AILSA CHANG, HOST:
We're about to hear the sounds of a city at the center of an Ebola outbreak. That city is Bunia in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The outbreak includes more than 800 confirmed cases and almost 200 deaths. It has been hard for reporters to gain access to Bunia, but Emmet Livingstone and photographer Arsene Mpiana are there for NPR.
EMMET LIVINGSTONE: In Bunia, people no longer greet each other with a handshake. Although the streets are lively and most people are carrying on as before, there are moments of discordance. A Jeep packed with health workers in full protective suits and goggles speeds down the road. And within hours of arriving, the scale of the crisis becomes impossible to ignore.
I'm looking at the tiling in front of a shop, which is covered in greenish liquid. A disinfectant team has just turned up and taken a body away. According to the story that locals are telling, it was an ill patient who was on the back of a motorbike being transported to hospital who projectile vomited and then died on the spot.
Fear is creeping into everyday life, and hospitals, for the most part, aren't considered safe.
I'm here in a hospital called Clinique Universelle. It's been completely shut down because just a few days ago, a patient was discovered to have had Ebola. Now a full disinfection team has been deployed. And I'm standing in front of a team of three women who are preparing large basins of chlorine solution. This is then going to be taken by another team and going to be sprayed on every single surface of this hospital.
We were inside for only a few minutes. Health workers recommended we leave, saying it wasn't worth the risk. The hospital director is Dr. Patient Mazirane (ph).
PATIENT MAZIRANE: (Non-English language spoken).
LIVINGSTONE: He says, "doctors are not just afraid, they're very afraid. There isn't enough protective equipment." So far, there are only a handful of places where Ebola patients are being treated at the recommended standards. One of them is in Rwampara, just outside of Bunia.
(SOUNDBITE OF BEEPING)
LIVINGSTONE: Eighteen patients with confirmed infections are receiving care here.
I'm here in Rwampara Ebola Treatment Center, and I'm in an Ebola ward with doctors going from isolated room to isolated room checking on Ebola patients. All of us are in full protective gear, which includes a bib, two layers of clothing, several layers of gloves, goggles, a mask. It's difficult to describe the level of discomfort wearing one of these suits. It's very hot in Ituri. The sun is bright. It's very difficult to breathe inside the suit, and on top of that, the goggles fog up, so it's also difficult to see. These are the conditions under which doctors have to work.
(SOUNDBITE OF COUGHING)
LIVINGSTONE: The Ebola patients themselves, some of them appear to be in a great deal of pain. We heard some people crying out. The doctors said that at a certain stage of the Ebola virus disease, the whole body aches, and it's extremely painful.
Emergency health workers say this patient is severely ill and needs a respirator. It's been ordered but hasn't yet arrived. Dr. Richard Kojan is a specialist in critical care and emerging infectious disease.
RICHARD KOJAN: (Non-English language spoken).
LIVINGSTONE: Dr. Kojan says what patients are going through is extremely difficult. The species of Ebola virus circulating has no vaccine. But with proper care, the disease is not necessarily a death sentence, and there are glimmers of hope. In Rwampara, about a dozen patients are on their way to making a full recovery. The outbreak was caught late, which is causing much of the suffering here. Health workers are desperately trying to catch up. For NPR News, I'm Emmet Livingstone in Bunia.
(SOUNDBITE OF DEBBIE SONG, "COUSIN'S CAR (FEAT. BERWYN)") Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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