Called for Life: How Loving Our Neighbor Led Us into the Heart of the Ebola Epidemic

Dr. Kent and Amber Brantly (with David Thomas) tell of Dr. Brantly’s near-death encounter with the Ebola virus in Liberia. The first American diagnosed during the 2014 outbreak, Dr. Brantly’s ordeal—including his controversial evacuation to and hospitalization in the United States—received worldwide media attention. Interspersed in the account is the full story of how both Kent and his wife, Amber, sought to serve others in the name of Christ in Liberia. Then, when tragedy struck—as thousands, perhaps millions of people worldwide prayed for his life—miraculous events unfolded that resulted in Dr. Brantly’s flight to Emory University Hospital in Atlanta…and an eventual clean bill of health.
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Called for Life: How Loving Our Neighbor Led Us into the Heart of the Ebola Epidemic

Dr. Kent and Amber Brantly (with David Thomas) tell of Dr. Brantly’s near-death encounter with the Ebola virus in Liberia. The first American diagnosed during the 2014 outbreak, Dr. Brantly’s ordeal—including his controversial evacuation to and hospitalization in the United States—received worldwide media attention. Interspersed in the account is the full story of how both Kent and his wife, Amber, sought to serve others in the name of Christ in Liberia. Then, when tragedy struck—as thousands, perhaps millions of people worldwide prayed for his life—miraculous events unfolded that resulted in Dr. Brantly’s flight to Emory University Hospital in Atlanta…and an eventual clean bill of health.
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Called for Life: How Loving Our Neighbor Led Us into the Heart of the Ebola Epidemic

Called for Life: How Loving Our Neighbor Led Us into the Heart of the Ebola Epidemic

Called for Life: How Loving Our Neighbor Led Us into the Heart of the Ebola Epidemic

Called for Life: How Loving Our Neighbor Led Us into the Heart of the Ebola Epidemic

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Overview


Dr. Kent and Amber Brantly (with David Thomas) tell of Dr. Brantly’s near-death encounter with the Ebola virus in Liberia. The first American diagnosed during the 2014 outbreak, Dr. Brantly’s ordeal—including his controversial evacuation to and hospitalization in the United States—received worldwide media attention. Interspersed in the account is the full story of how both Kent and his wife, Amber, sought to serve others in the name of Christ in Liberia. Then, when tragedy struck—as thousands, perhaps millions of people worldwide prayed for his life—miraculous events unfolded that resulted in Dr. Brantly’s flight to Emory University Hospital in Atlanta…and an eventual clean bill of health.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781633893276
Publisher: christianaudio.com
Publication date: 07/21/2015
Edition description: Unabridged
Product dimensions: 6.38(w) x 5.44(h) x 0.56(d)

About the Author

Dr. Kent Brantly and his wife, Amber,, served as medical missionaries in Liberia with World Medical Mission, the medical arm of Samaritan’s Purse. After contracting the Ebola virus, Dr. Brantly was evacuated to Emory University Hospital in Atlantawhere he recovered and was later reunited with his family.Kent and Amber currently live with their children in Ft. Worth, where he practices medicine.

Read an Excerpt

Update for the Paperback Edition
 
Liberia was declared Ebola free by the World Health Organization on Janu­ary 14, 2016—for the third time. We are thankful this outbreak has come to an end, but much work remains to be done.
 
There are more than seventeen thousand Ebola survivors in West Africa. ELWA hospital is currently one of four centers in Monrovia providing health care for Ebola survivors, helping to manage the lingering effects of the disease and helping the survivors to rebuild their lives in the midst of continuing stigma and rejection by many parts of society. In addition to the huge number of survivors, there are also thousands of individuals widowed or orphaned by Ebola. The gov­ernments of West Africa are struggling to find ways to care for these innocent victims.
 
Samaritan’s Purse continues construction on a new hospital at ELWA, pro­jected to open by the end of summer 2016. (To learn more about this project, visit SamaritansPurse.org.) Work also continues in the development of methods for the prevention and treatment of Ebola Virus Disease.
 
