Patient with no sign of Ebola being monitored after travelling from West Africa

A person who recently travelled to Guyana from a part of West Africa where the Ebola virus is not currently present is being monitored by the Ebola response team at the Georgetown Public Hospital where she was referred by a private physician after complaining about leg pains.

A press release issued today by the GPHC follows:

On October 24th 2014, GPHC was notified by a private physician of a patient who had recently travelled to a West African nation where Ebola is not present. She went to the Physician for evaluation and treatment of leg pains. During the Physician’s interview, she reported some mild joint pains and was concerned about Chikungunya infection.  She had recently returned from a leisure trip to a region in West Africa, so the Private Physician referred her directly to GPHC. The Ebola response team was immediately summoned and convened and she was placed immediately in isolation for investigation. She reported returning to Guyana, via Suriname, from a West African country where Ebola is NOT currently present.  She has not had contact with anyone with sickness of any kind in the last 21 days. She has not had fever at any point, but had taken non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medications for joint pains the previous day. This medication could mask a fever of any origin.

Out of an abundance of precaution, she was monitored by Senior Infectious Disease Specialists until enough time had passed for the medication to wear off. She remained free of fever and had no other symptoms. As such, she was discharged from isolation with any suspicion of Ebola Viral Disease discounted. She will be followed on a daily basis to ensure that fever or other symptoms do not develop.

As her exposure was very low-risk and she has NO signs or symptoms of infectious disease she will be kept in voluntary isolation. There is no threat to her family or the community. A team has been assigned with monitoring her daily and this work has already commenced even in the first hours following her discharge.