Ebola survivor Amber Vinson spoke out against the critics who called her careless and reckless after she was diagnosed with the deadly virus just a day after flying on a commercial flight.
“I’m an [Intensive Care Unit] nurse; I embrace protocol and guidelines and structure, because in my day-to-day nursing, it is a matter of life and death, and I respect that fact,” Vinson told TODAY on Thursday. “I would never go outside of guidelines or boundaries or something directly from the CDC [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] telling me I can’t go [or] I can’t fly. I wouldn’t do it.”
Vinson said on TODAY that she’d worked with the CDC and hospital officials every step of the way and they’d approved all her travel plans in advance. Her side of the story sheds light on just how unprepared the CDC was for both the highly contagious disease and the huge public anxiety.
It comes just as Republicans vow on the heels of their big midterm victory to reform disease control efforts, saying the “antiquated government bureaucracy” is “ill-equipped to serve a citizenry facing 21st-century challenges.”
Photo essay: Ebola continues its deadly march
“I was never told that I couldn’t travel,” she said of her trip to Ohio to visit her family and plan her wedding. “I talked to my ICU management team. I actually called in [that] Monday to verify that I was permitted to travel, and then again I was at work again on Tuesday or Wednesday, and I talked to management in person and they said the CDC said it was OK to go.”
While in Cleveland, Vinson said she learned that a fellow nurse had been diagnosed with Ebola.
“When I heard about my colleague Nina [Pham] coming down with that virus I was floored. I was afraid for myself and my family because I did everything that I was instructed to do, every time, and I felt like if Nina can get it any one of us can,” she told TODAY’s Matt Lauer.
“Because I was so afraid I did ask them – is there anything you guys can do to send for me? Do I need to leave earlier?” Vinson recalled. She eventually travelled back to Dallas earlier than planned as a precaution; once she was diagnosed; health officials said she shouldn’t have flown and people across the country slammed her for putting others at risk. Her family later released a statement explaining that the CDC had signed off on all the travel plans she was being personally blamed for.









