An American doctor who contracted Ebola will be released today from Emory University Hospital in Atlanta, ABC News has learned.
Dr. Kent Brantly, 33, contracted the deadly virus while working in a
Liberian Ebola ward with the aid agency Samaritan’s Purse. He was
evacuated to the U.S. earlier this month along with coworker Nancy
Writebol.
Brantly is the first-ever Ebola patient to be treated in the U.S. and
the first human to receive the experimental serum known as ZMapp.
According to reports, Brantly’s condition deteriorated so quickly that doctors in Africa decided to give him the drug in a last-ditch effort to save him.
Brantly’s condition started to improve dramatically within an hour after
getting the serum, according to Samaritan’s Purse, but it’s unclear if
the improvement was directly related to the medication. After his health
stabilized, Brantly was evacuated on a specially outfitted plane to
Atlanta in early August to the hospital isolation ward.
Writebol, 59, also survived after getting the serum and is still recovering at Emory University Hospital.
The virus has killed at least 1,229 and sickened 1,011 more, according
to numbers released Tuesday by the World Health Organization. Guinea,
Sierra Leone and Liberia have the most cases.
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