Kaci Hickox has fought a heated public battle over what she
considers draconian measures to isolate her for 21 days after her
return from Sierra Leone, in a case that highlights the dilemma over
how to balance public health needs and personal liberty.
In some U.S. states officials such as New Jersey Governor Chris
Christie have imposed strict quarantines on health workers returning
from three Ebola-ravaged West African countries, but the U.S.
federal government opposes such measures.
"When Governor Christie stated that it was an abundance of caution,
which is his reasoning for putting health care workers in a sort of
quarantine for three weeks, it was really an abundance of politics,"
Hickox said in an interview with NBC's "Meet the Press".
"And I think all of the scientific and medical and public health
community agrees with me on that statement," she said.
Christie has defended his decision to impose a mandatory three-week
quarantine, saying that counting on a voluntary system may or may
not work and that protecting health and safety is the government's
job.
The most deadly outbreak of Ebola on record has killed nearly 5,000
people, all but a handful of them in Liberia, Guinea and Sierra
Leone.
ISOLATION TENT
Hickox tested negative for Ebola after returning recently from
working for Doctors Without Borders in Sierra Leone. But she was
placed in an isolation tent in New Jersey when she returned before
being allowed to leave for Maine, which also sought to quarantine
her at home.
A judge in Maine on Friday rejected that state's bid to quarantine
Hickox, instead imposing limited restrictions on her. The judge said
that Hickox must continue direct monitoring of her health,
coordinate travel plans with health officials and report any
symptoms.
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"We know a lot about Ebola," Hickox told Meet the Press. "We know
that it's not transmitted from someone who is asymptomatic, as I am
and many other aid workers will be when they return."
Speaking to NBC from Fort Kent, Maine, Hickox indicated she would
continue to stay away from crowds in her community, but that her
partner, Ted Wilbur, should be allowed to go back to nursing school
on Monday.
"I understand that the community has been through a lot in the past
week and I do, you know, apologize to them for that," she told NBC.
"I will not go into town, into crowded public places ... But on the
other hand, you know, my partner is currently in nursing school and
there is definitely zero scientific evidence that says he shouldn't
be allowed to return to his campus on Monday."
Only one person in the United States is currently being treated for
Ebola, a New York doctor, Craig Spencer, who cared for patients in
West Africa. His condition was upgraded by New York City health
officials on Saturday to "stable" from "serious but stable" at
Bellevue Hospital.
In Oregon, test results were awaited for a woman with a fever who
was hospitalized in an isolation unit on Friday after returning from
West Africa, Oregon health officials said.
She had not come into known contact with Ebola patients while in
Africa, the officials added.
(Reporting by Susan Cornwall in Washington; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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