Quarantined Nurse Leaves New Jersey for Maine

Posted: Published on October 29th, 2014

This post was added by Dr Simmons

Fort Kent, Maine: A nurse who worked in West Africa with Ebola patients and was quarantined at a New Jersey hospital over the weekend was returning home to Maine on Monday as her lawyer criticized the state's policies that had her fighting to be released from an isolation tent.

Health officials said on Saturday that nurse Kaci Hickox tested negative for Ebola. Ms Hickox left a hospital on Monday afternoon, to be taken to Maine, where she lives.

Ms Hickox called her treatment "inhumane" and "completely unacceptable" after she became the first person forced into New Jersey's mandatory quarantine, announced on Friday by Governor Chris Christie for people arriving at Newark Liberty International Airport from three West African countries.

Prominent New York civil rights attorney Norman Siegel, hired by Ms Hickox while she was quarantined, said he has not ruled out legal action.

"We are pleased that the state of New Jersey has decided to release Kaci. They had no justification to confine her," Mr Siegel said. "We are figuring out how to amplify Kaci's voice on this issue. We have to figure out if that is through the courts of law or through the court of public opinion."

Ms Hickox's partner is a University of Maine at Fort Kent nursing student who lives off campus. There was no sign of her there late on Monday, and the home was dark inside.

Maine officials announced that Ms Hickox would be quarantined at home for 21 days after the last possible exposure to the disease under state health protocols. But lawyer Steven Hyman said he expected Ms Hickox to remain in seclusion for the "next day or so" while he works with state health officials.

He said he believes the state should follow federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines that require only monitoring, not quarantine, for health care workers who show no symptoms after treating Ebola patients.

Christie and New York Governor Andrew Cuomo jointly announced the quarantine policy on Friday. But over the weekend, President Barack Obama's administration condemned the mandatory quarantines. Late on Sunday night, Mr Cuomo and Mr Christie stressed separately that the policies allowed for home confinement for medical workers who have had contact with Ebola patients if the workers show no symptoms.

Under New Jersey's protocol, state residents who come into contact with someone with Ebola would be subject to a mandatory, 21-day quarantine at home, even if they had no symptoms. Non-residents who landed in the state would be taken home if feasible or otherwise quarantined in New Jersey.

See the article here:
Quarantined Nurse Leaves New Jersey for Maine

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