MERS patient is isolated in Indiana hospital
By Juan Perez Jr. and Andy Grimm
Chicago Tribune
(MCT)
The man US authorities cite as the nation’s first confirmed case of Middle East respiratory syndrome and dozens of hospital workers who first came into contact with him are being isolated from the public, in an effort to contain the potential spread of a deadly pathogen.
Medical workers at the Indiana hospital who have contact with the man are required to wear gloves, masks, gowns and eye protection. The man, who flew into O’Hare International Airport in Chicago from Saudi Arabia last month and was hospitalized days later, is being held in a room designed for patients with respiratory infections, and is segregated from the hospital’s air circulation system.
The patient needed oxygen during the first part of his stay, officials at Community Hospital in Munster, Ind., said Monday, but was not admitted to intensive care. Doctors said he’s now breathing regular air, is in good spirits and has a good appetite.
As the man’s condition appears to improve and nobody else has shown evidence of infection, officials provided the most detailed account to date of the seriousness of care with which public health and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have taken to investigate and contain the potential spread of MERS in the United States.
About 50 hospital nurses, clerks, aides, dietary experts and other workers who came into contact with the patient before his infection was confirmed are on paid leave _ isolated in their homes as experts watch for signs of symptoms and test for infection during the virus’ known incubation period.
The patient’s family members are in the same predicament. Those isolated at home have been asked to wear face masks if they leave the building, officials said.
At a briefing with Indiana and federal officials Monday, officials said the Saudi Arabian health care worker, who has not been identified but whom experts refer to as the “index patient,” is expected to return to home isolation with his family “very soon.”
But it’s unclear when the man, who officials said entered the U.S. through O’Hare while en route to a planned visit with Indiana relatives, will be able to travel or leave the country.
No one who has been isolated because of their contact with the patient has tested positive for the virus, officials said. Its incubation period lasts an estimated two to 14 days, and the patient first reported his illness at an Indiana hospital on April 28.
“We think this is well-contained, but we are exercising an abundance of caution,” said Dr. Daniel Feikin, a CDC epidemiologist and head of an agency response and investigation team sent to Indiana.
“I think it is promising that the staff that have had contact with him have already tested negative,” he said.
Feikin said the patient lives in Saudi Arabia and was working in a Riyadh hospital that housed MERS patients, though Feikin said the patient did not recall working directly with infected persons.
MERS is a new type of what scientists call “coronaviruses,” a widespread group of diseases that includes the common cold and pneumonia. The highly contagious SARS virus, which killed hundreds in Asia and North America in the early 2000s, is another kind of coronavirus.
First discovered in a Saudi Arabian patient in summer 2012, some experts believe MERS originated from an animal source because it’s been detected in camels and bats in the Middle East. MERS symptoms _ fever, cough and respiratory problems _ resemble those of influenza. Unlike the flu, however, there is no available vaccine or specific treatment recommended for the virus.
Health officials around the world have been particularly concerned about MERS because it is a new virus that scientists still have much to learn about, but has already proven to be quite lethal, with a recent CDC estimate showing it has killed nearly one quarter of the people who contracted it.
U.S. health experts aren’t certain where MERS originated, but say they’ve long expected the virus’ arrival to the country. Still, they say it currently poses low risk to the general public.