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Health emergency is making Ga. famous
Political Insight
Buddy-Carter

Last week, the second of two Americans infected with the Ebola virus arrived at Emory University Hospital in Atlanta.
The two Americans, Dr. Kent Brantly and Nancy Writebol, are medical missionaries who were infected with the virus while working at an Ebola treatment center in Liberia in western Africa. They are the first people infected with Ebola to be treated at a U.S. institution.
First detected in 1976 in the Democratic Republic of Congo in central Africa, Ebola is a severe viral hemorrhagic fever that often is fatal. Although there have been sporadic outbreaks since its detection, the current outbreak in western Africa is the biggest and most-complex Ebola outbreak ever documented. The World Health Organization (WHO) has declared the outbreak an international health emergency.  
Similar to many other illnesses, Ebola has an abrupt onset of symptoms such as fever, chills, sore throat, muscle weakness and body aches. Gastrointestinal symptoms, such as vomiting and diarrhea, are common, and hemorrhaging, including serious internal and external bleeding, occurs in almost half the cases.
Similar to HIV or hepatitis C, Ebola can be transmitted only through direct contact with bodily fluids or blood. While there is no vaccine or cure at this time, patients are infectious only when they are sick. Experts say that the most contagious patients are those who are sick and unlikely to be moving around much.
Because of poor health-care facilities and practices in Africa, the current outbreak kills between 60 to 80 percent of the people infected. As of last week in West Africa, there had been more than 1,700 confirmed and suspected Ebola cases and nearly 1,000 suspected-case deaths.
The suspicion of western medicine that exists in Africa, as well as the burial rites where families handle the still-contagious corpses of their loved ones, facilitates the spread of the disease, increasing mortality and incidence.  
In view of the high mortality rate, some have questioned the wisdom of bringing Ebola-infected patients back to the United States for treatment, especially to such a densely populated area as Atlanta.
While we always must be careful to not put the general population at risk with a communicable disease, in this particular situation we must keep in mind a number of things before jumping to conclusions.
The chance of a mass outbreak of this particular virus in the United States from a medical-isolation unit is exceedingly low.   
Because Ebola can be transmitted only through bodily fluids, the super-secure isolation unit at Emory University Hospital makes it one of the safest places in the world to treat someone with the disease.
But perhaps the most important point to be made here is the responsibility of our country to make certain that American medical workers risking their lives overseas are provided with the best treatment available without exposing the American people to unnecessary risks.
The real key here is education. Like the AIDS fears of the 1980s and 1990s, the public must be educated as to the risks involved and precautions that must be taken.
While this experience should help propel Emory University Hospital in Atlanta to be recognized as a top-tier academic medical center in America, the reputation of health care in Georgia also will be enhanced. Along with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Task Force for Global Health and the American Cancer Society, Georgia rapidly is becoming known as the home of world-class health facilities.
As a Georgian, I am proud of Emory University Hospital and the other world-class health facilities we have in our state. As an American, I am proud that we don’t abandon our medical missionaries and that we make certain they get the best treatment available.

Carter, who is running for Congress, can be reached at on Facebook at facebook.com/buddycarterga.

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