Local health officials prepare for Ebola

Local health officials prepare for Ebola

About 30 attend special meeting
Liberian native worries about family

Perhaps no one in Cortez has watched the news of Ebola spreading in western Africa quit as closely as James Kamara, a doctoral candidate in pharmacy at Southwest Memorial Hospital.
Kamara is a native of Liberia, one of the countries hit hardest with the deadly disease, and although he hasn't lived in Liberia in 25 years and hasn't visited it in five years, his nephews and sister are still there.
Kamara calls often and gives his sister advice.
He tells her to stock up on water, to get IV bags and to shut her door to others. He wonders if she can get her hands on protective clothing and tells her if she can't, to wear regular clothing that covers her up. And if she is around someone with Ebola, to throw those clothes away.
'In Africa, we open our doors to people. People can go in and out of your home all day,' Kamara said.
He told her to shut her door and not to hug people, a common greeting for his sister.
Kamara said that such an outbreak wouldn't occur in the U.S.
'In Africa, they lack water supply and electricity. The health care system here is safe. We know you have to wash your hands to keep down the spread of disease, but in Africa, we might not have water to wash our hands with,' Kamara said. 'Don't look at Africa's hospitals the same as here.'
Kamara, 45, is working of his doctorate in pharmacy and has spent the past six weeks at Southwest Memorial Hospital on a residency. He traveled to his New Jersey home on Sunday and will finish up his doctorate.
Kamara has been a pharmacist for 15 years. After he finishes his doctorate in pharmacy, he hopes to return to Liberia and give them what they desperately need - water.
'Some people have hobbies. I can still work as a pharmacist and build one well at a time,' he said.
Kamara said that civil war tore apart West Africa in the 1990s.
'Before the war, Liberia had hospitals, doctors, electricity. The place was nice,' he said. 'The civil war destroyed the infrastructure.'
Kamara said that if the health care system could be rebuilt and water and electricity brought back, the country would not be dealing with this disease at the scale they are now.
'Here, Americans should not panic about the disease. Although we know it's a deadly disease, the sanitary conditions in these hospitals are so much more advanced,' he said.

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