by Ayesha Gyening
Fatu Kekula, student nurse, saves her family from Ebola |
As Ebola
reaches Europe, and Jeremy Hunt has told Britain that we should expect ‘ten
cases by Christmas’ I wanted to share an inspirational story about the epidemic.
Ebola, which has killed more than 4,000
people in West Africa, and is rapidly spreading across the globe, is a virus
that causes viral haemorrhagic fever and has been
deemed the ‘most severe acute health
emergency in modern times’ by The World Health Organisation as the number of
cases hit 8,400.
70% of the
people who catch it are killed, a terrifying figure. What’s even more worrying
is that symptoms may only appear up to 21 days after infection so it is
difficult to identify if you have the virus thus enabling it to be easily
spread. There is also no vaccination, which is why Fatu Kekula’s story is so amazing.
When her 53 year old father, Moses,
developed a fever in Liberia, Fatu, a trainee nurse, took him to the nearest
hospital. It was there that he unknowingly lay down in a bed where a patient
had just died of Ebola, and contracted the virus, which can be spread through
bodily fluids. The hospital soon closed down because nurses started dying of Ebola.
Although she was rung by the family doctor, urging her to
stop risking her life by caring for her family and leave them to die, selfless twenty
two year old Fatu Kekula was able to keep three out of the four members of her
family who were infected with Ebola alive after they were turned away by four
hospitals who were full and unprepared for the over flow of people. After
returning home with her father, who then infected the rest of her family, she
called for an ambulance every day for two weeks, yet her calls were ignored.
Fatu's family: sister, mother and father |
In fact, lack
of space in hospitals is a huge problem in Liberia, with many desperately ill patients lying motionless on the ground;
too weak to even get up to go inside. In one video you can see a little boy
attempt to get out of an ambulance and walk into a hospital, only to collapse
to the ground, where he remained, unaided the hospital workers. It is ironic
that although he was only metres away from help, he was still suffering.
Faced with the chance of losing her
entire family, Fatu, who is in her final year of nursing school, took it upon
herself to care for them, with the only help being a phone call from the family
doctor who refused to go to her home.
Deciding to take matters into her own
hands, she set up an isolated room to treat her family in, and through use of
what’s been called, ‘the trash bag method’ managed to stay healthy and prevent
infection. This method, which is now being taught to other West Africans,
involves donning socks, with plastic bags over them, rain boots, four sets of
gloves, a coat, a mask and a plastic bag over her hair. She would change this
outfit several times a day, and this combined with the cost of blood pressure
medicine, antibiotics, analgesics, and antiretroviral medicine used for AIDS
patients, in addition to an IV through which she fed her father, meant that she
quickly spent $600. However, it was worth it, as she managed to stay healthy, when more that 300 health care workers have
become infected.
On the eighteenth day the ambulance
arrived, but it was too late for her cousin, Alfred, who died in the hospital.
Luckily, the rest of her family survived with a
25% death rate that is remarkably better than the estimated Ebola death rate of 70%. Now Fatu wants to spread hope, and pass on her
knowledge on to other families. She is also teaching others about her ‘trash
bag method’ through workshops organized by the Ministry of Health.
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