Thursday, October 6, 2016

Nurse Pauline Cafferkey Who Has Contracted Ebola in 2014 Is Rushed Back To Hospital Under Police Escort

Nurse Pauline Cafferkey, who was infected with the Ebola virus while working in Sierra Leone in 2014, has been taken to hospital in Glasgow under police escort, sources say.Pauline Cafferkey 
The 40-year-old children's nurse has almost died twice after contracting the deadly brain bug virus and is the only known survivor of Ebola to have seen the virus repeatedly 'reactivate' in her body.
The former Save the Children volunteer was originally infected in December 2014 while helping Ebola victims in Sierra Leone.  
She became the first victim to be diagnosed on British soil and spent almost a month in an isolation unit at the Royal Free Hospital in north-west London.
She was discharged the following month after making a recovery and was deemed not to be infectious.auline Cafferkey enters an isolation tent before boarding a RAF Hercules at Glasgow Airport
But she fell ill again in October last year - at one stage falling critically ill - after suffering meningitis caused by Ebola lying hidden in her spinal fluid.
Again, the disease was beaten back and she left the Royal Free last November. But, three months later in February, she was sent back to hospital again, treated for complications associated with the condition.
There are no details of Ms Cafferkey's current condition but Police Scotland today confirmed the force 'assisted in the transfer of a patient'.

A spokeswoman for NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde added: 'Ms Cafferkey was admitted to the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital under routine monitoring by the infectious diseases team.
'She is undergoing further investigations and her condition remains stable.'
First Minister Nicola Sturgeon tweeted: 'Sending my very best wishes to Pauline Cafferkey. She has already suffered way too much - & all for trying to help others. Thoughts with her.' 


Ms Cafferkey, from Cambuslang, Lanarkshire, was cleared last month of professional misconduct following an 18-month investigation into her conduct on her return to the UK.Healthcare worker Pauline Cafferkey being taken on board a plane at Glasgow Airport as she is moved to the Royal Free Hospital in London

The nurse was accused of concealing her high temperature in a 'chaotic' screening centre in Heathrow on her return from west Africa in 2014. 
It was also alleged that she failed to admit she had taken paracetamol - which can reduce fever - after learning of her high temperature.  
The Nursing and Midwifery Council argued that the nurse 'potentially put the public at risk' after being cleared to fly home in the early stages of Ebola, damaging trust in the nursing profession. 
They said nine people who sat near to the UK’s first Ebola victim on her return flight to Glasgow and another – believed to be her taxi driver – faced a three-week wait to see if they might have Ebola after she was diagnosed the next day. 
But the nurse's legal team pointed to her 'previously unblemished record' and insisted the legal threshold for a finding of misconduct against her had not been met. 
Following a two-day hearing in Edinburgh, the panel accepted expert medical advice that the Ebola virus had 'substantially affected' Miss Cafferkey's ability to make rational decisions on entering the UK. 
The panel also pointed to the nurse's 'medically-impaired state' at the time due to her health 'going rapidly downhill'.
Evidence was also put before the panel which said screening staff from Public Health England at the airport 'were not properly prepared to receive so many travellers from at-risk countries', resulting in the area being 'busy, disorganised and even chaotic'.    
After the hearing, Miss Cafferkey - who is still receiving psychological support for the effects of spending weeks in an isolation tent being treated for Ebola - claimed she had been made a 'scapegoat' for errors by Public Health England.  
The nurse, who won a Pride of Britain award for her courage in battling Ebola, said there had been a 'catalogue of errors' in her screening. Pauline Cafferkey

Nurse Pauline Cafferkey talks about her battle with Ebola

Loaded: 0%
Progress: 0%
0:00
Previous
Play
Skip
Mute
Current Time0:00
/
Duration Time1:11
Fullscreen
Need Text

No comments: