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Wednesday, 1 October 2014
EBOLA IN US: First Ebola case diagnosed in the US
Patient who recently returned from Liberia tested
positive at a hospital in Dallas, Texas, health
officials say.
A patient being treated at a Dallas hospital has
tested positive for Ebola, the first case of the
disease to be diagnosed in the United States,
federal health officials announced.
Officials at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital
said the unidentified patient is being kept in
isolation and that the hospital is following Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention
recommendations to keep doctors, staff and
patients safe.
The patient is a Liberian national who was
admitted on Sunday, a government official told Al
Jazeera.
The hospital had announced a day earlier that the
patient's symptoms and recent travel indicated a
case of Ebola, the virus that has killed more than
3,000 people across West Africa and infected a
handful of Americans who have traveled to that
region.
Thomas Frieden, director of the CDC, held a news
conference at the centre's headquarters in
Atlanta late on Tuesday.
“The infected person came from Liberia on
September 19 and began to develop symptoms
on September 24. He first sought care on the 26th
of September and on the 28th was admitted in
Texas,” Frieden said.
"Blood samples tested positive for Ebola… The
Ebola test is highly accurate," Frieden said,
adding: "There is no doubt in my mind that we will
stop it here (in the US)."
The CDC has said 12 other people in the US have
been tested for Ebola since July 27. Those tests
came back negative.
Under observation
Four American aid workers who have become
infected while volunteering in West Africa have
been treated in special isolation facilities in
hospitals in Atlanta and Nebraska, and a US
doctor exposed to the virus in Sierra Leone is
under observation in a similar facility at the
National Institutes of Health.
The US has only four such isolation units but the
CDC has insisted that any hospital can safely care
for someone with Ebola.
According to the CDC, Ebola symptoms can
include fever, muscle pain, vomiting and bleeding,
and can appear as long as 21 days after exposure
to the virus.
Jason McDonald, spokesman for the CDC, said
health officials use two primary guidelines when
deciding whether to test a person for the virus.
"The first and foremost determinant is have they
traveled to the region (of West Africa)," he said.
The second is whether there's been proximity to
family, friends or others who've been exposed, he
said.
US health officials have been preparing since
summer in case an individual traveler arrived
here unknowingly infected, telling hospitals what
infection-control steps to take to prevent the virus
from spreading in health facilities.
People boarding planes in the outbreak zone are
checked for fever, but symptoms can begin up to
21 days after exposure.
Ebola is not contagious until symptoms begin, and
it takes close contact with bodily fluids to spread.
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