sciencemag | Two ScienceInsider reporters called in to the press
conference, but there was so much interest from the media that they did
not get a chance to ask a question. Here, however, are some of the
questions they would like to have asked.
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Q: Dr. Frieden, it sounds like the patient wasn't
tested for Ebola when he first sought medical care, on 26 September,
even though he had just arrived from a country with an Ebola epidemic.
Why not? Did the health care provider who saw him know he had arrived
from Liberia 6 days earlier?
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Q: How many health care workers and how many others came into contact with the patient before he was isolated?
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Q: You said the patient's contacts are now being
monitored. Can you give some details about this? Does it include going
to their homes and taking their temperature daily? Or do you communicate
with them by electronic means, such as phone calls, text messages, and
e-mails?
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Q: Are contacts being told to isolate themselves from their friends and family while they are being monitored?
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Q: Does the government have any legal authority to
force potential contacts to cooperate if they don't want to? Are they
free to travel?
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Q: Has the house where the patient was staying been disinfected, and if so, how exactly?
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Q: What experimental therapies are available now for the patient, should he want to use them? Would you recommend anything specific?
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Q: Does the patient or his family members have an idea about how he got infected?
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Q: Virologist Heinz Feldmann has described
procedures at the airport in Monrovia as a "disaster" and said it was
the most dangerous situation he encountered during his visit to Liberia.
Could the patient have become infected at the airport? Is that
possibility being investigated?
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Q: What is the estimated number of people entering
the United States each week who have recently been in one of the
countries affected by the epidemic?
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Q: The number of Ebola cases is roughly doubling every 3 weeks; CDC's own worst case-scenario says there may be as many as 1.4 million patients by 20 January. Should the United States and other countries prepare to see imported cases on a regular basis?
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Q: The World Health Organization has raised the
possibility that Ebola could become endemic in West Africa. If that
happens, how should the United States deal with people traveling from
these countries in the future?
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Q: One more question, Dr. Frieden. The United States is paying a lot of attention to this single case right now. Do you think that will increase the amount of money and number of people the United States is willing to dedicate to containing the outbreak in West Africa?
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