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NATIONAL PUBLIC RADIO by Linda Poon May 3, 2015
Liberia is nearing a milestone. On May 9, its Ebola outbreak will be officially declared over, assuming no new cases between now and then.
But what happens when an outbreak of Ebola ends?
![](/sites/default/files/u478/Ebola%20Dr%20Piot%20and%20Congolese%20nurse%20may%203_0.jpg)
Dr. Peter Piot (left) meets with Sukato Mandzomba, a nurse who contracted Ebola during the 1976 outbreak. Mandzomba now runs a makeshift hospital lab in Yambuku. Courtesy of Dr. Heidi Larson
He says Yambuku hasn't changed much since then.
When Ebola first struck the village, it took a toll on the region's already weak health infrastructure and economy. .... as nearby villages came under quarantine during the harvest season, people weren't able to sell crops. That, he says, exacerbated the poverty.
Nearly 40 years later, Piot says it was hard to find signs of improvement during his visit.
Read complete story.
http://www.npr.org/blogs/goatsandsoda/2015/05/01/403575192/what-happens-to-a-country-when-an-outbreak-of-ebola-ends
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