The last American patient infected with Ebola, Dr. Craig Spencer, was released from Bellevue Hospital Tuesday after being cleared of the deadly virus in New York City.
“Today I am healthy and no longer infectious,” Spencer said at press conference at the hospital. He thanked his doctors, the aid group Doctors Without Borders and his employer for their support and understanding as he volunteered in Guinea to combat Ebola.
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Now, Spencer said, it’s time to focus on West Africa, the epicenter of the outbreak. “My infection represents but a fraction of the more than 13,000 cases reported in Africa, the center of the outbreak where families are torn apart and communities destroyed,” Spencer said. “Please join me in turning our attention back to West Africa.”
Spencer said that during his treatment in New York, his former patients in Guinea — Ebola survivors — reached out. “Many of these patients called from Guinea to ask if there was any way they could contribute to my care,” he said, and reminded the media of the doctors who have been fighting Ebola since the start of the outbreak earlier this year. “They are the true heroes that we are not talking about,” he said.
Spencer was diagnosed with Ebola in October, after returning from volunteer work in Guinea with Doctors Without Borders. Seventy percent of patients treated for Ebola in Africa die. Eight out of nine patients treated in the U.S. have survived.
New York Mayor Bill de Blasio called Spencer a “hero” and an “inspiration.” “It’s a good feeling to hug a hero,” he said after embracing Spencer in what de Blasio called “the official mayoral hug.”
Officials reiterated that Spencer followed protective protocols completely and that those protocols worked, a nod to the criticism he received upon his diagnoses, because he had spent the previous day coming down with a fever—typically the first symptom of Ebola—and taking public transportation and going bowling. His fiancé, Morgan Dixon, will remain under a voluntary quarantine for an additional three days. Two friends are being directly monitored by officials; the 100 individuals who were involved in his care are actively monitoring themselves for symptoms.
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Spencer’s only risk factor? Sex. Ebola survivors can transmit the disease through semen for up to 90 days.
Still, officials reiterated that today was a “day of celebration.”
“Today is proof that proper preparedness and erring on the side of caution can save lives. On behalf of all New Yorkers, I am greatly relieved to hear of Dr. Spencer’s recovery and thank him for his important and heroic work on the front lines of this devastating epidemic in West Africa,” Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in a statement.
Meanwhile in Maine, nurse Kaci Hickox, who recently treated Ebola patients in Sierra Leone, will see her high-profile monitoring and restrictions lifted in Fort Kent.
Hickox’s ordeal made headlines: she was first quarantined in New Jersey, on her way home from Africa, where she’d been treating Ebola patients through Doctors Without Borders. She was healthy—and hasn’t yet developed Ebola and has just hours left on her quarantine in which she could possibly do so—and threatened to sue New Jersey for forcibly quarantining her in a tent in a parking lot outside a Newark hospital.









