Fwd: Liberian Ebola burial teams stressed, traumatized

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Sep 13, 2014, 11:10:49 AM9/13/14
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Liberian Ebola burial teams stressed, traumatized

MONROVIA, 12 September 2014 (IRIN) - As the Ebola death toll mounts in
Liberia, burial teams are having to contend with physical risk and
trauma as they take charge of safely burying the dead, often in the
face of local anger.

Ebola has killed 1,224 Liberians as of 6 September, according to the
World Health Organization (WHO), with 68 percent of those deaths in
the past three weeks. Cases are expected to continue to spiral across
the country - 14 out of 15 counties have reported cases - with the
bulk in the capital, Monrovia.

Government and International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) burial
teams initially took charge of burying the dead but they could not
begin to keep up with the needs and called on community members to
take on this difficult task. Marcus Speare is the head of a burial
team in Margibi County (next to Montserrado County), which is made up
mostly of young men.

Each team is trained by the ICRC and Ministry of Health and members
are paid US$300 a month.

All day long Speare's phone rings requesting his team to pick up more
corpses. "We don't rest. My phone rings all day every day. We are on
our way right now to pick up dead bodies in the Palmwine Station
Community and Tower Hill. Sometimes we get tired. But this is what we
have chosen to do. We want to help our community. This fight cannot be
left on government and partners alone," he told IRIN by phone from
Margibi County.

"It is too sad," he continued. "We pick up all kinds of bodies. We
collect women, men and what mainly bring tears in my eyes are innocent
children who died from this disease. It is painful to bury our people
in these kinds of numbers. It is too much to handle."

Anger and fear

Team-members must contend with rejection from their own families and
communities, and anger and resistance from families they are trying to
help, which at times turns into violence.

"Our vehicle has been attacked by angry residents on many occasions,"
said Speare. "They have stopped us from picking up dead bodies from
various homes. They say to us that we are responsible for the
spreading of the disease. One group of youths threw stones at our bus
that is used to collect bodies. But we remain very calm with them. We
tell them that we also stand at risk to do this job. And that we are
just helping. So there is no need to attack us."

Police now escort teams to pick-up points.

Sumo Wonder, a member of Speare's team, told IRIN his parents have
expelled him from the house. "They feel that I will infect them. Right
now I am sleeping with my friend. They say I should return when the
Ebola crisis is over," Wonder told IRIN.

Team members must also cope with the shock of having to confront so
many deaths, including those of friends and family members, says the
Red Cross. A driver on a burial team in Kakata, capital of Margibi
County, told IRIN he was exhausted.

"Even as I speak to you we just received calls from three communities
to pick up dead people. The deaths are too much. Sometimes I get
confused. I am in shock. Too many of our people are dying."

Emmanuel Togar, member of a burial team in Kakata, the capital of
Margibi County, told IRIN: "Sometimes I cry when I see someone my own
age lying in a pool of blood. It is too sad. I am out of words."

It is also stressful having to be mindful of one's physical safety
every minute of the day, says an IFRC briefing note on the
psychosocial strain caused by Ebola. [
http://reliefweb.int/sites/reliefweb.int/files/resources/20140814Ebola-briefing-paper-on-psychosocial-support.pdf
]

Team members must wear a protective suit and goggles, boots and gloves
covering every inch of their body, which can pose a high risk of heat
exhaustion. "If we are not vigilant every minute of the day, then we
too will die from it [Ebola]," said Togar.

Improved pick-up rate

As more burial teams are trained, the pace of picking up the dead
quickened. In the first months overwhelmed burial teams would only get
to bodies three or four days after they had died, greatly upping the
risk of transmission to family members as the virus remains active
even in a dead body. Now the pick-up rate is usually within the day,
said Fiyah Tamba, secretary-general of the Liberian Red Cross.

Pick-up gaps are still leading to bodies piling up, however,
particularly in Monrovia which is experiencing ongoing protests as a
result - the latest one taking place in the Capitol bypass
neighbourhood on 11 September.

But Togar says they are doing their best and need others to join them.
"Now as soon as our phone rings we are on the move."

As of 6 September 2014, some 4,269 probable, confirmed and suspected
cases and 2,288 deaths had been reported in the current outbreak by
the health ministries of Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone. NGO
Médecins sans Frontières, WHO and affected governments have repeatedly
called on international governments to step up their response if the
disease is to be contained.

pc/aj/cb

[END]

This report online: http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=100599



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