Fevers, Feuds, and Diamonds: A conversation on Paul Farmer’s latest work, PIH’s Ebola response, and Sierra Leone today

In spring 2021, PIH hosted a series of conversations around Paul Farmer’s latest book, Fevers, Feuds, and Diamonds: Ebola and the Ravages of History. Jon Lascher, advisor to the executive director of PIH Sierra Leone, hosted these conversations with Dr. Paul Farmer, PIH co-founder and chief strategist, and colleagues across PIH who fought Ebola and now lead our health system strengthening work in Sierra Leone. These conversations went behind the scenes of Paul’s experience writing this defining text; discussed firsthand accounts from PIH’s work inside Ebola treatment units; and gave updates on our current and future work in Sierra Leone, from battling COVID-19 to solving the country’s longtime maternal health crisis. We invite you to listen to recordings of these conversations to learn more about health, humanity, and history in West Africa, and how we can apply the important themes and lessons from Paul’s book to the current pandemic and to our shared work toward global health equity. Below, we’ve also shared a look into Paul's book by posting a photo journal from the 2014 Ebola outbreak in West Africa.

fevers feuds and diamonds

 

Event Recordings

"Into My Notebook It Went”: The Origins and Creation of Fevers, Feuds, and Diamonds: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZluBkdGB7og

Care Versus Containment: Stories and Reflections from PIH’s Ebola Response: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JcAzTR1akc4

Watering a Clinical Desert: Updates on PIH’s work in Sierra Leone: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fxSl5tXAPnY

Fevers, Feuds, and Diamonds: Ebola and the Ravages of History Photo Journal

"As with COVID-19, the disease caused by a novel coronavirus, a lot of published or broadcast Ebola commentary did discuss where the epidemic had originated and hypothesized about how it had spread. The latter was never a mystery: for centuries, footpaths and river crossings, along with shared languages and cultures and family ties, have bound the eastern reaches of Sierra Leone, Liberia, and Guinea into a single ecological and social zone sometimes termed ‘Upper West Africa.’ The epidemic was fueled and sustained within this three-country region by everyday acts of caregiving, the mundane yet sacred obligations people felt to nurse the sick and bury the dead—without the PPE, or personal protective equipment, that such duties often require."

Paul Farmer, Fevers, Feuds, and Diamonds: Ebola and the Ravages of History 

Care workers in a vehicle on a dirt road
A Lofa County health department burial team rolls down a dirt road to bury Gulu Mulbah, 45, on November 7, 2014, in Voinjama, Liberia. The burial team took Mulbah’s body to his home, where they buried him in his backyard wearing protective suits, gloves, and goggles. (Michel du Cille / The Washington Post
A view of a village in Guinea
A view of the village of Meliandou, Guinea, where a toddler named Émile Ouamouno came down with symptoms consistent with Ebola and died in late December 2013. Émile is considered Patient Zero in the outbreak across Guinea, Sierra Leone, and Liberia. (Pete Muller / National Geographic

“Ebola and other public-health calamities strike most often in places from which human capital and raw materials have been extracted for centuries. From the rural reaches of Haiti and Rwanda, from the prisons of Siberia, and from the slums of urban Peru: for thirty years, I’ve been pointing out how the epidemics that people have suffered in these places have arisen because of the inequalities—political, economic, and medical—that such extraction invariably worsens.”

Paul Farmer, Fevers, Feuds, and Diamonds: Ebola and the Ravages of History

A view of a river in Nogoa, Guinea
A view from Nongoa, Guinea, where one can cross the Makona River into Sierra Leone by a dugout canoe. It is one of several ways to easily move among those countries and Liberia. (Daniel Berehulak / The New York Times
A general ward at Kenema Government Hospital
One of the general wards at Kenema Government Hospital was abandoned by staff and patients owing to fears over Ebola. (Tommy Trenchard / The New York Times/Redux/eyevine/Nature
Views from the campus of a dilapidated Port Loko Government Hospital
PORT LOKO, SIERRA LEONE - January 09, 2015: Views of and around the Government Hospital in Port Loko.
 
