Thursday, January 29, 2015

Possible Ebola Patient At UC Davis Medical Center In Sacramento, Calif.

A patient with possible Ebola symptoms is being cared for at UC Davis Medical Center in Davis, Calif., according to FOX40.



The patient first presented with symptoms at Mercy General Hospital in Sacramento, reports FOX40. While that hospital has resumed almost normal functioning, they have closed their emergency room in order to do a deep clean, and plan to re-open the facility later today.



There currently aren't any other details about the patient, where he or she came from or what the symptoms were, but the potential case is confirmation of public health authorities' warnings that the Ebola threat, while declining, is not over.



Ebola was first diagnosed in the U.S. in Sept. 2014, when Liberian man Eric Thomas Duncan was taken via ambulance to Texas Health Presbyterian hospital in Dallas. Duncan died of the disease, but two nurses who contracted the virus from him survived. Since their cases, a few more Ebola scares have cropped up, including in the Denver area and Bethesda, and a lab worker at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was accidentally exposed to the virus but did not end up contracting the disease.



UC Davis Medical Center was among the first group of hospitals identified by the federal government as qualified to receive and care for patients with Ebola and other infectious diseases last December.



Dr. Stuart Cohen, chief of the Division of Infectious Diseases and director of Hospital Infection Control at the UC Davis Health System, told HuffPost in a previous interview that the hospital was well-prepared to receive an Ebola patient, or a patient with any other rare or exotic infection. Cohen had led the charge to prepare the hospital for a possible Ebola case, just as he did when the hospital prepared for anthrax poisoning, SARS and influenza in the past. At the time HuffPost interviewed him, it was unclear whether UC Davis would receive a potential Ebola case, but Cohen believed the preparation would pay off in the long run.



“People are making infrastructure changes and really getting focused on what’s necessary to manage complicated patients,” said Cohen to HuffPost last December. “I do think there will be [disease outbreaks] after this, so that preparation won’t be a one-time wonder.”



This is a developing story.



from Healthy Living - The Huffington Post http://ift.tt/1CQhP8B

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