One of the United States aid workers who
recovered from an Ebola infection is “thrilled to be alive” as he and
another patient are discharged from hospital. Dr Kent Brantly, 33, thanked supporters
for their prayers at a news conference in Atlanta. Nancy Writebol, 59,
was discharged on Tuesday.
The two were brought to the US for treatment three weeks ago.
The outbreak has killed more than 1,300 people in West Africa, with many of the deaths occurring in Liberia.
“Today is a miraculous day,” said Dr
Brantly, who appeared healthy if pallid as he addressed reporters
yesterday at Emory University hospital.
“I am thrilled to be alive, to be well,
and to be reunited with my family. As a medical missionary, I never
imagined myself in this position.”
He said Ebola “was not on the radar” when he and his family moved to Liberia in October.
After his family returned to the US as
the Ebola outbreak tore through West Africa, he continued to treat Ebola
patients and woke up on July 23 feeling “under the weather”.
Dr Brantly said he lay in bed for nine
days, getting progressively sicker and weaker. On 1 August, he was flown
to Atlanta for treatment at Emory.
Emory infectious disease specialist Dr
Bruce Ribner said after rigorous treatment and testing, officials were
confident Dr Brantly had recovered “and he can return to his family, his
community and his life without public health concerns”.
The group for which he was working in Liberia, Samaritan’s Purse, said they were celebrating his recovery.
“Today I join all of our Samaritan’s
Purse team around the world in giving thanks to God as we celebrate Dr
Kent Brantly’s recovery from Ebola and release from the hospital,”
Franklin Graham said in a statement.
Nancy Writebol’s husband David said in a statement that she was free of the virus but was significantly weakened.
The family decided to leave the hospital privately in order to allow her to rest and recuperate.
South Africa on Thursday said
non-citizens arriving from Ebola-affected areas of West Africa – the
countries of Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone – would not be allowed
into the country.
The health ministry said borders would be closed to all non-citizen travellers from Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.
South African nationals will be allowed
to re-enter the country when returning from high-risk countries, but
will undergo strict screening.
All non-essential outgoing travel to the affected countries has been banned.
Usual screening procedures are in place
for those who travel between Nigeria, Kenya and Ethiopia, which have
been defined as medium-risk countries.
South Africa has experienced two Ebola
scares in recent weeks, involving passengers arriving from Liberia and
Guinea. But the country has managed to stay Ebola-free until now.
Johannesburg has one of the major transit airports, connecting southern Africa with the rest of the continent
The police in Liberia’s capital,
Monrovia, fired live rounds and tear gas during protests after a
quarantine was imposed to contain the spread of the deadly virus.
Residents of the capital’s West Point slum area said the barbed wire blockade stops them buying food and working.
Both Dr Brantly and Mrs Writebol received an experimental treatment known as ZMapp.
The drug, which has only been made in
extremely limited qualities, had never been tested on humans and it
remains unclear if it is responsible for their recovery.
ZMapp was also given to a Spanish priest, who died, and three Liberian health workers, who are showing signs of improvement
The regulatory body of the healthcare
sector in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi, announced yesterday that the formal
Ebola test has come back negative for the Nigerian woman suspected of
having the virus while transiting through the Abu Dhabi International
Airport last Friday.
She was known to have advanced cancer
and was on her way for treatment in India, but fell ill at the Abu Dhabi
International Airport, and resuscitation attempts were unsuccessful.
“Some of her signs during resuscitation,
although explainable by her medical condition, could also have been
caused by Ebola virus, and hence this diagnosis needed to be excluded,”
the statement said.
Haad followed standard procedures for
isolating the her contacts — the woman’s husband and the five medical
staff who tried to resuscitate her – as a precautionary measure pending
the result of the Ebola test.
“Given the negative result, all these individuals are scheduled to be released from isolation today,” it added.
The Health Authority in Abu Dhabi
assured the public that there is no risk to the community over the death
of a 35-year-old Nigerian woman at Abu Dhabi Airport.
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