As many of you know, I worked as a doctor in West Africa during the 2014-2016 Ebola outbreak. I was infected but lucky to have survived the disease myself.
So much of what I’m seeing now has parallels to what we saw then. 🧵👇
People would get tested and it could be days before we got a result back.
The whole time people were quarantined, sometimes with people who ultimately tested positive.
We needed faster testing.
Lots of people are reporting getting tested over a week ago and still not having results.
To be helpful in ending this outbreak, testing results must come back quicker. We absolutely need to do better.
In West Africa, there were so many rumors that Ebola wasn’t real or that it was a disease brought in by outsiders like myself.
We wondered why Liberians couldn’t just quarantine to get the outbreak under control!?
But have we’ve cast such a critical eye on ourselves?
So many of us are unwilling to give up the most meaningful things in our culture - going to church or family gatherings - despite the risk.
Sure, Ebola and COVID19 aren’t the same, but don’t we all respond to unknown and scary threats in similar ways?
If #COVID19 has shown us anything, it’s that we’re not more prepared or much different than anyone else.
This @NPR story outlines how Rwanda - a middle income country in East Africa - has crushed the coronavirus with only a tiny fraction of the means and resources available in places like the US.
npr.org/sections/goats…
I’ve seen the destruction each can have on patients, on families, and in communities.
At a time of global crisis, we need global solidarity.
Because in the end and regardless of the virus, we’re all really the same.
And we all deserve better than this.