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			 Obama's administration is facing sharp criticism from lawmakers over 
			its efforts to contain the disease at home. Obama authorized calling 
			up military reservists for the U.S. fight against Ebola in West 
			Africa on Thursday. 
 U.S. concerns have intensified after two Texas nurses who cared for 
			a dying Liberian patient contracted the virus that has killed nearly 
			4,500 people. Federal health officials said they were broadening 
			their outreach to people who may have come into contact with one of 
			the workers.
 
 Spain is also grappling with the spread of the disease, with four 
			new patients with suspected Ebola symptoms admitted to hospitals.
 
 The disease continues to spread in West Africa where the outbreak 
			began in March, and reached the last remaining district in Sierra 
			Leone that had not been affected by Ebola.
 
 U.S. lawmakers held a congressional hearing about the 
			administration's handling of the Ebola outbreak in the United 
			States. Some have called for a czar and a ban on travel from West 
			Africa.
 
			
			 
			"It may be appropriate for me to appoint an additional person" to 
			oversee efforts to contain Ebola, Obama told reporters, adding that 
			experts have told him "a flat-out travel ban is not the way to go" 
			because current screening measures at airports are working.
 
 He said he had no philosophical objection to a travel ban but that 
			some travelers might attempt to enter the United States by avoiding 
			screening measures, which could lead to more Ebola cases, not fewer.
 
 U.S. Federal Aviation Administration chief Michael Huerta told 
			reporters separately that the government was assessing whether to 
			issue a travel ban "on a day-to-day basis."
 
 Jamaica announced an immediate travel ban on Thursday and Guyana 
			said it has denied entry to citizens from four Ebola-hit West 
			African nations during the past five weeks.
 
 SCHOOLS CLOSE IN TEXAS, OHIO
 
 Amber Vinson, one of the nurses who treated the Ebola patient at 
			Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas and contracted the 
			virus, traveled to Ohio over the weekend on a Frontier Airlines 
			flight while running a slight fever.
 
 Dr. Christopher Braden, a spokesman for the Centers for Disease 
			Control and Prevention (CDC), said Vinson may have been ill as early 
			as Friday, when she boarded the flight from Dallas to Cleveland.
 
 The CDC said it was expanding its search for people who could have 
			been exposed to Vinson to include passengers on her flight to 
			Cleveland, Frontier Airlines flight 1142, in addition to those on 
			her Monday return trip to Texas, flight 1143.
 
			
			 
			
 The CDC said health professionals would interview passengers and 
			arrange for follow up monitoring if necessary.
 
 The Los Angeles Times reported that Frontier also said it would 
			contact some 750 other passengers who had flown on different 
			flights, but the same plane as Vinson.
 
 Dr. Thomas Frieden, the CDC director, has said it is unlikely 
			passengers who flew with Vinson were infected because the nurse had 
			not vomited or bled on the flight, but he said she should not have 
			boarded the plane.
 
 Concerns about Ebola exposure prompted several schools in Ohio and 
			Texas to close because people with ties to the schools may have 
			shared the flight with Vinson.
 
			
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			An air ambulance transported Vinson to Atlanta's Emory University 
			Hospital on Wednesday for treatment. The first nurse to contract 
			Ebola, Nina Pham, 26, was flown to the National Institutes of Health 
			(NIH) in Bethesda, Maryland, to be treated in an isolation unit.
 A YouTube video made by Pham's physician Dr. Gary Weinstein before 
			her discharge showed her in a bed at Texas Health Presbyterian 
			Hospital and with Weinstein in protective gear.
 
 In the video, Pham wiped away tears and said, "Come to Maryland, 
			everybody!" and "I love you guys." She requested that the video be 
			shared by the hospital.
 
			More than a week after the death of Thomas Eric Duncan, the first 
			patient diagnosed with Ebola in the United States, the Texas Health 
			Presbyterian Hospital acknowledged it made mistakes in diagnosing 
			Duncan and in giving the public information.
 Dr. Daniel Varga, chief clinical officer and senior vice president 
			of Texas Health Resources which owns the hospital, said the hospital 
			was "deeply sorry". He said there had been no Ebola training for 
			staff before Duncan was admitted.
 
 The hospital defended its treatment of Duncan, saying it had 
			followed CDC guidelines. Criticisms that had surfaced in the media 
			about its Ebola treatment "are often out-of-context and 
			sensationalized. Others are completely inaccurate," it said.
 
			
			 
			HALT URGED FOR WEST AFRICA FLIGHTS
 In the congressional hearing, several Republicans said flights from 
			West Africa should be stopped.
 
 "We need to look at all the options available to keep our families 
			safe and move quickly and responsibly to make any necessary changes 
			at airports," Democratic Representative Bruce Braley of Iowa told 
			the hearing.
 
 The virus is spread through direct contact with bodily fluids from 
			an infected person showing symptoms of Ebola. Ebola is not airborne.
 
 Frieden argued, as he has before, that closing U.S. borders would 
			not work and would leave the country less able to track people with 
			Ebola entering. Moreover, cutting flights to Africa would hit the 
			ability to stop the virus at its source, he said.
 
 (Additional reporting by Susan Heavey, Will Dunham, Mohammad Zargham, 
			Steve Holland, Jeff Mason and David Alexander in Washington and Jon 
			Herskovitz in Austin; Writing by Tom Brown; Editing by Bernadette 
			Baum and Dominic Evans)
 
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