Why raising money for Ebola is an issue we must address now

One Young World Ambassador Jennifer Kamara is a One Young World Returning Ambassador from Sierra Leone who founded World Health Equity, an organisation which aims to ensure that every individual's basic right to health care is met. She spoke during the Peace and Conflict Plenary Session at the 2014 Summit in Dublin.

What’s the big deal about Ebola?

I suddenly came down with fever. Within 3 hours, I went from energetically visiting Sierra Leonean health providers to shaking and shivering violently. I was in Freetown directing a maternal health program involving World Health Equity, international partners and the Sierra Leone Ministry of Health. I was weak and my body ached to an excruciating degree. My symptoms were typical of malaria. However, my interaction with health providers and patients from about a hundred facilities over the past two months put me at significantly higher risk of contracting Ebola.

The two days it took for my blood tests to process seemed to last a lifetime. As my condition grew worse and I started to vomit, I realized that what scared me was not that I could be awaiting death. Surprisingly I could accept that possibility. What drove me to feel helpless and terrified, was the knowledge that if I had Ebola, that I would die without saying good-bye to my loved ones. Diseases cost lives every second of every day. For me, what is so ruthless about Ebola in particular, is the way it forces victims to anticipate death, be ostracized and feared, and remain void of human touch and personal connection. My test results came back negative for Ebola. I had never been happier to have Malaria and to feel the physical touch of family and friends through illness.

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Today, close to 6,000 people have been infected with Ebola and about half of them have died. If these numbers appear small and insignificant, surely Centers for Disease Control (CDC) worst-case scenario projections of as high as 1.4 million Ebola cases by January 2015 will put things into perspective. What these projections suggest, is that in two and a half short months, populations the size of Philadelphia, Barcelona, Johannesburg could face isolated death from Ebola.  Today, weak health systems in West Africa continue to crumble. Restrictions to travel and trade are already causing prices for basic necessities to spike dramatically. Schools and universities have been closed for months. Tomorrow, this outbreak could become endemic and may literally annihilate countries. Unless we wake up and act, that is.

International Inaction to a Crisis of This Severity? You’re Joking!  

What these projections suggest is that in two and a half short months, populations the size of Philadelphia, Barcelona, and Johannesburg could face isolated death from Ebola.  Weak health systems in West Africa continue to crumble. Restrictions to travel and trade are already causing prices for basic necessities to spike dramatically. Schools and universities have been closed for months. Tomorrow, this outbreak could become endemic and may literally annihilate countries; unless we wake up and act, that is.

It is scary to think that some countries are not taking immediate action to tackle such a severe problem that so many have been facing for months. Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), one of the charities leading the response to the outbreak, is not the only organisation calling for help. CDC director, Thomas Friedman warns that if current underwhelming response rates persist, the Ebola outbreak could become the world’s “next AIDS”.

Why is it so hard to raise funds for Ebola?

According to NPR’s Planet Money, it is well known within the relief community that people donate to swift and visible catastrophe. We donate in response to unique moments of destruction in order to affect positive change. The more well defined the event, the greater the emotional and financial response; the attacks of 9/11 and the Haiti Earthquake are perfect examples. Both raised hundreds of millions of dollars in weeks because of how the sudden destruction moved us to want to make a difference immediately. Sadly, we are less moved to prevent disasters, even those slow-moving, but certain ones. 

Become part of the immediate solution

The world’s leading health organizations such as WHO, MSF, and the CDC have called on individuals – you - and companies to step up in supporting the frontline relief efforts. According to Sean Casey, the doctor leading the International Medical Corps operations in Liberia, “The most useful input that the average person with some interest in helping can provide is money to support the operations. Ebola response is very expensive - operating one 70-bed treatment unit can cost up to $1 million per month!”

Think about the fact that Thomas Eric Duncan, the first Ebola patient in the US just died.  Consider that a health worker who came in contact with Thomas has now contracted the virus in Texas. Now think about Teresa Romero who is sick with Ebola in Madrid. This is just 900 miles (1400km) from Dublin. These recent developments along with the CDC’s two and a half month projections have created a disaster for us to be moved by. They force us to think, ‘That fundraiser I will be moved to host next year when this gets worse... I might want to move that up. Now would be good.’

I am personally asking OYW delegates, Counsellors, community members, and the public to spread the word and support charities such as International Medical Corps and others fighting the deadly Ebola virus. Please share your support for the two causes I am driving.

  1. World Health Equity. Donations via my organization’s Indiegogo campaign, launched the 18 October, will fund the containment of Ebola by supplying personal protective equipment (PPE) to 100 health centers covered by our maternal health program in Sierra Leone.
  2. #EbolaChallenge Movement. Setup with fellow OYW Ambassadors and friends from 70+ countries, donations will go directly to MSF’s Ebola response efforts in hardest hit Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia.

Unfortunately we are fighting an invisible war against something we cannot see, touch or smell. But we do have the resources and power to make this epidemic a mere memory in human history.

Do something.

You can watch the One Young World Summit 2014 in Dublin as it happens on our livestream: www.oneyoungworld.com.

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Published on 18/10/2014