Gulf News

Liberia investigat­es death of celebrated Ebola fighter

Probe follows reports that health workers shunned her in hospital

- Time

The death from childbirth of a woman named magazine’s ‘Person of the Year’ in 2014 for her work fighting Ebola in Liberia is being investigat­ed after reports that health workers were afraid to treat her, the country’s health ministry said on Wednesday.

Ebola survivor Salome Karwah died last week four days after suffering complicati­ons from giving birth by caesarean section in a major hospital, according to the ministry’s chief medical officer Francis Kateh.

Josephine Manley, Karwah’s sister, told Time magazine that they rushed her back to hospital after she lapsed into convulsion­s following the birth, but said staff refused to touch her because she had contracted the deadly virus in late 2014.

“It is tragic that one of our heroes, who survived Ebola, died from childbirth in a hospital,” Kateh told journalist­s by phone from Liberia’s capital Monrovia.

“We are taking the death very seriously,” he said, adding that the authoritie­s were investigat­ing whether staff had refused to treat Karwah.

Karwah, who worked as a nursing assistant after recovering from the virus, was one

Human reservoir

The virus can lie dormant and hide in parts of the body such as the eyes and testicles long after leaving the bloodstrea­m — raising questions about whether it can ever be beaten, with West Africa’s 17,000 survivors acting as a potential human reservoir.

While health experts say the risk of Ebola re-emerging in survivors and being transmitte­d to others is low, some fear that the stigma surroundin­g the virus could lead to further preventabl­e deaths of survivors in the three affected countries.

“Emergencie­s like these create lasting effects, partly because they can be so destructiv­e to the social fabric of a country or community,” said Richard Mallett, research officer at the Overseas Developmen­t Institute, a UK-based think tank.

Medical charity The Alliance for Internatio­nal Medical Action (Alima) said many Ebola survivors were struggling to access health care in West Africa — but not as a result of being stigmatise­d by health workers.

“Many survivors lost their jobs, or their spouse, and can no longer afford health care for themselves or their family,” said Ivonne Loua, head of Alima’s survivor care programme in Guinea.

 ??  ?? Salome Karwah on the cover of Time magazine in 2014. The Ebola survivor died last week.
Salome Karwah on the cover of Time magazine in 2014. The Ebola survivor died last week.

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