The Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention says it's moved a team of experienced experts in
to help a Dallas hospital where a nurse became infected with Ebola to improve
"every step in the process." And they'll send in a special response
team to help any hospital in the future that gets an Ebola patient.
The team will help
workers there improve their techniques for safely caring for Nina Pham, who was infected while herself
caring for Thomas Eric Duncanbefore he died.
"The first and
most important is ensuring that every hour of the day there’s a site manager
there who is overseeing aspects of infection control," CDC director Dr.
Tom Frieden told a news conference. One thing the site manager will do is make
sure someone spots workers as they put on and take off personal protective
equipment (PPE).
CDC Admits It Did Not Respond
Fast Enough to Ebola in Dallas
And he promised any
hospital that receives an Ebola patient that CDC will help with a special
response team. "We will put a team on the ground within hours with some of
the world's leading experts on how to take care of and prevent health workers
form Ebola virus infection," Frieden said.
"I wish we had
put a team like this on the ground the day the first patient was diagnosed.
That might have prevented this infection," Frieden added. "But we are
prepared to do this in the future with any case anywhere in the U.S."
More patients with
Ebola are likely to turn up in the US so long as the epidemic continues in
Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea, Frieden says. The World Health Organization
says nearly 9,000 people have been infected and
more than 4,400 have died.
CDC will also
recommend that the hospital limit the number of staffers treating Pham, both so
they can become very familiar with how to safely care for her and to make sure
they are systematic in putting on and taking off gear.
"I wish we had put a team like this on the ground the day the first
patient was diagnosed. That might have prevented this infection."
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario