torn apart by Ebola: Photographer risks his own life to chronicle harrowing scenes in Liberia as doctors warn disease is out of control



  • Medics have likened the outbreak in west Africa to a state of war
  • Doctors Without Borders say the epidemic could last for another 6 months
  • One medic added that there is no way of knowing the true scale of deaths
  • Claims many of the sick are hidden at home rather than seeking treatment
  • WHO says it is coordinating a 'massive scale-up' of its bid to tackle Ebola
  • Added that the epidemic in West Africa has been vastly underestimated
  • Explained that extraordinary measures are need to contain spread of Ebola
  • Some athletes from west Africa are banned from attending Youth Olympics
  • Competitors in combat sports and swimming are not allowed to take part

As the Ebola outbreak continues to spread in West Africa - the current death toll standing at more than 1,000 - one photographer has bravely travelled to Monrovia, Liberia to chronicle work on the frontline. The pictures, by John Moore, from Getty Images, capture the harrowing scenes of families torn apart by the deadly disease, along with the medical workers battling to save the sick...
International doctors have admitted they don't know the true scale of deaths from the deadly Ebola virus warning the disease is spreading faster than the response.
The group Doctors Without Borders (Medecin Sans Frontieres) have likened the outbreak in west Africa to a state of war and said that the epidemic could last another six months.
Meanwhile, a medical worker on the frontline of tackling the disease in Liberia says response teams are unable to document all the cases erupting as many of the sick are being hidden at home rather than taken to Ebola treatment centres.
Scroll down for video


article-2725754-208DBBB000000578-604_964x615.jpg

A mother and child stand on top of a mattress in an Ebola isolation station in Liberia for suspected victims of the virus


article-2725754-208DBC6C00000578-246_964x618.jpg

A sick child lies on a mattress in a former classroom in a primary school, which has been transformed into an Ebola ward


article-2725754-208D951600000578-221_964x622.jpg

A woman stands over her husband with her head in her hands, after he staggered and fell, knocking him unconscious in an Ebola ward in Liberia


article-2725754-208D942100000578-423_964x626.jpg

Workers wearing protective clothing and masks look on as the woman desperately tries to help her husband who has fallen to the ground


article-2725754-208D977B00000578-634_964x625.jpg

The ward, in a former primary school, is where people suspected of having the virus are sent by health workers


article-2725754-208D8CF700000578-233_964x619.jpg

Patients in the Ebola isolation centre are forced to sleep on mattresses on the floor after being sent to the facility suspected of having the disease

article-2725754-208892EF00000578-9_966x625.jpg


Three-year-old Nino sits in a newly opened Ebola isolation centre set up by the Liberian health ministry in a closed school

article-2725754-2088928F00000578-725_964x634.jpg


Children sit in the isolation ward as the disease continues to spread in West Africa

Tarnue Karbbar, who works for the aid group Plan International in northern Liberia says in the last several days, up to 75 new cases a day are emerging in single districts.
He also added that those who have succumbed to the deadly virus are buried before teams can get to the area.
He said: 'Our challenge now is to quarantine the area to successfully break the transmission.'
It comes as Joanne Liu, international president of Doctors Without Borders told reporters in Geneva on Friday that there is no sign of stopping the disease.


article-2725754-208E266800000578-342_964x617.jpg

Getty Images staff photographer John Moore wears protective clothing, knows as personal protective equipment (PPE), before joining a Liberian burial team set to remove the body of an Ebola victim from her home

article-2725754-208DD28C00000578-768_964x646.jpg

Neighbours watch as a son prepares his father to be taken to an Ebola isolation centre yesterday

article-2725754-208DBC2C00000578-6_966x622.jpg




article-2725754-208DD38900000578-559_470x423.jpg


A son tries to rouse his father in their one-room home (left) before he is taken to an Ebola ward in Liberia; right, a man stands next to the coffin of Dr Modupeh Cole, a doctor from Sierra Leone, who succumbed to the deadly Ebola virus
article-2725754-208B531400000578-720_470x423.jpg

The facility was constructed to house a surging number of patients diagnosed with Ebola in three west African countries

article-2725754-20894AB200000578-379_964x633.jpg

An Ebola victim is loaded on to a truck by a government burial team at a facility in Kailahun in Sierra Leone

article-2725754-208B4FDB00000578-503_966x671.jpg

The team then spray the coffin with disinfectant at the facility set up by Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders)

article-2725754-208DF0E200000578-860_964x635.jpg


A man carries a child through the streets near an Ebola isolation ward. Ebola, which causes a high fever, bleeding and vomiting, has no cure and no licensed treatment

She said: 'We're running behind a train that is going forward.
'And it literally is faster than what we're bringing in terms of a response.'

The doctors' warnings come as a World Health Organisation official claimed that Ebola treatment centres are filling up faster than they can be provided in west Africa.
WHO spokesman in Geneva Gregory Hartl said: 'The flood of patients into every newly opened treatment center is evidence that the numbers aren't keeping up.'

article-2725754-208DF80F00000578-896_964x581.jpg

A security guard walks atop the roof of an abandoned hotel in Monrovia

article-2725754-208BD67300000578-347_964x645.jpg

Chinese doctors put on protective clothing and masks before starting work at the Harman Road Hospital in Freetown, Sierra Leone

article-2725754-208BD69500000578-217_470x423.jpg


article-2725754-208BD6A100000578-753_470x423.jpg


Chinese doctors came to the hospital, which had to have an overall disinfection after receiving a patient with Ebola. Right, a doctor works in the ophthalmologist clinic in the King Harman Hospital, which has treated Ebola patients

He added that an 80-bed treatment centre opened in Liberia's capital Monrovia in recent days and filled up immediately. The next day, dozens more people showed up to be treated.
Meanwhile, he said that experts who are going house-to-house in Kenema, Sierra Leone, in search of infected people are discovering more cases.
Earlier the UN organisation had said the epidemic had been 'vastly' underestimated and that extraordinary measures are needed to contain the disease.
The Geneva-based organisation said in a statement that it was co-ordinating a 'massive scale-up of the international response' in a bid to tackle the spread of the Ebola.
The death toll from the condition has now climbed to 1,069 with most victims in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea.
The WHO said in the statement: 'The outbreak is expected to continue for some time. WHO's operational response plan extends over the next several months.s Ebola virus is like fighting a war

video-undefined-208D4EB200000578-758_636x358.jpg



SOURCE
: Daily mail



 
Hapa tuombe na kumtegemea Mungu kwa kiasi kikubwa zaidi kuliko kutegemea wenzetu wa mipakani na viwanja vya ndege, rushwa ndiyo itatuangamiza
 
Bongo na hii fiesta huko mipakani tutakwisha
 
hiyo pctr ya mwisho kilema anamshika simba ni nn,
simba nao wana ebola ama
 
Ni kweli. Sipati picha na hekaheka zetu kwenye daladala. Mungu tuepushe na ugonjwa huu na uwape nafuu waliokwisha ugua Ebola. Amina.
 
Duh! Ni zaidi ya noma. Pole zao sana Hawa wapendwa.
 
Hii ni hatari sana. Tuombe yasitukute haya coz ninavyofahamu watanzania sisi ni wavivu kiasi kwamba endapo hili janga likija hapa kwetu usishangae viongozi wetu wakakwea pipa kwenda ulaya.
 
Mungu atusaidie maana hii Biological weapon ina nguvu kuliko tunavyofikiria!
 
Back
Top Bottom