1 00:00:00,697 --> 00:00:02,863 When I was asked to - invited, rather, 2 00:00:02,863 --> 00:00:05,362 to give this talk a couple of months ago 3 00:00:05,362 --> 00:00:08,893 we discussed a number of titles with the organizers 4 00:00:08,893 --> 00:00:12,308 and a lot of different items were kicked around and were discussed, 5 00:00:12,308 --> 00:00:14,349 but nobody suggested this one 6 00:00:14,349 --> 00:00:17,278 and the reason for that was, two months ago 7 00:00:17,278 --> 00:00:20,190 Ebola was escalating exponentially 8 00:00:20,190 --> 00:00:24,553 and spreading over wider geographic areas than we had ever seen 9 00:00:24,553 --> 00:00:27,822 and the world was terrified, concerned and alarmed 10 00:00:27,822 --> 00:00:32,790 by this disease, in a way we've not seen in recent history. 11 00:00:32,790 --> 00:00:36,610 But today, I can stand here and I can talk to you 12 00:00:36,610 --> 00:00:38,956 about beating Ebola, 13 00:00:38,956 --> 00:00:42,651 because of people whom you've never heard of, 14 00:00:42,651 --> 00:00:45,416 people like Peter Clement, 15 00:00:45,416 --> 00:00:49,815 a Liberian doctor, who's working in Lofa county, 16 00:00:49,815 --> 00:00:55,294 a place that many of you have never heard of, probably, in Liberia. 17 00:00:55,294 --> 00:00:57,684 The reason that Lofa county is so important 18 00:00:57,684 --> 00:01:00,115 is because about five months ago, 19 00:01:00,115 --> 00:01:04,533 when the epidemic was just starting to escalate, 20 00:01:04,533 --> 00:01:09,477 Lofa county was right at the center, the epicenter of this epidemic. 21 00:01:09,477 --> 00:01:11,742 At that time, MSF (Doctors Without Borders) 22 00:01:11,742 --> 00:01:13,383 and the treatment center there, 23 00:01:13,383 --> 00:01:16,097 they were seeing dozens of patients every single day, 24 00:01:16,097 --> 00:01:20,345 and these patients, these communities were becoming more and more terrified 25 00:01:20,345 --> 00:01:24,713 as time went by, with this disease and what it was doing to their families, 26 00:01:24,713 --> 00:01:28,329 to their communities, to their children, to their relatives. 27 00:01:28,329 --> 00:01:33,092 And so Peter Clement was charged with driving that 12 hour long rough road, 28 00:01:33,092 --> 00:01:37,339 from Monrovia, the capital, up to Lofa county, 29 00:01:37,339 --> 00:01:41,701 to try and help bring control to the escalating epidemic there. 30 00:01:41,701 --> 00:01:47,063 And what Peter found when he arrived was a terror that I just mentioned to you. 31 00:01:47,063 --> 00:01:51,304 So he sat down with the local chiefs, and he listened. 32 00:01:51,304 --> 00:01:54,945 And what he heard was heartbreaking. 33 00:01:54,945 --> 00:01:59,279 He heard about the devastation and the desperation 34 00:01:59,279 --> 00:02:02,578 of people affected by this disease. 35 00:02:02,578 --> 00:02:04,746 He heard the heartbreaking stories about 36 00:02:04,746 --> 00:02:08,103 not just the damage that Ebola did to people, 37 00:02:08,103 --> 00:02:11,299 but what it did to families and what it did to communities. 38 00:02:12,589 --> 00:02:16,239 And he listened to the chiefs, the local chiefs there 39 00:02:16,239 --> 00:02:17,434 and what they told him - they said 40 00:02:17,434 --> 00:02:20,443 "When our children are sick, when our children are dying, 41 00:02:20,443 --> 00:02:24,247 we can't hold them at a time when we want to be closest to them. 42 00:02:24,247 --> 00:02:28,937 When our relatives die, we can't take care of them as our tradition demands 43 00:02:28,937 --> 00:02:31,617 we are not allowed to wash the bodies to bury them 44 00:02:31,617 --> 00:02:34,801 the way our communities and our rituals demand. 45 00:02:34,801 --> 00:02:38,208 And for this reason, they were deeply disturbed, deeply alarmed 46 00:02:38,208 --> 00:02:41,995 and the entire epidemic was unraveling in front of them. 47 00:02:41,995 --> 00:02:44,911 People were turning on the health care workers who had come, 48 00:02:44,911 --> 00:02:48,265 the heroes who had come to try and help save the community, 49 00:02:48,265 --> 00:02:53,184 to help work with the community, and they were unable to access them. 50 00:02:53,184 --> 00:02:58,402 And what happened then was Peter explained to the leaders, 51 00:02:58,402 --> 00:03:01,137 the leaders listened. They turned the tables. 