The Guinean Town That Overcame Ebola

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The Telimele district, with its 300,000-strong population, was relatively far from the country’s Ebola epicenter in the southeastern forest region. Dr. Maurice Ony Beuvogui, the director of the district hospital in Telimele, believed his 44-bed hospital was ready to meet the challenge. It was one of a few in the country with quality certification for infection prevention and control. As the outbreak progressed across the country, the national preparedness plan was activated and the district hospital staff attended training sessions on infection prevention and received Ebola protective equipment. They hoped it would not be needed.

Healthcare workers in Telimele, a Guinean town located some 270 kilometers north of the capital Conakry. Photo by T. Jasarevic, courtesy of WHO

The Telimele district, with its 300,000-strong population, was relatively far from the country’s Ebola epicenter in the southeastern forest region. Dr. Maurice Ony Beuvogui, the director of the district hospital in Telimele, believed his 44-bed hospital was ready to meet the challenge. It was one of a few in the country with quality certification for infection prevention and control. As the outbreak progressed across the country, the national preparedness plan was activated and the district hospital staff attended training sessions on infection prevention and received Ebola protective equipment. They hoped it would not be needed.

Early in May 2014, a woman from the nearby village of Sogoroya visited her sick uncle in Conakry. Soon after coming back, she came to the Telimele hospital with symptoms that were believed to be caused by typhoid fever. A few days later she returned and died after admission. Her mother and another family member came the same week with similar symptoms and also died in the hospital.

Two more people from the same household visited Sogoroya health centre. They did not want to go to Telimele because three of their family members had died there. Staff at the Telimele hospital suspected Ebola was at large, and the laboratory team went to the village to take samples.

By the time results came in from Conakry, it was clear that Ebola was in town. Five people were suspected to have the disease, and three had died. All of them had come from Sogoroya village.

Among the patients infected early on was Mohammed Issa Cisse, a nurse who was taking care of the first patients affected by Ebola. “The two weeks I spent in the treatment center were the worst in my life. I was seeing people dying around me while I was fighting for my own life,” he says.

Medécins Sans Frontières (MSF) was quick to respond; its team transformed one of the Sogoroya health center’s wings into an isolation area while building a treatment centre nearby that was opened within days. The World Health Organization (WHO) also sent a team of Ebola experts to provide technical support for overall coordination, surveillance and data collection.

The district authorities immediately put in place a crisis committee involving leaders of all aspects of life in Telimele. The committee agreed that it was critical to put out one strong message: Come early for treatment – you survive; you come late – you die. “We wanted people to trust our interventions,” says Beavogui. "Setting up the treatment center fast and near the sick people was vital.

MSF ran the treatment center with increased transparency, allowing family members to talk to their loved ones from a distance. Local health workers had credibility and were connected to the community – an essential factor in encouraging people to follow public health advice.

Religious and traditional leaders and the Griots – influential musicians in the villages – worked together to counteract unfounded rumours and gain the trust of the community. The district health authority rapidly organized a 14-person contact tracing team that cruised throughout the district on motorbikes. At the peak of the Telimele outbreak, the health of around 250 contacts was monitored.

All the additional confirmed cases – a total of 26 – were identified through contact tracing. Of the 26, 10 people died. The mortality rate of 38 percent was much lower than the approximately 60 percent average for Guinea overall.

Telimele has been Ebola-free since the end of July. How did they do it?

"Setting up the treatment center fast and near the sick people was vital, and having strong infection prevention measures at the hospital level reduced the risk of infection of health workers,” says Beavogui.

“There were some rumours about the origin of the disease, but once people saw that even health workers like myself could be infected, they trusted us more,” says Cisse who, after two weeks in the treatment center, tested negative for Ebola infection. He then immediately went to work at the MSF treatment center.

Elsewhere in Guinea – especially in the southeastern part of the country and in the capital, Conakry – Ebola transmission continues. Beavogui is cautious. “We know that if we don’t stop Ebola elsewhere in the country, the virus can come back here again. We have to be ready.”

Source: WHO

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