• Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Home
Saturday, May 21, 2022
  • Login
METROWATCHonline
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Security
  • Crime
  • World
  • Home
  • News
  • Security
  • Crime
  • World
No Result
View All Result
METROWATCHonline
Home World

Ebola Patient in Critical Condition in Dallas, US

ayothisday by ayothisday
October 5, 2014
in World
1

(CNN)

Thomas Eric Duncan, the first Ebola patient diagnosed in the United States, is now in critical condition, a Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital spokeswoman said Saturday.
The Liberian man had previously been listed as being in serious condition. Hospital spokeswoman Candace White offered no new details other than his condition.
Earlier, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Duncan was in intensive care.
About 10 people are at “higher risk” of catching Ebola after coming into contact with Duncan but have shown no symptoms, health officials said Saturday.
The group is among 50 people being monitored daily, but the other 40 are considered “low risk,” said Dr. David Lakey, the commissioner of Texas department of state health services.
The nine people who had definite contact with the Ebola patient — including family members and health care professionals — have been monitored and show no symptoms or fevers, Dr. Tom Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said Saturday.
“We have already gotten well over 100 inquiries of possible patients,” Frieden told reporters. “We’ve assessed every one of those … and just this one patient has tested positive … We expect that we will see more rumors or concerns or possibilities of cases, until there is a positive laboratory test, that is what they are.”
Health officials did not provide details on the location of those being monitored or where they interacted with Duncan.
Monitoring includes a visit from a public health expert and temperature checks twice a day. None of them has had symptoms of Ebola so far, according to Lakey.
The latest figure is a drastic reduction of a number that had originally been put at 100 after initial talks with Duncan and hospital officials.
Duncan landed in Dallas on September 20, and started feeling sick days later. He made his initial visit to Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital on September 25.
10 people at ‘higher risk’ for Ebola Hazmat team cleans quarantined apartment How your hospital handles Ebola
He was released with antibiotics but went back three days later and was quickly isolated. A blood test Tuesday confirmed he had Ebola, the first case of the deadly virus diagnosed on American soil.

READ ALSO

UNISFA Brokers Peace Accord Between 2 Key Communities in Abyei

Gen Maikano, Others in Peru for Military Sports Confab

UN Sec-Gen Gutteres Urges Buhari to Prosecute Terrorists

Relocated to undisclosed location
“We’ve been very busy the last 24 hours trying to make sure that everyone who has had potential exposure is identified and they have been evaluated,” Lakey said.
The high-risk list likely includes Duncan’s partner, Louise, her 13-year-old son and her two 20-something nephews. The four had been holed up in the apartment Duncan lived in before he was hospitalized.
They were relocated to an undisclosed place Friday, and will be required to stay there until October 19. The incubation period — time between Ebola infection and the onset of symptoms — ranges between two to 21 days.
The Dallas hospital where Duncan is being treated has come under fire for its handling of his first visit there eight days ago.
Louise, who does not want her last name used, said Duncan told hospital staff he had a fever and abdominal pain, and had recently arrived from Liberia — key information that could have been a tipoff for Ebola.
Health care workers around the nation “have to learn from the experience,” Lakey said Saturday.
“The travel history is very important to take and it has to be communicated,” he said.

The hospital defended its handling of the case.

“As a standard part of the nursing process, the patient’s travel history was documented and available to the full care team in the electronic health record, including within the physician’s workflow,” it said in a statement.

Your Ebola questions answered

The church Louise attends said Duncan came to the United States so the two could get married.
Louise told the church’s senior pastor, George Mason, about their marriage plan, according to Mark Wingfield, a spokesman at the Wilshire Baptist Church in Dallas.

How the Ebola virus spreads
As nervous Dallas residents watch Duncan’s case unfold, more Ebola scares have popped up in other parts of the nation.
Howard University Hospital in Washington said Friday it had admitted a low-risk patient with symptoms that could be associated with Ebola, but health officials on Saturday said Ebola had been ruled out in that case. The unnamed patient had recently traveled to Nigeria.
In Liberia, NBC News freelance cameraman Ashoka Mukpo was diagnosed with Ebola on Thursday, and is expected to leave Monrovia for the United States on Sunday aboard a private charter plane.
In addition to Guinea and Sierra Leone, Liberia is one of three nations battling the deadly virus that has killed more than 3,000 people in West Africa.
Meanwhile, an American patient treated for Ebola in Nebraska then released is now in isolation in a hospital in Massachusetts. And an Ebola patient in Dallas has slipped into critical condition.
Dr. Richard Sacra had worked as a medical missionary in Liberia but not directly with Ebola patients. Nevertheless, he contracted the disease. He was treated in isolation at the Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha then released after testing negative for the virus.
Early Saturday, he went to an emergency room in Boston with a cough and fever, said missionary organization Serving in Mission. He was afraid he might have pneumonia.
Because of his previous infection, he was transferred to the UMass Memorial Medical Center in Worcester, the center said in a statement.

CDC: Only one patient tested positive

Doctors there don’t believe it is a recurrence of Ebola, but are keeping Sacra in isolation, in accordance with guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, until they are sure what is causing his symptoms.
“We’re waiting for final test results from the CDC, which we expect to receive late Monday,” said lead physician Dr. Robert Finberg.
Critical condition patient

ShareSendTweetShare
Previous Post

Suspected Ebola Patient Arrives Germany

Next Post

Iranian Woman Faces Death for Killing Alleged Rapist

Related Posts

UNISFA Brokers Peace Accord Between 2 Key Communities in Abyei
Security

UNISFA Brokers Peace Accord Between 2 Key Communities in Abyei

May 21, 2022
Gen Maikano, Others in Peru for Military Sports Confab

Gen Maikano, Others in Peru for Military Sports Confab

May 6, 2022
UN Sec-Gen Gutteres Urges Buhari to Prosecute Terrorists

UN Sec-Gen Gutteres Urges Buhari to Prosecute Terrorists

May 4, 2022
UN Sec-Gen: The Borno I Found Today is Borno of Hope
World

UN Sec-Gen: The Borno I Found Today is Borno of Hope

May 4, 2022
Next Post

Iranian Woman Faces Death for Killing Alleged Rapist

Latest News

UNISFA Brokers Peace Accord Between 2 Key Communities in Abyei

UNISFA Brokers Peace Accord Between 2 Key Communities in Abyei

May 21, 2022
‘Terrorists begin Massive Recruitment in Niger and Kaduna States’

‘Terrorists begin Massive Recruitment in Niger and Kaduna States’

May 20, 2022
Driver Delivers Guns to Man expecting Mother’s Foodstuffs

Driver Delivers Guns to Man expecting Mother’s Foodstuffs

May 20, 2022
Herdsmen invade Ortom’s Village in Broad Daylight, Kill Five Farmers

Herdsmen invade Ortom’s Village in Broad Daylight, Kill Five Farmers

May 20, 2022

ABOUT US

METROWATCH is a daily online newspaper published by MIRACULOUS MEDIA CONNECT LTD. It is largely intelligence-focused news medium that captures all security and crime-related stories around the world, but with more emphasis on Nigeria.

  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Home

© 2022 Metrowatch Nigeria

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Security
  • Crime
  • World

© 2022 Metrowatch Nigeria

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
Go to mobile version