Abstract

BackgroundThere has been little research on the impact of the 2014-2015 West African Ebola crisis on people with disabilities. This paper outlines the way in which the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) outbreak in Liberia in 2015 highlighted existing inequalities and exclusion of people with disabilities and their households.MethodsThe results presented here are part of a larger ESRC/DFID-funded mixed methods research project in Liberia (2014-2017) which included a quantitative household survey undertaken in five counties, complemented by qualitative focus group discussions and interviews with people with disabilities and other key stakeholders. Uniquely, this research gathered information about people with disabilities’ experience of the EVD outbreak, as well as additional socioeconomic and inclusion data, that compared their experience with non-disabled community members.ResultsReflections by people with disabilities themselves show knowledge, preparation, and responses to the EVD epidemic was often markedly different among people with disabilities due to limited resources, lack of inclusion by many mainstream public health and medical interventions and pre-existing discrimination, marginalisation and exclusion. Interviews with other key stakeholder revealed a lack of awareness of disability issues or sufficient training to include this population systematically in both Ebola response activities and general health services.Key findings include the need to understand and mitigate direct and indirect health consequences of unequal responses to the epidemic, as well as the limited capacity of healthcare and social services to respond to people with disabilities.ConclusionThere are lessons to be learned from Ebola outbreak around inclusion of people with disabilities, relevant to the current COVID-19 pandemic. Now is the time to undertake measures to ensure that people with disabilities do not continue to be marginalised and excluded during global public health emergencies.

Highlights

  • In 2014-2015, along with Sierra Leone and Guinea, Liberia experienced the worst ever outbreak of human Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) with over 28,000 cases, and 11,000Kett et al International Journal for Equity in Health (2021) 20:247 underinvestment bolstered by multi-lateral aid that does not improve core health systems paved the way for the Ebola disaster to unfold the way it did [4]

  • There are lessons to be learned from Ebola outbreak around inclusion of people with disabilities, relevant to the current COVID-19 pandemic

  • Now is the time to undertake measures to ensure that people with disabilities do not continue to be marginalised and excluded during global public health emergencies

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Summary

Introduction

Background In 2014-2015, along with Sierra Leone and Guinea, Liberia experienced the worst ever outbreak of human Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) with over 28,000 cases, and 11,000Kett et al International Journal for Equity in Health (2021) 20:247 underinvestment bolstered by multi-lateral aid that does not improve core health systems paved the way for the Ebola disaster to unfold the way it did [4]. Background In 2014-2015, along with Sierra Leone and Guinea, Liberia experienced the worst ever outbreak of human Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) with over 28,000 cases, and 11,000. Leach [20] argues that “...an interlocking of institutions has contributed to longer-term, and interlaced, inequalities, unsustainabilities and insecurities...” (ibid: 820). This distrust, as evidenced during the West Africa Ebola crisis, can lead to suspicion about activities and interventions that ostensibly do have public good at their heart ([20]: 827). This paper outlines the way in which the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) outbreak in Liberia in 2015 highlighted existing inequalities and exclusion of people with disabilities and their households

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