Communicating in a Crisis like Ebola: Facts and Figures

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Author(s)
Smout, E.
Publication language
English
Pages
13pp
Date published
29 Apr 2015
Publisher
SciDevNet
Type
Articles
Keywords
Disasters, Epidemics & pandemics, Urban
Countries
Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone
Organisations
London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine

Ebola’s challenges hold lessons for other health emergencies. Elizabeth Smout examines what worked, and what didn’t.

The ongoing Ebola outbreak in West Africa has devastated Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone. It is the largest epidemic of the disease ever recorded (see Figures 1 and 2). The economic impact is huge, accounting for as much as US$25.2 billion in lost GDP (gross domestic product) in 2014-15, according to the World Bank. [1] The number of deaths is an obvious measure of the human cost, but it doesn’t tell the whole story. The virus is transmitted through behaviours that represent the best of human nature — caring for the sick, showing reverence for the dead, showing affection — and this epidemic has torn through the social fabric of entire communities.