FORT WORTH, Texas – As her boyfriend Thomas Eric Duncan lay dying of Ebola in a Dallas hospital bed, Louise Troh battled loneliness and fear that she too had contracted the disease while confined to a stranger’s home under armed guard.
Troh’s confinement was ending Sunday night, along with several friends, family and others who had contact with Duncan after he first became infectious. Ebola has a 21-day incubation period, and the people who interacted with Duncan after he first arrived in Dallas from Liberia will be in the clear.
It’s an important milestone in the nation’s efforts to contain the outbreak. After three long weeks, Troh will be able to have a clean bill of health, leave the house and be done with twice-daily temperature readings by government health-care workers. She likened the period to being a prisoner.
“I want to breathe, I want to really grieve, I want privacy with my family,” Troh told The Associated Press on Friday, lamenting that she was missing Duncan’s memorial service at his mother’s church in North Carolina because of the quarantine. Troh says she and Duncan planned to get married later in the week.
Duncan arrived in Dallas from Liberia in late September and went to the hospital complaining of headache and stomach pain. He was sent home with a prescription for antibiotics to treat a misdiagnosed sinus infection. He returned two days later, was diagnosed with Ebola and died Oct. 8.
The day Duncan tested positive for Ebola, Troh, her 13-year-old son, Duncan’s nephew and a family friend were ordered by a Dallas court to stay inside the apartment among Duncan’s used linens and any lingering virus. The unusual confinement order was imposed after the family failed to comply with a request not to leave the apartment, Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins said. The four were later taken to an undisclosed gated community.
Jenkins and Troh’s pastor George Mason delivered the news of Duncan’s death to her during the confinement period.
The other people who will have their quarantine period end at midnight include Troh’s daughter, a nurse’s assistant who checked Duncan’s vital signs before calling for an ambulance.
For nearly three weeks, the daughter has not left the cramped, second-story apartment she shares with her partner, their three children – ages 2, 4 and 6 – and Yah’s 10-year-old son.
Unlike Troh, her daughter is not prevented from leaving by an armed guard, but the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention officials have come by daily to check everyone’s temperature.
“I’m telling you, just to step outside will be so great. To hug my mom and grieve for Eric, not over the phone like we’ve been doing but in the flesh,” Troh’s daughter said.