Wall Street Journal: West Africa, PIH Resolve to Build Health Systems

Posted on Jun 5, 2015

Wall Street Journal: West Africa, PIH Resolve to Build Health Systems
Partners In Health Chief Strategist Dr. Paul Farmer visits the doffing area of Maforki Ebola Treatment Unit in Port Loko, Sierra Leone, in January. Rebecca E. Rollins / Partners In Health

The Wall Street Journal takes a look at the challenges facing Liberia and Sierra Leone’s Ebola-wracked health care systems, and Partners In Health’s efforts to help in each country:

HARPER, Liberia—J.J. Dossen Memorial Hospital, on the southeastern tip of this nation recently declared free of Ebola, has three doctors and spotty electricity. Sixteen of its 46 nurses left during the Ebola crisis. When two motorcycle accident victims needed X-rays, the hospital dispatched them in its only ambulance on a bumpy eight-hour ride to the nearest facility with a machine.

The deadly disease may have receded, but it is still exacting a heavy toll. Run-down, poorly staffed and equipped health facilities allowed Ebola to explode. Since it was identified in early 2014, the epidemic has claimed the lives of 507 health-care workers in three West African countries, all of which already were short of medical professionals. The health-care system was so overwhelmed with Ebola victims that many other patients couldn’t receive care for malaria, heart disease or pregnancy complications. That bill is coming due.

“There are more people who are going to die from Ebola, but not have Ebola,” says Paul Farmer, a Harvard professor and co-founder of the Boston-based charity Partners In Health.

Read the full article.

Dr. Paul Farmer sharing a friendly moment with one of his staff.

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