CRISIS Ebola Patient Flees, Tellewoyan Hospital Shut Down

Coulter

Veteran Member
Lofa: Ebola Patient Flees, Tellewoyan Hospital Shut Down

Written by Stephen D. Kollie, stephenkollie13@gmail.com 0776329124 Published: 31 July 2014


Monrovia - The streets of Voinjama City, the provincial capital of Lofa County, on Tuesday witness a scene of panic with residents running helter-skelter when dozens of suspected Ebola patients ran from their holding room in the main hospital’s compound and started loitering around other wards that hosted several patients with different medical problems.


Tokpa Tarnue, a local journalist on the scene told FrontPageAfrica Wednesday that the majority of the suspected patients were in a holding room at the Tellewoyan Memorial Hospital while awaiting their departure for a treatment and isolation center in Foya when they abruptly left their room and moved into other wards that later resulted to all health workers escaping the hospital compound in deep fear.

According to the journalist, the suspected patients managed to leave the hospital premises and ran into various homes and streets, a situation that caused severe panic among citizens and residents of Voinjama who were likewise escaping from the patients fearing not to contract the deadly Ebola virus. He told FrontPageAfrica that for several hours Voinjama was like a ghost town as many residents escaped the city while others locked themselves in their homes.

Said the local journalist: “Everybody left. They had suspected Ebola patients in a holding room that is not well equipped. They are normally kept there before they are taken to Foya.

In the process of doing that, those suspected patients left their wards and stating entering the children's ward and other places while they were vomiting and releasing feces at the same time. Based on that the entire hospital staff all left including the doctors and nurses. Up to now they have not gone back to work.”

According to the journalist, the entire Tellewoyan Hospital facility, including the Outpatient Department (OPD) has been temporarily shut down and has been sprayed while heath workers are demanding police protection before they resume work. He said Barkedu town in Quardu Gboni district is now reporting the highest numbers of Ebola cases in the county as compare to Foya which was topping the number of cases.

The Tellewoyan Memorial Hospital is the largest referral hospital in Lofa County, which caters to several critical medical cases in the county. Some health workers in the county have reportedly refused to return to work fearing the deadly Ebola virus that has already killed 672 persons in Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone.

http://frontpageafricaonline.com/in...a-patient-flees-tellewoyan-hospital-shut-down



One of the comments -

Excerpt from Richard Preston "A classic sign of infection by Ebola … is a certain expression that invariably creeps over the patient’s face as the infection progresses. The face becomes fixed and “expressionless,” “masklike,” “ghostlike” (in the words of doctors who have seen it), with wide, deadened, “sunken” eyes. The patient looks and sometimes behaves like a zombie. This happens because Ebola damages the brain in some way that isn’t known. The classic masklike facial expression appears in all primates infected with Ebola, both monkeys and human beings. They act as if they were already embalmed, even though they are not yet dead. The personality may change: the human patient becomes sullen, hostile, agitated, or develops acute psychosis. Some have been known to escape from the hospital."
 
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paul d

Veteran Member
So after years of joking, it actually is the Zombie Apocalypse.


At least the CDC is ready for that.
 

Countrymouse

Country exile in the city

Excerpt from Richard Preston "A classic sign of infection by Ebola … is a certain expression that invariably creeps over the patient’s face as the infection progresses. The face becomes fixed and “expressionless,” “masklike,” “ghostlike” (in the words of doctors who have seen it), with wide, deadened, “sunken” eyes. The patient looks and sometimes behaves like a zombie. This happens because Ebola damages the brain in some way that isn’t known. The classic masklike facial expression appears in all primates infected with Ebola, both monkeys and human beings. They act as if they were already embalmed, even though they are not yet dead. The personality may change: the human patient becomes sullen, hostile, agitated, or develops acute psychosis. Some have been known to escape from the hospital."

maybe from the extreme dehydration and electrolyte imbalance resulting from the vomiting / diarrhea? Sort of like when you have an extreme "sugar" drop----you can't think, you can't function, everything becomes unreal & 'dream'-like....
 

bw

Fringe Ranger
maybe from the extreme dehydration and electrolyte imbalance resulting from the vomiting / diarrhea? Sort of like when you have an extreme "sugar" drop----you can't think, you can't function, everything becomes unreal & 'dream'-like....

Hot Zone described the expression as being due to degraded connective tissues, coupled with brain damage from the virus.
 
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