It's been 42
days since the last new case
Nigeria
and the World Health Organization were poised to declare the country free of
Ebola on Monday, a containment victory in an outbreak that has stymied other
countries’ response efforts.
The milestone was set for 9 a.m. local time or 4 a.m., E.T., 42 days since the last new case. The outbreak has killed more than 4,500 in West Africa is remains unchecked in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea, so Nigeria is by no means immune to another outbreak.
“It’s
possible to control Ebola. It’s possible to defeat Ebola. We’ve seen it here in
Nigeria,” Nigerian Minister of Health Onyebuchi Chukwu told TIME. “If any cases
emerge in the future, it will be considered—by international standards—a
separate outbreak. If that happens, Nigeria will be ready and able to confront
it exactly as we have done with this outbreak.”
For
the WHO to declare Nigeria’s Ebola-free, the country had to make it 42 days
with no new cases (double the incubation period), verify that it actively
sought out all possible contacts, and show negative test results for any
suspected cases.
Nigeria
had 20 cases of Ebola after a Liberian-American man named Patrick Sawyer flew
into Lagos collapsed at the airport. Health care workers treating Sawyer were
infected, and as it spread it ultimately killed eight people, a low number next
to the thousands of cases and deaths in other countries. Nigeria’s health
system is considered more robust, but there was significant concern from
experts that a case would pop up in one of the country’s dense-populated slums
and catch fire.
So
what did Nigeria do right? Chukwu and Dr. Faisal Shuaib of the country’s Ebola
Emergency Operation Center, broke it down for TIME.
Preparing
early. Nigeria knew it was possible a case of
Ebola would make it into the country, so officials got to work early by
training health care workers on how to manage the disease, and disseminating
information so the country knew what to expect.
Declaring an emergency—right away. When Nigeria had its first confirmed case of Ebola, the government declared a national public health emergency immediately. This allowed the Ministry of Health to form its Ebola Emergency Operations Center (EOC). The EOC is an assembly of public health experts within Nigeria as well as the WHO, Centers for Disease Control (CDC), and groups like Doctors Without Borders. “[We] used a war-room approach to coordinate the outbreak response,” Shuaib said. “So you have a situation whereby government and staff of international development agencies are co-located in a designated facility where they are able to agree on strategies, develop one plan and implement this plan together.”
The
EOC was in charge of contact tracing (the process of identifying and monitoring
people who may have had direct or indirect contact with Ebola patients),
implementing strict procedures for handling and treating patients, screening
all individuals arriving or departing the country by land, air and sea, and
communicating with the community. Some workers went door-to-door to offer
Ebola-related education, and others involved religious and professional
leaders. Social media was a central part of the education response.
Training
local doctors. Nigerian doctors were
trained by Doctors Without Borders and WHO, and treated patients in shifts with
their oversight.
Managing fear. “Expectedly, people were scared of contracting the disease,” Shuaib said. “In the beginning, there was also some misinformation about available cures, so fear and inaccurate rumors had to be actively managed.” Nigeria used social media to ramp up awareness efforts, and publicized patients who were successfully treated and discharged. “People began to realize that contracting Ebola was not necessarily a death sentence,” Shuai said. “Emphasizing that reporting early to the hospital boosts survival gave comfort that [a person] has some level of control over the disease prognosis.”
Keeping
borders open. Nigeria has not
closed its borders to travelers from Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia, saying
the move would be counterproductive. “Closing borders tends to reinforce panic
and the notion of helplessness,” Shuaib said. “When you close the legal points
of entry, then you potentially drive people to use illegal passages, thus
compounding the problem.” Shuaib said that if public health strategies are
implemented, outbreaks can be controlled, and that closing borders would only
stifle commercial activities in the countries whose economies are already
struggling due to Ebola.
Remaining
prepared for more patients. Even
though this outbreak was contained, Nigeria is not slowing down its training
and preparations for the possibility of more cases. “Outbreak response
preparedness
is a continuous process that requires constant review of the level of the
response mechanisms in place to ensure that the health system is ready to jump
into action at all levels,” Shuaib said. “There is no alternative to preparedness.”
Advocating
for more international response.
“The global community needs to consistently come together, act as one in any
public health emergency, whether it is Ebola or a natural disaster.” Shuaib
said. “While a lot has been done, it still falls short of what is necessary to
get ahead of the curve. We must act now, not tomorrow, not next week.”
Culled
from time
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