going to look at the future and the present intervened. so we said we got to go to west africa. and we were there for a couple of months and we came out and began working again on influenza and zika happened. and we thought we re a little bit more topical than we ever imagined. you were in west africaau during the ebola crisis. it only takes a small amount of the virus anywhere on your skin to cause an infeksz. and as i learned no precaution is too small for the doctors. this is one of the doctors without borders. he s from canada. he comes into these settings for weeks at time. he s not mairied, no children. that would be a job liability, he tells me. cover it like that? multiple pairs of gloves and
storm. you actually started working on the film before ebola, how did ebola kind of change the we thought we were doing a thing about the past like sars and influenza and we were going to look at the future and suddenly the present interscreened. we wept to west africa and we were there for a couple of months and we were there and working on inflew wu weenza and zika happened. you were in west africa during the ebola crisis, i just want to play this for our viewers. reporter: it only takes a small amount of virus anywhere on your skin to cause an infection, and as i learned, no precaution is too small for the doctors who treat these patients. tim is one of the doctors without borders, he s from canada, he comes into these settings for weeks at a time. he is not married, he has no children, that would be a job
dr. pierre rolen of the cdc has helped trace ebola outbreaks for many years. the risk is not the people dealing with ebola patient it s the people dealing with regular patient not thinking of ebola. it only takes a small amount of the virus anywhere on your skin to cause an infection and as i learned, no precaution is too small for the doctors who care for these patients. so, nothing gets in. nothing gets out. nothing gets out. tim is one of the doctors without borders. he s from canada. he comes into these settings for weeks at a time. he is not married. he has no children. that would be a job liability he tells me. like this? multiple pairs of gloves and masks. the head is completely covered. a multi-layer gown, boots and then an apron. it s positively suffocating in the 100-degree weather. these are the final pair of gloves we put on. preparing to treat a patient with ebola is like preparing to land on the moon, but you re their only visitor, the only
years. the risk is not the people dealing with ebola patient it s the people dealing with regular patient not thinking of ebola. it only takes a small amount of the virus anywhere on your skin to cause an infection and as i learned no precaution is too small for the doctors who care for these patients. so, nothing gets in. nothing gets out. nothing gets out. tim is one of the doctors without borders. he s from canada. he comes into these settings for weeks at a time. he is not married. he has no children. that would be a job liability he tells me. like this? multiple pairs of gloves and masks. the head is completely covered. a multi-layer gown, boots and then an apron. it s positively suffocating in the 100-degree weather. these are the final pair of gloves we put on. preparing to treat a patient with ebola is like preparing to land on a moon, but you re their only visitor, the only person
the air or live long on surfaces and peep don t typically spread it until they are sick. really sick. when that s the case, they re not up walking around on the busy streets. down in bed. in hospitals or worse. even the dead are highly contagious. the story, always the same. reporter: this doctor from the cdc helped trace ebola outbreaks for 30er yaos. years. it s the people dealing with regular patient not thinking of ebo ebola. it only take as small amount of the virus anywhere on your skin. nothing gets in. nothing gets out. tim is one of the doctors without boarders. he s from canada. he comes into these settings for weeks at a time. he is not married, has no children. that would be a job liability, he tells me.