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Nurse’s assistant came into contact with 21 people at Alcorcón Hospital

Staff including doctors, nurses and ambulance crew will be monitored for symptoms

A convoy transporting the Spanish nurse with ebola leaves Alcorcón Hospital in the early hours of Tuesday morning. / ANDRES KUDACKI (AP)

A day after news broke that a Spanish nursing assistant had becomethe first person in Europe to contract the ebola virus, health authorities were working to close the net around people with whom the 40-year-old woman could have come into contact.

The nurse’s assistant, who was part of the health team who looked after two Spanish missionaries with ebola who had been brought back from Africa for treatment in Madrid, was initially treated in Alcorcón Hospital in the southwestern suburb of the same name. The hospital has so far identified 21 members of staff with whom the patient came into contact, including an ambulance crew and doctors and nurses, according to health sources contacted by EL PAÍS.

All of them have been contacted by the health center and told they will have to be monitored for symptoms of the disease. They will have their temperature checked twice a day, but can continue with their normal day-to-day lives, given that the virus is not contagious until symptoms, which include fever, appear.

The patient was taken to Alcorcón hospital in a “conventional” ambulance, and without any special protection, according to the same sources. Once in the hospital, protocol for dealing with possible ebola cases was put into action. She was put into an isolation unit and the health professionals who treated her wore special suits.

The center will now have to decide how to clean the section of the hospital in which she was treated. For now the area has been closed off and sealed with plastic sheeting to prevent contagion.

With these 21 staff, around 50 health professionals are now being monitored after having come into contact with ebola sufferers in Spain. The health authorities who appeared at a press conference on Monday alongside Health Minister Ana Mato reported that 30 or so staff were already being monitored after having had contact with the two missionaries.

It is not yet known whether the nurse’s assistant had contact with members of her family last week, when she was already presenting symptoms of the fever but was going about her daily life as normal.

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

Brussels demands answers from Spain after nurse contracts ebola

But EC believes the spread of the virus in Europe “continues to be highly improbable”

 

The European Commission has called for “explanations” from Spain about the circumstances and possible mistakes made by the healthcare system that led to a nurse’s assistant contracting the ebola virus, a spokesperson from Brussels said on Tuesday.

“The European Commission sent a message to the Spanish Health Ministry on Monday to ask for explanations [about the circumstances] that have made this first contagion outside of Africa possible,” explained Frédéric Vincent, who added that they were expecting a response from Spain on Wednesday. “Obviously there is a problem somewhere,” the spokesperson concluded.

However, Vincent added that the commission was not excessively concerned about the case in Spain, given that the spread of the virus in Europe “continues to be highly improbable.”

Brussels called on the Spanish authorities on Monday to confirm that one of the health professionals who came into contact with missionary Manuel García Viejo at the Carlos III hospital in Madrid had contracted the virus. The priest died in September after having been repatriated to Spain from Sierra Leone.

Brussels stated that Spain would have to “provide explanations” about the details of the contagion. EC sources underlined that European hospitals must be “highly equipped” in order to protect their personnel.

Sources consulted by news agency Europa Press explained that the European Union has been “prepared” for some time for the chance that an infection might occur within its borders, but clarified that it would be “nearly impossible” for the disease to spread as it has done in West Africa, where 3,300 people have already died in the latest outbreak.

 

 

 


 

 

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illuminousink #1
Oh my... it's getting worse and worse. Hopefully it doesn't get too worst. And I hope the ones who got sick will be well and be treated properly.