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Ebola Patient Dies in German Hospital Ebola Patient Dies in German Hospital
(about 9 hours later)
BERLIN — A 56-year-old man who had been working with the United Nations in Liberia died overnight at the hospital in Leipzig where he was being treated for Ebola, the hospital said Tuesday in a statement quoted by the German news media. BERLIN — A 56-year-old Sudanese man who had been working with the United Nations in Liberia died overnight at the hospital in Leipzig where he was being treated for Ebola, the hospital and the United Nations said Tuesday.
The brief statement gave no further details. The man was the third patient to arrive in Germany in recent weeks for treatment of Ebola, and the first to die. The man was the third patient to arrive in Germany in recent weeks for treatment of Ebola, and the first to die.
The first patient, a Senegalese man who worked for the World Health Organization, was treated in Hamburg from late August until Oct. 3, when he was released. He has since returned home. The second patient, a Ugandan doctor who was working in West Africa for an Italian aid organization, continues to receive treatment at a hospital in Frankfurt. The hospital, in a statement quoted by the German news media, gave few details on the victim. But the United Nations Volunteers, an organization based in Bonn, Germany, that recruits people to serve in missions worldwide, identified him as Abdel Fadeel Mohammed Basheer, a Sudanese laboratory technician at the United Nations Mission in Liberia.
The St. Georg clinic in Leipzig, where the man who died was treated, announced his arrival last Thursday in a statement. At the time, doctors said his condition was critical, but stable, and there were no further updates on his status. The United Nations Volunteers said that Mr. Basheer had been in charge of disposal of medical waste and that he had four children. He fell ill on Oct. 6.
The hospital gave assurances that the third patient would be safely isolated. “There is no risk of infection for other patients, relatives, visitors or the public,” Dr. Iris Minde, the chief executive of the clinic, said in a statement when the patient was admitted. Dr. Minde said the clinic followed the “strictest hygienic protocols according to latest standards.” The first patient who arrived in Germany for treatment, a Senegalese man who worked for the World Health Organization, was treated in Hamburg from late August until Oct. 3, when he was released. He has since returned home. The second patient, a Ugandan doctor who was working in West Africa for an Italian aid organization, continues to receive treatment at a hospital in Frankfurt.
Dr. Thomas Grünewald, a senior physician at the Clinic for Infectious Diseases and Nephrology at the hospital, said the patient would be tended around the clock by at least one doctor and a nurse “in protection suits.” The St. Georg clinic in Leipzig, where the man who died was treated, announced his arrival last Thursday in a statement. At the time, doctors said his condition was critical but stable, and there were no further updates on his status.
The hospital had given assurances that the patient would be safely isolated. “There is no risk of infection for other patients, relatives, visitors or the public,” Dr. Iris Minde, the chief executive of the clinic, said in a statement when the patient was admitted. Dr. Minde said the clinic followed the “strictest hygienic protocols according to latest standards.”
Dr. Thomas Grünewald, a senior physician at the Clinic for Infectious Diseases and Nephrology at the hospital, had said the patient would be tended around the clock by at least one doctor and a nurse “in protection suits.”
He said then that the staff “was perfectly prepared,” and that it had been training with a system of airlocks that hermetically sealed special negative-pressure rooms used in the isolation ward.He said then that the staff “was perfectly prepared,” and that it had been training with a system of airlocks that hermetically sealed special negative-pressure rooms used in the isolation ward.
Bild, a top-selling daily newspaper, on Monday questioned whether the clinic was able to dispose safely of medical waste. It quoted the hospital as saying that it was set to receive the delivery only on Tuesday of a special machine that disinfects protection suits, gloves and masks before they are burned.Bild, a top-selling daily newspaper, on Monday questioned whether the clinic was able to dispose safely of medical waste. It quoted the hospital as saying that it was set to receive the delivery only on Tuesday of a special machine that disinfects protection suits, gloves and masks before they are burned.
Attempts to reach hospital personnel for comment on both Monday and Tuesday were unsuccessful. By midmorning, the hospital’s website had not been updated with news of the death, but a brief statement was issued to the German news media.Attempts to reach hospital personnel for comment on both Monday and Tuesday were unsuccessful. By midmorning, the hospital’s website had not been updated with news of the death, but a brief statement was issued to the German news media.