Raise Awareness for Africa: Ebola Education

Raise Awareness for Africa: Ebola Education Raise Awareness for Africa: Ebola campaign was created to assist caregivers by providing them with knowledge and resources needed to help Ebola victims

The brochure, Ebola Disease Facts for Community and Household Health, was prepared by Richard A. “Ran” Nisbett, Adjunct Professor for the Institute for Global Health at the Vanderbilt School of Medicine in Nashville. It currently is being distributed in Liberia and soon will be available in Sierra Leone. The piece has been translated from English to French for distribution in Côte d’Ivoire and Gui

nea. As of mid-December, 3,290 people have died from the 7,797 Ebola cases reported in Liberia during the current outbreak, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization. In Guinea, 1,518 deaths and 2,394 cases were reported, and in Sierra Leone, 2,033 deaths in 8,273 cases. Until now, Pippin said residents in Liberia and the other nations primarily have received information about the Ebola outbreak from fliers and posters that admonish them to “Wash your hands,” “Don't be in groups” and “Don't shake hands.”

“What some of our contacts (in Africa) told us is that they hadn't really had much in-depth information about Ebola itself,” she said. Because of the urgency, the brochure was sent to Monrovia laid out and ready to be printed by a publishing team already established under the guidance of Discipleship Resources International (DRI), a ministry of Discipleship Ministries. DRI partners with episcopal areas in Central Conferences to create publishing teams and to develop their capacity to provide contextual resources for their areas. The publishing team is distributing the brochure to clergy and lay people who can get the message out to the people, as a contribution to the broader health plans under GBGM leadership. The brochure content includes information about what Ebola is, where it comes from and how people are infected. “The doctors who study Ebola believe that this disease lives in High Bush around the world and that it existed even in way-back times,” the brochure says. “More recently, when Ebola has attacked a country, it has happened in upcountry, rural communities in Eastern and Central Africa.”

The brochure also explains that the Ebola outbreak also is occurring in other African nations.

“We think that kind of gives a perspective, even a theological perspective to the people there in Liberia because I think it would be easy for them to think, ‘We've had 20 years of civil war, and now this scourge has come down on us. Why does God reign this down on us? Why are we the ones that get punished?’ when in fact, this is in other places,” Pippin said. Content in the Ebola brochure is needed now because “often people let down their guard before the real crisis is over and they stop doing the things that keep it from proliferating,” Pippin said. “So actually, this is a good time to remind people to stay vigilant so that it doesn't refuel itself and hit again.”

Although the brochure’s distribution is beginning within the United Methodist connectional system, some of the material is being made available to the Catholic school system for use in high school libraries throughout Monrovia. To download the brochure, go to:

http://bit.ly/1bhSiva

The Vanderbilt Institute for Global Health wanted to see how well health messages could be distributed to people in Africa through the church, which is a trusted organization in African cultural life – even more so than doctors and hospitals, Pippin said. The institute had heard about the DRI’s e-reader project, which provides Kindles with theological resources to African seminary students, and asked about also putting health documents on the e-readers, Pippin said.

“They learned about our connections with the publishing team in Liberia, so we made the decision to go beyond the e-reader to actual print to get it to more people,” she said. Those discussions led to the printing project partnership. To avoid delays, Discipleship Ministries hopes to raise the initial $40,000 cost of brochures for the four countries by the end of the year. Early funding partners include Canterbury UMC and the Thompson Family Foundation, both in Alabama, and the Independent Presbyterian Church (IPC) Foundation.

