Fifteen days after she was diagnosed with Ebola, Amber Vinson appeared in public for the first time at a press conference marking her discharge.
Officials are no longer able to detect the deadly virus in her blood stream. The 29-year-old nurse had contracted Ebola after treating the late Thomas Eric Duncan, the first Ebola case on U.S. soil.
“I’m so grateful to be well,” Vinson said. “First and foremost, I want to thank God. It has been God’s love that has truly carried my family and me through this difficult time.”
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Vinson thanked her family, Ebola survivors Drs. Kent Brantely and Nancy Writebol — who had donated plasma to aid in her recovery, and the Emory University medical staff for treating her.
“I am so appreciative and grateful,” she said, before requesting privacy as she returns home.
Walking off the stage, Vinson stopped to hug every single one of her doctors and nurses, engaging in precisely the kind of physical connection she has been too contagious to engage in for weeks.
Re-entry into society for survivors after sometimes weeks in isolation is complicated, of course, by the country’s considerable fear and anxiety over the deadly virus. Health officials have cautioned Americans to treat medical professionals who treat Ebola patients like heroes, not pariahs, as their work to combat the virus is what got them sick in the first place.









