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Should US Ebola Health Workers Worry?
« on: October 12, 2014, 11:34:39 pm »
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/10/12/2nd-ebola-case-in-dallas-shows-limits-of-protective-gear.html

No Safe Place
10.12.14
Written byAbby Haglage Kent Sepkowitz

Should US Ebola Health Workers Worry?
While the U.S. public is not any greater danger from Ebola, health care workers remain at risk.

The announcement that a second case of Ebola has been diagnosed in Dallas should provide an enormous sense of security for the worried general public – after all, the case has occurred not in casual contacts or even family members, but rather as predicted, in someone who cared for the patient in the late stages of his infection.

Against the sigh of semi-relief, though, is the shiver of fear as a collective chill runs down the spine of healthcare workers in the U.S., Africa, and Spain charged with caring for infected patients.

According to reports on Sunday, a female nurse who was involved in the treatment of Thomas Eric Duncan has been confirmed to be carrying the disease, making her the first case of Ebola transmitted in the U.S. The case further complicates an already thorny question: are health care workers treating Ebola ever actually insulated from the disease?

The spread of Ebola from patient to health care worker is a new development here, but it has been raging in West Africa for months. In the World Health Organization’s most recent report, it is identified as “an alarming feature of [the] outbreak.”

As of Oct. 8, WHO reported there were 8,376 cases worldwide, and almost half—4,024—had died. Among medical personnel, there were 416 confirmed cases and 233 deaths—a mortality rate of more than 56 percent. While the number of health care worker deaths may seem small in comparison to the overall death toll, just three physicians are covering six of the hardest hit counties in Liberia, according to the CDC. The high death rate among doctors and nurses could weigh heavily on prospective volunteers.

In some ways, the concept of a health care professional contracting the disease from a patient in America is more alarming. In West Africa, most medical facilities lack basic supplies, meaning many health care workers there who contract the disease probably never had proper protective gear in the first place.

In America, with its endless supply of gloves, masks, boots, and gowns, transmission of the disease from patient to health care worker implies something different. Personal protective gear is only as effective as the protocol for using it, so what’s different?   

    “Even a single breach can result in contamination, and one of the areas that we look at closely are things like how you take off the gear that might be infected or contaminated."

The Dallas nurse, who officials confirmed was wearing gear, was allegedly treating Duncan on his second visit to the ER where he was hospitalized and diagnosed, before eventually dying.

This detail is extremely important.

Though much remains unclear about Ebola and transmission, we do know that any virus is much more contagious when high amounts of virus are concentrated in the sick person's blood. It is likely therefore that Duncan was much more contagious farther into his illness, making transmission increasingly likely.

Studies done two decades ago about a different virus that was transmitted too frequently to health care worker three decades ago—HIV—make this point very convincingly. "Source cases" with very high HIV viral loads were six times more likely to transmit HIV to health care workers.

This may have played into Duncan’s case, which has left officials in Texas such as Health Resources chief clinical officer Dan Vargas, scratching their heads. “We’re very concerned,” Vargas told the press. “[Though we’re] confident that the precautions that we have in place are protecting our health care workers.” In other words, the protocol works but many people’s ability to follow it exactly—really exactly—may pose a substantial challenge.

In a press conference Sunday morning, CDC Director Thomas Frieden touched on this concept—and suggested that more care must be taken in the later stages of the disease. “It’s deeply concerning that this infection occurred,” Frieden told the media. "Infections only occur when there's a breach in protocol. We know from many years of experience that it’s possible to care for [patients] with Ebola safely without risk to healthcare workers. But we also know that it’s hard, that even a single breach can result in contamination, and one of the areas that we look at closely are things like how you take off the gear that might be infected or contaminated."

Failing to follow proper protocol significantly increases the danger as the viral load in a patient’s blood rises—a product of the infection’s later stages. With knowledge of this, Frieden and the CDC is suggesting that care for patients in the late stages of the disease be limited solely to “essential procedures.” Kidney dialysis and respiratory intubation, two procedures performed on Duncan, are procedures unavailable for patients in West Africa that might that pose unanticipated risk to health care workers.

What this means for the hundreds of health care workers in Atlanta, Omaha at the containment Center, and in Dallas is both simple and very complex—caring directly for a patient with late stage Ebola is very dangerous. It also means that workers in the U.S., like those in Spain, may hesitate to work around such patients. Western workers may no longer feel safe volunteering in West Africa. For the U.S. and other nations who have just begun gearing up for a medical intervention there, this is a potentially huge setback.

In the welter of worry though, it is important to consider the experience at the two sites in the US with special training and recent experience treating patients: Emory in Atlanta and the Nebraska Biocontainment center in Omaha. These sites, where healthcare workers go through training and more training, have safely cared for five patients, including the first two, Kent Brantley and Nancy Writebol. For Ebola care, as with all other things, it is likely that practice makes perfect—and that only perfect is good enough.

On Wednesday of last week, a government agency sent out an email detailing the doctors, nurses, and infection specialists needed to make up each of the 24-person medical teams that will deploy to Liberia. Any sliver of appeal the $8-10K per month jobs may have held initially (that is slightly above average for nurses), may have disappeared.
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Offline PzLdr

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Re: Should US Ebola Health Workers Worry?
« Reply #1 on: October 13, 2014, 01:36:54 pm »
In a word? Yep!
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Offline Fishrrman

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Re: Should US Ebola Health Workers Worry?
« Reply #2 on: October 14, 2014, 02:26:43 am »
[[ “Even a single breach can result in contamination, and one of the areas that we look at closely are things like how you take off the gear that might be infected or contaminated."
The Dallas nurse, who officials confirmed was wearing gear, was allegedly treating Duncan on his second visit to the ER where he was hospitalized and diagnosed, before eventually dying. ]]

The further along that the Ebola victim deteriorates, the more "toxic" he becomes.

This is because the virus literally destroys the body's internal organs from the inside out, invading and killing every cell through amplification (the replication of the virus in ever-increasing levels).

One of the last stages of the disease results in convulsions, in which the victim becomes a literal "Ebola volcano", spewing contamination from all orfices.

Even after death, the body remains extremely toxic. This is one of the prime vectors of transmission in Africa, where ritual "handling of the body" after death spreads the infection.

This is documented in Richard Preston's "The Hot Zone".
Open a search engine.
Enter "the hot zone pdf" -- first hit should do it.
Download to drive and start reading.
Scary stuff.

Offline Scottftlc

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Re: Should US Ebola Health Workers Worry?
« Reply #3 on: October 14, 2014, 02:32:35 am »
This question doesn't even need to be asked. They need to be very, very worried.
Well, George Lewis told the Englishman, the Italian and the Jew
You can't open your mind, boys, to every conceivable point of view

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