 Since basically the middle of November, we went to high gear with preparation for the training academy project, the Nationally Bola Training Academy, which is situated on two distinct training sites, one being the National Stadium, the other one being the Faculty of Nursing College of Medicine. We offered two basic courses. One is the three-day IPC course offered to anyone. And basically it's a basic IPC, cleaners, hygienists, doctors, nurses. We also offer what is called the three plus two. It's a five-day clinical course, three days didactic, and two days simulated patient care. The patient's idea is with the confirmant of Ebola. He's lost lots of fluids from his body through diarrhea and vomiting, and he's getting confused. Blood is dripping over the place. The participants are supposed to identify him as somebody who could be dangerous to restrain him and sedate him so that he stops wandering around and also replace the IV line, give him medication and also document what they have done. We are here to make sure at least we simulate some cases. We make the training to become practical. Instead of just talking, talking and talking, you see the patient, I will appear before you. I manifest the signs, then you can see how best you can tragedy, and you classify whether we suspect a confirmed case or a probable case. My school where I work, that is McKay University School of Public Health, asked me whether I was interested to come and train health workers here. We've been training health workers in Uganda to prepare for Ebola hemorrhagic severs and mabak would move to districts and train. So I thought I would come and share my experience, but also learn from what is happening around. The child has symptoms that are consistent with Ebola, but the mother is asymptomatic and you want to isolate the child. Do you think that is going to be a simple task for you? We came in as WHO in partnership with IOM and IOM provided the technical assistance, the training materials, the curriculum, and together hand in hand with IOM, we've been able to express this to the participants, different participants, and keep adjusting it as the training needs keep changing. When I was born, I was positive, I felt bad, and the whole family started crying because it's general, this is the first time we have got this disease in our country, so medical people are dying, seductors are dying, so the entire family also was crying. I also was thinking that maybe I will not make it up, by the grace of God, now I'm here. Well, I had a tugging in my heart, I mean, I would watch CNN documentaries and other coverage by the media on the things that were happening here. I couldn't sleep at night, I said, I'm a serolonian, I'm a healthcare professional, and I know how to train, and I know there's some place for me to function over here. That was the overriding factor that brought me here. We definitely provide IOM with the facility, we have the training taking place right now, and we also provide them with staff, who are also part of the instructing team, or instructors on the training program, where periodically we talk to the staff to ensure that at least they are actually comfortable with the work they are doing. They have daily evaluation forms at the field, and giving their own comments on the training. Most of the comments are, this training must continue, you should take the training to the provinces, you should train more healthcare workers, thank you very much for the training, we say thanks to IOM, WHO and the ALSLAV, those are amongst the comments that they've been making over the period. The trainings help a lot in reducing the rate of transmission in the country, because initially people were not having adequate knowledge about the Ebola, the infection prevention and control measures. The skills and trainings you've been doing here, when you try to implement it, you will see the difference. So I'm advising everyone that is out there, that have not come here yet for this training, to rush up and come, so that they can improve the health status of the country as a whole. Working here in this academy, be it with IOM, WHO or other partners, we are working as a team. So our goal and purpose is one and the same. It's a big impact. It's a big impact. If I tell you how much I feel, how much I'm happy as a Sylonian, when IOM is contributing immensely to this response, I mean, I don't think we can even measure it. There is no tape to measure that.