In the time since the initial release of this book, many opportunities have been granted us to share our story before national and international leaders, aid workers, health-care professionals, college students, and faith groups. This has taken us around the globe, but perhaps the most meaningful journey of all was the trip our family took back to Liberia.
 
In June 2015, the four of us made the long journey over the ocean to visit old friends and see familiar places in Liberia. The time was too short, but the experi­ence brought healing and closure to an intense chapter in our family’s story.
 
We listened to our friends and coworkers tell how they have been affected by the Ebola outbreak. It was heart wrenching to see the pain in their faces as they recounted the stories of family members who had suffered and died in the Ebola treatment unit. We were struck by how grateful they all seemed to be, despite the circumstances and their deep grief; they all thanked God for getting them through.
 
We may never again live in our little house on the beach at ELWA, but we have been forever changed by our experiences and relationships there.
 
Kent has since reentered full-time medical practice in Fort Worth, Texas. He is working in the hospital system where he trained, taking care of patients and teaching family-medicine residents in advanced obstetrical care.
 
Amber volunteers in our children’s school and for World Relief Fort Worth as it helps to resettle refugees in new homes. She is also involved with women’s min­istries at our home church.
 
Some of the proceeds from the sale of this book have been given to the Pan-African Academy of Christian Surgeons in memory of Dr. Sarah Lantz. Dr. Lantz was Kent’s medical-school classmate and a fellow Samaritan’s Purse Post-Resident physician who worked in Zambia from January 2014 to August 2015, when she was diagnosed with stage IV breast cancer. She fought a courageous battle before she died on January 13, 2016. To learn how you can contribute to this endowed scholarship program for training African surgeons, please visit PAACS.net.
 
We continue to seek opportunities to love our neighbors where we are and are currently engaged in preparations for working overseas again. Though this Ebola outbreak is now part of history, the lessons learned through that crisis are still with us. There will be other disease outbreaks and other international disasters, such as the earthquakes in Nepal, the war in Syria, and the refugee crisis in the Middle East. And in all these situations, we must remember the lessons we learned through these events: we must choose compassion over fear.
 
Prologue
So What’s Next?

Kent, bud. We got your test result. And I’m really sorry to tell you that it is positive for Ebola.”
 
I had not expected to hear those words despite the mounting evidence over the past three days—the worsening symptoms, the repeated negative malaria tests—that would have led me to suspect Ebola had I been the doctor rather than the patient.
 
Our first Ebola patient had come to our hospital in Monrovia, Liberia, barely six weeks earlier. But we had worked under the strain of a looming Ebola outbreak for nearly three anxious months before then. For the thirty-eight years since Ebola Virus Disease had been identified, every outbreak had been limited to small rural communities.
 
This time, however, was different. This time, Ebola had found the perfect storm of factors, quickly spreading through three countries and into major urban centers.
 
Our hospital of forty-five to fifty beds hurriedly converted the chapel into a small isolation unit, hoping it would never be needed. When our first Ebola pa­tient arrived, we maintained the only treatment unit in all of southern Liberia.
 
In the beginning stages of what erupted into the worst Ebola outbreak the world has ever seen, I had learned to consider Ebola anytime a patient entered our emergency room with a fever and symptoms that, just a few months earlier, would have been suspected as likely malaria or typhoid fever. In fact, for the safety of our medical workers, we treated all febrile patients as though they had Ebola until proven otherwise. It was too risky not to.
 
The Ebola strain we observed carried a mortality rate of 70 percent. The death rate was even higher in our hospital, where only one of the dozens of patients who had tested positive for Ebola had survived.
 
One.
 
Ebola didn’t just kill our patients; it stripped them of their dignity. Ebola hu­miliated its victims by taking away control of their bodily functions. We con­stantly changed diapers and sheets and cleaned up patients, and we fed them when they could no longer do so themselves.
 
