Che Guevara’s daughter: ‘Ebola is beyond poverty, health cannot be marketed’

Che Guevara’s daughter: ‘Ebola is beyond poverty, health cannot be marketed’
Fecha de publicación: 
3 December 2014
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No amount of money can buy a human life, therefore it must never be marketed, Cuban doctor Aleida Guevara told RT, speaking on the Ebola epidemic. Cuba and the world have been racing to conquer the latest outbreak, which has claimed 7,000 lives.

Cuban doctors first came to West Africa in October in response to the UN’s call for help. Havana sent several hundred specialists to Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea.

“We sent a brigade of doctors, scientists and health workers, all with the aim to look for a solution for this disease, to try to eliminate this new pandemic that is assaulting humanity,” doctor Guevara, who has worked not only in Cuba, but also in Angola and Nicaragua, told RT’s Going Underground.

“We are working as a team which is the best way to work as doctors, not just looking at the disease, but trying to find ways to prevent it [from] repeating itself. We are working more to try to avoid other people from getting ill. Not just finding the cure, but avoiding other people getting ill.”

Ebola, which has a high mortality rate, was first discovered in 1976 in Zaire – now the Democratic Republic of Congo. There were several outbreaks in following years. The current epidemic is the worst ever recorded, and has killed nearly 7,000 and infected some 16,000 people since it was identified in March, according to the World Health Organization’s (WHO) latest estimates.

Doctor Guevara supposes the expansion of Ebola was caused by human impact on the environment. In the particular regions of the outbreak, people have altered the ecological situation, leading to the spread of infection.

“It is a problem about destroying the environment,” she said. “It is beyond poverty. We are killing our planet.”

Villain or hero? Bats may be key to curing Ebola, scientists say

The source of the epidemic is still unknown, though scientists believe fruit bats can be carriers of the virus. Local people in the affected areas have devastated tropical forests which are home to such bats, forcing them into towns and villages.

The UN has called on the world to help fight against the disease. Many countries – including European nations, Russia, and Cuba – have sent doctors and health workers to the outbreak zone.

Several countries are developing vaccines against Ebola. Canada and the US have already started testing their vaccines on humans. Russia also created a vaccine in October, and plans to send it to Guinea next month.

70-90% efficiency: Russia to send Ebola vaccine to W. Africa in 2 months

Doctor Guevara stressed that public health should not be a private business.

“Health is a human right,” she said. “If you ask someone how much they would pay to save the life of a child, nobody can give you an amount because there is not enough money to pay for the life of a human being. Something that has no price cannot be on the market.”

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