US envoy monitors health after West Africa trip

US Ambassador to the UN Samantha Power has her temperature taken at John F Kennedy airport in New York. Power returned to New York after a brief visit to Ebola-stricken West Africa. Picture: Michelle Nichols

US Ambassador to the UN Samantha Power has her temperature taken at John F Kennedy airport in New York. Power returned to New York after a brief visit to Ebola-stricken West Africa. Picture: Michelle Nichols

Published Oct 31, 2014

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New York - US Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power returned to New York on Thursday after a brief visit to Ebola-stricken West Africa and will report her temperature twice daily to the New York state health department for the next 20 days.

Travelling on a US government plane, Power's delegation did not come in contact with any Ebola patients during a visit to Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia, the three countries worst affected by the deadly haemorrhagic fever that has killed about 5 000 people.

Customs and Border Protection officers at New York's John F Kennedy airport took Power's temperature and she then answered several questions about her health and whether she had come in contact with anyone infected with Ebola.

Ebola is spread through contact with bodily fluids of an infected person or the still-contagious body of someone who has died of the virus.

It has a 21-day incubation period. Power left West Africa on Wednesday.

Power was given an information kit that included a thermometer and a card to record her temperature twice daily.

She is required to report her temperature and any symptoms twice daily to the New York State health department.

Several US states, including New York where the United Nations is headquartered, have imposed a mandatory quarantine on healthcare workers returning from the region who had contact with Ebola patients.

Speaking in Brussels earlier on Thursday, Power said some countries had yet to shoulder their share of the Ebola response burden and some restrictions on aid workers returning home from West African nations hit hardest by the disease could deter thousands from helping. - Reuters

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