Unable to cure their disease, we focused on treating their sense of isolation that came from being in a treatment unit where only two groups of people were allowed inside. One group was the medical personnel always working with their own safety in the front of their minds in light of the disproportionate number of health-care workers contracting the disease. The second group was other Ebola patients, moaning and groaning in pain until their bodies could fight no longer.
 
For all but that one patient, a positive Ebola test had become a death sentence served out among suffering patients and cautious medical personnel—some un­known foreigners, even—outfitted so securely that only our eyes were visible through the protective goggles.
 
No families. No friends. No familiar faces. No human contact.
 
With no cure, no hope.
 
As the outbreak had worsened and our hospital worked to expand our capac­ity, I was named director of the treatment unit. I became the physician who en­sured that our staff was properly trained, repeatedly reassuring them that when we followed the protocols and worked together as a team, we were completely safe. The staff had trusted me too, because for each of my patients, I had determined to display compassion over fear.
 
And now Dr. Lance Plyler, the team leader responsible for managing our medical response to Ebola, was standing outside my bedroom window, because he could not come into my contaminated home, notifying me that I, too, had contracted the virus. Dr. John Fankhauser, my colleague and mentor in Liberia for nine busy months, stood beside my bed dressed in full personal protective equip­ment (PPE), just as I had stood beside the beds of too many patients in our Ebola unit, because he wanted to be with me when Lance delivered the news.
 
“I really wish you hadn’t said that,” I told Lance.
 
I was so sick at that point that I don’t remember saying those words; that is Lance’s recollection of my reaction. But I do remember what I said immediately after.
 
“Okay, so what is next? What’s our plan? What are we going to do?”
 
I am a doctor, trained to respond to a bad test result by creating a plan. More importantly, I am a husband and a father, and my thoughts turned to my beautiful wife and children back home in the United States. I might not see them, much less touch them, ever again.
 
I stared out our bedroom window, looking to Lance.
 
“How am I going to tell Amber?”

Crisis

Chapter 1
Defenseless

Kent
This is it. Everything is about to change.
Our first Ebola patient looked up at me weakly as I knelt next to her bed of blankets on the patio near the hospital pharmacy. The disease we had prepared for while praying we would never see it had, indeed, arrived at our hospital, and I realized I was about to set the tone for the rest of our time treating Ebola patients—however long that might prove to be.
 
Dressed in full protective gear, I offered the young woman my right hand protected by two surgical gloves. She grabbed hold.
 
“Felicia, my name is Dr. Brantly,” I said. “This is David. He’s one of our nurses.”
 
David greeted her.
 
“We are going to take good care of you here,” I assured Felicia.
 
It was Wednesday night, June 11, 2014. Our hospital had the only Ebola treat­ment unit in Liberia’s capital city of Monrovia, and the phone call had come earlier in the evening from the country’s Ministry of Health. Two suspected Ebola pa­tients were being transferred to us from a hospital in the northern suburb of New Kru Town.
 
Three members of a family had died in the past week, and Ebola was the suspected cause. Two other family members had become sick and were at that hospital. As we began preparing our Ebola treatment unit, which had been sitting empty for months, we did not know when to expect the two.
 
We were not even sure they would actually come to us.
 
Nancy Writebol came in to help. Nancy, personnel director for Serving In Mission (SIM) missionaries in Liberia, had volunteered to serve as the unit’s hygienist when we ramped up our Ebola response. Nancy changed the sheets on the beds and mixed a sufficient quantity of the bleach-water solution for decontamination.
 
Dr. Debbie Eisenhut (known as Dr. Debbie) volunteered to stay at the hospital and said she would call me at home if anything developed. A little later, Debbie did call, telling me an ambulance had arrived at the hospital with two patients, a man in his midforties and his niece. I returned to the hospital.
 
As our two patients waited outside in the ambulance, we had to recruit two staff members willing to be the first to risk their lives to work in the unit with our first Ebola patients. I did not expect anyone to want to sign up.
 
I pleaded with some of the nurses: “Look, this is somebody’s sister, somebody’s mother, somebody’s daughter. Somebody’s uncle, somebody’s brother, somebody’s cousin. We’ve got to take care of them. Think if this was your family member.”
 
