Sheriff Mahmud Ismail
Sierra Leone Telegraph: 19 January 2015
When the Ebola virus struck Sierra Leone eight months ago in May 2014, it did so with extraordinary barbarity. Like an overpowering insurgent, it sought to demoralize the strongest among those who battled its ferocious onslaught.
It practically decapitated the resistance and unleashed a reign of terror on the foot soldiers. Sierra Leone’s foremost specialist in hemorrhagic diseases, Dr. Umar Khan succumbed three months into the Ebola outbreak. Soon after, several senior doctors – ten in all – perished.
About 200 health workers – nurses, midwives, lab technicians, ambulance drivers, and other support staff- have also fallen in the combat against this dreadful disease.
As the virus pounded on, its savagery forced some health workers to tactically retreat. Those who held their positions continue to do so with the gallantry of true patriots.
Ebola is a strange malady in Sierra Leone. And so, knowledge about it was as low as the logistics to fend it off was inadequate.
Yet, those men and women fought on and suffered death in the line of service, just as the survivors continue to endure the villainy of this virus.
But sadly, surviving health workers are now confronted with yet another battle – stigmatization and rejection.
While some have been evicted, or are being threatened with eviction from rented apartments, others are being taunted. The consequences are appalling.
Take Mohamed Sidie Sheriff. He is a lab technician with over 18 years in the public service. He was infected trying to collect blood specimen from a victim. After his discharged from the Hastings Treatment Center, he experienced bouts of stigmatization in his community.
Sheriff, a very communicative and highly courageous gentleman explains that he noticed a group of people pointing fingers at him; “so I told them – yes I was infected with Ebola, but I have recovered”.
The greatest worry for this instantly gelling personality is the eviction hanging over the heads of his family.
Soon after he resumed work, his landlords raised concern. “I tried to explain to them that there was no reason to worry because being a survivor means that I am even safer now”.
“This is a call to service to save our compatriots” he went on. “Besides, this is my source of livelihood, if I do not go back to work, how do I pay your rent”, he reasoned.
But his explanation has not changed the mind of his landlord. Sheriff’s appeal is for government housing accommodation or some dependable alternative accommodation to be made available.
Another surviving health worker is Amadu Bah. He is a young lab technician working at the Magburaka Government Hospital, in the Tonkolili district, in the north of the country. The story about his infection is similar, but his problem is different.
After recovering from the Ebola virus, he went back to work happily and was eager to meet with colleagues and friends. Being a survivor, he felt comfortable to hug and attempted to do so.
The snub that he experienced, hit him like a thunderbolt, and he doesn’t seem to have recovered yet from that shock. Bah looks nervous and somewhat incoherent- quite unwell, but this time from another infirmity.
He recounts that because of the rejection he suffered, he became depressed and had to be admitted at Sierra Leone’s only psychiatric hospital. “People told me that after that shocking snub, I lost my balance and for several days I was in the streets behaving like an evangelist – preaching the gospel”.
Bah has not fully recovered and he knows it. “I am feeling better now, but I think it will take some time for me to be fully back on”, he said.
Medical experts say, once survived, the only possibility of transmitting the virus is through sexual intercourse, because the virus remains in the semen for at least three months. Otherwise, there is no chance of transmission of the virus through body contact.
This ignominy of stigmatizing Ebola survivor – in particular health workers, is completely unnecessary, and is unacceptable. It’s a scar on the conscience of the perpetrators.
Certainly, frontline health workers deserve better, and Sheriff and Bah need urgent attention.
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