Health Services Vulnerability During the Ebola Outbreak: A Qualitative Report

Journal Title: Health in Emergencies & Disasters Quarterly - Year 2017, Vol 2, Issue 4

Abstract

Ebola is an infectious disease, which is caused by a virus belonging to the Filoviridae group. The outbreak of the disease in the African countries in 2015 caused massive death and contamination of the healthcare personnel those who were engaged in treating the infected patients and caused irreparable damage to the healthcare system. In this study, the vulnerability of the team of health service providers during the Ebola outbreak in Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone is studied. The article also proposes solutions that can be learned as a lesson, help in increasing their resilience in similar biological hazards and planning management strategies for similar events in the future. Long before the outbreak took place, West African countries were already facing acute problems in terms of access to health services and health infrastructure. The most important shortcomings for the same were identified as insufficient number of health personnel and capacity shortage that prevented the people from being ready to deal with such uncalled events viz. accidents and epidemic disease outbreak. The Ebola epidemic exacerbated the persisting problems caused due to a shortage of personnel in these countries and caused the death of a large number of common people as well as healthcare personnel. Generally, the vulnerability of the health team working during the Ebola outbreak could be divided into five general dimensions: 1. Management weakness; 2. Lack of engineering and environmental control; 3. Obstacles in the use of personal protective equipment; 4. Not having enough skills and practice exercises; and 5. Ignoring the social factors and satisfaction of the healthcare personnel. The main theme of the study was failure to understand the risk of personnel in accidents and disasters. Findings revealed building capacity and reducing vulnerability of the healthcare personnel against disasters and epidemics depends upon the perceived risk, which is a decisive factor for any intervention. Maintenance of human resources is impossible unless with the sole aim of promoting resilience in various areas of management, health, environmental control, the proper use of personal protective equipment, teaching training, skill upgrading of personnel, and increased social and material support are achieved.

Authors and Affiliations

Nasir Amanat, Seyed Hossein Hosseini, Hamid Reza Khankeh, Mohsen Aminizadeh, Maryam Nakhaee, Babak Farzinnia

Keywords

Related Articles

Collaboration of Patients With Mobility Disabilities in Caring: Conceptual Analysis

Background: Collaboration of patients in caring is regarded as a gold standard in professional care associated with modern nursing. Considering the complexity of the concept, it is imperative to analyze caring of patient...

Comparing the Effect of the Two Educational Methods: Competency-Based, and Lecture, on the Knowledge and Performance of Nurses in the Field of Hospital Triage

Background: The most critical issue in providing appropriate services to the large number of patients referring to emergency wards is the proper conduct of triage, by considering the shortage of personnel and the insuffi...

The Relationship Between Quality of Work Life and Organizational Commitment of Iranian Emergency Nurses

Background: Quality of work life depends on a combination of variables in the work environment that has an important impact on organizational commitment, work participation, and job performance. Therefore, measuring two...

Letter to the Editor: Application of Haddon Matrix in Disaster Management: A New Window in Disaster Mitigation Risk

In recent years, disaster management has been the focus of attention since disasters have been associated with huge destructions and consequences. Basically, disaster management techniques aim at the prevention and mitig...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP263365
  • DOI 10.29252/nrip.hdq.2.4.217
  • Views 122
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Nasir Amanat, Seyed Hossein Hosseini, Hamid Reza Khankeh, Mohsen Aminizadeh, Maryam Nakhaee, Babak Farzinnia (2017). Health Services Vulnerability During the Ebola Outbreak: A Qualitative Report. Health in Emergencies & Disasters Quarterly, 2(4), -. https://europub.co.uk./articles/-A-263365