U.S. to build quarantine facility in Kenya for Ebola-exposed Americans
by Lisa Hornung · UPIMay 27 (UPI) -- The United States and Kenya are in talks to create a quarantine facility in Kenya for Americans exposed to Ebola, unnamed officials told multiple media outlets Wednesday.
The U.S. Public Health Service would staff the planned field hospital and isolate and monitor Americans exposed to or at risk of the ongoing outbreak of Ebola in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Uganda and South Sudan.
The Kenyan government hasn't yet approved the plan, The Star, Kenya, reported.
The plan is to have the facility built with 50 beds within a week, with the potential to expand to 250 beds later, The Washington Post reported.
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The staff at the Public Health Service have begun training at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland to staff the Kenya facility, two people familiar with the response told The Post. But one person said they were concerned that the training was only three days.
The plan could keep U.S. citizens from re-entering the United States, a former official from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention who has worked on the Ebola response, told CBS News.
"It would be unbelievably unethical and irresponsible to maroon Americans, given Kenya doesn't have a proper Level 4 containment facility or much experience" in dealing with Ebola.
Nahid Bhadelia, director of Boston University's Center on Emerging Infectious Diseases who has cared for Ebola patients in multiple outbreaks, told The Post that creating a makeshift quarantine hospital overseas brings risks.
"My biggest concern would be that you cannot re-create the same quality of care or training among healthcare staff at an ad hoc center that you would at any of the well-trained and established hospitals that the U.S. has set up since 2014 to take care of these types of patients," Bhadelia said. "I'm also concerned what this does is effectively discourage Americans and American organizations from working in the area if they know it will be difficult for them to come back in case of an emergency."
Bhadelia added that if quarantined people contract the disease, staff "would need to be able to provide ICU-level care."
More than 220 people have died in the DRC in the latest outbreak of the rare Bundibugyo strain of Ebola. The World Health Organization has declared it a public health emergency of international concern. WHO and partner agencies have reported more than 900 suspected cases in Congo and Uganda as of Tuesday.
The WHO reported Wednesday that the fighting in Congo is also making it difficult for aid workers to respond to the outbreak.