Our medical director at ELWA, Dr. Jerry Brown, joined in recruiting nurses by phone.
 
Two volunteered for the job: Louise, an ER nurse, and David, a nurse’s aide.
 
Preparing the unit, assembling the staff, and getting the four of us dressed in PPE required a couple of hours. Debbie made several trips outside to the ambu­lance during that span. Each time Debbie went outside, she told everyone to re­main near the ambulance and not to get out to walk around or enter the hospital until we came to get them.
 
There were no ambulance services in Monrovia. The only ambulances were owned by hospitals and the government for transporting patients from one hospital to another. An ambulance was typically a modified Land Cruiser with sideways-facing seats in the back. The crew sat in the front seat with no divider between them and the patient or patients in the back.
 
The ambulance outside our hospital contained three crew members, the two patients, and two family members—a man in his thirties and a boy who appeared to be twelve.
 
As we were preparing the unit, the uncle, who had been alert and talking, became very still and silent. The two family members helped Felicia climb down out of the ambulance and lie on the asphalt road behind it.
 
One of Felicia’s relatives then grew angry at having to wait and stormed the entrance to the emergency room, kicking a hole in the door. He accused us of delaying care for Felicia and not being willing to admit her.
 
We tried to convince the family that we were not ignoring them, that we were preparing the best we could to take care of Felicia the right way and safely. He calmed down and returned to the ambulance.
 
Then it began raining. I do not know if Felicia walked or if she was carried, but they moved her to a covered porch in front of the hospital pharmacy and spread blankets there for her to lie on.
 
After we had the inside of the unit fully prepared, David and I suited up in PPE and approached Felicia on the porch. As I dropped to one knee beside her, the burden of the moment descended squarely on my shoulders, because I had known all along that once the first case arrived, working and living in Monrovia would never be the same.
 
“We have a stretcher,” I told Felicia, “and we are going to put you on the stretcher and carry you to a place we have prepared for you.”
 
I looked up at David. “Do you want her head or feet?”
 
“Feet,” he replied.
 
I picked Felicia up by the shoulders, and we slid her onto the stretcher and placed the blankets on top of her. We carried her around the back of the hospital and into the isolation unit.
 
Dr. Debbie and Louise were waiting for her inside. I picked up a spray can of the chlorine solution and walked back around the hospital to the ambulance. Felicia’s uncle remained curled up inside the ambulance, lying over the top of a backpack. I leaned into the truck and felt for a pulse, then looked him over. He was obviously deceased.
“I have to have that backpack,” the man with him said. “It has my identification card in it.”
I pulled the backpack out from under the uncle. The body fell onto the floor of the ambulance, his position unchanged. He still looked as though he were lying over the backpack. Rigor mortis had already set in.
I stood there, backpack in hand, facing a decision.
I could not give a backpack contaminated with Ebola to the man. But on the other hand, he had already been exposed, having ridden in the back of the ambulance and having taken care of the uncle and Felicia. I handed him the backpack.
The young boy started crying.
“Stop crying!” the man scolded him.
“It’s okay for him to cry,” I said. “You may be used to being around death, but he is twelve years old. He has lost four family members in a week. It’s okay for him to be scared and to cry.”
I sprayed bleach on the back of the ambulance and the road and porch where Felicia had been lying. I sprayed the door of the ER that had been kicked in and everything along the paths in between.
The leader of the ambulance team and I agreed that they would return the body to Redemption Hospital and we would take care of Felicia. None of the three crew members were wearing PPE. Not even a single pair of rubber gloves.
The man and the boy said they would ride in the ambulance back to Redemption. I didn’t like that idea.
“It’s fine,” the man said. “It’s just a dead body.”
It was not just a dead body; it was a body loaded with a deadly virus.
The health-care system in Liberia was not prepared for Ebola.
During Felicia’s first two days with us, her mental state waxed and waned. She would sit up and talk with the nurses and we would feed her, then she would lie down and become unresponsive for an hour. Then she would sit back up and want to eat or talk.
On the third day, Felicia’s condition improved. She was awake and alert more than she was out of it. Her fever came down. We hoped that she had turned a corner and would make it, that our first Ebola patient would survive.
The next day, June 14, her diarrhea increased. Her temperature shot back up. She became unresponsive, and she remained that way until she died.
Felicia introduced our hospital to Ebola.
Every shift, we would have to pull nurses away from their assignments and leave an area of the hospital short-staffed. One case of Ebola had strained our staff. I could not imagine what it would be like if we experienced an outbreak.
Our nurses who cared for Felicia were courageous and compassionate. They were the first to treat an Ebola patient at ELWA Hospital, and they took great care of Felicia.
They also encouraged their colleagues to sign up for shifts in the unit. The work had not been as bad as they expected. Their chief complaint was that it was hot inside the suits, with no air conditioning in a high-humidity environment. But other than that, treating an Ebola patient was a job that they had discovered they could do.
We had one nurse who experienced a problem with her asthma being exacer­bated by the masks we had to wear. But all the rest who worked in the unit volun­teered to do so again.
Everyone in the country was scared of this Ebola thing. But the nurses who went into the unit to care for Felicia realized that more than dealing with a disease, we were dealing with a person who needed compassion.
A Perfect Storm
 
