the nurse with her dog.
The move has provoked anger
- both on the streets of Spain and on social media around the world - prompting
a campaign to save the dog's life. Despite campaigns, the dog was eventually
carted off by authorities this morning, but its fate remains unclear. There were unconfirmed reports that officials
were considering putting the pet into quarantine rather than putting it to
sleep, amid growing public unrest over its plight.
The United States got its first
scare from Ebola last week when Thomas Eric Duncan, a man sick with the virus,
travelled from Liberia to Dallas. This man was feared to have been in contact
with up to 100 people after he became contagious, all of whom had to be
individually evaluated by public health professionals for their exposure risk.
Half of these individuals are currently under observation. Nine of them
considered to be at highest risk are being checked twice daily for symptoms. The man had presented himself to a Dallas
hospital only to be misdiagnosed and sent home. It took days before a properly
trained Hazmat crew was sent to the apartment to clean it. Some state that human errors in this single
case highlight why it is urgent that all commercial flights from the impacted
countries to all non-affected countries be banned until the outbreak is contained.
Amidst news that 100-strong
army of British military medics will set up Ebola hospital in Sierra Leone to
treat victims, the dog Excalibur has become the focus of animal lovers around
the world with hundreds flooding social media with adorable pictures of their
pets as part of an international campaign to save the dog. Twitter is awash
with photographs of dogs, cats and birds which have been posted alongside the
hashtag 'SalvemosAExcalibur' – which is Spanish for 'Let's save Excalibur'. A petition for the dog to be saved - on the
change.org website - has so far received over 300,000 signatures. The petition
for Excalibur said: 'It would be much easier to isolate or quarantine the dog
just as they have the victim’s husband. If this woman were to die, the dog
which has accompanied them for so many years would be an important emotional
support for her husband. This is not "just" a dog, for this couple he
is one of the family.'
Ms Romero Ramos, 44, from Galicia in northwest
Spain, who is one of the medical team that treated two repatriated Spanish
priests who died from Ebola, has been in quarantine since it was confirmed she
was carrying the virus. Her husband Javier Limon Romero has also been
quarantined over fears he may too have contracted the disease.
Lab experiments on other
animals suggest their urine, saliva or stool might contain the virus. That
means that in theory, people might catch it through an infected dog licking or
biting them, or from grooming. When over 3,400
people have died from Ebola, with almost 8,000 infected, the best-supported
petition concerning human sufferers of the crisis, calling for drugs and
vaccines to be fast-tracked, has just half that number, calling in to question
whether the West has its priorities right. At the time of posting
this, newspaper reports confirm that Health authorities put down mixed-breed,
Excalibur.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
9th Oct 2014
