Second Ebola Nurse to Be Moved Out of Dallas Hospital - East Idaho News
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Second Ebola Nurse to Be Moved Out of Dallas Hospital

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ht nina pham kb 141013 16x9 608?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1413477901346The Pham Family(DALLAS) — Nina Pham, the first nurse to contract Ebola in the United States, will be transferred from Dallas to the National Institutes for Health hospital in Bethesda, Maryland, tonight, federal officials told ABC News.

Pham, 26, contracted Ebola while treating Thomas Eric Duncan at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas. She was diagnosed on Sunday at the Dallas hospital.

Duncan, a Liberian national, became the first person to be diagnosed with Ebola in the United States on Sept. 30. He died on Oct. 8.

Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital requested that Pham be moved to the Special Clinical Studies Unit of the NIH Clinical Center, according to a statement from the NIH.

“She will receive state-of-the-art care in this high-level containment facility, which is one of a small number of such facilities in the United States,” according to the statement. “The unit staff is trained in strict infection control practices optimized to prevent spread of potentially transmissible agents such as Ebola.”

Dr. Anthony Fauci, who directs the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the National Institutes of Health, said the Bethesda isolation facility where Pham is headed has only two beds.

“She will occupy one of them,” Fauci said.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Tom Frieden said the move would help the hospital deal with any other new patients and to carefully monitor the 50 health care workers from Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital, who might have been exposed to Ebola and need to be carefully monitored.

On Wednesday, another nurse who treated Duncan was diagnosed with Ebola. Amber Vinson, 29, arrived at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital on Tuesday morning with a fever and was diagnosed with Ebola in the early hours of Wednesday morning. She was relocated to Emory University Hospital’s isolation unit Wednesday night.

Earlier this week, Pham’s and Vinson’s coworkers accused the hospital of sloppy protocols and failing to train and equip them properly to handle Duncan, leaving them vulnerable to Ebola. They released a statement through the National Nurses’ Union.

“Nurses had to interact with Mr. Duncan with whatever protective equipment was available, at a time when he had copious amounts of diarrhea and vomiting which produces a lot of contagious fluids,” the statement reads.

The hospital has insisted they complied with safety protocols established by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.


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