The fight against Ebola felt like a race in which the starter forgot to say “On your mark” and “Get set” and skipped directly to “Go!”
In late March, Doctors Without Borders had launched an emergency response due to the Ebola cases that had popped up in Guinea, which borders Liberia to the north. Doctors Without Borders, which is better known internationally by its French acronym of MSF (Médecins Sans Frontières), was created by French doc­tors in 1971 as a humanitarian organization to provide emergency medical aid around the world. MSF is normally the first organization on the ground to iden­tify and respond to outbreaks such as the Ebola epidemic in Guinea.
 
MSF had been successful in containing previous Ebola occurrences. There had been fewer than twenty Ebola episodes since the virus was identified in 1976 in two simultaneous events—one in Sudan and another in Zaire (now the Demo­cratic Republic of Congo), in a village near the Ebola River. MSF’s quick responses had prevented these prior outbursts from becoming widespread. The most deaths from an Ebola outbreak had been 280 in Zaire in 1976.
 
This time, however, MSF recognized the perfect storm gathering for a poten­tial catastrophe with this reappearance of Ebola, which had begun in a very mobile society within a tri-border region where the virus had not previously appeared. Thus, the people in that area were not on the lookout for it. Guinea, Sierra Leone, and Liberia also were three of the poorest countries in the world, and general dis­trust of government caused the people to argue that Ebola was not a real virus, that it didn’t actually exist.
 
For all those reasons, MSF knew it would be extremely difficult to bring a West African outbreak under control.
 
I had been working at ELWA Hospital on the south side of Monrovia for only eight months when we admitted Felicia. SIM ran the Eternal Love Winning Africa (ELWA) mission in Liberia, where it had maintained a presence since it started Radio ELWA in 1952. SIM had also opened a hospital in 1965 on its 130-acre compound that became known collectively as ELWA, or E-L-W-A. Monrovians consider ELWA like a section or neighborhood of the city.
Amber and I had signed up for a two-year term at ELWA through World Medical Mission, the medical arm of Samaritan’s Purse, which offers terms in mis­sion hospitals to young doctors like me who want to pursue medical mission work on a lifelong basis. Samaritan’s Purse, named for the good Samaritan in Luke 10 who rescued a dying man that others had walked past and ignored, was created in 1970 to offer care to the poor and suffering in crisis areas around the world.
 
Samaritan’s Purse and SIM had been working side by side in various efforts to assist the people of Liberia in their recovery from two civil wars in the previous twenty-five years.
 
Liberia (meaning “liberty”) began as an American settlement in the 1820s by the American Colonization Society. Free blacks and, later, rescued slaves from il­legal trade ships came to the west coast of Africa. In 1847 they signed a declaration of independence and founded the Republic of Liberia, modeling their constitution after that of the United States. American settlers, of course, were not the first people to live there, so immediate tension and distrust grew between the settlers and the local tribal groups.
 
