Medical staff wearing protective clothing
arrives at the apartment building of the Spanish nurse infected with Ebola in
Madrid, Spain, Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2014. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)
|
Two doctors who treated a Spanish nursing assistant
diagnosed with Ebola have been admitted to a Madrid hospital for precautionary
observation, bringing to six the number being monitored at the center, health
officials said Thursday.
A spokeswoman for the Carlos III hospital said neither
of the doctors, nor the woman's husband — who is also under observation — has
shown Ebola symptoms.
AP reports that the doctors tended
the nurse, Teresa Romero, before she was diagnosed as having Ebola on Monday.
Two other nurses in quarantine are awaiting tests for the virus.
Romero is the first person known to
have caught the disease outside the outbreak zone in West Africa. She is in
stable condition without fever.
The official spoke on condition of
anonymity in keeping with hospital regulations.
Ebola has killed at least 3,800
people in West Africa with no signs of abating. The presidents of Liberia,
Guinea and Sierra Leone, the countries hardest hit in the outbreak, are
appealing to the World Bank on Thursday for more help for their nations.
In Germany, a man infected in
Liberia arrived Thursday at a hospital in Germany for treatment — the third
Ebola patient to be flown to the country.
The St. Georg Hospital in Leipzig
said the man, who works for the United Nations in Liberia and whose name wasn't
given, will be treated in a special isolation unit.
A Ugandan doctor who contracted
Ebola while working in Sierra Leone is currently being treated at a hospital in
Frankfurt. A Senegalese scientist who was infected while working for the World
Health Organization in Sierra Leone, has recovered and was discharged last week
from a hospital in Hamburg.
The first person to be diagnosed with Ebola in the United States, Thomas Eric Duncan, died Wednesday in Dallas. Five major U.S. airports plan to try to catch any travelers from Ebola-ravaged countries who may be carrying the disease by checking their temperatures on arrival.
The first person to be diagnosed with Ebola in the United States, Thomas Eric Duncan, died Wednesday in Dallas. Five major U.S. airports plan to try to catch any travelers from Ebola-ravaged countries who may be carrying the disease by checking their temperatures on arrival.
No comments:
Post a Comment