(CNN) -- Thomas Eric Duncan, a man with Ebola who traveled to the United States from Liberia, died Wednesday morning at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas, the hospital said.
He had
been in critical condition after being diagnosed with the virus in
mid-September. People who have had contact with the Liberian national are being
monitored for symptoms.
It has
just been a little over a week since Duncan began receiving treatment for the
virus, and those days have spelled an "enormous test of our health
system," said Dr. David Lakey, the commissioner of the Texas Department of
State Health Services.
"For
one family it has been far more personal," he said in a statement. "Today
they lost a dear member of their family. They have our sincere condolences, and
we are keeping them in our thoughts."
He vowed
that health care workers will continue to try to stop the spread of the virus
"and protect people from this threat."
The Ebola
virus can live in dead bodies, the U.S. Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention says, and it can be transmitted
after death if the body is cut, body fluids are splashed, or if the body is
handled. Only personnel trained in handling infected human remains, wearing
protective gear, should touch or move Ebola-infected remains, the agency says.
An autopsy should be avoided, it says, but if one is necessary, the CDC should
be consulted.
Airport
screenings
News of
the death of the first Ebola patient diagnosed in the U.S. comes as a federal
official told CNN that airports in the United States will begin taking the
temperatures of arriving passengers who have flight itineraries originating
from West African countries where Ebola is concentrated.
The
screenings will begin this weekend or next week, according to the source who
has direct knowledge of the screenings.
Among the
countries considered to be in the so-called Ebola zone are Guinea, Sierra
Leone, Liberia
and Nigeria.
The new
measures at U.S. airports come a day after Dr. Thomas Frieden, the director of
the CDC, told reporters that devising travel guidelines was in the works but
nothing had yet been finalized enough to announce.
The Ebola virus
can spread through contact with bodily fluids -- blood, sweat, feces, vomit,
semen and saliva -- and only by someone who is showing symptoms, according to
the CDC.
People
with Ebola may not be symptomatic for up to 21 days.
Symptoms
generally occur abruptly eight to 10 days after infection, though that period
can range from two to 21 days, health officials say.
Air
travelers must keep in mind that Ebola is not transmitted through the air, said
Dr. Marty Cetron, director of the CDC's Division of Global Migration and
Quarantine.
"There
needs to be direct contact frequently with body fluids or blood," he
stressed.
Cases
in Europe
Meanwhile,
Frederic Vincent, a spokesman for the European Commission, told CNN on
Wednesday that there have been eight confirmed cases of Ebola in European
countries. There is one case in the United Kingdom that has been treated and
the person has recovered; one case in France like that; two cases in Germany in
which patients are receiving treatment; and three cases in Spain: two deceased
Spanish missionaries and a nurse's assistant who is being treated.
There is
also a case in which a Norwegian staffer with Doctors Without Borders is being
treated, he said.
Also in Spain,
health officials said four more potential Ebola cases -- in addition to the
nurse's assistant -- are under observation.
The
nurse's assistant said that she had no idea how she had contracted the virus,
but a doctor treating her said that she may have been exposed while she removed
her protective suit.
Dr.
German Ramirez said the assistant, who is in isolation at Madrid's Carlos III
Hospital, had told him it was possible that a part of the suit -- possibly the
gloves -- touched her face.
Cases
in West Africa
The
globe's largest outbreak of Ebola has killed more than 3,400 people in Guinea,
Liberia and Sierra Leone. Since March, more than 7,400 people have contracted
Ebola in those nations, according to the World Health Organization.
The CDC is tracking
the latest cases in the region.
NBC News
freelance cameraman Ashoka Mukpo was diagnosed with Ebola in Liberia on
Thursday. He left Liberia on a specially equipped plane Sunday and was headed
to Nebraska, the network reported.
Frieden
said Tuesday that battling the virus will be a "long, hard fight."
"The
virus is spreading so fast," he said, "that it's hard to keep
up."
No comments:
Post a Comment