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UPDATED WITH MORE DETAILS
WASHINGTON POST Oct. 20, 2014
During a media briefing late Monday, CDC Director Thomas Frieden said the updated guidelines give a greater margin of safety to health-care workers. They are modeled closely on those used by Doctors Without Borders, the aid group that has worked most extensively in West Africa... The guidance also reflects the consensus of specialists at Emory University Hospital, Nebraska Medical Center and the National Institutes of Health, which are currently treating Ebola patients.
Previous guidelines did not make clear that all skin must be protected. They also reflected the experience of care in Africa, Frieden said. But health-care workers in the United States face greater risk in caring for Ebola patients because hospitals here use more high-risk procedures that can expose workers to more of a patient’s bodily fluids.
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EARLIER STORY: CDC RELEASED NEW GUIDELINES
ASSOCIATED PRESS Oct. 20, 2014
ATLANTA (AP) — Health officials have released new guidelines for how health workers should gear up to treat Ebola patients.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released the long-anticipated updates on Monday evening. Health workers have been pushing for new standards since two Dallas hospital workers were diagnosed with the disease this month after treating an Ebola patient.
The guidelines call for face shields, hoods, boot covers and other garb that leave no part of the body exposed. They also call for a trained monitor to supervise the donning and doffing of protective wear. And they call for repeated training and practice.
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http://www.usnews.com/news/us/articles/2014/10/20/cdc-releases-revised-ebola-gear-guidelines
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