Robert Fuller did not hesitate to go to Indonesia to treat survivors of the 2004 tsunami, to Haiti to help after the 2010 earthquake or to the Philippines after a devastating typhoon last year. However, he has given up on going to West Africa to care for Ebola patients.
The doctor could make the six-week commitment sought by his go-to aid organization, International Medical Corps. However, the possibility of a three-week quarantine afterward adds more time than he can take away from his job leading UConn Health Center’s emergency department.
“I’m very sad that I can’t go, at this point,” Fuller said.
Nine weeks or more “gets to be a pretty long time to think about being away from your family and being away from your job,” he said.
As Ebola-related quarantine policies have arisen around the US, some health workers are reassessing whether they can be among the hundreds that officials say are needed to fight the outbreak.
New rules arose so rapidly that nurse Kaci Hickox was sequestered in a medical tent for days because New Jersey announced new regulations the day she flew back from Sierra Leone. Some aid workers wonder whether they will be able to go home for the holidays.
Aid organizations say it is too soon to tell whether quarantine rules are significantly shrinking the number of volunteers, but the measures are complicating an already challenging search for help treating a disease that has killed nearly 5,000 people, including about 310 healthcare workers.
New Jersey nurse Andrew Wegoye volunteered last month to go to West Africa with AmeriCares after seeing earlier outbreaks strike his native Uganda. New Jersey set its quarantine rules shortly before he left. However, he did not question his plans.
“Because being in quarantine for 21 days is nothing compared to people dying here without supportive care to help them see another day,” Wegoye said by telephone this week from Monrovia, Liberia.
Ebola can be transmitted by direct contact with patients’ bodily fluids after symptoms start. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend that anyone who has had such contact undergo monitoring and avoid crowds during the 21-day window for developing Ebola, but several states have gone further, requiring or requesting three weeks of sequestration.
Aid groups say such policies treat humanitarians like criminals, stigmatize people who are not sick and are not grounded in science.
International Medical Corps is weighing whether to send longer-term volunteers to other countries, instead of back home to the US, for breaks, international recruiting director Brandon Berrett said.
Some organizations tell returning health professionals to avoid patient care for three weeks. Samaritan’s Purse even sends them to one of its three safe houses, where they can have visitors and venture outside, but must avoid crowded places.
Each gets a US$1,000 bonus recognizing the hardship, president Franklin Graham said.
“Public perception is a real issue,” he said. “We can’t ignore it.”
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