One of the nurses who contracted Ebola while caring for an Ebola patient will file a lawsuit on Monday against the hospital’s parent company, NBC News confirmed Sunday.
“I wanted to believe that they would have my back and take care of me, but they just haven’t risen to the occasion,” 26-year-old Nina Pham told The Dallas Morning News in an exclusive interview. Instead, she will argue in her lawsuit, “corporate neglect” put her at risk and the hospital used her as a “PR pawn.”
Two nurses—Pham and Amber Vinson—both contracted Ebola from caring for Thomas Eric Duncan, the first person to be diagnosed with Ebola on American soil; after several rounds of experimental treatments and weeks of care, they both survived.
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But Pham’s lawsuit paints the picture of an extremely negligent and irresponsible hospital that did not initially have the protective gear or train its nurses to properly avoid contracting the disease. The nurses were forced to devise their own systems for protective gear and disposing of the toxic waste, she said, and the decisions were made “on the fly.” They also had to do their own janitorial work, she said.
The information she and other nurses were given on Ebola was printed off the Internet, she said.
“The only thing I knew about Ebola, I learned in nursing school [six years earlier]” she added.
Pham alleges that the hospital used her as a PR pawn, releasing a video of her in the hospital without her consent and didn’t adequately protect her privacy; amid ‘end-of-life decision’ discussions, she says PR people tried to get her to speak positively about the hospital for a press release.









