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KERA News
Reporter: Lauren Silverman
Reporter: Stella M. Chávez
Digital News Editor: Eric Aasen
Digital Coordinator: Molly Evans
Assistant Producer: Krystina Martinez
Producer: Stephen Becker
Designer/Developer: Ryan Tainter
Executive Producer: Jeff Whittington
KERA Vice President/News: Rick Holter
Selected photos courtesy of The Dallas Morning News
KERA’s radio program theme music “Tiptoe” by YEYEY is licensed under CC BY NC 3.0
KERA’s health, science and technology coverage is made possible in part by the Lyda Hill Foundation.
Stories
- What You Should Know About The Virus
- Ebola In Dallas: Scenes, Sounds and Stories
- Tracking Ebola’s Path Through Dallas
- 8 Lessons The Ebola Virus Taught Us
- The Voices Of Ebola
- At Texas Children’s Hospital, An Ebola Treatment Center Just For Kids
- An Ebola Vaccine May Come From An Austin Lab
- In Vickery Meadow, Ebola’s Epicenter, Life Returns To Normal
- ‘I Had No Idea I Would Be In Charge,’ Dallas County Judge Says
- After Ebola, Some Businesses Suffered, While Others Profited
About
In 2014, Americans watched from afar as the Ebola virus raged through West Africa, killing thousands and threatening millions. Until Sept. 30, when a Liberian man named Thomas Eric Duncan tested positive in a Dallas emergency room. Two nurses were infected before he died. Fear traveled faster, and far wider, than the virus.
KERA’s project Surviving Ebola explores what happened in Dallas – and what the medical community and local governments learned, how treatment changed and how the people on the front lines fought the disease and survived.