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    <title>NPR: Sudan strain</title>
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    <description>Sudan strain</description>
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      <title>A doctor&apos;s Ebola memoir is all too timely with a new outbreak in Uganda</title>
      <description>Dr. Benjamin Black talks about &lt;em&gt;Belly Woman: Birth, Blood and Ebola&lt;/em&gt; — the inside story of what it was like to face a terrifying epidemic in West Africa.</description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 28 Oct 2022 18:28:54 -0400</pubDate>
      <link>https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2022/10/28/1119976847/a-doctors-ebola-memoir-is-all-too-timely-with-a-new-outbreak-in-uganda</link>
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      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<img src='https://media.npr.org/assets/img/2022/10/28/thumbnail_whatsapp-image-2022-10-18-at-6.56.49-pm-3-_toned_custom-2c201f3df0c2d1935f7d6473ef50bead9fd1b1d1.jpg' alt='Dr. Benjamin Black in front of the Gondama Referral Center in Sierra Leone, where he worked during the Ebola outbreak of 2014-2016. The center treated children and women in urgent need of obstetric and gynecological care. As the outbreak exploded, the center decided to stop admitting pregnant women, a decision that still weighs on Black.'/><p>Dr. Benjamin Black talks about <em>Belly Woman: Birth, Blood and Ebola</em> — the inside story of what it was like to face a terrifying epidemic in West Africa.</p><img src='https://media.npr.org/include/images/tracking/npr-rss-pixel.png?story=1119976847' />]]></content:encoded>
      <dc:creator>Susan Brink</dc:creator>
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