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Sierra Leone marks grim Ebola anniversary

Published: 25 May 2015 - 12:48 pm | Last Updated: 13 Jan 2022 - 02:37 pm

 

 

Freetown---On May 24 last year a pregnant woman and an older housewife staggered into Kenema hospital in eastern Sierra Leone and were diagnosed within a day as the country's first Ebola cases.
The younger patient lost her baby but both were lucky to survive a virulent tropical virus which over the following 12 months laid waste to the country, leaving nearly 4,000 people dead.
Both women had attended the funeral of a widely-respected faith healer known as Mendinor, whose "powers" were renowned on both sides of Sierra Leone's border with Guinea.
The grandmother, whose real name was Finda Nyuma, had been treating sick patients in her home village, a diamond-mining town just a few hours' walk from Gueckedou in Guinea, where the outbreak began in December 2013.
"She was claiming to have powers to heal Ebola. Cases from Guinea were crossing into Sierra Leone for treatment," Mohamed Vandi, the top medical official in Kenema, told AFP in August last year.
She became extremely ill on April 28 and died two days later, according to a recent study by the National Center for Biotechnology Information, part of the US National Institutes of Health.
Her sisters, grandchildren and neighbours gathered around her bed in her mud brick house, washing her body and brushing her hair in line with traditional funeral rites to prepare her for the afterlife. Her husband and grandson died two days later.
Ebola has killed more than 11,000 people since it emerged in southern Guinea in December 2013, spreading first to Liberia, which was recently declared Ebola free, before Sierra Leone.
- Molecular shark -
The virus is highly infectious through exposure to bodily fluids, and its early rapid spread in west Africa was attributed in part to relatives touching victims during traditional funeral rites.
Ultimately 14 women were infected at Nyuma's funeral in mid-May.
But before they died they fanned out across the rolling hills of the Kissi tribal chiefdoms, starting a chain reaction of infections, deaths, funerals and more infections.
Within 35 days of Nyuma's death, there were 30 confirmed cases from Kailahun district, five active epidemic chains, and sporadic cases were being identified as far away as Port Loko district, on the other side of the country.
A worrying outbreak turned into a major epidemic when the virus finally hit Kenema city on June 17.
The brutality and cold efficiency of the Ebola virus -- described in medical literature as a "molecular shark" -- caught the city's shabby, chaotic hospital off-guard.
More than 20 healthcare workers died, including five co-authors of a study published by the journal Science which confirmed the healer's funeral as a seminal event at the outbreak's explosive start.

AFP