US Health Official Comments on Evolving Ebola Procedures


October 19,2014

WASHINGTON— A top U.S. health official says it is unrealistic to expect every hospital in America to be able to care for an Ebola patient, but that health care facilities must be vigilant for possible cases and be ready to isolate anyone infected with the virus for transport to specialized treatment centers. The Director of the National Institute of Allergies and Infectious Diseases, Anthony Fauci, spoke one day after President Barack Obama warned against mass-panic over the disease.

A collective sigh of relief could be felt aboard a cruise ship that docked in Texas after a passenger tested negative for Ebola. A Coast Guard helicopter was dispatched to collect a blood sample from a woman who had handled specimens from America’s first Ebola patient, Liberian Thomas Eric Duncan, who died earlier this month in Dallas.

The episode points to mounting fears and evolving health protocols to deal with the virus. Last week, America’s third Ebola patient, Dallas nurse Nina Pham, was transferred to the nation's premier health research facility, the National Institutes of Health near Washington, for treatment. NIH infectious disease specialist Anthony Fauci says it’s important to remain realistic.

US Health Official Comments on Evolving Ebola Procedures

“I think this idea that every single hospital can take care of a seriously-ill Ebola patient right now is not true. We do not want people to think that any community hospital is totally equipped to care for a patient,” said Fauci, speaking on ABC’s This Week program.

Earlier, President Barack Obama attempted to calm an increasingly-alarmed American public.

“This is a serious disease, but we cannot give in to hysteria or fear. Now, even one infection is too many. At the same time, we have to keep this in perspective. As our public health experts point out, every year thousands of Americans die from the flu,” said Obama.

But a growing chorus of critics, including some Republican and Democrat lawmakers, want stronger measures to isolate the United States from African nations where Ebola has killed more than 4,500 people. Congressman Fred Upton is among them.

“I am going to encourage the president to really put in a no-fly zone from that region of the world, particularly for folks trying to travel here on a visa,” said Upton.

President Obama said stopping flights to and from West Africa could make the situation worse by disrupting the flow of supplies and health workers to affected regions and causing passengers to go through third countries and possibly evade screening for Ebola.