Liberia: MSF's New Ebola Management Centers Already Overwhelmed

Tim Shenk/MSF

 

Read MSF's Response to the World Health Organization's Ebola Road Map

Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is rapidly scaling up its operations in Liberia, as the international response to the Ebola outbreak in West Africa continues to be chaotic and entirely inadequate. In its first week, MSF’s newest Ebola management center—also known as ELWA3—in the capital, Monrovia, is already at capacity with 120 patients, and a further expansion is underway. Meanwhile, in the north of the country, patients continue to flow into the newly rehabilitated Ebola management center in Foya.

“It is simply unacceptable that, five months after the declaration of this Ebola outbreak, serious discussions are only starting now about international leadership and coordination,” says Brice de le Vingne, MSF director of operations. “Self-protection is occupying the entire focus of states that have the expertise and resources to make a dramatic difference in the affected countries. They can do more, so why don’t they?”

The outbreak is spreading rapidly in Monrovia, overwhelming the few medical facilities accepting Ebola patients. Much of the city’s medical system has shut down over fears of the virus among staff members and patients, leaving many people with no health care at all, generating an emergency within the emergency.

“In the aftermath of an earthquake it would be unthinkable that there are so few places where women can safely deliver their babies, or where people can be treated for life-threatening conditions,” says Lindis Hurum, MSF emergency coordinator in Monrovia. “This is not only an Ebola outbreak—it is a humanitarian emergency, and it needs a full-scale humanitarian response.”

The number of people seeking care at the newly constructed 120-bed center in Monrovia, which opened on August 17, is growing faster than the team can handle, both in terms of the number of beds and the capacity of the staff. Patients are coming from nearly every district of the city. The staff is struggling to screen new arrivals, care for admitted patients, safely remove bodies, and transport them to the crematorium.

“The numbers of patients we are seeing is unlike anything we’ve seen in previous outbreaks,” says Hurum. “Our guidelines were written for an Ebola center with 20 beds, and now we are expanding beyond 120 beds. The situation means we have to constantly adapt and we are recruiting and training health and hygiene staff day and night. The priorities now are maintaining a safe facility; separating suspected, probable, and confirmed cases; and providing compassionate care.”

Like other Ebola centers, ELWA3 serves an important role in slowing the outbreak by isolating Ebola patients and preventing further infections. However, the unprecedented influx of patients is forcing MSF to reduce the level of care. It is not currently possible, for example, to administer intravenous treatments.

MSF is preparing for further construction and to erect three larger tents with space for 40 beds each.

In the very remote area of Foya, near the border with Guinea, the lack of assistance is compounding the emergency. MSF teams are working around the clock to contain the epidemic and the Ebola management center currently has 67 patients.

“We have arrived into an extremely chaotic situation, and there are hardly any aid organizations to be seen,” says Hugues Robert, emergency manager for MSF. “In some places around Foya, the Ministry of Health is experiencing shortages of protective equipment essential for the medical management of the disease. They also have limited capacity to safely bury bodies, and to provide ambulance services to refer patients. They need support. Aside from the provision of urgent medical care, we will also make it our priority to educate the community about the disease and how to prevent transmission.”

In Nigeria, MSF has also recently started providing technical support to the health authorities in their fight against the Ebola outbreak in the city of Lagos. MSF provides technical expertise in areas such as isolation, contact tracing, training and public education. MSF's assistance is designed to last over a month and is exclusively advisory. At this point, Nigeria does not need MSF’s hands-on support. The six-person MSF team is supporting the isolation ward set up at the Infectious Disease Hospital (IDH), the referral center for Ebola patients in Lagos.

MSF started its Ebola intervention in West Africa in March 2014 and is now present in Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone. The organization runs five Ebola case management centers with a total capacity of 415 beds. Since March, MSF has admitted a total of 1,885 patients. 907 of these patients tested positive for Ebola, and 170 have recovered. MSF has deployed 184 international staff to the region and employs 1,800 nationally hired personnel.

Brett Adamson, MSF project coordinator, helps a staff member prepare to enter the high-risk area of MSF’s ELWA 3 Ebola Management Center in Monrovia, Liberia, on its first day of operation, August 17, 2014.
Tim Shenk/MSF