Two
Americans battling Ebola are being flown from Liberia to Atlanta in
specially outfitted planes - bringing the incurable disease to U.S.
shores for the first time, it has been reported.
Dr Kent Brantly and hygienist
Nancy Writebol, both of whom are said to be in 'grave condition', will
be brought back to the U.S. one by one.
Emory
University in Atlanta has confirmed that they will be taking one of the
patients 'in the next several days' after they arrive in the U.S. in
the Gulfstream jet. It is not clear which of the two patients they will be housing or where the second patient will go.
Emory and the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention, which is also based in Atlanta, have built
a special containment unit to house the patient, who is in need of an extremely high level of isolation.
Inside
the aircraft, the patients will remain in a tent-like structure called
an aeromedical biological containment system, which allows officials to
move highly contagious patients without fear of exposure to pathogens.
According to WXIA,
Emory's isolation unit is on the ground floor and has three beds with
the highest standards in negative pressure air handling, HEPA filtration
and exhaust.
'When
this unit was being built, we hoped we'd never have to use the space to
treat a serious communicable disease,' said Emory epidemiologist Bruce
Ribner.
However
that's precisely what will soon happen. The modified Gulfstream III
took off from Cartersville, Georgia Thursday afternoon for the
first-of-its-kind mission to collect the Ebola patients.
After it emerged the Americans were returning to their homeland, Twitter lit up with fellow citizens fuming over the
decision.
One self-proclaimed patriot was especially unhappy with the news.
'Ebola
patient will be brought to the U.S. in a few days - now I know for sure
that our leaders are incompetent. KEEP THEM OUT OF HERE!' Donald Trump
tweeted Thursday evening.
Efforts
have been made to help the two patients with the means available in
Liberia - and just hours before the flight to Atlanta was revealed,
father-of-two Brantly gave up the single vial of an experimental
treatment sent over from the U.S. in order that Writebol - a grandmother
and longtime Christian missionary - could receive it instead.
Brantly,
from Fort Worth, Texas, ensured Writebol received the experimental drug
instead of him after only a small amount arrived in Liberia, the
Samaritan's Purse charity said on Wednesday.
Brantly
would receive a transfusion of the blood of a 14-year-old Ebola
survivor who personally helped to treat. Giving blood transfusions from
survivors to still suffering Ebola patients is an established, though
not nearly proven, treatment for the largely untreatable disease.
Announcing
Dr Brantly's gallant decision, Samaritan's Purse president Franklin
Graham said: 'Yesterday, an experimental serum arrived in the country,
but there was only enough for one person. Dr. Brantly asked that it be
given to Nancy Writebol.'
However, on Thursday charity SIM said in a statement that Mrs Writebol's condition had worsened, despite the serum.
Mrs
Writebol is in stable, but serious condition and is receiving an
experimental drug that doctors hope will better address her condition,
the charity said.
Her husband, David, is close by but can only visit his wife through a window or dressed in a haz-mat suit.
'We
continue to pray for Nancy's full and complete recovery,' said Bruce
Johnson, president of SIM USA. 'Even though her condition has worsened,
we know she is receiving the best possible medical care, and we are
thankful that she has access to this experimental drug.
'We believe in the power of prayer and
ask people around the world not only to pray for Nancy and Kent, but
also for everyone affected by this terrible virus.'
On Wednesday, the charity said Dr Brantley's condition had gone from grave to serious.
However, on Thursday they said he had 'taken a slight turn for the worse overnight.'
Despite Brantly's recent turn for the worse, his wife remained confident Thursday that he would pull through.
'I remain
hopeful and believing that Kent will be healed from this dreadful
disease,' she said in a statement Thursday. "He is strong and peaceful
and confident in the love of Jesus Christ, which is his sustenance right
now.'
She also said that she and her children, who were in Liberia with Brantly before he fell ill, remained perfectly healthy.
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