Ebola’s deadly toll on healthcare workers

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One of the biggest challenges facing health care workers in Sierra Leone is providing emergency surgical care to pregnant women. CapaCare provides this training, but the training programmes — and delivering care to pregnant women overall — has been deeply affected by Ebola.
Credit: CapaCare.org

Since its first outbreak in Guinea in December, 2013, Ebola has hit West African healthcare providers disproportionately hard. Hundreds of healthcare workers have been infected, many of whom have died, according to the World Health Organization.

Those grim statistics hit home for CapaCare, an innovative Norwegian-created surgical training programme, earlier this autumn with the death of one of the programme’s two dozen students, Joseph Heindilo Ngegba.

“Health care workers are Ebola’s collateral damage,” said Håkon Bolkan, a Norwegian surgeon and head of CapaCare, the non-profit organization he helped establish in 2011 to train community health officers in Sierra Leone to perform life-saving surgeries.

Bolkan is also a PhD candidate at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) Faculty of Medicine, who is studying the effectiveness of CapaCare’s training programme for his dissertation.

“There are fewer health care workers, and the health care system is collapsing,” Bolkan said.

Shortly before Ngegba contracted Ebola, he wrote on CapaCare’s blog of the stress of working with the disease as a constant threat.

“The Ebola epidemic is having a negative impact on my daily life, with regards to my work in the wards, and the surgeries we perform, because you don’t know if the people you are working with have been exposed or not,” he wrote. “It’s really stressful…The attitude of people towards the Ebola outbreak is negative, because most people don’t believe there is Ebola. They think health workers are killing their people.”

A system under stress

Sierra Leone already has among the worst doctor-to-patient ratios in the world, with less than 150 doctors for its 6 million residents. That’s one doctor for every 45,000 people, according to the WHO, compared to one doctor per 410 people in the US and roughly one doctor per 270 people in Norway. In 2008, the country had 10 surgeons to serve the entire country.

Samuel Batty and Mohamed Kamara are community health officers in Sierra Leone and CapaCare trainees who came to Norway in early September for additional training.

Both men said they were under pressure from their families to stop working in the health care system for fear that they, too, might be infected. But they made it clear that they were committed to continuing their work.

“Health care workers have to help in the fight,” Batty said. “We have to be cautious not to contract the disease, but we are at war with this disease and we want to do our part.

Fear keeping patients away

Bolkan said that fear of Ebola was also driving patients away from Sierra Leone’s health care system overall.

“The mortality in pregnant women and other patients who are not coming in to seek care is most likely far greater than the mortality caused by Ebola,” he said.

As a result, the number of patients that the CapaCare trainees were able to help had dropped precipitously.

In another CapaCare blog post, trainee Hassan P. Vandy explained how this drop in numbers was playing out in his hospital.

“The hospital used to be a busy one since my arrival from Masanga Hospital. The daily outpatient flow has been ranging between 70 — 100 per day and 8-10 surgeries per week including emergencies,” Vandy wrote on 27 August. “Since two weeks back, the flow has dropped from the above figure to 10-15 outpatients per day and only 3 surgeries in two weeks.”

Hard not to help

Bolkan said that all these factors had led to CapaCare stopping its clinical rotations for their trainees for the moment.

“Given the crisis, we have to find new solutions, more online training,” he said.

Kamara, who came to the CapaCare programme after he had essentially taught himself to do Cesarean sections and other life saving surgery, said he felt frustrated that he couldn’t do more to help.

“It is very difficult when you see the suffering, you want to help,” he said.

In early September, WHO director general Margaret Chan called the Ebola outbreak “the largest, most complex and most severe we’ve ever seen.”

In late September, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that in a worst case scenario, Liberia and Sierra Leone could have a total of 1.4 million cases by Jan. 20 if the disease keeps spreading without effective methods to control it.


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The above story is based on materials provided by The Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU). Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.