Crime & Safety
Healthcare Worker Who Treated Ebola Patients Lands At Newark Airport, Develops Fever
Gov. Chris Christie indicated that the healthcare worker would be quarantined even though the person displayed no symptoms upon arrival.

A healthcare worker with a recent history of treating Ebola patients in West Africa developed a fever and was kept in isolation Friday and Saturday, according to the New Jersey Department of Health
Gov. Chris Christie indicated that the healthcare worker would be quarantined even though the person displayed no symptoms upon arrival at Newark Liberty International Airport earlier Friday.
The healthcare worker, who was not identified, was being evaluated at University Hospital in Newark.
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The Newark incident was the latest in a series of episodes involving cases where people were identified as having Ebola-like symptoms. In nearly all these cases, the test results have proven to be negative. There are only four confirmed U.S. cases: Thomas Eric Duncan, a Liberian man who died from the virus in a Dallas hospital; two nurses who treated him; and a doctor in New York City who recently treated patients in Africa.
Christie has signed Executive Order 164, creating the Ebola Virus Disease Joint Response Team, an order that will “direct and coordinate” the state’s public health response to the Ebola crisis, officials from the Governor’s office reported.
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The Executive Order indicates that a multi-agency team, consisting of a variety of state agencies and departments, will work together to protect the health and safety of all New Jersey residents. according to the Christie administration. These agencies include the Department of Health, the State Police, Homeland Security, New Jersey Transit, and the Department of Children and Families.
The screening process includes: temperature checks, visual inspections for symptoms, and history of risk exposure, the Governor’s Office reported.
Department of Health doctors continue to work together with the CDC and area hospitals to mandate passenger screening and follow up. Symptomatic passengers are immediately transferred to University Hospital in Newark, Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital in New Brunswick, or Hackensack University Hospital in Hackensack.
If the CDC discovers a passenger who is not showing symptoms, but still has a high risk of exposure, the DOH will determine whether the passenger will be subject to State Quarantine. If such a passenger is detected, state agencies will serve the traveler with the quarantine order, officials say.
New Jersey hospital systems are well prepared to care for Ebola patients, officials say. Hospital systems have been coached on potential “false alarms” that commonly occur with those who display risk factors for the disease.
In addition, Rutgers University is training health educators about prevention tactics, and Commissioner Mary O’Dowd has held briefing calls for 738 hospital officials, county and local health department and EMS leaders.
Other education initiatives include state-sponsored webinars for nurses, and updates from the DOE for school administrators and superintendents. The DOE is also implementing emergency guidelines for schools who may need to close or quarantine groups of symptomatic students.
Support is also being offered to Liberian communities in New Jersey.
“The DOH has distributed information to help educate friends and families returning from West Africa and have attended community meetings with concerned community-based organizations throughout the state,” the Governor’s Office stated in a release.
To read more about Ebola preparation and case detection in New Jersey, click here.
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