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When Ebola hit U.S., CDC guidelines were weaker than those 15 years ago

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THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS  by Sue Ambrose                                     Dec. 27, 2014

DALLAS, Texas --When Ebola surfaced in the U.S., federal guidelines to protect medical workers here were weaker than the ones that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had in place 15 years earlier, The Dallas Morning News has found.

It’s not known exactly how nurse Nina Pham contracted Ebola while caring for patient Thomas Eric Duncan. Shown here at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas, she was later successfully treated at a National Institutes of Health hospital in Maryland. Agence France-Presse

A review of CDC documents and archived Web pages shows that a 1998 protocol originally written for health care workers in Africa had more protective measures than the one for U.S. caregivers when Thomas Eric Duncan became the first patient diagnosed with Ebola in this country.

Two Dallas nurses were infected with the deadly virus while treating Duncan at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas, where he died in early October....

The CDC maintains that the guidelines in place this summer were adequate when followed correctly. “We believed that U.S. hospitals should have been able to handle a case of Ebola using the original guidance,” said agency spokeswoman Melissa Brower....
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http://www.dallasnews.com/ebola/headlines/20141227-when-ebola-hit-u.s.-cdc-guidelines-were-weaker-than-those-15-years-ago.ece

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