The two American aid workers who were the first patients ever to be treated for the Ebola virus
at a hospital in the United States have been released, capping a
transcontinental medical drama that stirred public debate about whether
any American with the virus should have been allowed to return.
Emory University Hospital, which admitted Dr. Kent Brantly and
Nancy Writebol to a specialized isolation ward earlier this month, said
both were discharged after at least two weeks of treatment. Dr. Brantly
was released on Thursday, the hospital said, after Ms. Writebol was
quietly discharged on Tuesday.
“I
am forever thankful to God for sparing my life, and I’m glad for any
attention my sickness has attracted to the plight of West Africa in the
midst of this epidemic,” Dr. Brantly, who arrived at Emory on Aug. 2
after being evacuated from Liberia, said at a news conference here on
Thursday morning, his wife at his side.
Ms.
Writebol, who is from North Carolina, did not appear before reporters
on the Emory campus, which is near the headquarters of the federal
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. She arrived in the United
States three days after Dr. Brantly after she was flown, as he was,
aboard a private air ambulance to a military base northwest of Atlanta.
Dr. Brantly had been working with Samaritan’s Purse, a Christian aid
organization, in Africa, where an Ebola outbreak has claimed more than 1,200 lives. Ms. Writebol worked for SIM USA, also a Christian aid group. “Nancy
is free of the virus, but the lingering effects of the battle have left
her in a significantly weakened condition,” her husband, David
Writebol, said in a written statement. “Thus, we decided it would be
best to leave the hospital privately to be able to give...
Emory
on Thursday defended its decision to admit Dr. Brantly and Ms.
Writebol, saying that doctors had learned information that would
“advance the world’s understanding” of the virus while providing
lifesaving aid.
“It
was the right decision to bring these patients back to Emory for
treatment,” Dr. Bruce S. Ribner, the infectious disease specialist who
oversaw the pair’s care at Emory.
He added, “We always suspected that we had a good chance of helping these patients survive.”
The
admissions of Dr. Brantly and Ms. Writebol had drawn pointed questions,
many of them online, focused on whether they would spread the infection
in the United States. But doctors and public health officials
repeatedly said there was no risk to the public, especially with the
availability of an isolation unit.
(New York Times)
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