Madrid (CNN) -- Spanish health authorities said Tuesday they are monitoring three more potential cases of Ebola, a day after a nurse's assistant became the first person known to have contracted Ebola outside Africa in the current outbreak.
The woman helped treat two Spanish missionaries, both of whom had contracted Ebola in West Africa, one in Liberia and the other in Sierra Leone. Both died after returning to Spain.
The developments come
just as the organization Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without
Borders) reports that a Norwegian staff member has contracted the deadly
virus. The staffer had been working in the Sierra Leone city of Bo and
was placed in isolation Sunday after developing a fever, the
organization said.
The worker is being sent to a treatment center in Europe.
In Spain, no details have
yet been given of exactly how the nurse's assistant contracted the
virus, and her condition is unknown.
Francisco Arnalis, head
of internal medicine at the Carlos III Hospital, told a news conference
that the three other potential Ebola cases are being monitored there.
One is the assistant's
husband, who faces a high risk of infection and had no protection.
Another is a suspected case in a man who traveled overseas and has
tested negative twice, health officials said.
The third, a nurse, is
not a suspected case but has been brought in as a precaution after
suffering diarrhea. She was exposed, but she was wearing protective
gear, Arnalis said.
Another 22 contacts with
the nurse's assistant outside the Carlos III Hospital are also being
monitored, the head of the hospital said.
The hospital will not
release information about the status of the nurse's assistant, who has
not been named, in order to respect her privacy, director Rafael
Santamaria said.
The hospital has two
potential treatments at its disposal, said Dr. Jose Ramon Arribas, one
using an IV drip with the antibodies of Ebola survivors and the other an antiviral drug.
"This is a treatment
that the WHO (World Health Organization) has recommended, even though
they haven't verified its efficacy," he said of the IV drip.
EU: We need to know what happened
Spanish authorities have
said that all the proper protocols and procedures were followed in the
care of the two missionaries. But the European Union has asked for an
explanation as to how the woman was infected.
European Commission
spokesman Frederic Vincent said on Tuesday that "Spain told us all the
protocols have been followed, but obviously something wrong happened."
There have been 10
evacuations of Ebola-infected patients from Africa to Europe, eight of
those within the European Union, Vincent said -- and it is first time
that something like this has happened.
"The hospitals where the patients are being taken are supposed to be equipped and ready to deal with Ebola patients," he said.
"If protocols are being
followed, it's highly unlikely that an outbreak could happen in the EU.
But again, zero risk doesn't exist, particularly in a hospital, where
staff deal with sick people.
"We need to find out as soon as possible what happened and if we need to revise procedures."
There will be an extra meeting of European officials to discuss the Spanish Ebola case on Wednesday, he said.
The World Health
Organization said it was "ready to provide support to Spain, as and if
required," as it investigates the case and traces the infected woman's
contacts.
In the United Kingdom,
Prime Minister David Cameron will lead a Cabinet meeting to discuss way
to coordinate how to handle response to Ebola there, if it's necessary.
Cameron called Sierra Leone President Ernest Bai Koroma to discuss the
status of the outbreak in the West African nation and talk about how aid
the UK has provided is helping.
According to Downing
Street, the Sierra Leone leader said the situation continues to be "very
serious" and there was a need to train more medical staff, improve
burial processes and develop a better system for running service
treatment centers.
Unions question equipment used
Some Spanish unions have
blamed the government, saying they warned it that the personal
protective equipment used by the medical team was not of the highest
standard.
Angry doctors and nurses
outside the Carlos III Hospital where the nurse's assistant is being
treated -- and where the two missionaries were cared for before her --
said they were outraged the pair had been brought to the hospital, one
in August and the other in September.
They said that the two
priests, Miguel Pajares and Manuel Garcia Viejo, were almost dead when
they arrived, and that they should not have been brought back to Spain,
thereby putting other people's lives at risk.
Spanish Health Minister Ana Mato announced Monday that testing had confirmed the nurse's assistant has the virus.
The husband of the
nurse's assistant, who is under observation, is not sick, a spokesman
for the Health Ministry said. It was not clear whether he is under
quarantine. The couple have no children.
The assistant was one of
about 30 health professionals in Spain who helped treat the Ebola
patients. They and the ambulance team that took her to the hospital are
now reportedly under observation.
No word on where she took her vacation
Health officials said
the assistant developed symptoms on September 30. She was not
hospitalized until this week, when her only symptom was a fever.
She was first taken to a
hospital in southern Madrid before being transferred to Carlos III
Hospital, where she had helped care for the Ebola patients.
The second of the
missionaries died on September 26, and she went on vacation a day later,
health officials said. They have not said where that vacation was
taken.
A few days later, she
reported that she was not feeling well but her temperatures were not
very high, officials said. It was only several days later that her
temperature soared and she was hospitalized.
An investigation is
underway to find everyone the assistant may have had contact with while
infectious. So far, there are no other known related cases.
Health authorities have urged people to stay calm, as they hope that the virus' spread is contained.
"We are working in
coordination to give the best care to the patient and to guarantee the
safety of all citizens," said Mato, the health minister.
Obama: National security priority
The news came amid
growing fears in the United States that the disease could spread. The
first person to be diagnosed in the United States with Ebola, Thomas
Eric Duncan, remains in critical but stable condition in Texas,
according to Candace White, a spokeswoman for Texas Health. He is on a
ventilator and receiving kidney dialysis, she said, adding that his
liver function, which declined over the weekend, has improved.
He is continuing to receive an investigational medication, White said.
During a Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention press conference on Monday, CNN asked
Texas Department of State Health Services Dr. David Lakey how care
protocols in Spain compared to those involving Duncan in Texas.
Lakey said he personally
went to the Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital ward in Dallas where the
patient is being treated, and saw that there was extensive security and
a detailed method of how providers were protecting themselves. "They
take this really seriously," he said, describing treatment protocol as
"meticulous."
CDC Director Dr. Tom
Frieden said none of the people who Duncan came into contact with before
his diagnosis that the CDC has identified for monitoring has shown
symptoms.
Frieden also said the agency has not made final decisions about possible ways to screen at airports in the United States.
Meanwhile, some of the
U.S. military personnel being deployed to Liberia to help tackle the
Ebola crisis may come into contact with the virus, a Pentagon official
said Tuesday.
The head of U.S. Africa
Command, Gen. David Rodriguez, said that while the majority of U.S.
troops involved in the mission would not be exposed to the disease,
those in mobile testing labs could have contact in that environment.
"They're all trained at a
very, very high level," Rodriguez told reporters of the lab personnel,
who constitute a "separate, specialty element of the force."
President Obama told
reporters Monday, "As I've said from the start of this outbreak, I
consider this a top national security priority. This is not just a
matter of charity. ... This is an issue about our safety."
Obama called for
protocols to help stop the spread of the disease, including additional
air passenger screening, while downplaying the risk of an epidemic in
the United States.
Ebola has killed more than 3,400 people in West Africa, with more than 7,400 suspected, probable and confirmed cases.
The virus is transmitted
through close and direct physical contact with infected bodily fluids,
the most infectious being blood, feces and vomit. The incubation period,
from the time of infection to symptoms, is two to 21 days.
CNN's Al Goodman reported from Madrid, and
Laura Smith-Spark wrote in London. CNN's Laura Perez Maestro, Marilia
Brocchetto and Nick Thompson contributed to this report.
No comments:
Post a Comment