Second
Texas nurse with Ebola receiving care at Atlanta hospital
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[October 16, 2014]
By Terry Wade
DALLAS (Reuters) - The second nurse to
contract Ebola in the United States was receiving care at an Atlanta
hospital on Thursday, a day after the news emerged that officials did
not stop her flying on a commercial flight even after she reported a
slight temperature.
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The nurse, 29-year-old Amber Vinson, flew from Cleveland to Dallas
on Monday, a day before she was diagnosed with Ebola, the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said.
CDC Director Dr. Thomas Frieden had told reporters it was very
unlikely that other passengers were infected because Vinson did not
vomit and was not bleeding on the flight, but said she should not
have been aboard.
But a federal source said on Wednesday that Vinson had told the CDC
her temperature was 99.5 Fahrenheit (37.5 Celsius) but "was not told
not to fly" because that was below the CDC's temperature threshold
of 100.4F (38C).
The news was first reported by CNN.
Frieden and other officials are scheduled to testify at a
congressional hearing on Thursday into the country's response to the
Ebola threat.
Rising public anxiety over the virus has forced the White House to
shift into crisis mode and cancel two days of political events with
just three weeks to go before critical midterm elections.
Along with 26-year-old Nina Pham, her co-worker at Texas Health
Presbyterian Hospital who was diagnosed with the virus over the
weekend, Vinson had treated Liberian patient Thomas Eric Duncan.
Duncan died of Ebola on Oct. 8 and was the first patient diagnosed
with the disease in the United States.
Vinson had been monitoring herself for signs of infection, Frieden
said.
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She was isolated immediately after reporting a fever on Tuesday,
state health officials said.
She was transferred by air ambulance to the specially-equipped Emory
University Hospital in Atlanta on Wednesday night, the hospital said
in a statement. Three other people have been treated there and two
have been discharged, it said.
At least 4,493 people have died in the worst Ebola outbreak since
the disease was identified in 1976. The vast majority of the cases
have occurred in West Africa, but the two nurses contracted the
disease in Texas and one in Spain.
The virus causes hemorrhagic fever and is spread through direct
contact with body fluids from an infected person, who suffers severe
bouts of vomiting and diarrhea.
(Writing by Curtis Skinner in San Francisco; Editing by Sonya
Hepinstall)
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