CDC issues Ebola checklist: 'Now is the time to
prepare'
The Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, warning hospitals and doctors that “now is the
time to prepare,” has issued a six-page Ebola “checklist” to help healthcare
workers quickly determine if patients are infected.
While the CDC
does not believe that there are new cases of Ebola in the United States, the
assumption in the checklist is that it is only a matter of time before the
virus hits home.
For example,
one part reads: “Encourage healthcare personnel to use a ‘buddy system’ when
caring for patients.” Another recommends a process to report cases to top
officials:
Plan for regular situational
briefs for decision-makers, including:
-- Suspected and confirmed EVD
patients who have been identified and reported to public health authorities.
-- Isolation, quarantine and
exposure reports.
-- Supplies and logistical
challenges.
-- Personnel status, and policy
decisions on contingency plans and staffing.
The checklist
has been distributed to major hospitals and even little ones, including an
urgent center in Leesburg, Va.
“Every hospital
should ensure that it can detect a patient with Ebola, protect healthcare
workers so they can safely care for the patient, and respond in a coordinated
fashion,” warns the CDC.
“While we are
not aware of any domestic Ebola Virus Disease cases (other than two American
citizens who were medically evacuated to the United States), now is the time to
prepare, as it is possible that individuals with EVD in West Africa may travel
to the United States, exhibit signs and symptoms of EVD, and present to facilities,”
it adds.
Paul Bedard, the Washington Examiner's "Washington
Secrets" columnist, can be contacted at pbedard@washingtonexaminer.com.
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