{
   "source_x": "CZI",
   "title": "The health carer",
   "doi": "10.1126/science.367.6479.730",
   "abstract": "On 2 January 2019, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus faced a life-or-death decision. The director-general of the World Health Organization (WHO) had spent New Year's Eve in Bunia, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), to boost the morale of staff fighting the second biggest Ebola epidemic ever. As he was getting ready to board a helicopter to Uganda, where he was scheduled to meet Prime Minister Ruhakana Rugunda, Tedros had to decide whether to bring along a young Congolese man named Charles Lwanga-Kikwaya. The day before, a group of Ebola vaccinators was attacked by a group of young men and women\u2014one of many assaults WHO staff has had to endure\u2014and Lwanga-Kikwaya had been hit on the head with a large stone. His injury was serious, says Jeremy Farrar, head of the Wellcome Trust, who accompanied Tedros and examined the patient. \u201cWe quickly decided we either had to evacuate him or he was going to die,\u201d says Farrar, who trained as a neurologist.",
   "publish_time": "2020",
   "authors": [
      "Kupferschmidt, Kai"
   ],
   "journal": "Science",
   "Microsoft Academic Paper ID": "3006481984",
   "WHO #Covidence": "#820",
   "id": "https://doi.org/10.1126/science.367.6479.730"
}