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Spain Ebola Nurse: Relatives and Hospital Staff Monitored

Doctors in Madrid have been testing three people for Ebola after a Spanish nurse became the first person known to have contracted the deadly virus outside West Africa.

Some 52 others are being monitored, health officials say.

The nurse, identified in media reports as Teresa Romero, had treated two Spanish missionaries who died of Ebola after being repatriated.

Some 3,400 people have died in the current outbreak.

Most of the deaths have been in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has warned of the dire consequences for the economies in the region if the virus continues to spread.

Meanwhile the chairman of the World Health Organisation’s Ebola science group says he is not surprised that the Spanish nurse contracted the disease.

Speaking in Geneva, Prof Peter Piot said he expected more cases among medical staff, even in developed countries, and that the slightest mistake during the care of Ebola patients could be fatal.

Cleared

Reports said one of three people hospitalised in Madrid after the nurse’s diagnosis tested negative for the virus on Tuesday.

A female health worker, who also treated one of the Spanish priests, has been cleared in two separate tests, health sources say.

The husband of the afflicted nurse and a Spanish man who travelled to Spain from Nigeria remain in quarantine.

The European Commission has asked Spain to explain how Ms Romero, a 40-year-old auxiliary nurse, could have become infected. A hospital investigation is under way.

She was one of about 30 staff at the Carlos III hospital in Madrid who had been treating priests Manuel Garcia Viejo and Miguel Pajares, officials say.

File photo of Manuel Garcia Viejo at San Juan de Dios hospital in Lusar, Sierra Leone
Manuel Garcia Viejo was the second Spanish priest to be repatriated from Africa with Ebola
A woman wears protective mask as she leaves Alcorcon hospital on 7 October 2014
A woman wears protective mask as she leaves Alcorcon hospital

Mr Garcia Viejo, 69, died at the hospital on 25 September after catching Ebola in Sierra Leone. Mr Pajares, 75, died in August after contracting the virus in Liberia.

Ms Romero had twice gone into the room where Mr Garcia Viejo had been treated, to be directly involved in his care and to disinfect the room after his death.

Madrid healthcare director Antonia Alemany said: “The nurse went into the room wearing the individual protection gear and there’s no knowledge of an accidental exposure to risk.”

Shortly afterwards she went on holiday but fell ill on 30 September and was admitted to Alcorcon hospital in south-west Madrid.

It was not clear where she went on holiday.

The Ebola case was down to “procedure problem or human error”, says a Spanish public health expert

Early on Tuesday Ms Romero was moved under police escort to Carlos III hospital in the capital and is said to be in a stable condition.

The Spanish health authorities say she is being treated with a drip using antibodies from previous Ebola patients.

Doctors are monitoring 22 people including relatives and staff who had contact with the nurse at Alcorcon hospital, as well as 30 people working at Carlos III hospital.

All have been contacted by the health authorities.

Ebola Virus Disease (EVD)

  • Symptoms include high fever, bleeding and central nervous system damage
  • Spread by body fluids, such as blood and saliva
  • Fatality rate can reach 90% – but current outbreak has mortality rate of about 70%
  • Incubation period is two to 21 days
  • There is no proven vaccine or cure
  • Supportive care such as rehydrating patients who have diarrhoea and vomiting can help recovery
  • Fruit bats, a delicacy for some West Africans, are considered to be virus’s natural host

The Carlos III hospital was reported to have had extreme protective measures in place including two sets of overalls, gloves and goggles.

However, health workers told El Pais newspaper that the clothing did not have level-four biological security, which is fully waterproof and with independent breathing apparatus.

Instead it was level two, the paper says, as photographs provided by staff indicated that the overalls did not allow for ventilation and the gloves were made of latex and bound with adhesive tape.

Health staff in Madrid protested over alleged safety failures on Tuesday.

Hospital staff attend a protest outside La Paz Hospital in Madrid, Spain. 7 Oct 2014
Staff staged a protest outside La Paz Hospital in Madrid over the government’s handling of the Ebola cases

Containing Ebola: 

Patients should be isolated – ideally in a hospital with the highest level of bio-safety.

Such a facility would use a specially designed tent with controlled ventilation to house the patient’s bed – this allows staff to provide clinical care while containing the infection.

Staff treating the patient must wear protective suits, gloves, masks and goggles. This equipment should be completely impermeable since Ebola is spread in bodily fluids such as sweat, urine and blood

Any clinical waste such as syringes, paper towels or clothing from the patient should be incinerated. A dedicated laboratory should be used to carry out any necessary tests.

BBC.