Atlanta — A fourth American who contracted Ebola in West Africa was
expected to arrive in the U.S. for care Tuesday and will be treated at
an Atlanta hospital where two other aid workers successfully recovered
from the disease, the hospital said Monday.
Air Force spokesman
Lt. Col. James Wilson said the patient, as in past cases, would be flown
into Dobbins Air Reserve Base outside Atlanta. Emory University
Hospital said in a news release that the patient would be treated there
but cited confidentiality in not releasing more information about the
person.
The World Health Organization, however, said one of its
doctors who has been working in an Ebola treatment center in Sierra
Leone has tested positive for the disease. It said the doctor was in
stable condition Monday in Freetown and will be evacuated. The State
Department said the doctor was from the U.S.
Last month, two aid workers who contracted Ebola while working in
Liberia were treated successfully at Emory. A third patient, an American
doctor, who is being treated in Nebraska, appeared to be better
tolerating his experimental treatments Monday, but his recovery remains
uncertain.
The family of Dr. Rick Sacra said he was able to eat
breakfast Monday for the first time since arriving Friday at the
Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.
The 51-year-old remains in
stable condition. But his wife, Debbie, said Sacra is more alert and
that they had a half-hour conversation by video conference Sunday.
"He
hasn't been able to eat much since he got here, but he had some toast
and apple sauce," Debbie Sacra said. "He also tolerated the research
drug well — better than he had the previous doses he was given."
Rick
Sacra, a doctor from Worcester, Massachusetts, spent 15 years working
at the Liberia hospital where he fell ill. He was practicing family
medicine in Liberia with the North Carolina-based charity SIM.
Authorities
say roughly 2,100 people have died during the Ebola outbreak in West
Africa, but Ebola hasn't been confirmed as the cause of all those
deaths.
Sacra is being treated with an experimental drug that is
different than the one given to the two Americans treated for Ebola at
Emory University Hospital in Atlanta. Nancy Writebol, who also worked
for the SIM mission, and Dr. Kent Brantly, who worked for another
missionary group, Samaritan's Purse, in Liberia, have recovered.
Sacra came to Omaha instead of Atlanta because federal officials
asked the medical center to treat him in order to prepare other
isolation units to take more Ebola patients if needed.
Sacra's
doctors have refused to name the drug they are using, but they say
they've been consulting with experts on Ebola on his treatment.
Dr. Aneesh Mehta of Emory University said Monday that it was impossible to know if the experimental ZMapp they received worked.
But
Mehta said Emory doctors have been advising other physicians that some
particular types of supportive care did seem to help. Those included
switching between different types of IV fluids to meet each patient's
specific electrolyte needs at the time. And giving high-quality liquid
nutrition to boost their levels of protein and other nutrients "to help
build back that immune system that was under attack."
Mehta and other experts were discussing Ebola at the American Society for Microbiology meeting Monday.
Pharmaceutical
companies are developing vaccines for Ebola and drugs to help treat the
virus, but they're not fully tested or readily available yet.
Dr.
Gary Kobinger of the Public Health Agency of Canada helped pioneer the
research that led to ZMapp, and he said the U.S. manufacturer appears to
be on track for a Phase 1 safety study early next year, perhaps as
early as January, although no drug is available currently.
On the vaccine front, Kobinger said a Canadian-made candidate should be starting Phase 1 trials within weeks.
WHO
has suggested turning to the blood of Ebola survivors as an
experimental treatment, and Sacra's doctors have said they are
considering that.
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