The fight between a Maine nurse under Ebola-quarantine orders and
authorities intensified on Thursday, as the nurse defied state orders
and went for a bike ride with her boyfriend.
The nurse, Kaci Hickox, has argued that forced 21-day isolation
orders are medically unnecessary and violate her civil rights. She has
hired two New York City-based attorneys to fight Maine’s orders that she stay isolated indoors until 10 November.
“We have been in negotiations all day with the state of Maine, and
tried to resolve this amicably but they will not allow me to leave my
house and have any interaction with the public even though I am
completely healthy and symptom-free,” said Hickox from her front porch
in Fort Kent, at a press conference on Wednesday.
Armed state troopers have been guarding Hickox’s house since Wednesday, standing outside with a huddle of reporters.
Maine state police followed Hickox on her bike ride with boyfriend
Ted Wilbur to monitor her interaction with the public. The Associated
Press reports that Maine state police cannot arrest Hickox, because they
have not obtained a court order to do so.
The nurse hired attorneys after she was questioned and detained at
Newark Liberty Airport in New Jersey on Friday. Airport officials
questioned Hickox for three hours before detecting an elevated
temperature with a heat-scanning gun (which researchers do not consider reliable),
and bringing her to a nearby hospital where she was detained. Hickox
was forced to stay in an isolation tent at Newark University hospital
until Monday, when the governor of New Jersey agreed to her release.
The Ebola virus can have an incubation period of up to 21 days before
infected persons show symptoms, typically first a fever. Ebola is only
contagious when those infected are symptomatic.
To combat the disease, with which four people have been diagnosed in the United States, several states have adopted measures over and above what is called for by federal health authorities.
Maine, for example, says it will isolate any healthcare worker
returning from the Ebola-stricken west African countries of Guinea,
Liberia and Sierra Leone.
The isolation measures have brought widespread condemnation from the
medical establishment and the White House. Aid organizations say the
mandatory isolation periods will make it more difficult to recruit
volunteers, who typically serve in west Africa for only a few weeks.
“We have to keep in mind that if we’re discouraging our healthcare
workers, who are prepared to make these sacrifices, from traveling to
these places in need, then we’re not doing our job in terms of looking
after our own public health and safety,” President Barack Obama said on
Wednesday.
Doctors Without Borders, an international aid organization that
responds to public health crises, commented on Hickox’s isolation saying
it “strongly disagrees with blanket forced quarantine for healthcare
workers returning from Ebola affected countries.” The organization added
that “such a measure is not based upon established medical science”.
“Kaci Hickox has carried out important, life-saving work for [Doctors
Without Borders] in a number of countries in recent years, and we are
proud to have her as a member of our organization. [Doctors Without
Borders] respects Kaci’s right as a private citizen to challenge
excessive restrictions being placed upon her,” the organization said in a
press release.
news source . the gaurdian
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