• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

EBOLA HUAT AH! spreading fast in USA NOBODY IS SAFE

Huat A Fuck!

Alfrescian
Loyal
Joined
Sep 19, 2011
Messages
101
Points
18
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/wireStory/texas-dept-2nd-person-tests-positive-ebola-26206324


http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/oct/15/ebola-second-texas-nurse-transferred-atlanta

Second Texas nurse with Ebola to be transferred to special facility
CDC admits failings as director says nurse should not have been allowed on commercial flight in days before diagnosis

504 comments

Members of Dallas fire-rescue hazmat unit prepare to decontaminate common areas near the apartment of a second healthcare worker who has tested positive for Ebola. Photograph: Sana Syed/AP
Lauren Gambino in New York
Wednesday 15 October 2014 20.47*BST

The second nurse diagnosed with Ebola in Texas is to be transferred from Dallas to a special bio-containment unit in Atlanta, officials announced on Wednesday, as they acknowledged failings in the ongoing response to the arrival of the virus in the US.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) also said that the 29-year-old nurse, Amber Vinson, flew on a commercial flight from Cleveland, Ohio to Dallas with a low-grade temperature a day before she was diagnosed. While in Ohio, she also reportedly travelled from Cleveland to Akron.

Vinson is the second healthcare worker to have contracted Ebola at Texas Health Presbyterian hospital in Dallas, which treated Thomas Eric Duncan, a Liberian who was the first patient in the US to be diagnosed with Ebola. Another nurse, 26-year-old Nina Pham, was diagnosed at the weekend. Both had cared for Duncan, who died in an isolation ward on 8 October.

The second infection called into question the Dallas hospital’s ability to protect staff treating Ebola patients, and raised concerns about the quality of the initial response to Duncan’s diagnosis by state and federal agencies.

The largest nurses’ union in the US on Wednesday assailed Texas Health Presbyterian for the way in which Duncan’s case was handled in the time from his arrival at the hospital to his diagnosis.

Dr Tom Frieden, the CDC director, conceded on Wednesday that Vinson should not have been allowed to take the flights to Ohio. “We will, from this moment forward, ensure that no other individual who is being monitored for exposure undergoes travel in any way other than controlled movement,” Frieden said.


The CDC was attempting to contact the passengers and crew who were aboard Vinson’s return flight to Dallas - Frontier Airlines flight 1143 from Cleveland, Ohio. But Frieden said he believed the risk to passengers was low because Vinson’s symptoms did not present themselves until the following day.

Advertisement

The US secretary of health and human services, Sylvia Burwell, said that Vinson will be transported to Emory University hospital in Atlanta, which has successfully treated two Ebola patients and is caring for a third, an unidentified American doctor who contracted the disease while working in the Sierra Leone.

Before Duncan’s diagnosis, all Ebola patients in the US were treated in special bio-containment units in Atlanta and Omaha.

President Barack Obama has cancelled a planned campaign trip and was due to be briefed by the relevant members of his cabinet about the country’s Ebola response on Wednesday afternoon.

Texas governor Rick Perry, who is cutting short a trip to Europe to deal with the unfolding situation in Dallas, said in a statement on Wednesday: “This is the first time that our nation has had to deal with a threat such as this. Everyone working on this challenge - from the medical professionals at the bedside to the public health officials addressing containment of the infection - is working to end the threat posed by this disease.”

According to Frieden, the two nurses who contracted Ebola in Dallas had “extensive” contact with Duncan in the days before he was diagnosed, when he was extremely ill, excreting large quantities of highly contagious body fluids.

Advertisement

“Our investigation increasingly suggests that the first several days before the patient was diagnosed appear to be the highest-risk period,” Frieden said.

Information from medical records suggested that the team of healthcare workers who treated Duncan had exposed skin while working in the quarantine unit during the three-day window between when he was admitted and when he was diagnosed.

“Were protocols breached? The nurses say there were no protocols,” said National Nurses United Co-President Deborah Burger in a call with reporters Wednesday.

Burger said nurses who work at Texas Health Presbyterian reported that Duncan was not immediately placed in isolation upon his arrival at the hospital on 28 September. They said Duncan, who at that point was very ill, was left for several hours in an area where other patients were present.

Burger also said the union was told the nurses who initially treated Duncan wore only generic gowns, three pairs of gloves and surgical masks, and were not given surgical booties. They had the option to wear a full-face mask, but one was not initially required.

The nurses said they were eventually given better gowns, but the garments still exposed their necks, part of their heads and their scrubs from the knees down. To protect the exposed parts of their body, the nurses said, they were instructed to wrap medical tape around their necks. It is not clear what healthcare workers treating patients suspected or confirmed to have Ebola in Dallas are currently required to wear.

In a letter addressed to Obama, the union asked him to take executive action to keep nurses and all healthcare workers safe. They’re asking that every healthcare worker be required to wear a Hazmat suit when treating an Ebola patient, and for hospitals where they are being treated to be compelled to meet the same standards of care as the nation’s special bio-containment centers.

