The nurse, whose name has not been released by officials, has been
identified by friends and family and in media reports as Nina Pham,
26. Reuters independently verified her identity with a Sunday school
teacher at the church where her family worships and through a public
records check of her address.
Pham, a 2010 graduate of Texas Christian University, comes from a
deeply religious Vietnamese-American family in Fort Worth, according
to people who know them and are familiar with her social media
posts. She was called on by neighbors to babysit their children. Her
social media posts show she is a fan of actor Ryan Gosling and
passionate about nursing.
The family was in shock when it learned that she had contracted
Ebola, said their friend Tom Ha who is also a Bible studies teacher
at the Our Lady of Fatima Catholic Church in Fort Worth.
"The mother was crying, very upset," he said. "She comes from a very
devoted family."
Her family has not responded to requests for comment.
Officials have said that Nina Pham had frequent contact with
Liberian national Thomas Eric Duncan over the 11 days he was treated
for Ebola at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas. Duncan
died on Wednesday.
She was among 50 people asked by the hospital to take part in the
delicate and difficult care of Duncan, who was the first person
diagnosed with Ebola in the United States.
Officials have said they do not know how Pham contracted the deadly
virus. She was in stable condition on Monday.
Pham was thrilled when she became a registered nurse and obtained
credentials as a critical care nurse, the Dallas Morning News
reported based on an August posting on her Facebook site, which has
been taken down.
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She owns a 1-year-old King Charles Spaniel that has been taken from
her apartment to an undisclosed location where its health will be
checked, according to the office of Dallas County Judge Clay
Jenkins, the county's chief political official.
Last week authorities in Spain last week killed a dog owned by a
healthcare worker there who has Ebola. They said the dog, called
Excalibur, posed a biological risk and that there was evidence dogs
could carry the virus.
On Monday, hazardous materials crews were at Pham’s apartment.
Jenkins called her a hero.
(Additional reporting by Lisa Maria Garza and Terry Wade in Dallas;
Writing by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Will Dunham, Toni Reinhold)
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