If the Ebola epidemic devastating the countries of Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone had instead struck Washington, New York or Boston there is no doubt that the health systems in place could contain and then eliminate the disease. Hospitals would isolate suspected cases. Health workers would be outfitted with proper protective clothing and equipment. Doctors and nurses would administer effective supportive care, including comprehensive management of dehydration, impaired kidney and liver function, bleeding disorders and electrolyte disturbance. Labs would dispose of hazardous materials properly. And a public health command centre would both direct the response and communicate clearly to the public about the outbreak.
Ebola is spread by direct physical contact with infected bodily fluids, making it less transmissible than an airborne disease such as tuberculosis. A functioning health system can stop Ebola transmission and, we believe, save the lives of a majority of those who are afflicted. So why isn’t this happening in West Africa, where more than 1,500 people have already died? As international groups pull staff from the three countries, airlines suspend commercial flights and neighbouring countries close their borders, some have argued that it will be next to impossible to contain the outbreak — that public health systems are too weak, the cost of providing effective care too high and health workers too scarce.
But Ebola has been stopped in every other outbreak to date, and it can be stopped in West Africa, too. The crisis we are watching unfold derives less from the virus itself and more from deadly and misinformed biases that have led to a disastrously inadequate response to the outbreak. These biases, tragically, live on, despite evidence that disproves them again and again.
Just 15 years ago, western experts said confidently that there was little that rich countries could do to stop the global Aids crisis, which was killing millions of people in Africa and elsewhere.
Today, thanks to leadership and advocacy from former US president George W. Bush, a bipartisan coalition of members in Congress, courageous faith-based organisations and US government researchers such as Tony Fauci and Mark Dybul, more than 10 million Africans are getting life-saving treatment. The take-no-action argument has been used over the years as an excuse not to mount an effort to control drug-resistant tuberculosis, malaria and many other diseases that afflict primarily the poor.
But the reality is this: The Ebola crisis today is a reflection of long-standing and growing inequalities of access to basic health care. Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone do not have the staff, stuff and systems required to halt the outbreak on their own. According to its ministry of health, before the outbreak Liberia had just 50 doctors working in public health facilities serving a population of 4.3 million. To halt this epidemic, we need an emergency response that is equal to the challenge. We need international organisations and wealthy countries that possess the required resources and knowledge to step forward and partner with West African governments to mount a serious, coordinated response as laid out in the World Health Organization’s Ebola response roadmap.
Many are dying needlessly. Historically, in the absence of effective care, common acute infections have been characterised by high mortality rates. What is happening with Ebola in Africa has been no different.
A 1967 outbreak in Germany and Yugoslavia of Marburg haemorrhagic fever — a disease similar to Ebola — had a 23 per cent fatality rate. Compare that to an 86 per cent rate for cases across sub-Saharan Africa in the years since. The difference is that Germany and Yugoslavia had functioning health systems and resources to treat patients effectively. The West African countries coping with Ebola today have neither. With a strong public health response led by the United Nations, the World Health Organisation, the US, Britain, France and other wealthy nations, the virus would be contained and the fatality rate — which, based on the most conservative estimates, exceeds 50 per cent in the present outbreak — would drop dramatically, perhaps to below 20 per cent.
We are at a dangerous moment in these three West African countries, all fragile states that have had strong economic growth in recent years after decades of wars and poor governance. It would be scandalous to let this crisis escalate further when we have the knowledge, tools and resources to stop it. Tens of thousands of lives, the future of the region and hard-won economic and health gains for millions hang in the balance.
— Washington Post
Jim Yong Kim is president of the World Bank. Paul Farmer is the Kolokotrones University professor at Harvard University. Farmer and Kim, who are infectious disease physicians, are co-founders of the non-profit organisation Partners in Health.