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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums6 Big Problems With America's Ebola Response
http://www.alternet.org/world/6-big-problems-americas-ebola-response-according-leading-infectious-disease-specialistOctober 16, 2014 |
"While fears and rumors are spreading faster than the Ebola virus in the U.S., the past few days have shown that Americas hospitals are not well prepared to deal with a spreading outbreak and are rushing to fill in gaps as mistakes emerge.
This weeks news has shown that even major hospitals and their staffs have not been sufficiently trained nor equipped to detect the virus or handle patients with it. Thats been seen in the third case that arose at a prestigious Dallas hospitalthe eighth largest in Texaswhere a second nurse in a team of 100 that treated Thomas Eric Duncan, a Liberian who died of the virus, became infected from that care-giving.
Compounding that development was the fact that federal health officials overseeing the nations Ebola response gave permission to a nurse to fly on a commercial jet to Ohio after she reported a low-grade fever. The nurse has since been taken to a special infectious disease center in Maryland, with biohazard isolation rooms and other protocols that are not commonly found in most hospitals.
They are learning infection control on the fly, DeAnn McEwen, chief of infection control for National Nurses United, the countrys largest union of nurses, said on Wednesday, saying both federal officials and hospitals have been far too lax.
One infectious disease specialist contacted by AlterNet who runs that department for a major urban hospital made these and other similar points earlier this week, which have been borne out as hospitals across the U.S. begin to look at more thorough protocols than previously recommended by federal officials.
The infectious disease specialists major points are:
1. Most American hospitals are not equipped to handle Ebola. They are not like Emory University or the countrys handful of bio-containment centers. They don't have the space suits, isolation rooms, and training to deal with Ebola patients.
2. Nobody knows how the Texas nurses got the virus when treating Duncan. They didn't have the training or precautionary gear, even after the Presbyterian Hospital emergency staff failed to correctly diagnose Duncan at first and discharged him.
3. Initial assurances by the top officials at the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that they have the situation under control were not true, just as instituting airport screening of travelers will not do much to identify carriers.
4. Physicians are concerned about doing too littleand doing too much, because they do not want to be seen as racially profiling potential victims or feeding into what has already been negative stereotyping of West Africans in media.
5. Hospitals and doctors are instituting tougher measures as soon as mistakes are identified. While that is laudable, physicians dont know that much more than the public about Ebolas continuing spread in West Africa, except that its not contained.
6. Ebola will keep spreading, a doctor who runs an international vaccination center said, because if you are a wealthy West African, you will find a way to leave the region with your family and unknowingly might be infected.
On the solution side of the ledger, the U.S. military and other governments have begun to position medical teams and supplies in West Africa, according various news reports said. Those efforts have not unfolded as quickly as the virus has spread, however, which has led international health officials to predict there might be tens of thousands of deaths before it is contained.
Part of the reason why international efforts have been so slow to unfold is that hospitals in West Africa are nowhere near western standards (which have not even stopped the first cases from spreading here). In Sierra Leone and Liberia, hospital wards can be little more than cement rooms with old iron-frame beds, where patients and caregivers are crammed together with little sanitation. U.S. officials have said they need to set up systems to protect medical crews and patients, which has taken time."
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6 Big Problems With America's Ebola Response (Original Post)
dynasaw
Oct 2014
OP
Response to dynasaw (Original post)
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