By Amanda Frankel | Project Leader
Thank you for your support of our mission and our project in West Africa – where, with your donations, we are working to ensure that accurate, timely, reliable and contextualized local information about the nature, spread and treatment of the Ebola Disease Virus is provided and shared with the affected population by health workers and media.
If you donated today, your donation has been matched 100% by the Paul G Allen Family Foundation, doubling your impact and putting us that much closer to our fundraising goal. Thank you for your support!
It has been an extremely busy week since we launched our project on GlobalGiving. In Guinea, where Internews has been working since the early days of the outbreak, we have dramatically increased the amount of Ebola-related content on radios in the capital, in the South East and cross-border into Liberia. Our team in Guinea travelled to Monrovia, Liberia for a quick assessment of the environment, and a team member in Sierra Leona conducted a rapid assessment in-country last week.
We’d like to share some of the initial findings from the assessments we conducted, which will inform our response in Guinea, Sierra Leone, and Liberia moving forward.
Guinea:
Sierra Leone:
Liberia:
After this initial assessment, with your support, we can begin to bridge the gap in information and address the issues identified. On the whole, we understand that, of the most immediate needs, information is one of the most critical is fighting the spread of this disease; people need to know how to identify early symptoms, prevent transmission, what to do and where to receive medical help, especially if they live in remote rural areas. Rumours and false information proliferates in these situations. Communities need to be able to access relevant information through local media sources and platforms that they trust, in languages that they understand. Local media are a vital partner for agencies seeking to provide information about risk and assistance options, and an important tool to counter the rumours and false information. However only too frequently, local media themselves lack accurate and timely information, lack experience in reporting health emergencies, do not have well established contacts with the appropriate health authorities or service providers, and lack the resources to carry out the required reporting.
Thank you for partnering with us to address this very serious challenge. We will continue to update you on our progress.
In the meantime, we encourage you to share this project with your friends, family, and colleagues. For a limited time, the Paul G. Allen Foundation will be matching donations 100% for GlobalGiving projects supporting the treatment and prevention of the spread of the Ebola epidemic in West Africa. There are $100,000 available in matching funds for this effort.
Please consider telling your friends and family about our project - share the link on your blogs or social networks, use the tell-a-friend feature on the project page to email your network, or just bring us up in conversation. You know your friends and family best, so use your own words - tell them why you chose our project and what it means to you.
Thank you again for all you have done to support Internews and our mission.
Links:
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