Soka Moses: For survivors of Ebola, the crisis isn't over
Dr. James Soka Moses began his fight against Ebola by treating patients, moved on to survivor treatment and studies and now advocates for an enlightened global approach to pandemic prevention and response. Full bio
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the capital of Liberia.
free public health hospital in the city.
hundreds of thousands of people.
it puts strain on our resources.
would be seated in chairs.
who had been sick for a while.
in our hospital.
didn't seem to be helping her;
fever and weakness.
she developed severe respiratory distress,
a general surgeon,
were suggestive of Ebola.
we tried to help her.
typhoid and gastroenteritis.
but by then it was too late.
to check on my patient.
that she was filled with fear.
but shortly after ...
and panic spread across the hospital.
of our medical tsunami --
in our country's history.
from medical school two years before.
came from a one-page article
to run out of the hospital, too,
I stayed on and decided to help.
brave health care professionals.
had become high-risk contacts.
to potentially disease or death.
lacked skills and training.
affected by the Ebola virus disease.
health professionals became infected.
the general surgeon
the symptoms in that first case
on the worst-affected areas.
and universities
out of Sierra Leone and Guinea
of the disease each week.
to Ebola virus disease.
to set up the Ebola treatment unit
Ebola treatment unit in the city.
of patients, families and communities.
I came face to face with Ebola.
Ebola virus disease contact
the onset of symptoms of the disease.
temperature several times.
than actually recommended.
my pants, my hands, my car.
as a potential contact.
who was symptom-free,
who actually had symptoms,
Ebola successfully,
some of the normal rules of society.
a state of emergency in August
our work during the Ebola response.
gang members came in for isolation
as the VIP Boys of Monrovia,
a tremendous amount of fear,
legally carry guns.
in our unit and were not arrested.
they won't get treated.
will continue to spread."
to treat the VIP Boys,
about being arrested while in the unit.
West Africa had almost 29,000 cases.
at John F. Kennedy hospital in Monrovia.
after my first Ebola patient died,
would go back to normal.
than 17,000 survivors in West Africa.
Ebola virus disease,
and fulfilling joy for families.
was a moment of jubilation.
of the moment of discharge
that defines our life post-Ebola
in the words of my best friend
in an interview with "The Times."
from JFK hospital:
my wife was there.
and members of the media were there.
it felt like the 'Long Walk to Freedom,'
my hands to the heaven,
"Then I saw something else.
people happy to see me.
they backed away."
society still seems to be backing away,
to lead a normal life.
to another health emergency.
joint and body pain.
over time for most.
to bear intermittent pain.
others have neurological disabilities.
every day, in many ways.
post-traumatic stress disorder.
lack opportunity for education.
by fear of Ebola, too.
for transmitting Ebola virus through sex.
interventions for prevention.
safe sex promotion and research.
no cases of sexual transmission.
have lost their spouses
infected with Ebola.
for Ebola survivors
health services are free of charge.
lacks the funding and capacity
to all at the point of need.
many months to undergo surgery
the traumatic experience,
at the point of admission.
delayed or deferred admission
nor officially condoned,
of the sporadic resurgence of Ebola virus.
survivor, several times now.
became infected, she luckily survived.
she was discharged
was only two months old,
in an Ebola treatment unit in Monrovia.
is almost three years old now,
cannot walk, cannot speak.
and many stories are yet untold.
deserve our attention and support.
that we win this final battle.
adequate care at the point of need
and at no cost to them personally.
that they recovered from Ebola?
that a person no longer has
to seek medical care abroad?
a relationship with your spouse.
of friend or home.
carrying on your normal job,
or have a roof over your family's head.
and barriers that fuel that stigma?
to those questions in West Africa,
even a devastating one.
who survived the disease,
nurses, doctors, volunteers and staff
in service of humanity.
their lives in the process.
daily journeys into the Ebola wards.
to protect our global health security
and abroad was an honor.
our humanity became stronger.
working together defeated Ebola,
and in our communities.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Soka Moses - DoctorDr. James Soka Moses began his fight against Ebola by treating patients, moved on to survivor treatment and studies and now advocates for an enlightened global approach to pandemic prevention and response.
Why you should listen
At the height of Liberia's 2014 Ebola outbreak, newly trained physician James Soka Moses took on one of the toughest jobs in the country -- working in one of Monrovia’s largest Ebola Treatment Units, managing a high volume, highly contagious patient population while adopting a collaborative, systems-based public health approach. Once Ebola transmissions reduced, he turned his focus to Liberia’s thousands of survivors through the Ebola Survivor’s Clinic, providing treatment, support and training for patients and leading an important program to mitigate sexual transmission of the disease. In 2017, Moses was featured in the CNN documentary Unseen Enemy, which recounts the effects of the Ebola, SARS and Zika pandemics, as well as the consequences of emerging infectious disease threats on global health security.
Soka Moses | Speaker | TED.com