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Tracking the next pandemic: Avian Flu Talk

Isolation period ends for family, contacts of Ebol

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Jen147 View Drop Down
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    Posted: October 20 2014 at 7:06am
Isolation period ends for family, contacts of Ebola patient
 
October 20, 2014
 

Dozens of Dallas-area residents who had contact with the first Ebola patient to be treated in the United States, including the man's fiancee, were expected to be free to leave seclusion early Monday after a 21-day quarantine period expired at midnight. 

In all, 48 people who came in contact with Thomas Eric Duncan before he was admitted to Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital with the Ebola virus Sept. 28 were likely to emerge healthy. Those who were being monitored included Duncan's fiancee, Louise Troh, three paramedics who drove Duncan to the hospital on that Sunday night. and a homeless man who was transported in the same ambulance as Duncan before it had been disinfected. 

The incubation period also has passed for about a dozen health workers who encountered Duncan when he went to the hospital for the first time, on Sept. 25.

The end of the quarantine period marks an important milestone in the nation's efforts to contain the outbreak and a cause for celebration for Troh. After three long weeks, she will be able to have a clean bill of health, leave the house and be done with twice-daily temperature readings by government health care workers. She likened the period to being a prisoner.

"I want to breathe, I want to really grieve, I want privacy with my family," Troh told The Associated Press on Friday, lamenting that she had missed Duncan's memorial service at his mother's church in North Carolina because of the quarantine. Troh says she and Duncan planned to get married later in the week.

Duncan arrived in Dallas from Liberia in late September and went to the hospital complaining of headache and stomach pain. He was sent home with a prescription for antibiotics to treat a misdiagnosed sinus infection. He returned two days later, was diagnosed with Ebola and died Oct. 8.

The day Duncan tested positive for Ebola, Troh, her 13-year-old son, Duncan's nephew and a family friend were ordered by a Dallas court to stay inside the apartment among Duncan's used linens and any lingering virus. The unusual confinement order was imposed after the family failed to comply with a request not to leave the apartment, Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins said. The four were later taken to an undisclosed gated community.

Jenkins and Troh's pastor George Mason delivered the news of Duncan's death to her during the confinement period.

One of the others whose quarantine period ended at midnight include Youngor Jallah, Troh's daughter, a nurse's assistant who checked Duncan's vital signs before calling for an ambulance.

For nearly three weeks, Jallah had not left the cramped, second-story apartment she shares with her partner, Aaron Yah, their three children, ages 2, 4 and 6, and Yah's 10-year-old son.

Unlike Troh, Jallah was not prevented from leaving by an armed guard, but Centers for Disease Control and Prevention officials have come by daily to check everyone's temperature.

"I'm telling you, just to step outside will be so great. To hug my mom and grieve for Eric, not over the phone like we've been doing but in the flesh," Jallah said.

Mason said he is coordinating efforts with the city, county and philanthropic community to help Troh and the family recover. Because of the Ebola infection risk, crews stripped Troh's apartment down to the carpeting, saving only a few personal documents, photographs and a Bible.

"They were left with nothing. They are completely devastated by this, so there's need to have their lives rebuilt," Mason said.

Troh plans to partially recover financially with a book written about her life, from growing up in Liberia, meeting Duncan in a refugee camp in Ivory Coast, Duncan's years-long quest to come to America to be reunited with his girlfriend and their 19-year-old son, and his death in an isolation ward.

"It will be a love story," she said.

Troh also issued a statement Sunday asking for privacy as she comes through the ordeal while thanking everyone who came to their side.

At Wilshire Baptist Church in Dallas on Sunday, associate pastor Mark Wingfield said the congregation was eager to welcome Troh back.

"We look forward to welcoming Louise and her family members back to church after the quarantine is lifted and we want you to know that when that happens we will be glad to receive each one of them," he said.

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Hazelpad View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Hazelpad Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 20 2014 at 7:48am
On the other side of the story

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/10/18/ebola-doctor-dallas/17495951/

DALLAS — Gary Weinstein, the doctor who treated all three U.S. Ebola patients at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital, says the hospital did everything it could to save the life of Thomas Eric Duncan, the first patient to die of the virus in the USA.

"I find that remarkably insulting," Weinstein said referring to suggestions Duncan didn't receive adequate treatment because he was black and uninsured.

"I don't know how better to describe that," he added as he was brought to tears. "The team here worked their tails off trying to save his life."
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Jen147 View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Jen147 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 20 2014 at 7:51am

If they are getting ready for a lawsuit they need to stop apologizing in the media don't you think... Re: Hospital took out a full page ad in newspaper admitting mistakes were made, apologizing.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote mamabear4 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 20 2014 at 9:34am
Hopefully they are correct on the incubation period. Why not be cautious and go for 25 days days ?
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