52 00:03:01,137 --> 00:03:04,744 And Peter explained what ebola was. He explained what the disease was, 53 00:03:04,744 --> 00:03:07,019 he explained what it did to their communities. 54 00:03:07,019 --> 00:03:12,177 And he explained that Ebola threatened everything that made us human. 55 00:03:12,177 --> 00:03:16,563 Ebola means you can't hold your children the way you would in this situation. 56 00:03:16,563 --> 00:03:18,523 You can't bury your dead the way that you would. 57 00:03:18,523 --> 00:03:23,866 You have to trust these people in the space suits to do that for you. 58 00:03:23,866 --> 00:03:26,905 And ladies and gentlemen, what happened then was rather extraordinary; 59 00:03:26,905 --> 00:03:29,951 the community, health workers, Peter, they sat down together 60 00:03:29,951 --> 00:03:35,168 and they put together a new plan for controlling Ebola in that Lofa county. 61 00:03:35,168 --> 00:03:39,642 And the reason that this is such an important story, ladies and gentlemen, 62 00:03:39,642 --> 00:03:44,656 is because today, this County, which is right at the center of this epidemic 63 00:03:44,656 --> 00:03:47,513 you've been watching, you've been seeing on the newspapers, 64 00:03:47,513 --> 00:03:51,306 you've been seeing on the television screens, 65 00:03:51,306 --> 00:03:54,153 today, loafer County is nearly eight weeks 66 00:03:54,153 --> 00:03:57,720 without seeing a single case of Ebola. 67 00:03:57,720 --> 00:04:04,439 (Applause) 68 00:04:04,449 --> 00:04:07,872 Now this doesn't mean that the job is done obviously. 69 00:04:07,872 --> 00:04:10,888 There still are huge risk that there will be additional cases there. 70 00:04:10,888 --> 00:04:14,392 But what it does teach us is that Ebola can be beaten. 71 00:04:14,392 --> 00:04:15,930 That's the key thing. 72 00:04:15,930 --> 00:04:19,363 Even on the scale, even with the rapid kind of growth that we saw 73 00:04:19,363 --> 00:04:24,571 in this environment here, we now know Ebola can be beaten. 74 00:04:24,571 --> 00:04:28,562 When communities come together with health care workers work together, 75 00:04:28,562 --> 00:04:31,235 that's when this disease can be stopped. 76 00:04:31,235 --> 00:04:34,885 But how did Ebola end up in Lofa county in the first place? 77 00:04:34,885 --> 00:04:39,577 Well, for that, we have to go back 12 months, to the start of this epidemic. 78 00:04:39,577 --> 00:04:42,828 And as many you know, this virus went undetected, 79 00:04:42,828 --> 00:04:46,803 evaded detection for 3 or 4 months when it began. 80 00:04:46,803 --> 00:04:49,306 That's because this is not a disease of West Africa, 81 00:04:49,306 --> 00:04:52,611 it's a disease of Central Africa, half a continent away. 82 00:04:52,611 --> 00:04:54,417 People hadn't seen the disease before, 83 00:04:54,417 --> 00:04:57,156 health workers hadn't seen the disease before -- 84 00:04:57,156 --> 00:04:59,134 they didn't know what they were dealing with, 85 00:04:59,134 --> 00:05:01,383 and to make it even more complicated, 86 00:05:01,383 --> 00:05:05,951 the virus itself was causing a symptom, a type of a presentation, 87 00:05:05,951 --> 00:05:08,216 that wasn't classical of the disease. 88 00:05:08,216 --> 00:05:12,631 So people didn't even recognize the disease, people who knew Ebola. 89 00:05:12,631 --> 00:05:16,490 For that reason it evaded detection for some time, 90 00:05:16,490 --> 00:05:19,660 But contrary to public belief sometimes these days, 91 00:05:19,660 --> 00:05:25,175 once the virus was detected, there was a rapid surge in of support. 92 00:05:25,175 --> 00:05:28,796 MSF rep relief set up an Ebola treatment center 93 00:05:28,796 --> 00:05:32,070 as many of you know, in the area the World Health Organization 94 00:05:32,070 --> 00:05:34,067 and the partners that it works with deplored. 