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			 The patient, who recently returned from Liberia, had complained of 
			headache and muscle aches, prompting his admittance to an isolation 
			ward with close monitoring, the hospital said. 
 "This patient does not appear to meet CDC criteria to be considered 
			someone at high risk for Ebola and the likelihood of Ebola Virus 
			Disease is extremely low," the hospital said in a statement emailed 
			to Reuters.
 
 Even so, the patient will remain in isolation, the hospital said.
 
 The response in Massachusetts demonstrates the high state of alert 
			medical facilities are under since a Texas health worker became the 
			first person on Sunday to contract the disease in the United States. 
			She had treated a Liberian man who died of the deadly virus last 
			week.
   
			 "We are taking all necessary precautions in collaboration with the 
			city of Boston and the department of public health for the potential 
			that this is suspected Ebola,” Dr. Kenneth Sands, chief quality 
			officer at Beth Israel, said at a news conference. "We are only at 
			the stage where we are doing an assessment."
 There have been several Ebola scares in the United States in the 
			past week. A plane was briefly quarantined at a Las Vegas Airport on 
			Friday after a passenger reported feeling unwell. Health officials 
			around the country have fielded scores of possible cases that were 
			false alarms.
 
 On Sunday, a United Airlines flight from John F. Kennedy Airport in 
			New York landed at an isolated terminal at Los Angeles International 
			Airport after a passenger who had recently visited Africa began 
			vomiting and running a fever, officials said.
 
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			However, it turned out that the woman had visited South Africa, 
			which is not an area of concern for Ebola.
 The Massachusetts patient first reported to the Harvard Vanguard 
			Medical Associates hospital in Braintree, Massachusetts, and was 
			then transferred to Beth Israel, said Ben Kruskal, a physician and 
			chief of infectious disease at Vanguard, in a statement.
 
 Kruskal said the Braintree building was closed briefly but reopened
 
 The current Ebola outbreak, the worst on record of the disease, has 
			killed more than 4,000 people, mostly in Liberia, Sierra Leone and 
			Guinea in West Africa.
 
 (Reporting by Kevin Murphy in Kansas City, Peter Cooney in 
			Washington, Frank McGurty in New York and Sharon Bernstein in 
			Sacramento; Editing by Lisa Shumaker, Eric Walsh and Michael Perry)
 
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