Webcast: After Ebola: Lessons Learned in Sierra Leone

Sierra Leone 2012 © Lynsey Addario/VII

October 15 2019, 7:00pm - 8:30pm ET

Join Doctors Without Borders for a webcast discussion of lessons learned after the 2014 Ebola outbreak in Sierra Leone.

After Ebola: Lessons Learned in Sierra Leone (Webcast)

When the Ebola outbreak hit Sierra Leone in 2014, the country was still struggling to recover from the impact of civil war. Rates of maternal, infant, and child mortality were already among the highest in the world. The largest ever Ebola epidemic wreaked havoc across West Africa and crushed Sierra Leone’s already weak health system. An estimated 3,956 people died of Ebola in Sierra Leone, including some 79 health workers at the forefront of the response. Many others died because they could not get access to medical care.

Today, an Ebola outbreak grinds on in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. Its trajectory and duration remain uncertain, let alone all the lessons to be gleaned. But the Sierra Leone experience provides unique insights.

Join a panel of medical experts from Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) and Columbia University for a discussion about the impact of a major public health crisis on fragile health care systems, with a focus on women’s health. We’ll discuss lessons learned by MSF during the outbreak in Sierra Leone and what the country’s health system looks like now.

Panelists include Dr. Susan Michaels-Strasser, senior implementation director/associate director for nursing programs for ICAP, and assistant professor for Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health; Dr. Séverine Caluwaerts, MSF obstetrician-gynecologist and author; Dr. Gillian Burkhardt, MSF obstetrician-gynecologist and author; and Ella Watson-Stryker, MSF health promotion activities manager, and humanitarian representative for MSF-USA. Dr. Craig Spencer, MSF-USA board of directors member, and director of Global Health in Emergency Medicine/assistant professor of medicine and population and family health at Columbia University will moderate the panel.

At the time of the event, tune in to our webcast here. Audience Q&A will be provided via the chat.