“We're seeking donations from anyone who is interested in helping the church instruct about Ebola – from individuals, congregations who might want do a special offering for it and organizations that have an interest in health initiatives,” Pippin said. For information about how to contribute to the Ebola brochure project, contact M. Scott Gilpin, Executive Director for Fund Development at Discipleship Ministries at [email protected]

52 people under enforced isolation after possible   exposurehttp://yhoo.it/1LoVAcq
05/21/2015

52 people under enforced isolation after possible exposure
http://yhoo.it/1LoVAcq

Sierra Leone on Wednesday berated the "selfish and shameful" behaviour of people risking a resurgence of the Ebola virus by flouting quarantine restrictions, as authorities announced a spike in cases. The country's National Ebola Response Centre (NERC) spoke out as the World Health Organization (WHO…

More than 360 African health workers died of Ebola last year. Some of them made headlines around the world. But, most of...
05/14/2015

More than 360 African health workers died of Ebola last year. Some of them made headlines around the world. But, most of the fallen health workers didn't get that degree of attention. They were doctors, nurses, midwives, lab technicians. As they tried to save the lives of others, they sacrificed their own.

"You are fallen heroes. You are gone but not forgotten. May you rest in perfect peace."

http://n.pr/1A2vQkZ

The virus has taken a tragic toll in their ranks. At hospitals and clinics, their photos are displayed along with messages from their friends and family: "May you rest in perfect peace."

The UMC Mission in Guinea-Conakry provided $5,000 USD in food, health aid, and over 550 Ebola Disease Fact Booklets to p...
05/12/2015

The UMC Mission in Guinea-Conakry provided $5,000 USD in food, health aid, and over 550 Ebola Disease Fact Booklets to poverty stricken families affected by Ebola this week!! Our efforts continue as does the Ebola disease.
Though Liberia has been labeled as "Ebola Free", places like Guinea still need resources to pick themselves back up.
Click here to help!

http://bit.ly/1BQCkRa

Apologies for the picture quality.

Ebola isn’t over. The disease might never leave, becoming endemic—with its own season—like the flu in North America. And...
05/11/2015

Ebola isn’t over. The disease might never leave, becoming endemic—with its own season—like the flu in North America. And even as Liberia is celebrating its win over this disease, other diseases are on the rise. They always are.

http://www.wired.com/2015/05/one-year-later-ebolas-lessons-next-big-outbreak/

The sun is setting on the great Ebola crisis. But it---or some other awful disease---will be back. What can we learn about how to react better?

This article explains just how far Western Africa has come over the past 8 months.  In just two days, Liberia will celeb...
05/07/2015

This article explains just how far Western Africa has come over the past 8 months. In just two days, Liberia will celebrate what seemed like an impossible dream last summer: The end of its Ebola outbreak.

While this is great news, we cannot forget about cities like Sierra Leone and Guinea where Ebola Disease transmission is still present.

http://n.pr/1KPHhNV

On May 9 — 42 days after the last reported case — the World Health Organization will announce that the epidemic has ended in the West African nation. Its citizens are proud, sad and a bit leery.

Please read this incredible story of an eastern Sierra Leone schoolgirl and her family, who overcame the Ebola disease, ...
05/01/2015

Please read this incredible story of an eastern Sierra Leone schoolgirl and her family, who overcame the Ebola disease, and are now awaiting the re-opening of their schools with both excitement and nervousness. Read about the affects of Ebola and how the culture in Western Africa is adjusting below.


http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/apr/26/ebola-kerema-sierra-leone-back-to-school

In her diary from eastern Sierra Leone, the schoolgirl explains the difficulties of everyday life

Ebola Education Booklets arrived in Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire and Guinea Africa Last week! Mr. Tanoh is proceeding with the...
04/30/2015

Ebola Education Booklets arrived in Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire and Guinea Africa Last week! Mr. Tanoh is proceeding with the formalities to retrieve the booklets. “We thank everybody for this happy ending.” said Yed Angoran, Publishing Coordinator for the Africa-French Edition of The Upper Room.

Thoughts and prayers go out to all affected by the 7.8 magnitude earthquake that hit Kathmandu, Nepal on Saturday, April...
04/28/2015

Thoughts and prayers go out to all affected by the 7.8 magnitude earthquake that hit Kathmandu, Nepal on Saturday, April 25. It destroyed swaths of the oldest neighborhoods of Kathmandu, and was strong enough to be felt all across parts of India, Bangladesh, China’s region of Tibet and Pakistan. Click below if you would like to help Nepal through the Red Cross

http://rdcrss.org/1OwDURy

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