Spanish nurse becomes first to contract Ebola outside West Africa
Wednesday, 8 October 2014 00:02
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Reuters: A Spanish nurse has become the first person to contract Ebola outside of Africa, casting doubt over measures taken in Spain to control the potential spread of the deadly disease.
The nurse had helped to treat two priests who contracted Ebola in Africa and were repatriated to Spain. Some 30 other health workers and those who came in contact with her are now being monitored for symptoms.
Both priests died shortly after reaching Spain. Each had worked in West Africa, where an epidemic of Ebola has spread through Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia since March, killing more than 3,400 people in the largest outbreak of the disease in history. Cases have also reached Senegal and Nigeria.
Spanish officials said they still had to find out how the nurse, who was not named but identified as married with no children, contracted the viral infection, which causes fever and bleeding.
“At the moment we are investigating the way in which the professional was infected,” Antonio Alemany, the head of Madrid’s primary health care services told a news conference.
The nurse was one of a specialist team who treated elderly priest Manuel Garcia Viejo at the Madrid hospital Carlos III when he was repatriated from Sierra Leone with Ebola on Sept 21. He died four days later.
Garcia Viejo was kept in isolation during his treatment last month and officials said they followed a strict protocol designed to protect health workers and patients at the hospital.
The nurse who has since fallen ill only entered Garcia Viejo’s room twice, once after his death, Alemany said.
Health authorities said she had also helped treat Miguel Pajares, who had been working in Liberia when he came down with the disease. He was airlifted back to Spain on Aug 7 and died five days later.
he Spanish nurse went on holiday immediately after Garcia’s death on Sept 25 and began feeling sick on Sept 30, said Alemany. He did not say where the nurse went on holiday.
Scientists tracking the Ebola epidemic in West Africa and analysing air traffic data have predicted a high risk of a case being imported unwittingly into Europe before the end of this month.
The first Ebola case to be diagnosed in the United States was identified last week in a man from Liberia, who U.S. health officials say is now in a critical condition.