Interview with
Photojournalist Neil Brandvold
Q&A: What It’s
Like to Cover Ebola
After returning from West Africa, photojournalist Neil Brandvold
is isolating himself as a precaution.
Photojournalist Neil
Brandvold recently shot video of patients and caregivers in Liberia and Sierra
Leone, at the epicenter of the Ebola outbreak that
has killed more than 4,400 people in recent months.
While in West Africa, he ate his own packaged granola bars, beef
jerky, and ramen so he wouldn't have to eat locally prepared foods. When it was
time to head home, he left behind the clothes he had worn to the Ebola clinics.
Now—and until his quarantine period ends around October 26—he is checking his
temperature at least twice a day, because the first sign of Ebola is usually a
fever.
Q: How have you adjusted to your return?
A: It's been a strange culture shock. I still feel the compulsive
need to wash my hands over and over all day long. For the whole time I was over
there, you don't touch anyone or anything, and that was very strange to go
weeks without any physical interaction with anyone. I still feel conscious of
anything I touch or do.
Q: Do you have any
reason to think you might have caught the virus?
A: I took all the necessary precautions: wore gloves, rubber boots.
Sprayed everything with chlorine about a million times a day.
Q: But you're still a
little nervous, particularly after another videographer, Ashoka Mukpo,
contracted the virus?
A: There are always flukes. If you got close when they disinfected
a car or body and they sprayed up, you could get some Ebola from the spray. You
can never be 100 percent safe, especially in situations like that.
Q: And you won't know for certain that you're safe until the
21-day incubation period ends?
A: I'm here counting my days. It's been [11] days.
Q: Are other people
scared of you, even though you're unlikely to have Ebola and people with Ebola
aren't contagious unless they have symptoms?
A: People are overly scared. I think it's lack of education of how
it's spread. It's happening in Africa, too. The medical workers—their families
have disowned them, kicked them out of the house. They've been evicted from
multiple landlords. I met this group of nurses and they were all living on two
beds in an Ebola clinic because no one would let them rent a place.
Q: They lived in the
clinic?
A: It was really sad to see these people
who are on the front line risking their lives, and they've been shunned by
everyone. The ones I met, they haven't been paid in two weeks. They didn't have
food. When we came in, they were basically begging for food. It's super
dangerous for them. It's really hard and hot work for them in these suits that
are heavy, suffocating. To be doing that kind of work without any food, without
any pay, and without a place to stay at the end of the day, it's just
incredible that people would sacrifice like that.
Q: Why do they stay on
the job?
A: [In] the most poignant interview I might have shot the whole
trip, a nurse said that it was a war and she feels like she's on the front line
of this war. She's lost so many people [in her family to Ebola], she wants to
do whatever she can do to win the battle.
Q: You also followed
people who help to safely remove the bodies of those who have died—from Ebola
or other causes.
A: In three hours, they collected 20 bodies. They said they
collected over 100 in the previous two days. These aren't trained
professionals. These are people who've volunteered and said they want to help
out.
Q: Did you see any
hopeful signs? Any sense that things might be getting better?
A: Toward the end, it seems like they had gotten a better handle on
things. There weren't the huge lines of people trying to get into clinics.
Either people were afraid and dying at home, or the clinics had enough beds
that they were able to let people in.
Q: Did the conditions at
the hospitals surprise you?
A: They're glorified tents or abandoned wards from old hospitals.
You wouldn't want to get treated for a cold in there. [At a center in Monrovia,
Liberia] they had 35 beds and 75 patients. Most were on mattresses on the
ground in incredible humidity and heat. The sanitation levels are rough. One of
the last days we were there, the clinic completely ran out of chlorine, which
is the front-line defense for everyone. There's no way to interact [safely]
with patients if you can't wash all your gear multiple times with chlorine.
Q: Most people would do
whatever they could to avoid West Africa, but you willingly headed there. Why?
A: For me, it's just always been an interest in what's happening
and storytelling. I covered the Arab Spring and the coup in Honduras. I think
it's important to tell people's stories and let [other] people be aware of
what's happening. To be able to go over and tell that, it seems like the most
important thing I could be doing with my life right now.
This interview has been
edited and condensed.
(Source: Author: Karen Weintraub ;
http://news.nationalgeographic.com)
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