“I assure you that the reality on the ground in West Africa is worse than the worst report you’ve seen,” he said. “And our attention and our efforts need to be on loving the people there, on praying for them the way that so many of you prayed for me.” He urged followers of Christ to use their money and talents to raise awareness of the problem, advocate for the people of Africa and “end the hysteria here.”
Dr. Kent Brantly had a message for all those inclined to panic about a possible Ebola outbreak in the U.S.
Don’t.
“There has been a lot of panic, a lot of — I hesitate to use the word hysteria — around the events in Dallas,” he said during a visit to his alma mater, Abilene Christian University. The medical missionary and Ebola survivor urged people of faith to spend time praying and seeking ways to help the people of West Africa, “not worrying that, because we live 100 miles from a hospital that treated a patient, that we are at risk.”
Two days before Brantly spoke, during ACU’s homecoming weekend, Thomas Eric Duncan died from Ebola at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas. Two days after Brantly’s visit, health officials announced that a second person — Nina Pham, a nurse who had treated Duncan — tested positive for the deadly virus.
“My heart is broken for his family,” Brantly said of Duncan, a native of Liberia, where Brantly served in a post-residency program with Samaritan’s Purse and contracted Ebola.
“The truth is Ebola is a very serious disease,” Brantly said in an interview with ACU Today editor Ron Hadfield while on campus. “But I want to be very clear that — for someone who is not in contact with a person who is sick with Ebola — there is no risk.”
Brantly’s photo appeared on TV sets across the U.S. as the physician battled the virus. Around the world, people prayed for him by name — and for Nancy Writebol, another American who contracted Ebola while serving in Liberia. Both were treated and recovered from the virus at Emory University Hospital in Atlanta.
Since his recovery, Brantly has spoken about his ordeal in an interview with NBC’s Matt Lauer and written a piece for Time magazine.
En route to Abilene, he received a phone call from the Nebraska hospital treating photojournalist Ashoka Mukpo, also diagnosed with Ebola in Liberia. The two men have the same blood type, so healthcare workers asked Brantly to donate blood, hoping that the antibodies he acquired would help Mukpo in his fight. Brantly stopped at a nearby hospital and made the donation.
More recently, Brantly donated blood to help Pham, who is being treated for Ebola in Dallas.
“This is not about me,” Brantly said, repeatedly, as he spoke at ACU. “This is about our great, compassionate, merciful God and our neighbors who need our help.”
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