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DALLAS -- Health officials are intensifying the monitoring
of hospital workers who provided care to the first person to be
diagnosed with Ebola in the U.S. after one of them was infected with the
virus despite wearing protective gear.
Tests
confirmed the first known case of Ebola transmitted in the nation,
raising questions about assurances by health officials here that the
disease will be contained and any American hospital should be able to
treat it.
Dr. Tom Frieden, head of the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention, said Sunday that there had been a
breach of protocol that led the worker to become infected while treating
patient Thomas Eric Duncan, but officials are not sure what went wrong.
Duncan, who traveled from Liberia to visit family, did not get sick
until he arrived in the U.S. He died Wednesday
The worker, who has not been identified, has not been able to point to how the breach might have occurred.
President Barack Obama asked the CDC to move as quickly as possible to investigate the incident, the White House said.
Dallas
police barred entry to the health care worker's apartment complex
Sunday. Officers also knocked on doors, made automated phone calls and
passed out fliers to notify people within a four-block radius about the
situation, although Dallas authorities assured residents the risk was
confined to those who have had close contact with the two Ebola
patients.
The worker wore a gown, gloves, mask
and shield while she cared for Duncan during his second visit to Texas
Health Presbyterian Hospital, said Dr. Daniel Varga of Texas Health
Resources, which runs the hospital.
Duncan,
who arrived in the U.S. from Liberia Sept. 20, first sought medical care
for fever and abdominal pain Sept. 25. He told a nurse he had traveled
from Africa, but he was sent home. He returned Sept. 28 and was placed
in isolation because of suspected Ebola.
Liberia
is one of the three West African countries most affected by the Ebola
epidemic, which has killed more than 4,000 people, according to World
Health Organization figures published Friday. The others are Sierra
Leone and Guinea.
Texas health officials have
been closely monitoring nearly 50 people who had or may have had close
contact with Duncan in the days after he started showing symptoms but
before he was diagnosed with the disease.
The health care worker reported a fever Friday night as part of a self-monitoring regimen required by the CDC, Varga said.
Another
person described as a "close contact" of the health worker has been
proactively placed in isolation, he added, without elaborating on where
that person is being monitored. The hospital said its emergency
department is diverting ambulances to other hospitals, though is still
accepting walk-in patients.
Frieden said officials are evaluating and will monitor any workers who may have been exposed while Duncan was in the hospital.
Among
the things the CDC will investigate is how the workers took off
protective gear, because removing it incorrectly can lead to
contamination. Investigators will also look at dialysis and intubation -
the insertion of a breathing tube in a patient's airway. Both
procedures have the potential to spread the virus.
"We
knew a second case could be a reality, and we've been preparing for
this possibility," said Dr. David Lakey, commissioner of the Texas
Department of State Health Services. "We are broadening our team in
Dallas and working with extreme diligence to prevent further spread."
Every
emergency room needs to be prepared to isolate and take infection
control precautions, because no one can control where an Ebola patient
might show up, said Dr. Dennis Maki, University of Wisconsin-Madison
infectious disease specialist and former head of hospital infection
control.
However, only large hospitals such as
those affiliated with major universities truly have the equipment and
manpower to deal with Ebola correctly, Maki said.
The
case heightens concern for health workers' safety, and nurses at many
hospitals "are alarmed at the inadequate preparation they see," says a
statement from Rose Ann DeMoro, executive director of the union,
National Nurses United.
Health care workers
treating Ebola patients are among the most vulnerable, even if wearing
protective gear. A Spanish nurse assistant recently became the first
health care worker infected outside West Africa in this outbreak. She
helped care for two priests who were brought to a Madrid hospital and
later died. More than 370 health care workers in West Africa have fallen
ill or died since the epidemic began earlier this year.
Officials
said they also received information that there may be a pet in the
health care worker's apartment, and they have a plan in place to care
for the animal. They do not believe the pet has signs of having
contracted Ebola. A dog belonging to the Spanish nurse was euthanized,
drawing thousands of complaints.
Ebola spreads
through close contact with a symptomatic person's bodily fluids, such
as blood, sweat, vomit, feces, urine, saliva or semen. Those fluids must
have an entry point, such as a cut or scrape or someone touching the
nose, mouth or eyes with contaminated hands, or being splashed. The
World Health Organization says blood, feces and vomit are the most
infectious fluids, while the virus is found in saliva mostly once
patients are severely ill. The whole live virus has never been culled
from sweat.
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