Perhaps it was due to this tension that, over one hundred years later in 1980, an indigenous leader, Samuel Doe, rose to power through a coup and the slaugh­tering of the president and his cabinet. Through fraudulent elections, Doe named himself president and began a bloody and racially charged rule. In 1989, a rebel leader, Charles Taylor, overthrew Doe’s government and Liberia’s civil war ensued. More than two hundred thousand Liberian lives were lost in the war, and a mil­lion more were displaced as refugees.
 
Finally, in 2003, largely through the courage and determination of Liberia’s women and mothers, Charles Taylor was forced to resign and a peace accord was signed. Taylor was later indicted for crimes against humanity. The United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL) came to monitor the peace accord. Then in 2005, Africa’s first female president was elected, President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, or “Ma Ellen” as she is called by her people.
 
The needs of the Liberians were many and great, and we were there not to be Westerners swooping in to do things our way or to make them like us, but to partner with the Liberians as they helped themselves. Our hospital’s medical direc­tor, Dr. Brown, is Liberian and a very influential medical voice in his country. We also worked with a team of general practitioners and nurses from Liberia.
 
Dr. Debbie, a general surgeon from Oregon, had moved to Liberia a year earlier and headed up ELWA Hospital’s Ebola response. She sent the medical staff an e-mail on March 22 informing us of a news report that up to fifty-nine people in Guinea had died from the rare and deadly Ebola Virus Disease. The article also reported that Ebola might have spread to Sierra Leone, Liberia’s neighbor to the northwest.
 
“I thought that you all would be interested in this,” she wrote. “It is a bit close for comfort. We all need to be alert to the possibility of seeing something here.”
 
Two days later, we held our first doctors’ meeting about Ebola to discuss how we would combat the disease if it made it into our country and city.
 
I knew about Ebola from my medical education when we studied rare, exotic viruses like Ebola, Lassa fever, and Hantavirus. I knew it was a really bad, viral, hemorrhagic fever with no cure, no vaccine, and an astoundingly high death rate.
 
In 2013, during my residency training, I had spent three weeks in Uganda at Mulago Hospital. They had treated a patient with Ebola the month before our arrival, and there had been other cases in Uganda. Signs around the hospital kept patients and medical personnel on alert for symptoms of the disease: “Do you have a fever?” “Are you bleeding?” “Do you have Ebola?” That level of public awareness had helped minimize the outbreak in East Africa.
 
But when we moved to Liberia in October 2013, there had been no docu­mented cases—ever—of Ebola in West Africa. Ebola was not on my radar; I did not expect to see it there.
 
We might be overreacting a bit because Guinea is a long way from here, I thought when our discussion began. It was 282 miles from Monrovia to the city of Foya near the Guinea border. After just a few minutes of Dr. Debbie and Dr. John Fankhauser describing the situation, though, I changed my mind and agreed that we needed to take immediate action. We absolutely had to prepare for the worst.
 
We brainstormed where we could create a safe space to isolate a patient. That place wound up being our chapel, a small, freestanding building in the courtyard of the horseshoe-shaped hospital. Our staff devotionals were held each morning in the chapel, along with afternoon discipleship classes for hospital employees.
 
Dr. Brown and Dr. Fankhauser received pushback on their decision to isolate Ebola patients in the chapel. Some were upset the chapel would be used for such a dirty job and that we would be bringing death into a sacred place.
 
Jerry and John explained the move by asking, historically, in times of war, where had people gone for refuge? They went to churches, Jerry and John said, and what better place could we offer than a chapel to bring sick patients who were in search of life?
 
Work began immediately to convert the chapel into an isolation unit, which we called the Case Management Center, with five beds and a small area for storage.
 
