
Nurse's aide Benetha Coleman comforts an infant girl thought to have Ebola symptoms in the high-risk area of the Doctors Without Borders' Ebola Treatment Unit in Paynesville, Liberia, in January. The baby's blood test later came back negative.

Midwife Maima Johnson hands a newborn girl to mother Cecelia Mensah after delivering the child at the Star of the Sea Health Center in Monrovia, Liberia, in early 2015. Midwives and health workers in the clinic have taken extra precautions throughout Liberia's Ebola epidemic to avoid becoming infected.

Health workers in protective clothing speak with new arrivals in the outpatient waiting room of Redemption Hospital, formerly an Ebola holding center, in February 2015 in Monrovia, Liberia. The virus has killed at least 3,700 people in Liberia alone, the most of any country, and nearly 9,000 across in West Africa.

A health worker wearing protective clothing sprays the entrance of Redemption Hospital in Monrovia.

A sign, originally saying "Ebola is Real," hangs defaced in the West Point township in Monrovia, Liberia, in early 2015. Early in the epidemic, many residents of the seaside slum believed the epidemic was a hoax.

A mother brings her sick child for treatment at Redemption Hospital, formerly an Ebola holding center, in Monrovia in February 2015. Life is slowly returning to normal for many Liberians.