AKRON, Ohio — Amber Vinson learned that her friend Nina Pham was infected with Ebola early Sunday morning and started noticing that she, too, wasn’t feeling well, a federal official said. Three days later, Vinson was diagnosed with Ebola after flying from Cleveland to Dallas. The Dallas-based nurse and her family isolated themselves soon thereafter — but they also grabbed a lifeline from some of the people they trusted most: their church pastors.
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Reverend Marvin McMickle has been on the phone every day with Vinson’s stepfather, Kelvin Berry, since her diagnosis. McMickle said Berry sounded “justifiably concerned” about his stepdaughter over the phone but was generally holding steady.
“I think he has such calm because he believes that God is with him and with Debra and with Amber. When you have that resource, you don’t spend quite as much time in anguish. You release your concerns,” said McMickle, the former pastor of Antioch Baptist Church in Cleveland, where he said Berry first met Vinson’s mother.
During her three-day visit to Ohio, Vinson stayed at the Berrys’ home in suburban Tallmadge, which is now cordoned off by yellow police tape and monitored by law enforcement around the clock. Kelvin Berry has been staying there alone since Vinson’s mother flew to Dallas to be with their daughter. But while her stepfather has taken such precautions, he doesn’t expect that he will come down with Ebola, the pastor said.
“He’s fairly certain his contact with Amber was not of a nature that would have infected him or his wife Debra,” McMickle said.
Meanwhile, both Vinson and her mother have been speaking with Reverend Lorenzo Glenn, asking him to pray for them, according to the New York Daily News. Outside Glenn’s church in Akron, Macedonia Baptist Church, the letterboard read, “Pray about everything / Leave outcomes up to me / God.”
The county health department has not recommended for any schools or churches to close or events to be cancelled because of potential infection. Two school districts in Cleveland closed on Thursday as a precautionary measure, however, and some parents in others have kept their children home.
Vinson’s diagnosis, however, has prompted both federal and state officials to revise their guidelines and take additional steps to contain the disease. In the U.S., the disease has been only been transmitted to two health-care workers, Pham and Vinson, who both extensively treated Thomas Eric Duncan, the Liberian man who died from the disease earlier this month.
On Friday, Texas officials made efforts to contain the movement of the other health-care workers who cared for Duncan. The workers are now being asked to sign agreements not to fly, take public transportation, “or go to public areas where people congregate.” State and federal health officials had not previously deemed them to be at risk.
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Vinson asked Texas health officials on Monday whether she could fly to Dallas after discovering she had an elevated temperature, her uncle told ABC News. State officials then relayed the information to the CDC, which cleared her for air travel. “At the time, we didn’t consider health care workers exposed because of their use of personal protective equipment. Those health care workers at the time, we now know, should not have traveled. As of now, they can’t travel,” said Dr. Chris Braden of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, who is working with Ohio officials on their Ebola response.









