
First Discovered In 1976, And Long Regarded As An Easily Manageable Virus Affecting Isolated Rural Communities, Ebola Rocketed To World Prominence In 2014 As A Deadly Epidemic Swept Through Guinea, Sierra Leone, And Liberia In West Africa. Thousands Of People Died As The Extraordinarily Contagious Disease Spread Rapidly From Villages To Urban Centres. Initial Quarantine Responses Proved Often Too Little And Too Late, And The Medical Infrastructure Of The Affected Countries Struggled To Cope. By August 2014, Several Months After The Start Of The Outbreak, The Who Declared The Epidemic A Public Health Emergency And International Aid Teams And Volunteers Began To Pour In. But Halting The Epidemic Proved To Be Hugely Challenging, Not Only In Terms Of The Practicalities Of Dealing With The Sheer Numbers Of Patients Carrying The Highly Infectious Virus, But In Dealing With Social And Cultural Barriers. The Author, Dorothy Crawford, Visited Sierra Leone While The Epidemic Was Ongoing And Met With Those On The Frontline In The Fight Against The Virus. In Ebola Crawford Combines Personal Accounts From These Brave Medical Workers With The Latest Scientific Reports To Tell The Story Of The Epidemic As It Unfolded, And How It Has Changed Our Understanding Of The Virus. She Looks At Its Origin And Spread, The International Response, And Its Devastating Legacy To The Health Of Those Living In The Three Worst Affected Countries. She Describes The Efforts To Prevent International Spread, The Treatment Options For Ebola, Including The Drug And Vaccine Trials That Eventually Got Underway In 2015, And The Sensitive Issue Of Running Trials Of Experimental Therapies During A Lethal Epidemic. Our Understanding Of The Ebola Virus Continues To Develop As Long-term Health Problems And Complications Following Recovery From The Disease Are Being Identified. Epidemics Of Ebola Or Other Dangerous Microbes Will Continue To Threaten The World Regularly. Already Concerns Have Been Raised By The Po
This book investigates the origins, transmission dynamics, and societal impact of the Ebola virus, specifically focusing on the catastrophic 2014 West African epidemic. Dorothy H. Crawford, a distinguished virologist, utilizes her firsthand experience visiting Sierra Leone during the crisis to synthesize complex medical data with human narratives. Her argument centers on the necessity of integrating clinical science with cultural awareness to effectively manage and contain highly infectious viral outbreaks in a globalized world.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and reviewers frequently note the accessibility of Crawford’s prose, which balances rigorous scientific reporting with the gravity of the humanitarian crisis. The text is widely regarded as a foundational account for understanding the intersection of public health policy and field-based medical response during modern epidemics.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191078859
ISBN-13:
9780191078859
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