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posted by martyb on Thursday October 16 2014, @11:34PM   Printer-friendly
from the connecting-the-dots dept.

Pamela Engel writes that Americans need only look to Nigeria to calm their fears about an Ebola outbreak in the US. Nigeria is much closer to the West Africa outbreak than the US is, yet even after Ebola entered the country in the most terrifying way possible — via a visibly sick passenger on a commercial flight — officials successfully shut down the disease and prevented widespread transmission. If there are still no new cases on October 20, the World Health Organization will officially declare the country "Ebola-free". Here's how Nigeria did it.

The first person to bring Ebola to Nigeria was Patrick Sawyer, who left a hospital in Liberia against the wishes of the medical staff and flew to Nigeria. Once Sawyer arrived, it became obvious that he was ill when he passed out in the Lagos airport, and he was taken to a hospital in the densely packed city of 20 million. Once the country's first Ebola case was confirmed, Port Health Services in Nigeria started a process called contact tracing to limit the spread of the disease and created an emergency operations center to coordinate and oversee the national response. Health officials used a variety of resources, including phone records and flight manifests, to track down nearly 900 people who might have been exposed to the virus via Sawyer or the people he infected. As soon as people developed symptoms suggestive of Ebola, they were isolated in Ebola treatment facilities. Without waiting to see whether a "suspected" case tested positive, Nigeria's contact tracing team tracked down everyone who had had contact with that patient since the onset of symptoms making a staggering 18,500 face-to-face visits.

The US has many of these same procedures in place for containing Ebola, making the risk of an outbreak here very low. Contact tracing is exactly what is happening in Dallas right now; if any one of Thomas Eric Duncan's contacts shows symptoms, that person will be immediately isolated and tested. “That experience shows us that even in the case in Nigeria, when we found out later in the timeline that this patient had Ebola, that Nigeria was able to identify contacts, institute strict infection control procedures and basically bring their outbreak to a close”, says Dr. Tom Inglesby. “They did a good job in and of themselves. They worked closely with the U.S. CDC. If we can succeed in Nigeria… I do believe we will stop it here.”

 
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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 17 2014, @12:15PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 17 2014, @12:15PM (#106967)

    The LAST question asked when you arrive complaining about Ebola is "Do you have insurance".

    No, that will still be among the first questions asked. Your response will not influence the resulting care (very much), but the hospital absolutely cares whether their compensation will be coming from Kaiser, medicaid, or the taxpayers.

    The bigger problem is the one so clearly demonstrated in Dallas: if you show up at the emergency room complaining of fever and diarrhea, the most likely diagnosis is food poisoning - take these antibiotics and go home. In, literally, 47,999,999 out of 48,000,000 cases, it's food poisoning and not ebola. Catching ebola victims at the ER is like catching terrorists at airport screening. Dallas failed to connect one very important dot: recent travel from West Aftrica, and - like the shoe bomber - you can expect that ERs across the country are going to be much more diligent following up that particular question.