The 77 healthcare workers who worked in the quarantine room with Duncan or handled samples of his blood were initially instructed to monitor themselves for symptoms, Frieden said. After Pham was diagnosed, the healthcare workers were placed under “active monitoring”, which requires a twice daily temperature check by a public health official. At that point, Vinson had already left Texas and traveled to Ohio.

Frieden said three people who may have made direct contact with Vinson have been identified and are being actively monitored. Officials are also monitoring one person who may have made direct contact with Pham, as well as her dog.

Pham was in “improved condition” Wednesday, according to Frieden, while Vinson was “ill but clinically stable”.






8af555c7-84d0-4f7d-8f5a-5af5ee6e7929-620x372.jpeg
 
http://www.forbes.com/sites/dandiam...-doctors-nurses-and-other-healthcare-workers/



Ebola Has Already Killed More Than 200 Doctors, Nurses, And Other Healthcare Workers This*Year
Comment Now Follow Comments

Ebola has now infected multiple people in America: The first two homegrown cases of Ebola are a pair of nurses who got sick after treating Thomas Duncan, the first person ever diagnosed with Ebola in the United States.

Both nurses with Ebola — Nina Pham and Amber Joy Vinson — were among the 70-plus staff who encountered Duncan during his 10-day stay at Dallas’s Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital. However, several staff on Wednesday anonymously told reporters that the nurses were not given sufficient protection against the risk of Ebola.

(A person can become infected with Ebola after being in close proximity with a visibly sick Ebola patient, and specifically by making contact with an infected person’s bodily fluids.)

Although Duncan was admitted to the hospital on September 28, having traveled from West Africa and suffering from common Ebola symptoms like vomiting and diarrhea, staff weren’t told to wear protective gear to guard themselves against Ebola until September 30. That’s when tests formally confirmed that Duncan was infected with Ebola, and had been contagious for nearly a week.

Also See: Yes, Ebola Is Scary. But It’s Also Beatable. Here’s Why.

The allegations that the Dallas nurses didn’t have sufficient protections against Ebola are disturbing — more on those in a second — but the infection pattern keeps with a sad trend: A disproportionate number of people who were sickened with Ebola in West Africa were health care workers, too.

Doctors Without Borders this week said that 16 of its staff had contracted Ebola in the current outbreak, and nine had died from the disease. Dr. Sheik Umar Khan, the doctor who heroically led Sierra Leone’s fight against Ebola, got sick and died in July; his colleagues opted not to give him the experimental ZMapp cocktail, which appears to have helped treat several Ebola patients.


We’ve been tracking the Ebola outbreak at the Advisory Board Daily Briefing, and my colleagues Juliette Mullin and Rich Van Haste have monitored how the current Ebola outbreak has hit health care workers especially hard.

Around the globe, about 400 health care staff have contracted Ebola, and more than 230 have died.


The current Ebola outbreak has infected more than 400 health care workers and killed more than 200 of them.

Caring for Ebola patients is complicated; the patients are highly acute and need constant monitoring from health care staff. But to do so, doctors and nurses must undertake comprehensive protections to ensure that fluids expelled by Ebola patients don’t touch their skin or get accidentally ingested.

And as Juliette points out, writing at the Daily Briefing, Ebola patients become more contagious at end-of-life—which poses a further risk to the nurses who care for them.


Some hospitals have been up to the challenge. While Emory Healthcare has been able to treat three different Ebola patients without any staff becoming sickened by the disease, that hospital has dedicated, high-level expertise in fighting problems like Ebola. Emory’s one of just several hospitals across the nation with an isolated infectious disease unit, for instance.

Also See: One U.S. Hospital Already Treated Three Ebola Patients — And Cured Two Of Them

Amber Vinson, one of the Dallas nurses sickened by Ebola, is now being taken to Emory for care.

But Texas Health’s level of preparation is probably more representative of the average hospital. “What are the chances America’s first Ebola patient ended up at the *only* hospital that would make mistakes?” health care economist and writer Austin Frakt ruefully*asked on Twitter “Point is, errors are everywhere.”

And that’s a reminder the average hospital may not be well-prepared to handle Ebola after all, despite the CDC’s assurances.

According to Texas Health nurses, they had no clear understanding of the protocols to treat Ebola patients. As Sarah Kliff details at Vox, trying to follow a visual guide to don and remove gear designed to protect against Ebola requires 21 separate steps and is a long, intense process.


Emory staff care for an American missionary who contracted Ebola in Africa. (Graphic via Los Angeles Times.)





la-na-nn-ebola-missionary-emory-atlanta-arrive-20140805-1940x10331.jpeg
 
under my ebola ola ola ola eh eh oh....under my ebola ola ola!!!!

[video=youtube;CvBfHwUxHIk]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CvBfHwUxHIk[/video]
 
Back
Top