Public Health Alert - South Central Public Health District
Subject: Ebola Update - New York City Reports Positive Test for Ebola in Volunteer International Aid Work (more information)
Date: October 24th, 2014  
Unless events directly affecting Idaho residents occur, an updated Public Health Alert regarding Ebola is scheduled for October 27th, 2014. 
localLocal Ebola Response
Situation Report
There are no suspected or confirmed cases of Ebola in Idaho. While an outbreak in Idaho is unlikely, there always is a possibility we could see a person be diagnosed with Ebola in our state. This is why Idaho public health, hospitals and healthcare professionals are working together to protect Idaho communities.

Unless the situation changes, an updated Public Health Alert regarding Ebola is scheduled for October 27th, 2014. 

Preparation
  • Idaho has a strong, effective collaborative process that works. Even though the risk in Idaho is low, all of us are concerned about what has occurred nationally. That is why our local and state public health officials and Homeland Security have met with medical professionals, hospitals, emergency responders, universities and airports to discuss the need to look for symptoms that could indicate Ebola virus infection and educate health workers about effective response protocols to a suspect case.
     
  • Idaho public health has a well-established disease monitoring and tracking system for infectious diseases, including Ebola. This system is a collective effort among state and local public health agencies, our state's healthcare community, and federal health authorities, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
     
  • If there's a suspected Ebola case in Idaho, local public health district workers are ready to mobilize and identify all possible contacts of suspect patients. Ebola doesn't spread as easily as many other infections; it takes direct contact with the blood or other bodily fluids of an infected person. Contact tracing by local public health staff is extremely effective in halting the chain of transmission.
     
  • Hospitals and health-care facilities are screening patients with symptoms similar to Ebola and are asking about travel history or any physical contact with an Ebola patient. Idaho hospitals have strong infection control practices to quickly and safely isolate a possible infectious patient to protect other patients and healthcare workers. 
     
  • If Idaho identifies a possible infection, there are 18 labs in the nation that can test for Ebola virus and provide results within 24 to 48 hours of submission.



latestLatest News

New York City Reports Positive Test for Ebola in Volunteer International Aid Work  (View CDC Media Release)

 

A hospitalized medical aid worker who volunteered in Guinea, one of the three West African nations experiencing an Ebola epidemic, and since returned to the United States has tested positive for Ebola according to the New York City Health Department laboratory, which is part of the Laboratory Response Network overseen by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

 

The patient has been notified of the test results and remains in isolation. The patient is currently at Bellevue Hospital in New York City. Bellevue Hospital is one of eight New York State hospitals that Governor Cuomo has designated to treat Ebola patients. A specially trained CDC team determined earlier this week that the hospital has been trained in proper protocols and is well prepared to treat Ebola patients.

 

Confirmation testing at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's laboratory will be done. The healthcare worker had returned through JFK Airport on Oct. 17 and participated in the enhanced screening for all returning travelers from these countries. He went through multiple layers of screening and did not have a fever or other symptoms of illness. The patient reported a fever to local health officials for the first time today. The patient was transported by a specially trained HAZ TAC unit wearing Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) to Bellevue. The New York City Health Department has interviewed the patient regarding close contacts and activities.

 

CDC is in close communications with the New York City Health Department and Bellevue Hospital, and is providing technical assistance and resources. Three members of CDC's Ebola Response Team will arrive in New York City tonight. This team is deployed when an Ebola case is identified in the United States, or when health officials have a very strong suspicion that a patient has Ebola pending lab results.

 

In addition, CDC already had a team of Ebola experts in New York City who can offer immediate additional support. The CDC experts were in New York City this week assessing hospital readiness to receive Ebola patients, including Bellevue hospital. CDC's Ebola hospital assessment teams are designed to make sure that hospitals that have volunteered to take Ebola patients are Ebola ready.

 

These teams assess a facility's infection control readiness and to determine if there are gaps in infection control readiness. They support a facility in developing a comprehensive infection control plan. The principle is to be ready for the patient coming in the front door and everything that happens through the patient's stay in the hospital. CDC's team is a multidisciplinary team of experts. It includes infection control practice specialists, personal protective equipment specialists, worker safety experts, clinical care and diagnostics experts, and laboratory processes experts. New York City and New York State have designated Bellevue as an Ebola treatment hospital. The CDC team, which had completed its assessment of Bellevue, found the facility to be well prepared to care for a patient with Ebola.

 

Ebola is spread through direct contact with bodily fluids of a sick person or exposure to objects such as needles that have been contaminated. The illness has an average 8-10 day incubation period (although it could be from 2 to 21 days). CDC recommends monitoring exposed people for symptoms a complete 21 days.

Confirmatory CDC laboratory tests will be shared when these tests are done, following appropriate patient notification. 

 

 


 

story1What the United States is Doing
Response in the United States

 Clinicians in the United States have been key to our safety here at home by:

  • Identifying patients with both a history of travel from West Africa or contact with someone with a confirmed case of Ebola and symptoms indicating they might have Ebola
  • Immediately isolating these patients
  • Consulting their local or state health departments
  • Getting these patients tested as needed

We have also been responding to new information to adapt and enhance our response. The following five U.S. airports - which receive more than 94 percent of travelers coming to the United States from countries affected by the Ebola outbreak - are also implementing new Ebola screening measures to help stop the spread of the disease:

  • John F. Kennedy International Airport - New York, NY
  • Washington Dulles International Airport - Washington, D.C.
  • Newark Liberty International Airport - Newark, NJ
  • Chicago O'Hare International Airport - Chicago, IL
  • Jackson Atlanta International Airport - Atlanta, GA

  

Response Abroad

CDC, USAID, and other U.S. officials have been deployed to the West Africa region to assist with response efforts - including surveillance, contact tracing, data management, laboratory testing, and health education - and CDC experts have been deployed to non-affected border countries, including Cote d'Ivoire, to conduct assessments of Ebola preparedness in those countries. This deployment constituted CDC's largest overseas mission to date.

 

The President announced in September a scaled-up response that calls upon the unique capabilities of the U.S. military to support the civilian-led response. The United States already has committed more than $350 million toward fighting the epidemic in West Africa, including more than $111 million in humanitarian aid, and the Department of Defense (DoD) is prepared to devote more than $1 billion to the whole-of-government Ebola response effort.  

 

As a further indication of our prioritization of this response, the United States convened a special U.N. Security Council session on the epidemic, and President Obama called the world to action during a subsequent U.N. session called by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. These U.S. actions have galvanized millions of dollars in international funding and in-kind support.

 

 

 

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contactContact Information
To report life threatening emergencies call 911

To report public health related issues during business hours: 
  • South Central Public Health District epidemiologist: 208-737-5929
  • Clinic line: 208-737-5966
To report public health issues after business hours
  • State Communications at 1-800-632-8000 
  • Idaho Bureau of Communicable Disease Prevention: 208-334-5939
     

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