By Dennis Thompson
HealthDay Reporter
SATURDAY, Oct. 25, 2014 (HealthDay News) -- On Friday, the governors of New York and New Jersey announced strict new quarantine measures for anyone returning via Kennedy and Newark Liberty airports who may have had contacts with Ebola patients in Guinea, Liberia or Sierra Leona.
The measures, which exceed current federal guidelines, mean that people who had such contacts would be tested and kept in quarantine for 21 days, the longest known length of incubation of the Ebola virus.
The rules were announced Friday by New York governor Andrew Cuomo and New Jersey governor Chris Christie, the New York Times reported.
The move came a day after Dr. Craig Spencer, a New York City doctor who recently returned from West Africa, tested positive for Ebola. He is currently in stable condition at Bellevue Hospital, feeling well enough to talk on his cellphone and even do some yoga in his hospital room on Friday, the Times reported.
Spencer had been working with the medical aid agency Doctors Without Borders, helping to treat Ebola patients in Guinea, one of three West African countries hit hard by the disease.
On Saturday, New Jersey officials say that a nurse who had been working with Ebola patients in West Africa and returned via Newark Liberty airport had tested negative for the Ebola virus. However, under the new rules she will still be held under quarantine for the next 21 days, the Times said.
Cuomo and Christie defended the new quarantine measures, which exceed those recommended by many infectious disease experts, including the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. ""A voluntary Ebola quarantine is not enough," Cuomo said. "This is too serious a public health situation."
But others worry that such rules might deter health care personnel from joining the fight against Ebola in West Africa, where staff are desperately needed. According to the Times, the United Nation's emergency Ebola mission says that over 19,000 medical staff are needed by Dec. 1 to fight the widening crisis, but numbers of new doctors, nurses and paramedics in the region remain far too low.
According to Times, Spencer, 33, had returned to New York City from Guinea on Oct. 14, and by 11 a.m. on Thursday morning he had developed a 100.3-degree fever. He immediately alerted Doctors Without Borders. Emergency medical workers in full personal protective gear transported him from his Manhattan apartment to an isolation unit at Bellevue Hospital.
Three people he was in contact with in recent days, including two friends and Spencer's fiancee, have been placed in isolation, the Times reported.
On Tuesday, Spencer visited the High Line elevated park in Manhattan and ate at the Meatball Shop in the city's West Village. On Wednesday, he traveled on two subway lines from Manhattan into the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn, visited a bowling alley there and then took a taxi back to Manhattan.
According to the Times, the taxi driver had no direct contact with Spencer and is not considered to be at risk.
Speaking Thursday night at a press conference at Bellevue, Mayor Bill de Blasio stressed that "being on the same subway car or living near a person with Ebola does not in itself put someone at risk."
Out of an abundance of caution, however, the Brooklyn bowling alley has been closed temporarily while health workers visit it, and Spencer's home has been sealed off, the Times said.
According to the Times, Spencer is a fellow of international emergency medicine at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center, and an instructor in clinical medicine at Columbia University.
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