A look over the Kroo Bay neighborhood of Freetown, Sierra Leone
A look over Kroo Bay neighborhood of Freetown, Sierra Leone. (Pete Muller / National Geographic

“I couldn’t shake the feeling that Ebola was a fire that we had an ethical obligation to fight. Saving lives is, after all, what doctors and nurses take oaths to do. Even after tardy WHO warnings and appeals for assistance, however, a familiar and unambitious logic proliferated in public-health circles around the world: the priority was containment, not delivery of clinical services. This was clinical nihilism: the tools and funding required to improve supportive and critical care, we heard every damn day, were not in the budget. But if Ebola wasn’t in the budget, didn’t that mean that the budget, not the virus, was wrong?”

Paul Farmer, Fevers, Feuds, and Diamonds: Ebola and the Ravages of History 

Local workers raising a PIH flag on a wall
PORT LOKO, SIERRA LEONE - Our flag was raised when a cohort of PIH clinicians joined a staff of local health care providers at the Port Loko Ebola Treatment Unit (ETU) in Sierra Leone on Nov. 13, 2014.
Healthcare workers holding a baby
PORT LOKO, SIERRA LEONE - January 14, 2015: A family of three exits the ambulance; a woman, man and their infant. Nurse Tim Cunningham swaddles the baby in a "lappa," a Sierra Leonean body drape, as Dr. Luanne Freer checks the child's temperature using an infrared thermometer which never touches the skin.
Clinical meeting with healthcare workers
PORT LOKO, SIERRA LEONE - January 10, 2015: The Maforki ETU. The morning clinical meeting in the triage workroom. The gathering includes PIH, Cuban and Sierra Leonean clinicians and is usually led by Chief Health Officer John Martin.
Doctor examining a patient
PORT LOKO, SIERRA LEONE - JANUARY 09, 2015: Dr. Regan Marsh manages Mariatu's care while an adult Ebola survivor helps to feed and encourage the little girl.
 

“Perfect storms strike in perfect conditions, but, as Albert Camus said, they are long in the making. The long history of injury and injustice and extraction in West Africa made the Ebola crisis feel inevitable. What is not inevitable, however, is the cynical notion that misery and privation will continue unabated in the region. With a modicum of investment, a larger dose of social justice, and attention to the needs of those already sick or injured, the disastrous health conditions of this region can be reversed.”

Paul Farmer, Fevers, Feuds, and Diamonds: Ebola and the Ravages of History
 

Helicopter preparing to takeoff
BONG, LIBERIA - OCTOBER 13, 2014: Partners In Health and Wellbody Alliance Coalition members hitch a ride back to Monrovia in a UN helicopter.
 
Joia meeting with community members
Wellbody Alliance staff and patients—including Co-founder Bailor Barrie and Medical Director Yusupha Dibba—welcome PIH’s Chief Medical Officer Joia Mukherjee to their clinic in Kono District, Sierra Leone, in early 2015. (Wellbody Alliance)
President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf of Liberia with PIH leaders
MONROVIA, LIBERIA - OCTOBER 14, 2014: Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf receives Partners In Health and Last Mile Health coalition members for a second meeting to discuss the Ebola response.
 
A view of Freetown from Yabom Koroma's neighborhood
FREETOWN, SIERRA LEONE - APRIL 7, 2015: Gina lamin, survivor program coordinator in Kono District, and Umu Kallom, a survivor working on social mobilization in Freetown, leave a home visit to Yabom Koroma, not pictured, in the mountain court section of Freetown.

“If there’s a lesson to be learned from Ebola, it may be this one: for everything we do, or say, in pandemic time, let’s keep asking the same question. Might this help?”

Paul Farmer, Fevers, Feuds, and Diamonds: Ebola and the Ravages of History