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Uranus
October 24th, 2014, 11:43 AM
NEW YORK -- The nation's most emblematic big city came to grips with Ebola Friday as a doctor who tested positive for the deadly virus remained in hospital isolation while health officials traced his recent travels, quarantined his fiancé and close friends and sought to ease health concerns.



Craig Spencer, a 33-year-old emergency physician at New York Presbyterian Hospital, was being treated in an isolation unit at Bellevue Hospital Center after being rushed to the major trauma facility Thursday when he reported a high fever and diarrhea, which are among Ebola's symptoms.



Spencer, also a volunteer for international health care group Doctors without Borders, had returned less than a week ago from Guinea, one of the three countries in West Africa hardest hit by an outbreak of Ebola. The epidemic there has killed about 4,800 people. More than 440 health workers there have contracted the disease, and about half have died.



STORY: N.Y. doctor with Ebola a 'dedicated humanitarian'

Four American aid workers, including three doctors, were infected with Ebola while working in Africa and were transferred to the U.S. for treatment in recent months. All recovered. Health care workers are vulnerable because of close contact with patients when they are their sickest and most contagious.

As news of Spencer's hospitalization spread, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which will conduct further tests to confirm the initial finding of Ebola, dispatched a rapid response team to New York to monitor the case.

Health officials said Spencer followed standard medical protocol by taking his own temperature twice a day and refraining from seeing any of his New York patients while awaiting the end of the 21-day incubation period for Ebola, said city Health Commissioner Dr. Mary Travis Bassett.

But as New Yorkers learned that Spencer in recent days had traveled at least three subway lines, gone bowling in Brooklyn's Williamsburg neighborhood with his fiancé and two friends, used an Uber car service ride and went elsewhere, questions rose about whether the risk of contagion could have spread.

STORY: House oversight panel examines Ebola response

Seeking to reassure the millions of residents and daily visitors to the five boroughs, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Friday said Spencer was well aware he would not be contagious and a potential threat to others unless he developed a fever and started experiencing other Ebola symptoms.

"This is a doctor who's taking his temperature twice and day and obviously concluded that he was not symptomatic, and that's why he went out, still in a limited way. He went bowling with two friends. He was with his fiancé and he took the subway," Cuomo said during a Friday morning appearance on NBC's Today show.

"As soon as he had a fever, he presented himself to the hospital. All of the procedures thereon were exactly according to the book," added Cuomo.

"He is a committed and responsible physician who always puts his patients first,'' New York Presbyterian Hospital said in a statement.


President Obama spoke to Cuomo and New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio on Thursday night and offered the federal government's support. He asked them to coordinate with Ron Klain, the White House's newly appointed "Ebola czar," and public health officials in Washington.

At the same time, city and state officials moved quickly to reassure New Yorkers that any threat of Ebola spreading from Spencer was negligible.

"We want to state at the outset, there is no reason for New Yorkers to be alarmed," said de Blasio during a news conference Thursday night. "New Yorkers who have not been exposed to an infected person's bodily fluids are not at risk."



Health officials say the chances of the average New Yorker contracting Ebola, which is spread through direct contact with the bodily fluids of an infected person, are slim. Someone can't be infected just by being near someone who is sick with Ebola. Someone isn't contagious unless he is sick.

Still, New Yorkers remained concerned. A few vented criticism via Twitter about Spencer's recent travels, which officials said also included a three-mile jog and a visit to The High Line, a popular elevated park on Manhattan's West Side.

STORY: Tweeters slam Ebola docs subway, bowling foray

Joshua Jones, 23, of Brooklyn, said Friday there were too many things for New Yorkers to worry about than to be concerned about contracting Ebola. Even so, Jones added he was troubled that Spencer traveled around the city despite his recent work in a country stricken with the virus outbreak.

"Why are you exploring New York City if you're a doctor who was treating Ebola patients?" said Jones. "That's inconsiderate. He's reckless. You don't go bowling when you're feeling sick."

In a sign of concern, officials took rapid steps to contain even the hint of any threat the virus might spread.

The Gutter, the popular bowling alley and bar in Brooklyn's Williamsburg neighborhood that Spencer recently visited, was closed as a precaution. Spencer's apartment in upper Manhattan's West Harlem area was cordoned off. The Department of Health was on site across the street from the apartment building Thursday night, giving out information to area residents.

Spencer's fiancé and two friends with whom he has been in contact were placed under quarantine, officials said. None of those people, along with the Uber driver with whom he rode, showed any symptoms, officials said. One contact has been hospitalized as a precaution, officials said.