95 00:05:34,067 --> 00:05:37,005 eventually hundreds of people over the next two months 96 00:05:37,005 --> 00:05:39,393 to be able to help track the virus. 97 00:05:39,393 --> 00:05:43,424 The problem, ladies and gentlemen, is by then, this virus, 98 00:05:43,424 --> 00:05:46,977 well known now as Ebola, had spread too far. 99 00:05:46,977 --> 00:05:50,186 It had already outstripped what was one of the largest responses 100 00:05:50,186 --> 00:05:53,995 that had been mounted so far to an Ebola outbreak. 101 00:05:53,995 --> 00:05:56,403 By the middle of the year, not just Guinea 102 00:05:56,403 --> 00:06:00,366 but now Sierra Leone and Liberia were also infected. 103 00:06:00,366 --> 00:06:05,233 And the virus was spreading geographically the numbers were increasing 104 00:06:05,233 --> 00:06:10,289 and at this time, not only were hundreds of people infected 105 00:06:10,289 --> 00:06:12,978 and dying of the disease, but as importantly, 106 00:06:12,978 --> 00:06:14,907 the front line responders, 107 00:06:14,907 --> 00:06:17,750 the people who had gone to try and help the people, 108 00:06:17,750 --> 00:06:20,892 the health care workers, the other responders 109 00:06:20,892 --> 00:06:24,312 were also sick and dying by the dozens. 110 00:06:24,312 --> 00:06:26,882 The presidents of these countries recognized the emergencies 111 00:06:26,882 --> 00:06:30,422 they met right around that time, they agreed on common action 112 00:06:30,422 --> 00:06:34,640 and they put together an emergency joint operation center in Conakry 113 00:06:34,640 --> 00:06:38,960 to try and work together to finish this disease and get it stopped, 114 00:06:38,960 --> 00:06:41,712 to implement the strategies we talked about. 115 00:06:42,242 --> 00:06:46,199 But what happened then was something we had never seen before with Ebola. 116 00:06:46,199 --> 00:06:49,785 What happened then was the virus, or someone sick with the virus, 117 00:06:49,785 --> 00:06:53,181 boarded an airplane, flew to another country, 118 00:06:53,181 --> 00:06:57,323 and for the first time, we saw in another distant country 119 00:06:57,323 --> 00:06:59,879 the virus pop up again. 120 00:06:59,879 --> 00:07:04,286 This time it was in Nigeria, in the teeming metropolis of Legos, 121 00:07:04,286 --> 00:07:06,245 21 million people. 122 00:07:06,245 --> 00:07:09,228 Now the virus was in that environment. 123 00:07:09,228 --> 00:07:12,768 And as you can anticipate, there was international alarm, 124 00:07:12,768 --> 00:07:16,536 international concern on a scale that we hadn't seen in recent years 125 00:07:16,536 --> 00:07:18,990 caused by a disease like this. 126 00:07:18,990 --> 00:07:23,630 The World Health Organization immediately called together an expert panel, 127 00:07:23,630 --> 00:07:27,251 looked at the situation, declared an international emergency. 128 00:07:27,256 --> 00:07:32,346 And in doing so, the expectations would be that there be a huge outpouring 129 00:07:32,346 --> 00:07:36,996 of international assistance to help these countries which were in so much trouble 130 00:07:36,996 --> 00:07:39,034 and concern at that time. 131 00:07:39,364 --> 00:07:42,111 But what we saw was something very different. 132 00:07:42,341 --> 00:07:45,869 There was some great response. 133 00:07:45,869 --> 00:07:50,630 A number of countries came to assist, many many NGOs and others as you know, 134 00:07:50,630 --> 00:07:54,046 but at the same time, the opposite happened in many places. 135 00:07:54,046 --> 00:07:58,161 Alarm escalated and very soon these countries found themselves 136 00:07:58,161 --> 00:08:02,556 not receiving the support they needed but increasingly isolated. 137 00:08:02,556 --> 00:08:07,290 What we saw with commercial airlines started flying into these countries 138 00:08:07,290 --> 00:08:09,881 and people who hadn't even been exposed to the virus 139 00:08:09,881 --> 00:08:12,043 were no longer allowed to travel. 