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Biotech / Medical : Ebola Outbreak 2014 - News, Updates and Related Investments

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To: IRWIN JAMES FRANKEL who wrote (550)11/11/2014 12:28:46 PM
From: howestreetbull   of 608
 
New York City Ebola Patient Craig Spencer Leaves Hospital

By Robert Langreth Nov 11, 2014 8:04 AM PT

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Photographer: Don Emmert/AFP via Getty Images
Dr. Craig Spencer (L) receives a hug from New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio at a news... Read More

Craig Spencer, the New York Citydoctor who contracted Ebola while treating patients in Guinea, was declared free of the virus and released from Bellevue Hospital Center after 20 days of treatment.

“Today I am healthy and no longer infectious,” Spencer said at a news briefing at the city-run hospital in Manhattan, where he was joined by by Mayor Bill de Blasio and local health officials. “My early detection, reporting and now recovery from Ebola speaks to the effectiveness of the protocols that are in place for health staff returning from West Africa.”

After being swarmed by a throng of photographers, Spencer, 33, received hugs from the mayor and his wife, Chirlane McCray.

New York City’s first and only Ebola case: successfully treated,” said de Blasio, who called Spencer an American hero. “Dr. Spencer is Ebola-free, and New York City is Ebola-free.”

Spencer served as a volunteer with Doctors Without Borders, an aid group that has sent medical professionals to fight the outbreak at its West African source. He fell ill on Oct. 23, six days after returning to New York from the outbreak zone, and was rushed to Bellevue and put in a special isolation unit.

About nine hours later, officials confirmed the infection. His treatment included brincidofovir, an experimental drug made by Chimerix Inc. (CMRX), as well as a blood transfusion from another Ebola survivor, which can boost virus-fighting antibodies in a patient.

Doctor Restored“Dr. Spencer poses no public health risk,” the city’s Health and Hospitals Corp., the agency that operates Bellevue, said in an e-mail yesterday. He received a “rigorous course of treatment and testing,” the agency said.

Spencer’s fiancee remains under quarantine at home until Nov. 14. Two of Spencer’s friends who had been quarantined have since been released.

Thomas Eric Duncan, the Liberian national who died from Ebola on Oct. 8 in Dallas, is the only death from the disease in the U.S. Seven other Ebola patients treated at various American hospitals have survived. They include two Dallas nurses infected by Duncan, several American aid workers and a TV cameraman who got sick in West Africa and were flown home.

The Ebola outbreak, concentrated in Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone, has infected more than 13,000 worldwide and killed more than 4,800, according to the World Health Organization. There is no approved cure for the disease. Current standard care involves supporting the patient and using antibiotics to fight off secondary infections.

Bellevue RefittedBellevue, the oldest continuously operating hospital in the U.S., is one of eight hospitals designated by New York state as go-to centers to care for a potential Ebola patient. The midtown facility had upgraded its infectious-disease unit in the weeks before Spencer was admitted in preparation for a case like his.

The isolation rooms were fitted with separate air management systems and a power supply that permits the use of specialized life-support equipment, and a new laboratory was built so blood samples wouldn’t have to be transported to the hospital’s regular laboratory.

“Dr. Spencer showed us what it means to help your fellow human,” de Blasio said at the briefing. “And that spirit was met and answered here by the extraordinary team at Bellevue.”

Spencer had ventured around the city soon before he was driven to the hospital with Ebola symptoms. He rode the subway, ate at a meatball restaurant and visited a bowling alley. In the days after he went to Bellevue, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention toughened its guidelines for people with direct exposure to the virus, saying they should be isolated in their homes for 21 days.

Outside of Spencer’s apartment on 147th Street and Broadway in Manhattan today, city health officials were handing out flyers titled “Ebola: Am I at Risk?” that are designed to make people aware of how the disease is transmitted. In the past four weeks, officials handed out almost 400,000 of them across the city, said Javier Lopez, who works for the Health Department.

“Things are pretty calm around here,” he said. “So I think we did a good job.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Robert Langreth in New York at rlangreth@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Crayton Harrison at tharrison5@bloomberg.net; Stephen Merelman at smerelman@bloomberg.net Mark Schoifet
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