Tag: kaci hickox
‘Epidemic Of Fear’ Has Driven Ebola Debate, Experts Say

‘Epidemic Of Fear’ Has Driven Ebola Debate, Experts Say

By Tony Pugh, McClatchy Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — In his 30 years as director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Dr. Anthony Fauci has seen his share of public health scares.

When AIDS exploded in the 1980s among gay men, Fauci recalls that some people didn’t want gay waiters to serve them in restaurants. And during the anthrax scare that followed the 9/11 terrorist attacks, many were afraid to open their mail.

But when it comes to Ebola, “This one’s got a special flavor of fear,” Fauci said at the recent Washington Ideas Forum, sponsored by The Atlantic magazine and the Aspen Institute, a nonpartisan policy group.

The growing death toll in West Africa has helped create “an epidemic of fear” in the U.S., Fauci said, even though most experts feel the likelihood of a widespread outbreak in this country is minimal.

James Colgrove, a public health professor at Columbia University, said the chances of an outbreak in this country are “extremely remote.” Pamela Cipriano, president of the American Nurses Association, went even further. “What we know right now would suggest that there is no risk of an epidemic,” she said.

Enhanced screenings of West African visitors allow U.S. health officials to “very quickly identify and sequester and evaluate and care for anyone who shows any type of risk,” Cipriano said. “That’s a very high level of control.”

Even in Dallas, where Liberian Ebola patient Thomas Eric Duncan triggered the nation’s first potential outbreak, only two nurses contracted the virus after direct contact with Duncan while he was desperately ill. That’s out of 70-plus health care workers and 48 family and community members who interacted with him.

Despite the flawed federal and local response, the Dallas episode proved what Fauci and other experts have said all along: Ebola is tough to catch and even tougher to spread when contact tracing, patient isolation and quarantines are in place.

But rather than validate experts’ calls to trust the science and impose public health precautions that reflect actual risk, the Dallas scare triggered a policy backlash driven by fear. Individual states imposed mandatory quarantines for all health care workers returning from Ebola-stricken West Africa, even if they had no symptoms and weren’t contagious.

Kaci Hickox, a Doctors Without Borders nurse who treated Ebola patients in Sierra Leone, was, upon returning, kept in an isolation tent for a weekend by New Jersey officials, even though she showed no symptoms of the virus.

She was permitted to return home to Maine, where officials tried to legally quarantine her. A judge ruled in her favor, requiring only that Hickox monitor herself for signs of Ebola for 21 days, which ended Monday night.

“The fear is trumping science,” said Dr. Georges Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Association.

Lawmakers continue to call for outright travel bans from West Africa, which, experts say, would only cause people to seek alternative entry while discouraging U.S. caregivers from helping out in Africa.

Fauci said the severe responses are simply good-faith efforts by politicians to protect fearful constituents.

“You have to respect the fear of people,” he said. “You can’t denigrate it and say, ‘Why are you afraid?’ You’ve got to try and explain to them and you’ve got to do it over and over. … It’s just that as a health person, as a physician and a scientist, I would say you look at the data, and it tells you what the risk is.”

Ebola is only transmitted by direct contact through broken skin or mucous membranes with the body fluids of infected people. Airborne transmission of the virus — through tiny, dry particles that float through the air — does not occur.

But if larger saliva or mucous droplets from an infected person are expelled by coughing or sneezing and come in contact with another’s eyes, nose or mouth, that person could become infected. No such infections, however, have ever been documented.

Americans’ lingering fears about the disease stem partly from health officials’ misstatements about the nation’s readiness to fight it.

Tom Frieden, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, originally said hospitals in this country were ready to care for Ebola patients. Many, in fact, were not.

The agency then had to revise its outdated and insufficient guidance on personal protective equipment to ensure the safety of Ebola caregivers. The CDC also provided contradictory information about whether people being monitored for Ebola symptoms should be allowed on public transportation.

“Some of the missteps have eroded some of the trust that the public has had,” said Cipriano, the nurses association president. “I think that it certainly has added to the sense of, ‘Well, who do we trust?’ ”

Colgrove said Frieden’s mistakes were surprising, because the CDC director had always excelled in the art of communicating risk. Frieden used to refer to public health in an epidemic as “the art of controlled hysteria,” Colgrove said.

