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(U.S. Needs To Rethink How To Handle Ebola, Says CDC Director - News - Headlines & Global News)
(Inside an Ebola isolation unit- How doctors, nurses protect themselves)
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"We have to rethink the way we address Ebola infection control. Even a single infection is unacceptable," Dr. Thomas Frieden, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told reporters, according to . "The care of Ebola is hard. We're working to make it safer and easier."<br>
 
  
Health authorities are still investigating how nurse Nina Pham, 26, became infected while caring for Liberian Ebola patient Thomas Eric Duncan in the Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital isolation ward, said Frieden.<br>
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Caring for patients with Ebola comes with very strict guidelines for hospital workers. TODAY鈥檚 Matt Lauer observed the procedures firsthand during , where health care officials successfully treated Ebola patients Dr. Kent Brantly and Nancy Writebol.
 
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With questions now being raised about a possible protocol breach that led to , the Liberian victim who carried the disease to Texas, here's a look at the meticulous precautions in place at Emory to treat someone infected with Ebola, or any other highly infectious disease.
While the Dallas nurse is "clinically stable" according to Frieden, as many as 70 other hospital workers may have also come into close contact with Duncan while treating him. All were wearing the same protective gear, and are now being closely monitored by the CDC for symptoms of the virus.<br>
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Putting on the protective gear is聽always done聽in pairs.
 
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TODAYSuiting up can take up to 20 minutes, and partners observe each other's every move: 鈥淲e're watching each other for safety,鈥?says Emory nurse Jill Morgan.
"We need to consider the possibility that there could be additional cases, particularly among the health care workers who cared for" Ebola patient Thomas Eric Duncan, he said, adding: "We're concerned that there could be other infections in the coming days."<br>
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Two sets of gloves and boots.
 
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TODAY"We tape our first set of gloves on," Morgan says.
Pham received a transfusion of plasma from Kent Brantly on Monday, the Texas physician who survived the virus, reported the .<br>
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The suit also includes a helmet with a built-in fan.
 
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TODAYThe fan pulls outside air through a filter 鈥渟o he鈥檚 never breathing any air from the outside room,鈥?Morgan says.<br>
Frieden said he will be implementing an "immediate set of steps" to ensure staff caring for Pham remain safe.<br>
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TODAY"We're trying to make sure we don't carry any of that contamination out of that room."
 
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聽Workers may stay inside the isolation room for up to four hours at a time.
Some changes in procedures have already been put into effect, said Friedan, such as having staff monitor those putting on and taking off protective gear, and retraining staff on how to do so properly.<br>
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TODAY鈥淲hen we are in that room, you are all in. Eating, drinking, taking a bathroom break all wait until you can come out of that suit,鈥?Morgan says.<br>
 
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A second suited-up person always observes from outside, both as a backup and to watch for any mistakes or signs of contamination.
Other steps are being considered, including improved protective clothing, and implementing the use of a disinfectant spray.<br>
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TODAY鈥淚f I see anything that might be dangerous for them then we're going to interrupt that behavior right away,鈥?Morgan says.<br>
 
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Leaving the isolation unit
Friedan also apologized for his initial remarks on Sunday, when he suggested that Pham was responsible for a "protocol breach" resulting in her exposure to the virus.<br>
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TODAYThe risk for self-contamination is highest when health care workers leave the isolation room and take off their suit, Morgan said. A three- to five-minute shower body scrub always follows.聽
 
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鈥淚t鈥檚 important to keep whatever's in this room, in this room, and keep it from getting out into any part of the environment," Morgan says.<p>Related Articles:</p><ul><li><a href=http://www.louisvuitton-pascher.com>Louis Vuitton Palermo</a></li><li><a href=http://www.louisvuitton-pascher.com>Louis Vuitton Pallas</a></li><li><a href=http://www.louisvuitton-pascher.com>Louis Vuitton Rendez-Vous</a></li></ul>
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Revision as of 23:31, 31 October 2014

Caring for patients with Ebola comes with very strict guidelines for hospital workers. TODAY鈥檚 Matt Lauer observed the procedures firsthand during , where health care officials successfully treated Ebola patients Dr. Kent Brantly and Nancy Writebol. With questions now being raised about a possible protocol breach that led to , the Liberian victim who carried the disease to Texas, here's a look at the meticulous precautions in place at Emory to treat someone infected with Ebola, or any other highly infectious disease. Putting on the protective gear is聽always done聽in pairs.

TODAYSuiting up can take up to 20 minutes, and partners observe each other's every move: 鈥淲e're watching each other for safety,鈥?says Emory nurse Jill Morgan.

Two sets of gloves and boots.

TODAY"We tape our first set of gloves on," Morgan says.

The suit also includes a helmet with a built-in fan.

TODAYThe fan pulls outside air through a filter 鈥渟o he鈥檚 never breathing any air from the outside room,鈥?Morgan says.
TODAY"We're trying to make sure we don't carry any of that contamination out of that room."

聽Workers may stay inside the isolation room for up to four hours at a time.

TODAY鈥淲hen we are in that room, you are all in. Eating, drinking, taking a bathroom break all wait until you can come out of that suit,鈥?Morgan says.

A second suited-up person always observes from outside, both as a backup and to watch for any mistakes or signs of contamination.

TODAY鈥淚f I see anything that might be dangerous for them then we're going to interrupt that behavior right away,鈥?Morgan says.

Leaving the isolation unit

TODAYThe risk for self-contamination is highest when health care workers leave the isolation room and take off their suit, Morgan said. A three- to five-minute shower body scrub always follows.聽
鈥淚t鈥檚 important to keep whatever's in this room, in this room, and keep it from getting out into any part of the environment," Morgan says.

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