The doctors’ meeting regarding the Ebola threat took place on the twenty-fourth of March, a Monday. I had recently been named physician liaison for the HIV treatment program and spent three days that week in meetings at the Na­tional AIDS Control Program for staff in all of Liberia’s HIV clinics. Ebola was on my mind so often during those meetings that I downloaded the Twitter app on my phone and created an account so I could follow Ebola updates from the World Health Organization (WHO), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and UNMIL.
 
At ELWA we began implementing strict universal precautions regarding con­tact with potential Ebola patients based on a 1998 WHO booklet titled “Infection Control for Viral Haemorrhagic Fevers in the African Health Care Setting” that we found online.
 
The best science we knew at the time said Ebola was transmitted through body fluids, such as sweat, blood, vomit, and diarrhea. As far as viruses were con­cerned, Ebola did not spread easily. It required direct exposure to mucous mem­brane (eyes, nose, mouth) or broken skin (a cut or even a small scratch or scrape).
 
By comparison, Ebola was not spread through coughing, as with measles or influenza. When we cough, our breath contains tiny particles that can travel across a room on air currents. Ebola was transmitted only via droplets, which by defini­tion are larger particles. Because of the weight of droplets, gravity prevents them from becoming airborne.
 
Ebola may not be easily transmissible, but its greatest threat comes in needing only a small amount of virus to cause infection. The medical term viral load refers to the number of copies of a virus in a milliliter of bodily fluid. Ebola has one of the highest viral loads among viruses. With HIV, for example, 100,000 copies per milliliter is a high viral load. In an Ebola patient near death, the number of copies of the virus in one milliliter can reach into the billions. Additionally, it takes a relatively small number of Ebola viral particles to cause infection. I have heard estimates of 10 to 1,000. When you consider that a dying patient can have upwards of a billion particles in one milliliter of bodily fluid, it is easy to understand the danger inherent with Ebola.
 
To use a military analogy, most viruses would be like a nation with a poorly trained force that needs to deploy its entire army into enemy territory to complete a mission. Ebola, though, would be like a terrorist cell that only needs two or three terrorists to infiltrate to inflict deadly damage.
 
Health-care workers are disproportionately affected by the virus for a couple of reasons.
 
First, they provide care to very sick infected patients. Ebola is not easily trans­mitted in the early stages of the illness. But as the patients become sicker, their viral load increases.
 
A good example of that is the case of Thomas Eric Duncan, the Liberian who in September 2014 became the first person to be diagnosed with Ebola in the United States. He was with his family in the first days of his illness, but none of them contracted Ebola. The two people who became infected through contact with him were nurses who cared for him as his sickness worsened.
 
Second, health-care workers encounter patients before they are known to have Ebola. Especially early in the West Africa outbreak, patients would come into an emergency room or a clinic with symptoms commonly ascribed to malaria. The medical personnel first seeing those patients often did not have all the proper per­sonal protective equipment and were not able to follow certain procedures to pre­vent Ebola’s spread.
 
Therefore, one of the keys to preventing an epidemic is to first ensure the safety and preparedness of medical workers.

Table of Contents

Update for the Paperback Edition xi

Map of Guinea, Sierra Leone, and Liberia xiii

Prologue: So What's Next? 1

Part 1 Crisis

1 Defenseless 7

2 On High Alert 19

Part 2 Galled to Serve

3 She Said "Yes" 31

4 A Whole New World 45

Part 3 Fighting Ebola

5 Life and Death 57

6 "Love Your Neighbor as Yourself" 67

7 An Overwhelming Challenge 79

8 Just Not Feeling Right 87

9 Praying for Dengue Fever 99

Part 4 Tested Positive

10 Kent … Has … Ebola 109

11 Bad News, Bad Signs 121

12 The Humiliation of Ebola 131

13 The Day Kent Almost Died 141

Part 5 Rescued!

14 Preparing to Evacuate 151

15 "Welcome Home" 161

16 Reunited with Nancy 171

17 Ebola Free! 183

Part 6 Next Steps

18 Road to Recovery 195

19 The Call Continues 205

Epilogue: Gratitude 213

Acknowledgments 217

Notes 221

List of Abbreviations 223

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