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Africa traveler now in hospital

‘Odds are, this is not Ebola,’ doctor says
People working for a petroleum company take part in an Ebola awareness campaign in Monrovia, Liberia, on Monday to try and prevent the deadly Ebola virus from spreading. A doctor with the federal National Institutes of Health says the agency will begin human trials of Ebola vaccine in September.

NEW YORK – A man who recently visited West Africa and had a high fever and gastrointestinal symptoms was placed in isolation at a New York hospital on Monday and was being tested for possible Ebola but likely didn’t have it, health officials said.

“Odds are, this is not Ebola,” said Dr. Jeremy Boal, chief medical officer at Mount Sinai Health System in Manhattan. Boal said he expected a definitive answer within a day or two.

The man, who recently traveled to a country where Ebola has been reported, was ill when he arrived at Mount Sinai Medical Center early Monday.

The city’s Department of Health echoed what Mount Sinai hospital officials said, that “the patient is unlikely to have Ebola.” It said more testing was being done for common causes of illness and to definitively exclude Ebola. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said three Americans in the United States were tested for Ebola since the West African outbreak erupted this year and those results were negative.

Officials at U.S. airports are watching travelers from Africa for flu-like symptoms that could be tied to the recent Ebola outbreak there.

The Ebola virus causes a hemorrhagic fever that has sickened more than 1,600 people, killing nearly 900 mostly in Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone. It’s spread through direct contact with bodily fluids. A person exposed to the virus can take up to 21 days to exhibit symptoms, making it possible for infected travelers to enter the U.S. without knowing they have it.



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