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Nancy & David Writebol: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know

(Facebook/Mark Sheeks)

Another American missionary has been infected with the ebola virus due to their work in Liberia. Nancy Writebol has been in Liberia with her husband David since August as part of the Christian charity SIM. The Writebols’ charity was working in conjuction with Samaritan’s Purse, the same charity Dr. Kent Brantly was serving when he was diagnosed with the disease.

Here’s what you need to know about the couple:

1. They Aren’t Medical Personnel

(Facebook/Nancy Writebol)

According to SIM’s website, David Writebol is the Technical Services Manager and SIM’s Eternal Love Winning Africa’s (ELWA’s) complex of 100 buildings. He helps staff provide electrical power, water and other technical services to the campus, which are utilized by the radio station, hospital, elementary and secondary schools on the campus. Nancy serves as a Personnel Coordinator by helping missionaries and short-term teams with their entry into Liberia. SIM’s website categorizes the Writebols’ work as Technical Services and Business Ministries/Administration/Leadership.


2. They Left Successful Software Industry and Education Careers to Serve as Missionaries

(Facebook/SIM Liberia)

According to their biography on SIM’s website, Nancy and David did not become missionaries until they raised their two sons and left successful careers in education and the software industry. Prior to joining SIM in 2013, the Writebols’ spent 14 years serving orphans and other vulnerable children in Ecuador and Zambia.


3. Nancy Writebol Is the Second American in Liberia to Contract the Virus

According to USA Today, Writebol is the second American to be diagnosed with Liberia as a result of missionary work. Dr. Kent Brantly is the other American who, after working with ebola patients in Liberia, contracted the disease. Brantly came to Liberia with his family after practicing family medicine in Fort Worth, Texas. Since being diagnosed, Brantly has been taken to the isolation ward in Atlanta’s Emory University Hospital, according to NBC News.
Writebol will join Brantly in the same isolation ward, NBC News reports.
Medical professionals are required to wear special gear and suits while working with ebola patients to prevent the spread of the disease.


4. The Ebola Epidemic in Western Africa Has Caused More Than 600 Deaths and 1,000 Infections

According to USA Today, the World Health Organization reports the ebola outbreak in Western Africa has killed more than 670 people and caused more than 1,000 infections. Ebola is considered one of the world’s most virulent diseases with a mortality rate of 90 percent. The disease is spread by contact with infected bodily fluids and has no cure.


5. The Virus Killed one of Liberia’s Top Ebola Doctors

The Associated Press reports a top doctor working in Liberia’s largest hospital died after being infected with the ebola virus. Dr. Samuel Brisbane died Saturday in a treatment center on the outskirts of Monrovia, Liberia’s capital city. The ebola outbreak has killed 319 people in Guinea and 224 in Sierra Leone, the World Health Organization reports.

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Nancy Writebol is the second U.S. citizen to be diagnosed with ebola in Liberia. She and her husband, David, left for Liberia in August as missionaries with the Christian group, SIM. There is no cure for ebola.