October 25, 2014

Doctors in New York are diagnosed positive Ebola

The doctor from New York who recently traveled to the West African nation of Guinea, who contracted Ebola, has been positively diagnosed tersedang virus, officials said New York.

Doctor Craig Spencer, who worked for Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), comes with a fever on Thursday.

He was the first case diagnosed in New York, the largest city in the United States.

More than 4,800 people died from Ebola, especially in Liberia, and Sierra Leone Geneva, since March.

Spencer fell ill with fever and diarrhea on Thursday and was taken to Bellevue Hospital, where he was immediately placed into the isolation room, officials said.

The health department officials took to the streets of the town to track their contacts and identify those at risk of contracting the disease from Spencer.

Ebola patients are infected and have no symptoms of the disease that moves through the body fluids, said the expert.

Spencer was the fourth person diagnosed positive Ebola in the United States.

Ebola is diagnosed first caught at the locality Liberia and traveled to Dallas and Texas, before he was exposed to the symptoms. And he died on 8 October 2014.

Two nurses who cared for him in Dallas and then participate contracted the disease and recovered on Vaccine Research.

Meanwhile on Thursday, the West African nation of Mali confirmed cases of Ebola in the country's first of a two-year-old girl recently returned from Geneva.

The mother of the child died in Geneva a couple of weeks ago and the child is taken relative to Mali, said the Minister of Health as reported by Reuters.

Mali is currently the sixth West African countries affected by Ebola, in which the health organization WHO declared that Nigeria and Senegal declared free of Ebola virus.

Separately, the WHO has identified at least two promising experimental vaccine that is trusted.

At a meeting in Geneva, the PNB-owned organization said that it takes several tests to enhance the vaccine until the end of December.

WHO said that of 443 health workers who contracted with Ebola, 244 of whom died.

No comments:

Post a Comment