The
ambulance carrying the Nigeria soldier infected by the Ebola virus arriving in
Amsterdam Saturday.
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The first Ebola patient to be treated in The
Netherlands was flown to the country in a specially equipped plane and was to
be taken straight to the university hospital in Utrecht, in the centre of the
country.
"After Germany, France and Switzerland, it is The
Netherlands' turn to make a contribution by welcoming an employee of an
international organization," the Dutch health and development ministers
said in a letter to parliament.
The patient had been enlisted in the fight against
Ebola, which has killed more than 6,000 people.
Meanwhile two more Sierra Leonean doctors have died
from Ebola, further depleting the West African country's ability to respond to
the devastating outbreak, health officials said Saturday.
The deaths bring the number of Sierra Leonean doctors
killed by Ebola to nine. The disease is spread through the bodily fluids of
people showing symptoms and people who have died of the disease. Because
transmission requires close contact with those fluids, health workers are among
the most at risk of contracting it and hundreds have become infected in this
outbreak.
Dr. Thomas Rogers, who had worked at Connaught
Hospital in the capital, died Friday, according to Chief Medical Officer Dr.
Brima Kargbo. Dr. Dauda Koroma also died Friday, said Jonathan Abass Kamara, a
spokesman for the Health Ministry.
In all, 11 Sierra Leonean doctors have been infected;
one has been cured and another is still in treatment.
Ebola has sickened more than 17,500 people, mostly in
Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone. Of those, about 6,200 have died. The disease
is currently spreading fastest in Sierra Leone.
The high number of infections in health workers has
deterred many from volunteering to work on Ebola wards, especially local health
workers. While foreign doctors and nurses who have become infected have been
evacuated for treatment at world-class hospitals abroad, locals are typically
treated in-country.
In
an effort to address that disparity, special clinics dedicated to the treatment
of health care workers and staffed by foreigners have opened in Sierra Leone
and Liberia and another is planned for Guinea. Rogers was treated at one of
those, a clinic in Kerry Town staffed by British army medics.
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