The first group of Ebola patients were very special, two elderly female patients, 75-year-old KADIATU and 60-year-old MARIAMA, we learned through medical history that KADIATU is an elderly widow, while the other one is always frail and sick. The morning shift started at 8:30 a.m. The doctor on duty introduced the distribution and condition of the patients currently in the hospital in detail, focusing on the changes in the condition of the two elderly positive patients yesterday, the treatment process and today’s treatment plan. The medical team leader, nursing team leader and team leader all gave instructions on the treatment plan for the patients and determined the purpose of treatment and execution steps for today. At 10:00 a.m. on time, medical and nursing staffs finished putting on personal protection from their respective work areas and entered the infected wards, together they summarized the number of patients currently in the hospital and the distribution of the wards, and then checked the wards together, with detailed consultation and examination of each one by the doctors. Since Ebola virus disease is one of the most dangerous infectious diseases and patients’ blood and body fluids are highly infectious, there are no routine laboratory indicators available to clinicians as we commonly draw blood for laboratory tests. We must judge the patient’s condition based on the description of the patient’s discomfort and the objective conditions seen on physical examination, arrange the daily treatment plan, and then hand over to the nursing team to prepare and bag the medication to each patient, and if an infusion is needed, prepare it according to the infusion plan and have the infusion team operate it after the preparation of the liquid. The infusion treatment for the two Ebola patients today included supplemental Ringer’s solution of 1000ml, cephalosporin and metronidazole antibacterial treatment by IV, and electrolyte correction treatment such as potassium supplementation when necessary. The treatment process fully demonstrated that one must rely on solid professional knowledge, two must be responsible, and three must achieve mutual respect between doctors and patients. 75-year-old KADIATU initially resolutely refused to be given fluids by the nurses, the Chinese and Serbian nursing staff did not give up, and after a simple consultation together, firstly, the Serbian nurses communicated with the elderly, explaining the important role of the current infusion, with a kind attitude, and with the local indigenous language communication, this communication The effect was remarkable. Then the Chinese nurse started the infusion operation, which is an invasive operation directly touching the patient and directly contaminating the patient’s blood, which is highly dangerous in itself, but the nursing staff had no fear and was able to successfully complete the puncture despite the goggles, face screen and three layers of gloves, fully demonstrating the professionalism of the medical staff. The intravenous needle was placed, the infusion line was connected, and the fluid was successfully introduced into the patient. The treatment brought hope to the Ebola patients and everyone’s hard work and sweat was something to be proud of.