“You want people to be worried enough that they give you the resources that you need to do the job,” explained Colgrove, the Columbia professor, “but you don’t want them to be so worried that they do stupid things. It’s a very, very delicate balance that he has to walk. That any public health official has to walk.”

With a lull in the number of new Ebola cases, many are hoping the U.S. has seen the worst of the deadly virus. But Benjamin, of the American Public Health Association, knows better.
“I always remain skeptical and vigilant,” he said. “So while I’m hoping that we have, I still believe that we have to keep a high index of suspicion.”

AFP Photo/Chip Somodevilla

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Maine Judge Rejects Ebola Quarantine Of Nurse Kaci Hickox

Maine Judge Rejects Ebola Quarantine Of Nurse Kaci Hickox

By Michael Muskal, Los Angeles Times (MCT)

A judge rejected a bid by Maine to restrict the movements of Kaci Hickox, the nurse who treated Ebola patients in Africa and who has defied state quarantine efforts.

In a ruling released Friday, Judge Charles C. LaVerdiere turned down the state’s request to strictly limit Hickox’s movements. The nurse had argued that since she had no symptoms of Ebola, it would violate her freedom to put her in quarantine.

“I am very satisfied with the decision,” Hickox said during a televised news conference from her home in Fort Kent, Maine, shortly after the ruling was released.

Maine had argued that a quarantine and limits were needed to protect public health, a position the judge said had not been proven.

“The State has not met its burden at this time to prove by clear and convincing evidence that limiting Respondent’s movements to the degree requested is ‘necessary to protect other individuals from the dangers of infection,’ ” the judge wrote. “According to the information presented by the court, Respondent currently does not show any symptoms of Ebola and is therefore not infectious.”

If Hickox does show symptoms, the judge said it would then become necessary to isolate the nurse.

On Thursday, LaVerdiere temporarily restricted Hickox’s movements, limiting her travel and banning her from public places, as the state had requested.

The current ruling supersedes the earlier order and will be in effect until a full hearing on the issue. The court papers set no specific date for a full hearing, but they noted that such a proceeding must be held “no less than three days and not more than ten days” from Thursday.

The latest ruling orders Hickox to cooperate with direct active monitoring of her temperature, a practice she said Friday she is already following. She was also asked to coordinate her travel with public health officials and immediately notify the state if she develops symptoms.

But the judge rejected the stricter conditions sought by Maine public officials, including that Hickox be barred from long-distance commercial or local public travel. The state also unsuccessfully sought to bar her from public places.

Hickox has been staying in her rural hometown at the northern tip of the state. She has left the house at least twice, once to speak to reporters and the other time to take a bicycle ride with her boyfriend.

State police had been at the house, but no action was taken earlier to detain her, Fort Kent Police Chief Tom Pelletier told the Los Angeles Times. He said he had talked briefly with Hickox on Friday.

Hickox became the face of the latest legal battle over Ebola when she arrived last week in New Jersey, where she was detained in a tent at University Hospital in Newark. In media interviews she repeatedly protested the conditions at the hospital and her mandatory quarantine. She and other medical experts have said such isolation was not based on science.

After being released from her confinement in Newark, Hickcox returned to Fort Kent where her battle with Maine has been unfolding this week.

Maine originally sought a more draconian form of quarantine, beyond the guidelines of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Hickox remains at risk of being infected with Ebola until the end of a 21-day incubation period, Dr. Sheila Pinette, director of the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention, wrote in the court papers.

“It is my opinion that the respondent should be subjected to an appropriate public health order for mandatory direct active monitoring and restrictions on movement as soon as possible and until the end of the incubation period … to protect the public health and safety,” she stated.

In the original petition, Maine followed the federal CDC recommendations, but also noted that the CDC allows states assess each case and seek tougher standards if it wants.
Among the specific restrictions Maine sought were to have any travel by Hickox coordinated with state health officials and barring her barred from long-distance commercial or local public travel.

In his ruling, LaVerdiere praised Hickox for her generosity and her compassion in traveling to Sierra Leone to treat Ebola cases.

“We need to remember as we go through this matter that we owe her and all professionals who give of themselves in this way a debt of gratitude,” he wrote.

The judge also warned Hickox that fear of the disease exists and while it may not be rational, it is real in society.

Hickox “should guide herself accordingly,” he wrote.

AFP Photo/Spencer Platt