Quarantined Vietnamese
man unlikely to have Ebola: health official
Dr. Nguyen Hoang
A Vietnamese guest worker who has
just returned from
Two blood test results showed that
the worker tested positive for malaria and negative for the Ebola virus. But
whether or not he is completely free from Ebola has to await the final test
whose result is expected within Sunday.
Chu Van Chung, 26, was admitted to
the Hoan My Hospital at 10:30 am Saturday after showing symptoms of headache
and high fever, doctors said.
Chung, a native to the
Blood samples have been collected
for analysis, doctors said.
Ngo Thi Kim Yen, deputy director of
the
"That means the patient is 99
percent free from Ebola," Yen said. “However, We still await the
final test before being able to conclude if he is 100 percent Ebola-free,”
she said.
Ngo Thi Kim
Yen, deputy director of the
Health
authorities are expecting to have the final result within Sunday.
Yen said doctors have still isolated
Chung and treated him with the malaria protocol. But they have kept a close
watch on his possible Ebola symptoms, she said.
Chung has been recovering, doctors
said,
“We cannot rule out that Chung has
both Ebola and malaria so health staff must not be complacent on this case,”
Pham Hung Chien, director of the
Tran Dac Phu, director of the
Preventive Health Department at the Ministry of Health, confirmed Saturday
that many Vietnamese guests workers have contracted malaria, some fatal,
after returning home from Africa.
Chung’s was the second suspected
Ebola case in
“We have also asked the city
preventive health center to trace those who have had contact with this
patient, including doctors who have treated him, and who sat close to him
from all the flights back to Vietnam and the one from HCMC to Da Nang,” Yen
was quoted by the online edition of Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper as saying.
Several medical institutions in
Tests for the virus can now be
conducted at laboratories of the National Institute of Hygiene and
Epidemiology and the
The Ebola epidemic has killed 4,951
people out of 13,567 infected in eight countries, Reuters reported Friday,
citing the World Health Organization, which slightly revised downwards its
figures for cases mainly due to "suspected cases in
Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone
account for the bulk of infections of the deadly hemorrhagic fever, but there
have been sporadic cases in Nigeria and Senegal, both now declared
Ebola-free, as well as Spain, the US and Mali, according to Reuters.
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Chủ Nhật, 2 tháng 11, 2014
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