Ebola outbreak: U.S. creates rapid-response team - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 10:55 PM | Calgary | -6.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
World

Ebola outbreak: U.S. creates rapid-response team

U.S. health officials say they are setting up an Ebola response team that would travel to anywhere in the country where Ebola is diagnosed within hours."

2nd Ebola case in Texas might have been prevented if reponse team had been in place, CDC head says

Cpl. Zachary Wicker shows other U.S. soldiers how to put gloves on while in germ-protective gear in Fort Bliss, Texas. The CDC chief said Tuesday that an Ebola rapid-response team might have been able to prevent transmission of the virus to a Texas nurse. (Juan Carlos/Associated Press )

U.S. health officials saidan Ebola response team has been created that will travel anywhere in the country where Ebola is diagnosed within hours."

Centersfor Disease Control and Prevention director TomFriedensaid at a news conference in Atlanta on Tuesday that he's been hearing "loud and clear" from health-care workers in the U.S. that they are worried and don't feel prepared to treat Ebola.

I wish we had put a team like this on the ground the day [the first]patient was diagnosed, he said, adding that a rapid-responseteam might have prevented the secondary infection of nurse Nina Pham.

FriedensaidPham,who became infected with Ebola while treating the first patient diagnosed in the U.S., remains in stable condition.

Pham, 26, said earlier in the day that she was "doing well."Phamwas among about 70 staff members at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital who cared forThomas Eric Duncan, according to medical records.
Dr. Tom Frieden, head of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said a rapid-response team will respond to any future cases of Ebola in the U.S. "within hours." (John Amis/Associated Press)

The 48 people who had contact with Duncan before he was diagnosed have passed through the highest risk period of their quarantine without symptoms, though Friedensaid it wasn't impossible some of them could have Ebola.

Health officials are monitoring 76 people who may have come into contactwithDuncan after he was hospitalized, as well asone person who was in contact with Pham when she became symptomatic.

Pham was in Duncan'sroom often, from the day he was placed in intensive care until the day before he died last week.

"I'm doing well and want to thank everyone for their kind wishes and prayers," Pham said in a statement issued by the hospital, which said doctors were hopeful that she would recover.

CDC promises to look at 'everything'

She and other health care workers wore protective gear, including gowns, gloves, masks and face shields and sometimes full-body suits when caring for Duncan, but she became the first person to contract the disease within the United States. Duncan died last Wednesday.
Nurse Nina Pham, 26, became the first person to contract Ebola within the United States. (Courtesy of tcu360.com/ Associated Press)

A single infection in a health-care worker is unacceptable," Frieden said, as he outlined the CDC's plans to better support front-line health workers. "What we're doing at this point is looking at everything we can do to minimize that risk so those who are caring for her do that safely and effectively."

The CDC is looking at "everything from the type of personal protective equipment to the procedure for putting it on and the procedure for taking it off," he said.

Friedensaid two nurses from Emory University's SeriousCommunicable Disease Unit are now on the ground working with theDallas hospital on the proper use of personal protective gear.

Friedenis recommending that the hospital limit the number of staff who care forPhamso that people who treat her can
become more familiar and more comfortable with using protectivegear. Nurses groups have demanded better training and guidanceon how to use equipment that already includes face shields,masks, gowns and gloves.

Phamunderstood risks, family friend says

Pham understood the risks and tried to reassure her family that she would be safe, according to a family friend.

When Pham's mother learned her daughter was caring for Duncan, Pham told her: "Don't worry about me," Christina Tran told The Associated Press on Monday.

Pham went to the hospital Friday night after finding she had a fever.

Pham's parents live in Fort Worth, where they are part of a closely-knit, deeply religious community of Vietnamese Catholics. Members of their church held a special mass for her Monday.

At the hospital, she received a plasma transfusion from a doctor who beat the virus.

Jeremy Blume, a spokesman for the non-profit medical mission group Samaritan's Purse, confirmed that the plasma donation came from Kent Brantly, the first American to return to the U.S. from Liberia to be treated for Ebola. Brantly received an experimental treatment and fought off the virus, and has donated blood to three others, including Pham.

Brantly said in a recent speech that he also offered his blood for Duncan, but that their blood types didn't match.

With files from CBC News and Reuters