"For the relevant period of time, he was only exposed to a very few people,'' Cuomo said.

The first person in the U.S. diagnosed with the disease was a Liberian man, who fell ill days after arriving in Dallas and later became the only fatality. None of his relatives who had contact with him got sick. Two nurses who treated him were hospitalized for Ebola symptoms.

One of the nurses, Nina Tham, who has been undergoing treatment at the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center in Bethesda, Md., was declared free of the virus and is expected to be discharged, NIH officials said Friday. She was admitted to the hospital on Oct. 16.



More On This Can Be Found Here (http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/10/24/new-york-city-ebola-mayor-isolation-hospital-subway/17823575/)

Edited Lime Green out - Hurts eyes :).
~Plane And Simple

CosmicNoodle
October 24th, 2014, 01:15 PM
Ohh my god, 1 american caught a virus that thousands of people in Africa caught, ohh god the humanity!

Uranus
October 24th, 2014, 01:22 PM
Ohh my god, 1 american caught a virus that thousands of people in Africa caught, ohh god the humanity!

I totally agree

James Dean
October 24th, 2014, 11:11 PM
Again, he knows there's an epidemic airborne virus going on in that part of Africa, he came back to the states and didn't say anything. I don't get it.

Body odah Man
October 25th, 2014, 04:59 AM
What makes this scary isn't the fact that it's one guy. It's that ebola has now struck in Spain, Texas and NY. Soon it will strike all of America and Europe I fear :(
May God help us all

Uranus
October 25th, 2014, 07:51 AM
What makes this scary isn't the fact that it's one guy. It's that ebola has now struck in Spain, Texas and NY. Soon it will strike all of America and Europe I fear :(
May God help us all

I guess that's my fear now. It's not about race, or a single man or country now...soon we may all be exposed. We just have to hope they do whatever they can to prevent the spread of the disease.

Body odah Man
October 25th, 2014, 12:45 PM
I guess that's my fear now. It's not about race, or a single man or country now...soon we may all be exposed. We just have to hope they do whatever they can to prevent the spread of the disease.

Sadly I doubt it. If you've ever read Thucydides' Histories current events seem to mirror the things he has documented (the Krim struggles, the strife between America and Russia) and in his time there was also a huge plague that wiped out almost all of the populace of Athens. I fear that this ebola will do the same

Vlerchan
October 25th, 2014, 12:50 PM
I guess now might be a good time to invest in those guns I've always wanted.

Credible threat to my life that Ebola is.

SethfromMI
October 25th, 2014, 01:07 PM
What makes this scary isn't the fact that it's one guy. It's that ebola has now struck in Spain, Texas and NY. Soon it will strike all of America and Europe I fear :(
May God help us all

I am with you on this. esp if it spreads in New York City, in a city where not only millions of people live but thousands more come in and out every day. not good all

xXl0sth0peXx
October 25th, 2014, 02:01 PM
It's bodily fluid only though. You won't catch it by just breathing. I'm not concerned honestly. Safe prevention is all we can do, and that's what this doctor did. He followed protocol taking temperature and whatnot. We're not going to die.

Either way, it sucks that he contracted it.. We'll see how the next 21 days go.

Elysium
October 25th, 2014, 02:13 PM
Again, he knows there's an epidemic airborne virus going on in that part of Africa, he came back to the states and didn't say anything. I don't get it.
It's not airborne. There's reason to be cautious (as there always is when taking public transportation in NY), but not to be paranoid or outright afraid.

Luminous
October 25th, 2014, 03:26 PM
There's reason for concern, but nobody needs to be panicking. NYC is one of the worst places for Ebola to be, so yes, this is an issue. But it's so difficult to catch, and an infected person is only contagious while symptomatic so if handled correctly this should not be an issue for the general public. Doctors and nurses treating Ebola patients have been slowly catching it, so hopefully hospitals will create better care plans and prevent Ebola from spreading further.

Uranus
October 25th, 2014, 03:39 PM
Sadly I doubt it. If you've ever read Thucydides' Histories current events seem to mirror the things he has documented (the Krim struggles, the strife between America and Russia) and in his time there was also a huge plague that wiped out almost all of the populace of Athens. I fear that this ebola will do the same

I am with you on this. esp if it spreads in New York City, in a city where not only millions of people live but thousands more come in and out every day. not good all

It's not airborne. There's reason to be cautious (as there always is when taking public transportation in NY), but not to be paranoid or outright afraid.

There's reason for concern, but nobody needs to be panicking. NYC is one of the worst places for Ebola to be, so yes, this is an issue. But it's so difficult to catch, and an infected person is only contagious while symptomatic so if handled correctly this should not be an issue for the general public. Doctors and nurses treating Ebola patients have been slowly catching it, so hopefully hospitals will create better care plans and prevent Ebola from spreading further.

