MADRID (Reuters) - Sixteen people were
being monitored in a Madrid hospital for signs
of Ebola on Saturday, with patient numbers
rising as the Spanish government tries to
contain recriminations over how it has
handled the first outbreak of the disease
outside Africa.
A nurse who contracted the virus after caring
for two infected priests repatriated to Spain
remained seriously ill. Teresa Romero, 44, is
so far the only person who has tested positive
for Ebola through a transmission in the
country.
The latest outbreak of the disease has already
killed more than 4,000 people, mostly in West
Africa, and the Spanish case has raised
concerns about contagion in Europe.
Three more people who came into contact
with Romero - a hairdresser, another nurse
and a cleaner - were admitted to the isolation
unit at the Carlos III hospital on Friday
evening. None of the 16 now being monitored,
including Romero's husband, have shown
Ebola symptoms.
Spain's government attempted to stem an
outcry over its response by tightening Ebola
detection protocols on Friday and putting
Deputy Prime Minister Soraya Saenz de
Santamaria in charge of handling the health
crisis, five days after the contagion was
confirmed.
Amid disquiet in Spain over how the virus
could have spread, some officials initially
deflected blame on nurse Romero, seizing on
her admission that she may have touched her
face with the gloves of her protective suit.
Angry health workers jeered Prime Minister
Mariano Rajoy on Friday as he visited the
hospital, throwing surgical gloves at his car,
while unions and the public have also laid into
the government for its slow response.
Romero remained undiagnosed for days
despite reporting she had a fever, one of the
symptoms of Ebola.
"The bad way this crisis was handled by
politicians proved fertile ground for panic," El
Mundo newspaper said on an editorial on
Saturday, describing the case of one school
which wanted a nurse to keep her child away,
because she worked in another Madrid
hospital where Romero was first admitted.
Three hairdressers were among those under
observation on Saturday, after Romero visited
a salon for a beauty treatment before she was
diagnosed.
Patients also included five doctors, a hospital
porter and four nurses, one of whom had also
cared for one of the repatriated priests, and
tested negative for Ebola in an initial
examination. The two priests died of the
disease.
Romero was now being treated with ZMab,
some Spanish media, including El Pais said.
The combination drug was one of the agents
used to make ZMapp, an experimental
treatment which has been used on some
Ebola sufferers, a number of whom survived.
Spain's health ministry and hospital
authorities declined to comment, while the
government had no immediate comment.
Medical staff had been giving Romero
antibodies from previously infected patients
earlier this week.
Hmm...! dis issue of Ebola,God pls save us from dis deadly virus.
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