140 00:08:12,043 --> 00:08:15,971 This cause not only problems, obviously, for the countries themselves, 141 00:08:15,971 --> 00:08:18,093 but also for the response. 142 00:08:18,093 --> 00:08:21,055 Those organizations that were trying to bring people in, 143 00:08:21,055 --> 00:08:23,261 to try and help them respond to the outbreak 144 00:08:23,261 --> 00:08:25,193 they could not get people on airplanes, 145 00:08:25,193 --> 00:08:28,392 they could not get them in to the countries to be able to respond. 146 00:08:28,392 --> 00:08:30,404 In that situation, ladies and gentleman, 147 00:08:30,404 --> 00:08:33,639 a virus like Ebola takes advantage. 148 00:08:33,639 --> 00:08:38,577 And what we saw then was something also we hadn't seen before. 149 00:08:38,577 --> 00:08:41,733 Not only did this virus continue in the places 150 00:08:41,733 --> 00:08:45,324 where they'd already become infected, but then it started to escalate 151 00:08:45,324 --> 00:08:47,692 and we saw the case numbers that you see here, 152 00:08:47,692 --> 00:08:50,746 something we'd never seen before on such a scale 153 00:08:50,746 --> 00:08:53,783 and exponential increase of Ebola cases 154 00:08:53,783 --> 00:08:58,024 not just in these countries or the areas already infected in these countries 155 00:08:58,024 --> 00:09:01,883 but also spreading further and deeper into these countries. 156 00:09:01,883 --> 00:09:03,987 Ladies and gentleman, this was one of the 157 00:09:03,987 --> 00:09:09,772 most concerning international emergencies in public health we've ever seen. 158 00:09:10,502 --> 00:09:13,723 And what happened in these countries then, many of you saw, again, 159 00:09:13,723 --> 00:09:16,742 on the televisions, read about in the newspapers, 160 00:09:16,742 --> 00:09:22,102 we saw the health system start to collapse under the weight of this epidemic. 161 00:09:22,102 --> 00:09:26,722 We saw the schools begin to close, markets no longer started, 162 00:09:26,722 --> 00:09:30,042 no longer functioned the way that they should in these countries. 163 00:09:30,042 --> 00:09:34,161 We saw the misinformation and the misperceptions started to spread 164 00:09:34,161 --> 00:09:37,645 even faster through the communities which became even more alarmed 165 00:09:37,645 --> 00:09:39,260 about the situation. 166 00:09:39,260 --> 00:09:42,794 They started to recoil from those people that you saw in the space suits, 167 00:09:42,794 --> 00:09:45,091 as they call them, would come to help them. 168 00:09:45,091 --> 00:09:48,118 And then the situation deteriorated even further. 169 00:09:48,118 --> 00:09:50,800 The countries had to declare a state of emergency. 170 00:09:50,800 --> 00:09:54,315 Large populations needed to be quarantined in some areas 171 00:09:54,315 --> 00:09:59,975 and then riots broke out. It was a very very terrifying situation 172 00:09:59,975 --> 00:10:02,834 And the world many people began to ask 173 00:10:02,834 --> 00:10:06,803 can we ever stop Ebola when it starts to spread like this 174 00:10:06,803 --> 00:10:11,255 and they started to ask, how well do we really know this virus. 175 00:10:11,585 --> 00:10:14,740 The reality is we don't know Ebola extremely well. 176 00:10:14,740 --> 00:10:18,595 It's a relatively modern disease in terms of what we know about it 177 00:10:18,595 --> 00:10:21,760 we've known the disease only for forty years since it first popped up 178 00:10:21,760 --> 00:10:24,502 in Central Africa in 1976. 179 00:10:24,502 --> 00:10:27,582 But despite that we do know many things, 180 00:10:27,582 --> 00:10:31,805 we know that this virus probably survives in a type of a bat, 181 00:10:31,805 --> 00:10:34,801 we know that it probably enters a human population 182 00:10:34,801 --> 00:10:38,258 when we come in contact with a wild animal that has been 183 00:10:38,258 --> 00:10:41,086 infected with the virus and probably sickened by it. 184 00:10:41,086 --> 00:10:44,307 Then we know that the virus spreads from person to person 185 00:10:44,307 --> 00:10:46,580 through contaminated body fluids. 