These are all great posts combined together. There shouldn't be a need to worry. We should at least be concerned and cautious for now. We don't know how many people have been exposed entirely. Even though it is not airborne, some people could have been exposed, which is bad for many people who have visited NY in the past two days. If a single person who is visiting, gets exposed, and goes back to wherever he/she lives, the greater the chance it could spread throughout the United states. Thankfully it's only in NY. We must try and hope that it only stays there.

SethfromMI
October 25th, 2014, 06:21 PM
These are all great posts combined together. There shouldn't be a need to worry. We should at least be concerned and cautious for now. We don't know how many people have been exposed entirely. Even though it is not airborne, some people could have been exposed, which is bad for many people who have visited NY in the past two days. If a single person who is visiting, gets exposed, and goes back to wherever he/she lives, the greater the chance it could spread throughout the United states. Thankfully it's only in NY. We must try and hope that it only stays there.

this true. there doesn't need to be a panic, but should be a realization and even a preparation if things do go out of hand (if they could do something)

It is not something I am going to live my life in fear about

Uranus
October 25th, 2014, 06:34 PM
this true. there doesn't need to be a panic, but should be a realization and even a preparation if things do go out of hand (if they could do something)

It is not something I am going to live my life in fear about

Yes I fully agree. I'm not worried but I'm concerned that if it does spread outside of NY, we would all need to be prepares. Everyone should. And nobody should panic, that's what will stop us from preventing the spread. All in all, we should at least be prepared for what may happen in the near future. In my opinion, I think they will stop it before it even leaves NY. I don't think there will be a problem, as long as they hustle now, with the low number of people who have it before it spreads anymore

Horatio Nelson
October 25th, 2014, 07:06 PM
Agree with everything said above. We should be taking precautions.

Uranus
October 25th, 2014, 07:37 PM
Agree with everything said above. We should be taking precautions.

Yup. The last thing we should do, is panic

James Dean
October 25th, 2014, 10:17 PM
It's not airborne. There's reason to be cautious (as there always is when taking public transportation in NY), but not to be paranoid or outright afraid.

We can agree to disagree on this. I'm just saying to my knowledge he didn't go to hospital until he got sick, knowing all the news of him travelling to Africa, he should have checked himself in just for safe measures.

Ammyneac
October 25th, 2014, 11:47 PM
http://www.reactiongifs.us/going-die-indiana-jones/

That is what my friends says in school. They aren't taking this seriously

Elysium
October 26th, 2014, 05:36 AM
We can agree to disagree on this. I'm just saying to my knowledge he didn't go to hospital until he got sick, knowing all the news of him travelling to Africa, he should have checked himself in just for safe measures.
It's not airborne. You'd have to have serious exposure and as soon as he developed a fever, he was hospitalized (so in the brief time that he was somewhat symptomatic and not quarantined, how many people were exposed to his bodily fluids?) There isn't any reason to panic. And widespread panic in a place like NYC would just be chaos. But yes, I would be alright agreeing to disagree.

Body odah Man
October 26th, 2014, 01:36 PM
All of you saying we shouldn't panic but precautious-I agree. However I'm worried that history is repeating itself and thus no matter what we do Ebola is gunna happen :( I pray that I am wrong however.
I apologize for the doomsaying-I'm not trying to scare people, just saying it is worrisome. However technology and medicine ahve come far in the last few millennia so perhaps we can overcome the ebola threat.

Uranus
October 26th, 2014, 02:17 PM
All of you saying we shouldn't panic but precautious-I agree. However I'm worried that history is repeating itself and thus no matter what we do Ebola is gunna happen :( I pray that I am wrong however.
I apologize for the doomsaying-I'm not trying to scare people, just saying it is worrisome. However technology and medicine ahve come far in the last few millennia so perhaps we can overcome the ebola threat.

Yep I agree with you man. It has definitely came a long way.. But it doesn't mean we should stop being concerned yet. Just a simple mistake, could change the world we know, to something entirely different

Body odah Man
October 28th, 2014, 02:01 PM
Yep I agree with you man. It has definitely came a long way.. But it doesn't mean we should stop being concerned yet. Just a simple mistake, could change the world we know, to something entirely different

Yeah, ur right. Look how it went with Athens. They went from a thriving coastal power and one of the two great Athenian powers to a wreck under Spartan subjugation. And Rome, which went from a vast and mighty empire to a tourist attraction and a bunch of separated villages