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			 President Barack Obama expressed cautious optimism about the 
			situation in the United States after meeting with his Ebola response 
			coordinator, Ron Klain, and other top officials on Klain's first day 
			on the job since being named on Friday. 
 The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's new 
			restrictions on travelers arriving from Liberia, Sierra Leone and 
			Guinea marked the latest precautions put in place by the Obama 
			administration to stop the spread of the virus. The steps stopped 
			short of a ban on travelers from those countries demanded by some 
			lawmakers.
 
 Health authorities and the public have been on alert for Ebola since 
			late September when a Liberian visiting Dallas, Texas became the 
			first person diagnosed with the virus in the United States. Two 
			nurses who cared for him were also infected.
 
 The CDC said that, beginning on Monday, travelers from the three 
			countries will be told to check in with health officials every day 
			and report their temperatures and any Ebola symptoms for 21 days, 
			the period of incubation for the virus.
 
 The travelers will be required to provide emails, phone numbers and 
			addresses for themselves and for a friend or relative in the United 
			States covering the 21 days, and the information will be shared with 
			local health authorities.
 
			 The travelers also will be required to coordinate with local public 
			health officials if they intend to travel within the United States. 
			If a traveler does not report in, local health officials will take 
			immediate steps to find the person.
 CDC Director Dr. Tom Frieden told reporters the active monitoring 
			program will remain in place until the outbreak in West Africa is 
			over. The U.N. World Health Organization's latest figures on 
			Wednesday showed at least 4,877 people out of 9,936 confirmed, 
			probable and suspected cases have died in the outbreak, the worst on 
			record.
 
 "These new measures I'm announcing today will give additional levels 
			of safety so that people who develop symptoms of Ebola are isolated 
			early in the course of their illness," Frieden said. "That will 
			reduce the chance that Ebola will spread from an ill person through 
			close contact and to healthcare workers."
 
 Beginning Wednesday, travelers from Liberia, Sierra Leone or Guinea 
			were being funneled through one of five major U.S. airports 
			conducting increased screening for the virus.
 
 Six states account for nearly 70 percent of all travelers arriving 
			from the affected countries: New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, 
			Virginia, New Jersey and Georgia. The new monitoring will begin in 
			those states first and will be expanded to other states.
 
 The CDC said the monitoring program affects anyone coming back from 
			the region, including CDC employees and journalists. It said when 
			affected travelers enter one of the five airports they will receive 
			a care kit that contains a tracking log, a pictorial description of 
			symptoms, a thermometer, instructions on how to monitor their 
			temperature and information on what to do if they experience 
			symptoms.
 
			
			 Liberian Thomas Eric Duncan, who died on Oct. 8 and nurses Nina Pham 
			and Amber Vinson of Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital, are the only 
			cases detected in the country. Pham's condition was last upgraded on 
			Tuesday to good from fair at a hospital in Bethesda, Maryland.
 Vinson's family said in a statement Wednesday that officials at the 
			CDC and Emory University Hospital in Atlanta, where she is being 
			treated, "are no longer able to detect virus in her body."
 
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			OBAMA SEES PROGRESS
 Speaking in the White House Oval Office with Klain sitting on a 
			couch beside him, Obama said the CDC would continue to put in place 
			further measures to prevent the spread of Ebola as needed.
 
 "A number of things make us cautiously more optimistic about the 
			situation here in the United States," Obama said, noting that dozens 
			of people who interacted with Duncan did not get Ebola.
 
 Obama said officials were working to ensure that problems that arose 
			with Ebola protocols at the Dallas hospital do not occur again. He 
			expressed confidence that any further Ebola patients would get 
			first-class treatment and said officials would make sure hospitals 
			are prepared and would take the right precautions.
 
 The White House said Obama spoke by phone with staff at Texas 
			Presbyterian Hospital "to thank them for their courage and 
			perseverance in dealing with the first cases of Ebola to appear in 
			the United States."
 
 Human testing of a second "investigational" Ebola vaccine has begun 
			at the U.S. National Institutes of Health's Clinical Center in 
			Maryland, officials said.
 
 The vaccine was developed at the Public Health Agency of Canada's 
			National Microbiology Laboratory and licensed to NewLink Genetics 
			Corp through its wholly owned subsidiary BioProtection Systems, both 
			based in Ames, Iowa, the NIH said.
 
 Testing on a first potential vaccine began last month, and initial 
			results were expected by year's end.
 
 NBC freelance cameraman Ashoka Mukpo, an American who contracted 
			Ebola while working in West Africa, is free of the virus and was 
			discharged on Wednesday from a special unit at Nebraska Medical 
			Center in Omaha, the hospital said.
 
 
			
			 
			"I feel profoundly blessed to be alive, and in the same breath aware 
			of the global inequalities that allowed me to be flown to an 
			American hospital when so many Liberians die alone with minimal 
			care," Mukpo said in a statement.
 
 The 1-year-old King Charles Spaniel belonging to Pham has tested 
			free of the virus, the city of Dallas said.
 
 (Additional reporting by Ben Hirschler in London, Will Dunham and 
			Susan Heavey in Washington, Barbara Goldberg in New York, Julie 
			Steenhuysen in Chicago and David Bailey in Minneapolis; Writing by 
			Will Dunham; Editing by Michele Gershberg, Grant McCool and Jonathan 
			Oatis)
 
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