5 October 2014

EBOLA VIRUS - Family moved out of Texas Ebola flat






The occupants of a flat in Texas where a man lay sick for days with Ebola have been moved from their home.
Thomas Duncan, who caught the virus in his native Liberia, is now in a serious condition in hospital. This is the only Ebola case recorded so far in the US.
The flat in Dallas where he lived before being isolated is being cleaned by hazardous materials specialists.
The four people living there have been moved to a private home offered by a volunteer.
Louise Troh, thought to be Mr Duncan's girlfriend, her 13-year-old son and two nephews have spent days inside the flat under the orders of health officials.
The family was driven away from the home in a police car, after officials failed to find shelter for them.
Hotels, flats and others had refused to offer them accommodation, before a private residence was offered.
"No one wants this family,'' said Sana Syed, a Dallas city spokeswoman.
More than 3,431 people have died in four West African countries in what has become the world's worst ever Ebola outbreak.
Pentagon spokesman Rear Adm John Kirby said the US could deploy as many as 4,000 troops to West Africa to help contain the outbreak.
Although Mr Duncan is the first person to be diagnosed within the US, four Americans have contracted the virus in Liberia.
Thomas Duncan, shown at a 2011 wedding in GhanaMr Duncan, shown here at a 2011 wedding in Ghana
A worker with the Red Cross brings emergency supplies to the flat where Mr Duncan's close associates are quarantinedA worker with the Red Cross brought emergency supplies to the flat
Three aid workers have recovered after flying back to the US for treatment but a fourth, photojournalist Ashoka Mukpo, 33, is expected to be flown home over the weekend.
Mr Duncan's diagnosis was confirmed on Tuesday, 10 days after he arrived in the US to visit relatives and friends.
As well as the four who shared his flat, another six people who had contact with Mr Duncan have been identified by Texas health officials as higher risk.
Mr Duncan, a courier driver, is believed to have taken a sick patient to a clinic in Liberia.
Authorities there have accused him of lying on an Ebola questionnaire prior to leaving the country and say they plan to prosecute him upon his return.
On Friday, Howard University hospital in Washington DC said a patient had come in with symptoms "associated with Ebola".
He was being kept in isolation while he was tested for the disease. He had recently travelled from Nigeria.

Source: http://www.bbc.com/

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