U.S.
designates 35 hospitals as Ebola treatment centers
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[December 03, 2014]
(Reuters) - U.S. health officials
have designated 35 hospitals nationwide as Ebola treatment centers and
expects to name more in coming weeks deemed capable of treating patients
while minimizing risk to staff, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention said on Tuesday.
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The list includes those that have already treated patients with the
virus, such as Emory University Hospital in Atlanta, and other
prominent hospitals, including Johns Hopkins in Baltimore, Mayo
Clinic Hospital in Minnesota, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
and New York-Presbyterian.
More than 80 percent of returning travelers from Ebola-stricken
countries in West Africa live within 200 miles (320 km) of a
designated Ebola treatment center, the CDC said.
"As long as Ebola is spreading in West Africa, we must prepare for
the possibility of additional cases in the United States," CDC
Director Tom Frieden said in a statement.
More than 6,000 people have died out of more than 17,000 Ebola cases
in the three hardest hit countries of Liberia, Sierra Leone and
Guinea, according to the World Health Organization.
Each U.S. hospital with an Ebola treatment center has been assessed
onsite by a CDC Rapid Ebola Preparedness team, the agency said. CDC
said it has conducted assessments of more than 50 hospitals in 15
states and Washington.
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CDC has taken a far more active role in assessing Ebola treatment
preparation after two nurses at a Dallas hospital contracted the
virus while treating Liberian Thomas Eric Duncan, who later died
from the disease. Both nurses recovered.
There are currently no known patients being treated for Ebola in the
United States.
(Reporting by Michele Gershberg and Bill Berkrot; Editing by
Jonathan Oatis)
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