186 00:10:46,580 --> 00:10:49,051 And as you've all seen we know the horrific disease, 187 00:10:49,051 --> 00:10:53,483 that it then causes in humans where we see this disease cause 188 00:10:53,483 --> 00:10:56,351 severe fevers, diarrhea, vomiting, and then 189 00:10:56,351 --> 00:11:02,541 unfortunately, in 70% of the cases or often more, death. 190 00:11:02,541 --> 00:11:07,884 This is a very dangerous, debilitating, and deadly disease. 191 00:11:08,344 --> 00:11:12,517 But despite the fact that we've not known this disease for a particularly long time, 192 00:11:12,517 --> 00:11:17,394 and we don't know everything about it, we do know how to stop this disease. 193 00:11:17,394 --> 00:11:20,608 There are four things that are critical to stopping Ebola. 194 00:11:20,608 --> 00:11:24,922 First and foremost, the communities have got to understand this disease, 195 00:11:24,922 --> 00:11:28,443 they've got to understand how it spreads and how to stop it. 196 00:11:28,443 --> 00:11:32,519 And then we've got to be able to have systems that can find every single case, 197 00:11:32,519 --> 00:11:36,725 every contact of those cases and begin to track to transmission chains 198 00:11:36,725 --> 00:11:38,682 so that you can stop transmission. 199 00:11:38,682 --> 00:11:42,304 We have to have treatment center specialized Ebola treatment centers, 200 00:11:42,304 --> 00:11:47,167 where the workers can be protected as they try to provide support 201 00:11:47,167 --> 00:11:49,689 to the people who are infected, 202 00:11:49,689 --> 00:11:52,134 so that they might survive the disease. 203 00:11:52,134 --> 00:11:55,664 And then for those who do die, we have to ensure 204 00:11:55,664 --> 00:12:00,192 there is a safe, but at the same time, dignified burial process, 205 00:12:00,192 --> 00:12:04,088 so that there is no spread at that time as well. 206 00:12:04,798 --> 00:12:09,299 So we do know how to stop Ebola and these strategies work, ladies and gentlemen, 207 00:12:09,299 --> 00:12:13,458 the virus was stopped in Nigeria by these four strategies 208 00:12:13,458 --> 00:12:15,562 and the people implementing them obviously. 209 00:12:15,562 --> 00:12:19,584 It was stopped in Senegal where it had spread, and also in the other countries 210 00:12:19,584 --> 00:12:23,047 that were affected by this virus, in this outbreak. 211 00:12:23,047 --> 00:12:27,018 So there's no question that these strategies actually work. 212 00:12:27,018 --> 00:12:32,326 The big question, ladies and gentlemen, was whether these strategies could work 213 00:12:32,326 --> 00:12:36,600 on this scale, in this situation, with so many countries affected with 214 00:12:36,600 --> 00:12:40,206 the kinda exponential growth that you saw. 215 00:12:40,206 --> 00:12:44,757 That was a big question that we were facing just two or three months ago. 216 00:12:44,757 --> 00:12:48,801 Today, we know the answer to that question. 217 00:12:48,801 --> 00:12:51,779 We know that answer because of the extraordinary work 218 00:12:51,779 --> 00:12:56,546 of an incredible group of NGOs and governments, of local leaders, 219 00:12:56,546 --> 00:13:00,932 of UN agencies and many humanitarian and other organizations 220 00:13:00,932 --> 00:13:04,850 that came and joined the fight, to try and stop Ebola in West Africa. 221 00:13:04,850 --> 00:13:08,293 But what had to be done there was slightly different. 222 00:13:08,293 --> 00:13:11,218 These countries took those strategies I just showed you; 223 00:13:11,218 --> 00:13:16,624 the communities and community engagement the case finding, contact tracing, etc. 224 00:13:16,624 --> 00:13:18,548 and they turn them on their head. 225 00:13:18,548 --> 00:13:21,481 There was so much disease they approached it differently. 226 00:13:21,481 --> 00:13:26,912 What they decided to do was they would first try and slow down this epidemic 227 00:13:26,912 --> 00:13:30,959 by rapidly building as many beds as possible so that they specialized 228 00:13:30,959 --> 00:13:34,823 treatment centers so that they could control, they could prevent the disease 229 00:13:34,823 --> 00:13:37,200 from spreading from those were infected. 230 00:13:37,200 --> 00:13:40,032 They would rapidly build out many many burial teams so that 231 00:13:40,032 --> 00:13:41,827 they could safely deal with the dead, 232 00:13:41,827 --> 00:13:44,394 and with that, they would try and slow this outbreak 233 00:13:44,394 --> 00:13:48,613 to see if it could actually then be controlled using the classic approach 234 00:13:48,613 --> 00:13:51,364 of case finding in contact tracing. 235 00:13:51,364 --> 00:13:55,867 And when I went to West Africa about three months ago when I was there, 236 00:13:55,867 --> 00:13:57,669 what I saw was extraordinary. 237 00:13:57,669 --> 00:14:02,595 I saw presidents opening emergency operation centers themselves against Ebola 238 00:14:02,595 --> 00:14:06,363 so that they could personally coordinate and oversee in champion 239 00:14:06,363 --> 00:14:10,450 this surge of international support to try and stop this disease. 240 00:14:10,450 --> 00:14:14,001 We saw militaries from within those countries in from far beyond 241 00:14:14,001 --> 00:14:16,741 coming in to help build Ebola treatment centers 242 00:14:16,741 --> 00:14:19,991 that could be used to isolate those who were sick. 243 00:14:24,460 --> 00:14:27,449 to help train the community so that they could actually 244 00:14:19,991 --> 00:14:24,460 We saw the Red Cross movement working with its partner agencies on the ground there 245 00:14:27,449 --> 00:14:32,132 safely bury their dead in a dignified manner themselves, 246 00:14:32,132 --> 00:14:36,176 and we saw the UN agencies the World Food Program build a tremendous 247 00:14:36,176 --> 00:14:39,996 air bridge that could get responders to every single corner of these countries 248 00:14:39,996 --> 00:14:44,089 rapidly to be able to implement the strategies that we just talked about. 249 00:14:44,089 --> 00:14:47,434 What we saw, ladies and gentlemen, which is probably most impressive 250 00:14:47,434 --> 00:14:52,216 was this incredible work by the governments, by the leaders in these countries 251 00:14:52,216 --> 00:14:56,486 with the communities to try to ensure people understood this disease, 252 00:14:56,486 --> 00:15:02,169 understood the extraordinary things they would have to do to try and stop Ebola. 253 00:15:02,169 --> 00:15:07,189 And as a result, ladies and gentlemen, we saw something that we did not know 254 00:15:07,189 --> 00:15:11,179 only two or three months earlier, whether or not it would be possible. 255 00:15:11,179 --> 00:15:14,309 What we saw was what you see now in this graph, 256 00:15:14,309 --> 00:15:17,118 when we took stock on the first of December. 257 00:15:17,118 --> 00:15:20,560 what we saw was we could bend that curve, so to speak, 258 00:15:20,560 --> 00:15:24,334 change this exponential growth and bring some hope back 259 00:15:24,334 --> 00:15:27,163 to the ability to control this outbreak. 260 00:15:27,163 --> 00:15:29,197 And for this reason, ladies and gentlemen, 261 00:15:29,197 --> 00:15:33,368 there's absolutely no question now that we can catch up with this outbreak 262 00:15:33,368 --> 00:15:37,785 in West Africa, and we can beat Ebola. 263 00:15:37,785 --> 00:15:39,578 The big question though is, 264 00:15:39,578 --> 00:15:42,941 that many people are asking even when they saw this curve, they said, 265 00:15:42,941 --> 00:15:45,485 "hang on a minute, that's great you can slow it down, 266 00:15:45,485 --> 00:15:47,656 but can you actually drive it down to zero?" 267 00:15:47,656 --> 00:15:51,057 Now we already answered that question back at the beginning of this talk 268 00:15:51,057 --> 00:15:55,590 when I spoke about Lofa county in Liberia, 269 00:15:55,590 --> 00:15:59,526 we told you the story haw Lofa county got to a situation where they have 270 00:15:59,526 --> 00:16:01,829 not seen Ebola for eight weeks. 271 00:16:01,829 --> 00:16:05,205 But there are similar stories from the other countries as well. 272 00:16:05,205 --> 00:16:07,451 From Gueckedou in Guinea, 273 00:16:07,451 --> 00:16:11,959 the first area where the first case was actually diagnosed. 