Augustine admits he was scared at first but trusts the personal protective equipment he is given. All workers wearing protective gear must be careful when taking it off to avoid coming into contact with any bodily fluids that could be on it.

The facility divides patients between suspected, probable and confirmed Ebola cases. Augustine works in the area with those who are confirmed to have Ebola because, he said, they need the most help.

Though he’s proud of his work, many people who are associated with Ebola — even health care workers — are stigmatized in Sierra Leone.

“My family has abandoned me — and my friends — because I’m doing this job. I’m alone,” Augustine said. “But I have decided to help my country, my people. I feel I am doing the right job. I was sad at first to their reactions, but at the same time, patients here are being discharged. Some are getting better, so it’s worth it.”

One survivor at the facility danced when she was released. Momoh, another patient, said he contracted the virus after driving Ebola patients to the hospital by ambulance. He, too, danced, as the staff sang to cheer up patients.

The Kenema area was one of the hardest hit in Sierra Leone when the outbreak appeared there in May. The facility has been operating for just over a month in a tented area several miles outside the city.

Every day the kitchen goes through 100 coconuts, more than 6,000 gallons of water, 130 pounds of chlorine and many pounds of rice.

It’s a massive operation, and it is functioning at half capacity. There are 60 beds, but staffers can care for only about 30 patients at a time.

At one point they were getting 70 cases a week, said Amanda McClelland, senior emergency health officer for the IFRC. Kenema currently has 481 Ebola cases, according to figures from the Ministry of Health and Sanitation. While the number of cases is starting to decrease, the local facility is still understaffed.

A number of new workers have arrived in recent days for training, and McClelland hopes the facility will be in full operation by next week.

She added that the international response was far too long coming.

“We were there with Médecins Sans Frontières [Doctors Without Borders] in the beginning, trying to say it’s not enough,” she said. “We don’t need money or advisers. We don’t need more people to build Ebola treatment centers. We need more people to run them.”

For Canadian Garth Tohms, who does all the maintenance at the site, the experience was not as scary as he thought it would be.

“I was expecting people lying in streets, dying bodies everywhere. That’s the way some of the media was portraying it, and it wasn’t like that at all,” he said.

He said fear is stopping other qualified workers from coming, and he’s been encouraging other IFRC staffers that they will be protected when dealing with patients.

Veronica Bull has been a nurse for three years and arrived from the country’s capital, Freetown, to work in Kenema. She admits she was scared at first to work with Ebola patients but has quickly grown comfortable and enjoys helping her country.

“I urge other nurses to come, she said. “You cannot sit with your arms folded when you’re a nurse and while people are dying from sickness.”