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 Linda_K
 
posted on May 29, 2007 03:05:24 PM new


U.S. isolates traveler infected with super-TB


Tue May 29, 2007 4:34PM EDT
By Will Dunham

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States has isolated a man who may have exposed fellow passengers on two transatlantic flights to a strain of tuberculosis that is extremely hard to treat, officials said on Tuesday.

It was the first time the federal government has issued such an isolation order since 1963, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

CDC Director Dr. Julie Gerberding said authorities were trying to notify passengers who traveled aboard Air France flight 385 from Atlanta which arrived in Paris on May 13 and on Czech Air flight 0104 from Prague to Montreal on May 24.

The man, from the U.S. state of Georgia, returned to the United States by car and has been in the hospital "in respiratory isolation" since then, the CDC said. He is suffering from extensive drug-resistant TB, known as XDR TB, that resists virtually all antibiotics.

"This is an unusual TB organism, one that's very, very difficult to treat. And we want to make sure that we have done everything we possibly can to identify people who could be at risk," Gerberding said at a news conference.

Authorities did not identify the man, but said he had voluntarily entered a medical isolation facility in New York City.

Tuberculosis is a bacterial infection that usually attacks the lungs. It kills about 1.6 million people annually, with the highest number in Africa. It is spread through the air when infectious people cough, sneeze, talk or spit.

PASSENGERS AT RISK

Gerberding said the plane passengers most likely to be at risk were those seated close to the patient.

"Consistent with the World Health Organization guidelines, CDC is recommending that those passengers be notified by their health officials in their responsible country or state, and that such persons then have a test for tuberculosis to determine whether or not they were in fact exposed," she said.

Others aboard the planes also should be notified so they can be tested for TB, although their risk was not thought to be high, she said.

Gerberding said the patient had "compelling personal reasons" to travel and did so despite the illness. She stressed that he had not broken any laws.

"In this case, the infected patient traveled on two trans-Atlantic air flights and in doing so, may have exposed passengers and crew to XDR TB," the CDC said in a statement.

It was working with U.S. state and local health departments, ministries of health in other countries, the airline industry, and the World Health Organization.

Dr. Kenneth Castro of the CDC's Division of Tuberculosis Elimination said that from 1993 to 2006 CDC knew of just 49 people in the United States with XDR tuberculosis.

XDR TB requires 18 months to two years of treatment with a mixture of four to six drugs. The treatment can often require surgery as well as the newest drugs and can cost $500,000 per patient.

Multidrug-resistant TB is resistant to at least two first-line antibiotics. XDR TB is resistant to first-line antibiotics, and to an entire class of antibiotics called fluoroquinolones, as well as to at least one of three injectable drugs.

Isolation refers to the separation of persons who have a specific infectious illness from those who are healthy. Quarantine refers to the separation and restriction of movement of persons who, while not yet ill, have been exposed to an infectious agent and therefore may become infectious.


© Reuters 2006. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by caching, framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters and the Reuters sphere logo are registered trademarks and trademarks of the Reuters group of companies around the world.
Reuters journalists are subject to the Reuters Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.
 
 Bear1949
 
posted on May 30, 2007 01:56:35 PM new
CDC: 107 people on TB flights need tests

ATLANTA — A man with a form of tuberculosis so dangerous he is under the first U.S. government-ordered quarantine since 1963 had health officials around the world scrambling Wednesday to find about 80 passengers who sat within five rows of him on two trans-Atlantic flights.

The man told a newspaper he took the first flight from Atlanta to Europe for his wedding, then the second flight home because he feared he might die without treatment in the U.S.


It is foolish and wrong to mourn the men who died. Rather we should thank God that such men lived.George S. Patton
 
 Linda_K
 
posted on May 30, 2007 02:07:25 PM new
Yes, sure was concerned about all those he might infect. NOT!!

Now all those people and their families can worry about getting a strain of TB that is extremely hard to cure, if it can be at all.

Because it was ALL about HIM.


Health officials REPEATEDLY told him NOT to fly. He was aware as of the 10th of May NOT to travel because he would infect others. [per the CDC announcement]

And he did anyway, six to seven times....continuing to expose other passangers.

SEVEN different cities can now have others walking around spreading this disease.

[ edited by Linda_K on May 30, 2007 02:11 PM ]
 
 zoomin
 
posted on May 30, 2007 07:28:41 PM new
My first thought was to wonder if the bride realized what a selfish sob she had just married or if she had already known what a jerk he was and married him anyway.
Then I heard that they both knew about the tb and snuck back into the US together.
Did their families know as well?
Probably.

What a huge amount of people have been inadvertently exposed as these two traveled and partied away on their honeymoon.

My guess would be that his name does not remain anonymous for long.

Someone he met along the way will speak up or the airlines personnel will leak it either to the press or on the web.





 
 Linda_K
 
posted on May 31, 2007 12:52:17 AM new
The first thing I thought about when the wedding was mentioned....was 'what a jerk'....knowing what he KNEW, on top of what he was told....and he was still willing to not only infect strangers...but all their supposed loved ones at their wedding.

Great wedding party that could turn out to be...all of them open to infection from one they came there to honor and celebrate the couples happiness with.


 
 
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