By Magdalena Mis
LONDON (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Thousands of Ebola survivors with little to no risk of re-infection are critical to controlling the epidemic and training them has the potential to save thousands of lives and decrease the spread of the virus, experts said on Wednesday.
Survivors have developed immunity and are effectively the only people in the world protected from the virus, which could allow them to care for the sick without risking their lives, said experts in the International Journal of Epidemiology.
The worst Ebola outbreak on record has killed 6,331 in the three worst hit countries Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, and infected 17,800, including 7,719 in Liberia and 7,798 in Sierra Leone, the World Health Organization said.
"In a sense survivors are the only people in the world who are 'vaccinated' against further Ebola infection with the strain in circulation," Zena Stein of the HIV Center for Clinical and Behavioral Studies at the New York State Psychiatric Institute wrote in an editorial.
"This uniquely positions them to mediate between the infected and uninfected and between local people and foreign responders."
As survivors speak local languages and are familiar with local culture, they might also be seen more favourably than outsiders by local communities who often mistrust foreigners, chasing away health workers and shunning treatment, said the paper.
Community-based epidemic response - like an HIV campaign in South Africa - has been effective in turning survivors into advocates and educators and helping to tackle stigma and gain trust.
Although survivors could still face stigmatising by their communities, people were starting to see them as a real sign of hope and help, the United Nations children's agency UNICEF has noted.
Creating jobs by employing Ebola survivors as caregivers might also be beneficial for sub-Saharan Africa's economy, which has been hit by an estimated $3-$4 billion in financial damage through the virus outbreak.
Survivors can also donate their blood as their antibodies might be protective and help those infected to survive the virus, the experts said, even though this has not yet been proven to be effective.
With a case recovery rate of around 30 percent for the current epidemic, there are already thousands of survivors whose immunity can be established through blood tests.
(Reporting By Magdalena Mis; Editing by Astrid Zweynert)