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Missionaries who had Ebola contact to be quarantined

The Columbian
Published: August 11, 2014, 12:00am

Missionaries returning from Liberia who have been in direct contact with the Ebola virus but who are not sick are heading to Charlotte, N.C., and will be quarantined once they arrive, health officials said Sunday.

Dr. Stephen Keener, medical director of the Mecklenburg County Health Department, declined to specify how many missionaries will be quarantined, when they’ll arrive or how they’ll travel from Africa, citing the need for privacy.

“It’s very important to hear and understand that . none of the returning missionaries are ill, none of them have the Ebola virus disease,” Keener said at a press conference. Those affected with Ebola are not infectious until they are symptomatic, health officials have said.

In a statement Sunday, Charlotte Douglas International Airport officials said they are “fully cooperating with state and local officials on the return of volunteers, staff and their families from West African countries currently affected by an Ebola outbreak.”

“The arrival will occur in an undisclosed, nonpublic area in order to ensure the safe return and privacy of the passengers,” the statement said. “The arrival is expected to have no impact (on) airport operations.”

SIM USA, based in Charlotte, is an international mission group that helps the needy in Africa, Asia, the Americas and Europe.

One of its missionaries, Nancy Writebol, became the second American stricken with Ebola while serving in Liberia. She was transferred to Emory University Hospital last Tuesday while her husband, David, remains in Liberia until his health condition is cleared.

Two other missionaries, along with their six children, arrived in Charlotte from Liberia on Aug. 3, SIM said. They remain on the SIM campus in an area that is separate from ongoing operations.

Keener said the missionaries returning differ from those eight who returned last week because last week’s group didn’t have any defined contact with people affected by the Ebola virus.

Those missionaries who returned last week were asked to remain available to go the full 21 days of quarantine in the interest of public safety. “They were not put under an official quarantine,” Bruce Johnson, SIM USA’s president, said.

Precautions

Quarantine is a tool used to protect the public from the possible spread of a disease. During a quarantine, persons who have been exposed to a communicable disease, but who are not themselves ill, are limited in their movement and contact with others.

“They’re kept at home or in another situation that is controlled so they do not contact other people,” Keener said. In the case of Ebola, exposure would mean contact with blood, saliva, vomit or other bodily fluids as well as contact with instruments that may be used, such as needles.

Those missionaries who have not been exposed by that definition, however, are “free to travel wherever they want,” Keener said.

“The definition we’re using is a very broad one, just to ensure out of a sense of overcaution that we wouldn’t be letting anything slip through the cracks,” Keener said.

He said because these missionaries are not sick or an immediate threat to public health, the organization is not disclosing any more information about them.

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