The Commercial Appeal

Screens to begin on Mali travelers

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NEW YORK — Travelers from Mali will be subject to the same screening and monitoring that was ordered for people arriving from three other Ebola-affected countries, U. S. health officials said Sunday.

ali is not suffering widespread Ebola illnesses. But federal officials are growing increasing­ly worried about a new cluster of seven illnesses in Mali that have left health public health workers scrambling to track and monitor at least 450 other people who may have had contact with the seven people and may be at risk.

“At this point we can’t be confident that every exposed person has been identified, or that every identified person is being monitored daily,” said Dr. Tom Frieden, director of the U. S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Starting Monday, anyone arriving in the United States from Mali will undergo the same screening procedures that were ordered last month for travelers from Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea. That includes taking arriving travelers’ temperatur­es, and questionin­g them about their health and possible exposure to the Ebola virus.

They also will be asked to provide contact informatio­n and to agree to have daily communicat­ions with local health officials for 21 days, who will be asking them to take their temperatur­es twice each day and monitoring them to see if they develop symptoms.

West Africa is currently suffering the worst Ebola epidemic in world history, with at least 14,000 illnesses and more than 5,100 deaths so far. Nearly all of the cases have been in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone. About 75 people arrive from those three countries each day, on average. They are funneled through five airports — two in New York and one each in Washington, Chicago and Atlanta.

In contrast, only about 15 to 20 passengers arrive from Mali to the United States on an average day. The majority end up arriving through the same five airports.

But in the next few days, steps will be taken to make sure all funnel through those airports, Frieden said.

In Omaha, Neb., a surgeon who contracted Ebola while working in Sierra Leone was in extremely critical condition Sunday, his doctors said.

Dr. Martin Salia, who was diagnosed with Ebola on Monday, arrived in Omaha on Saturday to be treated at the Nebraska Medical Center’s biocontain­ment unit that has successful­ly treated two other Ebola patients this fall.

Salia is “extremely ill,” said Dr. Phil Smith, who is helping oversee Salia’s treatment. The 44-yearold Salia might be more ill than the first Ebola patients successful­ly treated in the United States, according to the hospital.

“This is an hour-by-hour situation,” Smith said Sunday.

 ?? SARAH HOFFMAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Health workers in protective suits unload Dr. Martin Salia, a surgeon working in Sierra Leone who had been diagnosed with Ebola, from an ambulance in Omaha, Neb.
SARAH HOFFMAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS Health workers in protective suits unload Dr. Martin Salia, a surgeon working in Sierra Leone who had been diagnosed with Ebola, from an ambulance in Omaha, Neb.

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