Dr Craig Spencer from New York Infected with Ebola after West African Trip

Dr Craig Spencer from New York Infected with Ebola after West African Trip

New Yorker,Dr Craig Spencer ,contracted Ebola while in South Africa.
New Yorker,Dr Craig Spencer ,contracted Ebola while in South Africa.
Craig Spencer,a doctor who recently returned to New York from Ebola-ravaged west Africa has tested positive for the disease, officials announced.
Health officials assured New Yorkers not to panic as Ebola was a disease very hard to get
and could only be contracted by bodily fluids or very close contact.Well,i'm not so sure about that anymore the way things are going.
Craig Spencer, 33, a doctor who lives in the Harlem neighbourhood of the city, was taken to hospital in NewYork City on Thursday after displaying symptoms consistent with those caused by Ebola, including a fever of 103F (39.5C).
A preliminary test confirmed that Spencer, who had been working in Guinea, has the virus. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) will carry out a further test to confirm the result.
Health officials had already said they were tracing the doctor’s contacts, which the New York City mayor, Bill de Blasio, said were not numerous. The CDC has sent a team to New York City.
Officials say Spencer took a trip on the New York subway and took a taxi to a bowling alley in the Williamsburg area of Brooklyn in the past week, before he began to display symptoms.
“It is our understanding very few people were in direct contact with him,” de Blasio told a news conference before the diagnosis was confirmed. “Every protocol has been followed. We’re hoping for a good outcome for this individual,” he said.
Spencer’s apartment in Harlem was cordoned off, and health officials were giving out information to residents. His fiancée was being monitored in a separate quarantine ward at Bellevue hospital.
City health officials said returned to west Africa the US within the last 21 days, which is the maximum incubation period for the virus. 
Craig Spencer was transported by a team wearing protective gear to Bellevue hospital with a fever and “gastrointestinal symptoms” on Thursday. Though the city’s statement did not specify, severe diarrhoea is a common Ebola symptom.
“A person in New York City, who recently worked with Doctors Without Borders in one of the Ebola-affected countries in west Africa, notified our office this morning to report having developed a fever,” Doctors Without Borders said in a statement.
The aid organisation, known internationally as Médecins Sans Frontières, said Spencer reported his fever immediately to the agency, in accordance with its guidelines for returning field workers. It was unclear whether the doctor had been quarantining himself.
Spencer’s public Facebook page, which has since been taken down, showed a photo of him dated 18 September wearing protective gear announcing he was heading to Guinea with Doctors without Borders. It showed him checking into a location in Brussels on 16 October.
Craig Spencer's LinkedIn profile identified him as a fellow of international emergency medicine at Columbia University-New York Presbyterian hospital.
New York Presbyterian hospital released a statement in which it did not identify Spencer by name but called the patient “a dedicated humanitarian on the staff of NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University medical centre who went to an area of medical crisis to help a desperately underserved population”.
It said Spencer has not returned to work at the hospital or seen any patients since returning from west Africa, where more than more than 4,500 people have died since the current outbreak began.
Leaders have attempted to reassure New Yorkers that the city and state are safe. City health officials repeated that Ebola is difficult to contract, since people must come into direct contact with body fluids of an infected and symptomatic person.
Many fears about Ebola disease have swirled around New York’s status as a transport hub. Airports in the metropolitan area process the majority of passengers arriving from west Africa everyday, and John F Kennedy international airport and Newark, New Jersey’s airport, are now among the only airports in the US accepting such passengers. Starting on Monday, passengers from the worst affected countries – Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia – will be monitored for 21 days after arriving in the US.
As part of the governor’s Ebola preparedness plan, two ambulances are being regularly stationed at JFK and Newark airports, the city’s transit authority was provided with protective gear and training, and unannounced drills are being conducted at airports, college campuses and in subways. The governor designated eight hospitals in the state to handle Ebola patients.
To abate healthcare workers’ fears about the disease, New York City held an Ebola educational session on Tuesday.
Ebola surely has got the whole world panicking,when and how soon can we eradicate this terrible disease?
SOURCE THE GUARDIAN
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