Dallas Ebola patient vomited outside apartment on way to hospital
By Lisa Maria Garza
DALLAS (Reuters) - Two days after he was sent home from a Dallas
hospital, the man who is the first person to be diagnosed with Ebola in
the United States was seen vomiting on the ground outside an apartment
complex as he was bundled into an ambulance.
"His whole family was screaming. He got outside and he was
throwing up all over the place," resident Mesud Osmanovic, 21, said on
Wednesday, describing the chaotic scene before the man was admitted to
Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital on Sunday where he is in serious
condition.
The
hospital cited the man's privacy as the reason for not identifying him.
However, Gee Melish, who said he was a family friend, identified the man
in Texas infected with Ebola as Thomas Eric Duncan.
The New York Times said that Duncan, in his mid-40s,
helped transport a pregnant woman suffering from Ebola to a hospital in
Liberia, where she was turned away for lack of space. Duncan helped
bring the woman back to her family's home and carried her into the
house, where she later died, the newspaper reported. Four days later
Duncan left for the United States, the Times said, citing the woman's
parents and neighbors.
Texas health officials said that up to 18 people, including
five children, had contact with the Ebola patient after he traveled to
the United States from Liberia in late September. The children had gone
to school early this week but have since been sent home and are being
monitored for symptoms.
The Dallas Ebola case has prompted national concern over the
potential for a wider spread of the deadly virus from West Africa, where
at least 3,338 people have died in the worst outbreak on record.
U.S. health
officials have said the country's healthcare system was well prepared to
contain any spread of Ebola, through careful tracking of people who had
contact with the patient and appropriate care for those admitted to
hospital.
U.S.
stocks fell sharply. Airline and hotel company shares dropped over
concerns that Ebola's spread outside Africa might curtail travel.
Drugmakers with experimental Ebola treatments in the pipeline saw their shares rise.
SENT HOME
The patient had initially sought treatment at Texas Health
Presbyterian Hospital late on Thursday and was sent home with
antibiotics rather than being observed further, even though he told a
nurse he had recently returned from West Africa. By Sunday, he needed an
ambulance to return to the same hospital, where he was admitted.
A nurse asked about the travel as part of a triage
checklist and was told about it. “Regretfully, that information was not
fully communicated throughout the full teams. As a result, the full
import of that information wasn’t factored into the full decision
making,” Texas hospital official Mark Lester said.
Infectious
disease experts said that time gap represented a critical missed
opportunity that may have led others to be exposed to the virus.
At the apartment complex, Osmanovic said he met the man
three times over the years when he was visiting his family. Most of the
neighborhood is from Liberia, Somalia or the Sudan. Osmanovic is from
Bosnia.
The
only sign Wednesday of the family's presence was someone occasionally
pulling back the white blinds to peek out into the parking lot. A
security officer blocked the entrance to the complex, with instructions
only to let residents in and out.
Dr. Christopher Perkins, Dallas County Health and Human
Services Medical Director, said that of the 18 people who had been in
contact, many were "close family members."
The children among them "did not have any symptoms and so
the odds of them passing on any sort of virus is very low," said Mike
Miles, Dallas Independent School District superintendent.
Miles said the four different schools they attended would
be staffed with additional health professionals and classes would remain
in session.
Texas officials said health workers who took care of the patient had so
far tested negative for the virus and there were no other suspected
cases in the state. Texas Governor Rick Perry told a news conference he
was confident the virus would be contained, as did other officials.
Ebola spreads through contact with bodily fluids such as
blood or saliva, which health experts say limits its potential to infect
others, unlike airborne diseases. Still, the long window of time before
patients exhibit signs of infection, such as fever, vomiting and
diarrhea, means an infected person can travel without detection.
While past outbreaks killed as many as 90 percent of
victims, the current epidemic's fatality rate has averaged about 50
percent in West Africa.
The patient arrived in Texas on Sept. 20, and first sought
treatment six days later, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control. The Liberian government said that the man showed no signs of
fever or other symptoms of Ebola when he left the country on Sept. 19.
A Liberian official said the man traveled through Brussels
to the United States. United Airlines said in a statement that the man
took one of its flights from Brussels to Washington Dulles Airport,
where he changed planes to travel to Dallas-Fort Worth.
(Additional reporting by Jon Herskovitz in Austin, Texas;
Jeffrey Dastin in New York; Susan Heavey and Alphonso Toweh in
Washington; and David Lewis in Dakar; Writing by Grant McCool; Editing
by Michele Gershberg, Howard Goller and Lisa Shumaker)
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