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How Liberia Is Starting To Beat Ebola, With Fingers Crossed

If you want the inside scoop about what's happening with the Ebola outbreak, then just hangout at the Mamba Point Hotel in Monrovia.

It's packed with scientists from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, international reporters and a bunch of guys and gals in camouflage from the U.S. Army.

They all like to hang out at the bar during lunch time. That's where I met Joel Montgomery, a top epidemiologist at the CDC. We head off to a quiet side room, and he starts telling me about all of his trips to Monrovia.

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"When I was here in August, not to sound like, making this too colorful but, I mean there were ... literally dead people on the streets," Montgomery says. "And the burial teams were picking up 50 to 60 bodies a day."

At that point, the country had been on a devastating path. Clinics were stretched way past capacity. And even getting an Ebola test could take days, or weeks if you lived in the jungle. Samples had to be sent by a series of canoes and motorcycles to the only lab in the country.

The epidemic was doubling every few weeks. Some computational biologists were predicting more than 20,000 cases by the end of October.

But officials are seeing a very different situation on the ground now. The country has had about 6,500 cases. New cases are on a decline, dropping off by about a 100 a week, on average, since early October.

Liberia has also beefed up its ability to deal with the virus. The country has quadrupled its diagnostic labs. And hundreds of new beds have been added in Ebola clinics.

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"It does fell much better than it did in August, I've got to tell you," Montgomery says. "The pulse, you know? The people on the street. It just feels different. It feels more controlled now than it did."

So has the tide turned?

"It's too early to say," Montgomery says. "Because as soon as you say that, you're going to be wrong."

The country is still reporting a large number of cases. And the virus is still popping up in new parts of the country, Montgomery notes.

But there's another positive sign that doesn't get much attention, he says: Liberians are taken the matter into their own hands.

"I think a lot communities are now starting to get it and figure out how they can limit spread, prevent infection and prevent transmission," he says. "Cause this is not ... rocket science."

That same day, at that same bar, I heard about a woman in Monrovia helping with a grassroots campaign in West Point, one of the city's poorest neighborhoods.

The project sounded awesome. So I emailed Katie Meyler the day after I returned to the States. She called me on her cellphone from a market near West Point.

"Nobody would want to eradicate Ebola from their own neighborhood more than those who live in their neighborhood," Meyler says. "The mothers, fathers and neighbors and sisters, who want to protect their own children and protect their own families."

Meyler is the founder of More Than Me. It's a small nonprofit that runs a free school for girls in West Point. The school had to close when Ebola came. So Meyler knew she needed to turn her attention to getting the virus out of West Point.

A few months ago, she says leaders in West Point banded together and built their own Ebola task force.

"They started going door-to-door-to-door, first with information about what Ebola is and how to keep yourself save," Meyler says.

Then the team started training people to be nurses. So the team could actively look for Ebola cases in West Point. When the nurses find someone sick with what looks like Ebola, the team calls an ambulance and gets the person out of the community. All this hasn't cost much money, Meyler says.

"These guys just need boots because they're like going door-to-door in flip flops looking for sick people," she says. "They need transportation to get the sick out as soon as possible. It doesn't have to be a billion dollar ambulance.

The shoestring operation is working well. Cases in West Point have dropped. And the government wants to expand the project to five other neighborhoods in Monrovia.

"The way to reduce the cases," Meyler says, "is to listen to people who live in the community."

Copyright 2014 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.