Ebola: Rising Call for Ban on Travel From W Africa

By CONNIE CASS Associated Press 

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An ambulance carrying Amber Joy Vinson, the second health care worker to be
diagnosed with Ebola in Texas, arrives at Emory University Hospital on
Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2014, in Atlanta. Vinson was one of the nurses who cared
for Thomas Eric Duncan, who died at the Dallas hospital last week of the
Ebola virus. (AP Photo/David Tulis) 

AP 



Warning that Americans are losing faith in their government's ability to
stop Ebola, Republican lawmakers on Thursday pressed for a ban on travel to
the U.S. from the West African outbreak zone. The White House said other
measures are more effective.

The administration spent the day trying anew to tamp down fear as the pool
of Americans being monitored for symptoms expanded from Texas to Ohio.
President Barack Obama said he might appoint a single official to lead the
nation's efforts against the deadly disease.

Health officials in Texas took a tougher stance on monitoring the dozens of
health care workers who had contact with the man who died of Ebola in
Dallas, asking them to sign legal documents agreeing to stay home under
threat of sanctions if they ventured out in public places. Earlier,
officials had requested the 75 workers to self-monitor for symptoms of
infection after two nurses were diagnosed with the virus.

One of them, Nina Pham, was moved Thursday from the Texas hospital to a
specialized federal facility in Maryland. The other nurse, Amber Vinson, has
been transferred to an Atlanta hospital that has one of only four
bio-containment units in the U.S.

In a brief video provided by Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas,
Pham smiles as she sits up in a hospital bed and chats briefly with an
attendant and her treating physician, Dr. Gary Weinstein, who are clad in
protective gear.

Asked if she needs anything, Pham replies, "I don't think so." When tears
come to her eyes, she's handed a tissue. She wipes her eyes and says, "I
love you guys."

While a contentious congressional hearing focused on the three cases of
Ebola diagnosed within the U.S., the World Health Organization said the
outbreak in West Africa was on pace to top 4,500 deaths by the end of the
week.

Obama authorized a call-up of reserve and National Guard troops in case they
are needed. His executive order would allow more forces than the up-to 4,000
already planned to be sent to West Africa, and for longer periods of time.

The president met into the evening with top aides and health officials at
the White House, declaring afterward that he had no "philosophical
objection" to imposing a travel ban on West Africa but had been told by
health and security experts that it would be less effective than measures
already in place — and perhaps would be counterproductive.

He said a ban could result in people trying to hide where they were coming
from and thus becoming less likely to be screened.

He said it may be appropriate to appoint an additional person to lead the
anti-Ebola effort in the U.S., a response to calls that he name an Ebola
"czar."

Health authorities insisted anew there is virtually no risk right now to
Americans beyond medical workers involved in treating Ebola cases or people
who recently traveled to West Africa. Yet people across the country were
quick to take precautions.

Individual schools in Akron, Ohio, suburban Cleveland and Belton, Texas,
were closed for disinfecting because of fears that students or staff might
have had tenuous exposure to Vinson, who flew across the Midwest the day
before she was diagnosed with Ebola. Akron's school superintendent, David
James, said the move would calm fears in the community.

Officials in Texas expanded their airline investigation to include
passengers on a flight last Friday from Dallas to Cleveland that carried
Vinson. Passengers on the return flight on Monday already were being
contacted.

 

 

EM

On the 49th Parallel          

                 Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in
anarchy"
                    Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni
katika machafuko"

 

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