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Witnessing joy amid the death: BBC travels to epicentre of Ebola outbreak
Witnessing joy amid the death: BBC travels to epicentre of Ebola outbreak 2 hours ago Share Save Add as preferred on Google Anne Soy Mongbwalu and Rwampara BBC "Grace has been shown to us," sing health workers at the epicentre of DR Congo's Ebola outbreak It is strange to witness singing and dancing in a place which has seen so much death but the successful treatment of an Ebola patient is cause for celebration at a hospital in the north-east of the Democratic Republic of Congo. Just after midday on Friday, about a dozen healthcare workers in green scrubs sang songs of praise β "grace has been shown to us; grace has been shown to patients" - as they escorted Daniel Kitambala out of the clinic. Two negative Ebola tests confirmed he was free of the virus after spending about three weeks at the facility. "That disease is terrible. I was feeling very ill [when I came here]. But God is great, I am well now," Kitambala, a devout Christian, told the BBC as the medics continued to cheer. The 49-year-old, dressed in a black T-shirt and trousers and carrying a black polythene bag with his sterilised belongings, was beaming with joy and relief as he walked between the two lines of orange netting that mark out the path out of the treatment centre. More than 140 people are confirmed to have died from the rare Bundibugyo species of the disease here in Ituri province, the epicentre of the latest outbreak that was first declared just over a month ago. But this virus, which has killed around one in five of those known to have been infected, could have been spreading undetected for months. The authorities are now battling to get infections under control. That struggle is in part about overcoming local myths, including that the disease is the result of something known here as the "coffin curse" and that treatment centres are the problem rather than the solution. But it is possible to survive the virus and the celebrations at the Ebola treatment centre in Mongbwalu were a sign of that. Amensisa Negera / BBC Daniel Kitambala encouraged those with Ebola symptoms to seek treatment "Seeβ¦ I recovered," the subsistence farmer said as he raised his hands in the air three times in a victory salute and in praise of God. "People should seek treatment when they fall ill," he said as he turned to thank the healthcare workers behind him who were clapping. Reflecting on how he was infected, Kitambala said he went to see someone in his community who was unwell and pray for him. Shortly afterwards, he fell ill himself. The virus spreads from one person to another by contact with infected bodily fluids such as blood or vomit. When Kitambala first fell ill, like many people in DR Congo, he initially tried traditional medicine. But when his condition deteriorated, he went to hospital. "We have seen a huge difference in the community since the first patient recovered and returned home," said Dr Richard Lukodu, Mongbwalu hospital's medical director. "More people are coming here now seek
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