Dr. Martin Salia, a surgeon who was
diagnosed with Ebola in Sierra Leone and flown to Nebraska over the
weekend for treatment, has died, hospital officials said Monday.
Salia, 44, became the
second person to die of the disease in the United States. Thomas Eric
Duncan, who contracted Ebola in Liberia and traveled to Dallas, died
last month.
Salia landed Saturday in
Omaha. He was the 10th patient to be treated on American soil and the
third at Nebraska Medical Center. Hospital officials had said that he
was perhaps sicker than any other patient flown to the United States
from West Africa.
“It is with an extremely
heavy heart that we share this news,” said Dr. Phil Smith, medical
director of the hospital’s biocontainment unit. “Dr. Salia was extremely
critical when he arrived here, and unfortunately, despite our best
efforts, we weren't able to save him.”
The hospital planned to release further details later Monday.
Salia, a native of
Sierra Leone and a legal U.S. resident, was living in Sierra Leone and
working at a hospital when he was diagnosed last week. The Ebola
outbreak, the worst in recorded history, has killed more than 5,000
people in Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia.
Salia has a wife and two
children who live in the Washington suburb of New Carrollton, Maryland.
A son, Maada, told NBC News last week that Salia knew the risk of
working in West Africa but wanted to do his part.
“Even though he knows
the sickness is already out, he decided to still go and help his people
because he wanted to show that he loves his people,” the son said. “He’s
really, really a hero to me.”
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