274 00:16:11,959 --> 00:16:15,373 We've seen very very few cases in the last couple of months, 275 00:16:15,373 --> 00:16:19,800 and here in Kenema, in Sierra Leone, another area in the epicenter, 276 00:16:19,800 --> 00:16:23,061 we have not seen the virus for more than a couple of weeks -- 277 00:16:23,061 --> 00:16:27,980 way too early to declare victory obviously but evidence, ladies and gentlemen, 278 00:16:27,980 --> 00:16:32,346 not only can the response catch up to the disease but this disease 279 00:16:32,346 --> 00:16:34,722 can be driven to zero. 280 00:16:34,722 --> 00:16:38,878 The challenge now, of course, is doing this on the scale needed 281 00:16:38,878 --> 00:16:44,244 right across these three countries, and that is a huge challenge. 282 00:16:44,244 --> 00:16:46,579 Because when you've been at something 283 00:16:46,579 --> 00:16:52,949 for this long, on this scale, two other big threats come in to join the virus. 284 00:16:52,949 --> 00:16:57,701 The first of those is complacency. The risk that as this disease 285 00:16:57,701 --> 00:17:02,739 curve starts to bend, the media look elsewhere, the world looks elsewhere. 286 00:17:02,739 --> 00:17:05,521 Complacency always a risk. And the other risk of course 287 00:17:05,521 --> 00:17:09,964 is when you've been working so hard for so long and slept so few hours 288 00:17:09,964 --> 00:17:15,510 over the past months, people are tired, people become fatigued and these new risks 289 00:17:15,510 --> 00:17:18,660 start to creep into the response. 290 00:17:18,660 --> 00:17:20,830 Ladies and gentlemen, I can tell you today 291 00:17:20,830 --> 00:17:25,150 I've just come back from West Africa. The people of this countries, 292 00:17:25,150 --> 00:17:27,936 the leaders of these countries, they are not complacent. 293 00:17:27,936 --> 00:17:31,879 They want to drive Ebola to zero in their countries. 294 00:17:31,879 --> 00:17:35,664 And these people, yes they're tired, but they are not fatigued. 295 00:17:35,664 --> 00:17:37,869 They have an energy, they have a courage, 296 00:17:37,869 --> 00:17:40,399 they have the strength to get this finished. 297 00:17:40,399 --> 00:17:45,113 What they need, ladies and gentlemen, at this point, is the unwavering support 298 00:17:45,113 --> 00:17:49,437 of the international community, to stand with them, to bolster and bring even more 299 00:17:49,437 --> 00:17:54,727 support at this time, to get the job finished. Because finishing Ebola 300 00:17:54,727 --> 00:17:59,835 right now means turning the tables on this virus, and beginning to hunt it. 301 00:17:59,835 --> 00:18:05,124 Remember, this virus, this whole crisis, rather, started with one case, 302 00:18:05,124 --> 00:18:10,353 and is going to finish with one case. But it will only finish if those countries 303 00:18:10,353 --> 00:18:14,207 have got enough epidemiologists, enough health workers, enough logisticians 304 00:18:14,207 --> 00:18:17,594 and enough other people working with them to be able to find every one of 305 00:18:17,594 --> 00:18:22,636 those cases track their contacts and make sure that this disease stops 306 00:18:22,636 --> 00:18:24,220 once and for all. 307 00:18:24,220 --> 00:18:27,557 Ladies and gentleman, Ebola can be beaten. 308 00:18:27,557 --> 00:18:32,245 Now we need you to take this story out to tell it to the people who will listen 309 00:18:32,245 --> 00:18:35,457 and educate them on what it means to beat Ebola, 310 00:18:35,457 --> 00:18:39,189 and more importantly, we need you to advocate with the people 311 00:18:39,189 --> 00:18:42,743 who can help us bring the resources we need to these countries, 312 00:18:42,743 --> 00:18:44,517 to beat this disease. 313 00:18:44,517 --> 00:18:48,699 There are a lot of people out there who will survive and will thrive, 314 00:18:48,699 --> 00:18:52,101 in part, because of what you do to help us beat Ebola. 315 00:18:52,101 --> 00:18:53,587 Thank you. 316 00:18:53,587 --> 00:18:57,474 (Applause)