Dr. Kent Brantly walked around the room at Emory University
Hospital on Thursday, hugging staff members and shaking hands.
It was like he wanted everyone to know: I'm no longer
infectious. The virus is out of my system. Ebola didn't beat me.
"Today is a miraculous day," Brantly said at a
news conference Thursday. "I am thrilled to be alive, to be well and to be
reunited with my family."
Emory's staff is confident that the American patients'
discharges pose "no public health threat," said Dr. Bruce Ribner,
director of Emory's Infectious Disease Unit. He said the reason the public was
not made aware of Writebol's release immediately was that she requested her
discharge not be publicly announced.
"Nancy is free of the virus, but the lingering effects
of the battle have left her in a significantly weakened condition," her
husband, David Writebol, said in a statement. "Thus, we decided it would
be best to leave the hospital privately to be able to give her the rest and
recuperation she needs at this time."
But Brantly passed along gratitude from the woman with whom
he has shared a harrowing journey.
Both patients were evacuated from Liberia this month, in a
plane specially equipped with an isolation tent, and accompanied by medical
staff outfitted in head-to-foot protective clothing. The plane was able to take
only one patient at a time and made two trips. The patients were taken to an
isolation unit at Emory, where they'd been treated for the last few weeks.
As she walked out of her isolation room Tuesday, Brantly
recalls Writebol saying, "To God be the glory."
"We are tremendously pleased with Dr. Brantly and Mrs.
Writebol's recovery," Ribner said at the news conference. "What we
learned in caring for them will help advance the world's understanding of how
to treat Ebola infections and help, hopefully, to improve survival" in
other parts of the world.
"There may be some recovery time because this is a
fairly devastating disease," but in general, Ebola patients who survive
without organ damage are expected to "make a complete recovery," he
said.
Brantly and Writebol's releases are historic, says CNN chief
medical correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta. They were the first humans with Ebola
to ever arrive in the United States. And they were the first humans to receive
an experimental Ebola drug called ZMapp, which may have saved their lives.
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