Passengers traveling from Mali will now face heightened screenings after a handful of cases of Ebola were reported in the West African country.
Already, travelers arriving in the U.S. after spending time in the three top Ebola hotspots, Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia, are extensively screened, subject to lengthy interviews and have their temperature taken before being allowed entry. Now, passengers from neighboring Mali will be subject to deeper screenings, after two people, weeks apart, were found to have Ebola after their deaths, leaving an unknown number exposed to the deadly virus.
Passengers visiting from all four countries will be subject to three weeks of monitoring after their arrival, the longest incubation time of Ebola.
The new screenings are the latest precaution put in place by the president’s administration to keep Ebola at bay. Despite Republicans’ fiery criticism that the deadly virus couldn’t be contained through extensive screening and monitoring, the U.S.’ Ebola precautions have so far worked.
Just a handful of Ebola cases have been treated here in the U.S; the majority are aid workers brought here for treatment.
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The first case diagnosed on U.S. soil occurred in September, when Thomas Eric Duncan, a Liberian man who came to the U.S. to marry his fiancé, presented with the deadly virus. He infected two nurses before dying himself, and their infection spread fear of the disease spread like wildfire.
PHOTO ESSAY: Ebola continues its deadly march









