Examining the long-term social consequences of epidemic survival in post-Ebola West Africa.
What happens to survivors when an epidemic ends and the headlines fade? In Life After Epidemics, Kevin J. A. Thomas confronts this pressing question through the voices of those who lived through the world's deadliest Ebola outbreak. Based on interviews with 250 survivors in Liberia and Sierra Leone, the book reveals how, years after their recovery, many survivors continue to endure long-term health issues, economic hardship, and social exclusion, conditions which are often exacerbated by their preexisting marginalization.
The 2014-2016 West African Ebola epidemic left more than 17,000 survivors. Yet even as governments and international agencies celebrated medical successes and invested in disease surveillance and vaccine development, they offered minimal attention to the social realities unfolding in the epidemic's aftermath. This book documents how the lack of sustained social response through support for livelihoods, reintegration, and long-term care has had lasting consequences on survivors and their communities. Thomas argues that these devastating consequences are even worse for those already facing poverty, stigma, and social invisibility.
Yet amid these challenges, many survivors have found ways to reframe their experiences, participate in recovery efforts, and forge new roles within their communities. Their stories speak not only to resilience but to the unfinished work of public health systems that still treat survival as a conclusion rather than a beginning. Life After Epidemics makes the case that addressing the aftermath of outbreaks must go beyond emergency medical responses to encompass the complex social dimensions that shape recovery while reconsidering what it means to truly heal after crisis.
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Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Produkt-Hinweis
Maße
Höhe: 229 mm
Breite: 152 mm
Dicke: 12 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-4214-5414-6 (9781421454146)
DOI
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Kevin J. A. Thomas is a distinguished professor of sociology at Rice University. He is the author of Global Epidemics, Local Implications: African Immigrants and the Ebola Crisis in Dallas and Diverse Pathways: Race and the Incorporation of Black, White, and Arab-Origin Africans in the United States.
Table of Contents
Dedication
Acknowledgements
1. Beginning Life at the End of Epidemics
2. Social Determinants of Recovery
3. Family Life in the Aftermath of Ebola
4. The Health Consequences of Prior Ebola Infection
5. The Stickiness of Stigma
6. Livelihood Strategies and the Economic Consequences of the Epidemic
7. Beyond Medical Responses