Many articles about ebola continue to mention a two year old boy who was probably infected with the virus some time in December of 2013. The articles refer to the boy as the 'index case', as if his being infected set off the recent epidemic in West Africa.
In fact, working back from confirmed cases, the trail goes cold before December 2013. There is no data about the virus and the investigation becomes pure speculation at this point. There is no evidence that the boy was infected by a bat, nor is there evidence that bats or other animals in the area carry ebola.
Articles mentioning this two year old boy, bats, 'corpse touching' at funerals and even sexually transmitted ebola (of which no cases have ever been confirmed), are commonplace. It is not just the media that revel in them, but also many scientific and medical articles.
But the people of West Africa seem oblivious to many of the warnings they have been receiving about ebola. And maybe they are right?
In Guinea, cases of malaria and deaths from malaria far exceed numbers of people infected with ebola and deaths fromebola. More importantly, the number of deaths from malaria has increased because people have been avoiding health facilities, fearing they might be infected with ebola.
Worse still, their condition may be mistaken for ebola and they could end up in an ebola treatment unit, with other suspected ebola cases, some of which turn out to have the virus.
To fear health facilities in Africa is perfectly logical. Healthcare conditions in most African countries are appalling. Not just ebola, but HIV, TB, hepatitis and other diseases have been spread by unsafe healthcare practices, such as reused injecting and other skin-piercing instruments.
CDC, UNAIDS, WHO and other health agencies may be convinced by their own propaganda, but people in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia are not. And, it seems, they have entirely valid reasons for ignoring this 'official' advice. Unfortunately, that means many people will suffer from and die from easily treated conditions.
But 'global' health is in crisis because those most likely to suffer from 'global' health conditions are probably least likely to trust health facilities in their country. The interference of various international agencies (or local offices of international agencies) is only likely to increase this mistrust.
Nigeria has problems with 'quack' doctors. Nigerians escaped a serious ebola epidemic, but the second largest HIV positive population in the world resides in Nigeria. Nigeria has also swallowed the dubious claims of UNAIDS and others that HIV is almost always transmitted through heterosexual sex in Africa countries.
As a result, the country has passed punitive laws about 'non-disclosure', exposure and transmission, but only, it appears,when transmission is sexual.
The ebola epidemic has shown that people find it hard to trust 'global' health agencies. Warnings about various sexual practices and HIV have also fallen on deaf ears. But perhaps ordinary people are right to ignore 'global' health agencies. Perhaps bush meat and 'corpse touching' are either not as common or not as risky as we have been told. And perhaps the appalling conditions to be found in health facilities are much more risky than we have been told.
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