Government and Regulations

U.S. volunteer infected with Ebola in Sierra Leone


 

References

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will conduct contact tracing of individuals in Sierra Leone, including several American citizens, who may have come into contact with an American health worker who has become infected with the Ebola virus.

The patient returned to the United States by medevac and has been admitted to the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center for treatment, the agency said in a written statement.

Although none of the individuals currently being monitored in Sierra Leone have tested positive for Ebola, they will voluntarily self-isolate and remain under direct active monitoring for the 21-day incubation period before returning to the United States.

In the event that another Ebola case is confirmed, the CDC and the State Department are developing contingency plans for returning the other American health care workers to the United States by noncommercial air transport.

mbock@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

Edoxaban approved for atrial fib, DVT, and PE indications
MDedge Internal Medicine
Ebola: Lessons learned in the Nebraska medicine biocontainment unit
MDedge Internal Medicine
M.O.R.E. means less delirium in ICU
MDedge Internal Medicine
No pain benefit found for IV acetaminophen vs. oral in the neuro ICU
MDedge Internal Medicine
VIDEO: Postsurgical readmissions present pay-for-performance challenges
MDedge Internal Medicine
Accurate ID of nonsalvageable trauma patients improves trauma center performance metrics
MDedge Internal Medicine
Ventilator driving pressure may predict mortality in ARDS
MDedge Internal Medicine
Experimental vaccine may have worked on Ebola-exposed physician
MDedge Internal Medicine
Increase enoxaparin doses to prevent VTEs in trauma patients
MDedge Internal Medicine
Ebola-positive healthcare worker to be admitted to NIH
MDedge Internal Medicine