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The Conversation

A decade after the World Health Organization officially declared an end to the Ebola pandemic in Liberia and Sierra Leone, another outbreak is occurring in the DRC and Uganda. But little is known about how survivors of the Liberia and Sierra Leone outbreak have coped over the last 10 years. Many survivors live in worse conditions than before the epidemic and have been unable to return to their normal lives. Kevin J.A. Thomas argues that learning about their experiences can prevent these problems from occurring among survivors of current and future epidemics.

Adejuwon Soyinka

Regional Editor West Africa

A nurse takes the temperature of a participant in the Ebola vaccine trials in Liberia, 2015. John Moore/Getty Images

Ebola survivors struggle to return to normal lives: what I found out in Sierra Leone and Liberia

Kevin J.A. Thomas, Rice University

10 years after official end of the Ebola pandemic, very few people know that survivors have struggled to continue with their lives.

Drug shortages continue to be a problem in the UK – yet strengthening supply chains alone won’t solve this issue

Emilia Vann Yaroson, University of Sheffield; Jonathan Silcock, University of Bradford; Liz Breen, University of Bradford

Prescription drug shortages can have a significant effect on quality of life for patients.

Why European households throw away so much food – and how to curb the waste mountain

Ian Williams, University of Southampton

Wastage of edible food means lost calories, lost money and a growing climate problem.

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