Monday, 4 August 2014

American Missionary Struck With Ebola Gives Medical Experts Hope

No one has been able to find a sure treatment or vaccine for the
deadly Ebola disease, but medical experts are now optimistic after a
US missionary doctor, who contracted Ebola in West Africa seem to be
getting better as he was filmed walking into a hospital after being
flown back to America.

Two specialists told America's ABC News that the apparent condition of
Dr Kent Brantly 10 days after first showing symptoms was a "good
sign".

Dr Kent Brantly arrived for treatment on a medical plane which landed
at Dobbins Air Reserve Base in Georgia shortly after 11am (1am AEST).

It is the first time the deadly virus has been on American soil.

He was taken immediately to Emory University Hospital in Atlanta where
CNN showed aerial footage of a figure in a hazard suit, believed to be
Dr Brantly, being helped out of the back of an ambulance then walking
into the hospital. The Ebola victim will be treated at the hospital's
special care isolation units.

Infectious disease specialist Dr William Schaffner, of Vanderbilt
University School of Medicine, noted Dr Brantly didn't require a
ventilator.

"The first thing we all said 'Whoa he's not on a vent'," he told the ABC.

"In general (with) Ebola is ... you progress on a downhill course. If
you're at this point and you're holding your own you're entitled to be
optimistic."

Dr Stephen Morse, a professor of Epidemiology at the Columbia
University Mailman School of Public Health, said: "If you can walk in,
that's a very good sign. I was surprised but pleasantly."

Another American health worker, Nancy Writebol, who is fighting for
her life after contracting Ebola in the same outbreak in Liberia, was
also being flown back home for treatment. Though it was not yet known
when she would arrive.

Both patients were being flown home on a Gulfstream private jet which
had been fitted with a collapsible, mobile isolation unit designed to
transfer employees from the US Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) exposed to contagious diseases.

It's believed to be the first time a patient infected with Ebola has
been treated anywhere in the US.

The latest outbreak of the haemorrhagic fever in west Africa has
killed 729 people of the more than 1300 infected since March.

The World Health Organization has said the fast-moving outbreak was
causing "catastrophic" loss of life in the affected countries of
Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria and Sierra Leone. The latest outbreak is the
largest since the virus was first identified in 1976.

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