Thanks to Adia Benton for tweeting the link to this BBC Report by Tulip Mazumdar: Is Sierra Leone ready for the next epidemic? Excerpt:
The UK pledged £427m ($560m) towards responding to the Ebola outbreak, and strengthening the country's health systems.
The jewel in the crown to that response was the 100-bed Kerrytown Ebola treatment centre. I visited the site a number of times during the outbreak. At its height it was a buzzing lifeline for a country that was overwhelmed. Some 1,500 British troops deployed there to help build and staff parts of the site.
Save the Children took up the daunting task of running the main treatment areas. Their medics saved more than 150 lives.
When I visited this time, it was derelict and decaying. A few stray dogs and a family of goats had taken up residence in what used to be functioning wards.
I went there with Kerrytown's first survivor, 18-year-old Daniel Turay, and his sister Cecilia. They lost 27 members of their family to Ebola.
Daniel said he had both heart-breaking and heart-warming memories of the site.
"When I was in the red zone it was horrible seeing people dying… but seeing the work the doctors were doing - even though they were risking their lives, they didn't relent.
"They went on to make sure that we survived. I told them that because of what you've done, I want to be like you, I want to be a doctor."
'Total mess'
As Daniel wandered through the empty tents and overgrown grounds, he was clearly very frustrated.
"The government said they wanted to establish a hospital here… but what I see really discourages me.
"It's something that hasn't been made a reality. It's a total mess to see it like this. There aren't many hospitals here. It could have been a benefit to the whole district."
The Ministry of Health has said it plans to make a maternity unit on the site by the end of the year. We did not see any building work taking place.
The solar panels for precious lighting, the drainage system and some of the structures were all still standing. These are rare commodities in a country desperate for more health facilities.
"There's a very small community in that area," said Dr Brima Kargbo. "We are building a new hospital in the nearby area of Waterloo instead."