On the evening of June 25, about a week after workers at Redemption started dying, Logan Town took in a young Ebola patient named James Fallah, the caretaker of a nearby Pentecostal church, United God Is Our Light.

The security guard who had wheeled Mr. Fallah into the building held him down a few hours later when he became violent before dying. A week later, the guard came down with Ebola and passed on the virus to two of his children and one grandchild, all of whom died.

After the guard was treated at the clinic, the contagion widened to five other clinic employees. All of them died, including the chief administrator, Edwin Dour, who fatally infected his son, Kaizer, one of Liberia’s most promising basketball players. Kaizer, in turn, passed the virus on to five family members, who all died.

The clinic, which closed for three months, is now operating only during the day and seeing about half of the patients it treated before the epidemic.

“Because of the stigma, people that used to come here before are afraid to come,” said Edwin Sengar, the physician assistant who is now in charge of the clinic.

Some of the staff members had not returned, either.

“I’m afraid,” said Moses Safa, the physician assistant who was on duty the night the Ebola patient was brought in. “I’m not doing anything now. I’m just staying at home. Maybe I’ll go back after Liberia is declared Ebola-free.”