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Thursday, 16 October 2014
Obama vows 'more aggressive' Ebola monitoring
US president calls emergency meeting as
government confirms infection of another nurse
who helped treat Ebola patient.
US President Barack Obama has vowed "much
more aggressive" response to Ebola cases in the
United States and warned that in an age of
frequent travel the disease could spread globally
if the world does not respond to the "raging
epidemic in West Africa".'
Obama sought on Wednesday to ease growing
anxiety in the US, as a second nurse was
diagnosed with Ebola after treating a patient in a
Dallas hospital. That patient, Thomas Eric Duncan,
died of Ebola on October 8.
In an interview with a local US television station,
that nurse said she informed authorities several
times that she had a slight fever before boarding
a commercial flight, and was told that it was okay
to fly. She has now been transferred to a hospital
in the city of Atlanta for treatment.
The president said he had directed the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to step
up its response to new cases.
"We want a rapid response team, a SWAT team
essentially, from the CDC to be on the ground as
quickly as possible, hopefully within 24 hours, so
that they are taking the local hospital step by step
though what needs to be done," he said.
Obama spoke after cancelling a political campaign
trip to convene a session of top Cabinet officials
involved in the Ebola response both in the US and
in the West African region, where the disease has
been spreading at alarming rates.
The meeting included the top military commander
General Martin Dempsey and defence chief Chuck
Hagel.
Obama has been pressing the international
community to step up its assistance in combating
the disease.
Hours before Obama canceled his trip, officials
confirmed the infection of the second nurse who
helped treat Duncan.
The Texas developments added a new domestic
element to what has developed into an Ebola
crisis in the West African countries of Guinea,
Sierra Leone and Liberia.
'Controlled environment'
US government officials on Wednesday said the
nurse should never have got on the plane.
Tom Frieden, director of the CDC, said no one else
involved in Duncan's care will be allowed to travel
"other than in a controlled environment''.
"We could've sent a more robust hospital
infection control team and been more hands-on
with the hospital from day one about exactly how
this should be managed,'' he said Tuesday.
Infected Ebola patients are not considered
contagious until they have symptoms.
Frieden said it was unlikely that other passengers
or airline crew members were at risk because the
nurse did not have any vomiting or bleeding.
However, the CDC has alerted the 132 passengers
aboard Monday's Flight 1143 from Cleveland to
Dallas' Fort Worth on Monday "because of the
proximity in time between the evening flight and
first report of illness the following morning''.
The woman is being treated in Texas and will be
flown to a specialist hospital in Atlanta where
some previous Ebola patients have recovered.
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