Duncan probably left Africa for the medical care offered by America.
When he got to the hospital he was vomiting according to CNN.
The article from CNN makes it clear the hospital knew he was from Monrovia Liberia and he presented with symptoms of Ebola... (the hospital seems to have downplayed the vomiting and called it abdominal pain)
Is it possible the hospital did not take him in because of some interaction with Obamacare and Medicaid cuts and Texas?
Its seems to me that if a doctor saw him... he would have thought Ebola? Doctors have to be fairly smart.
http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Peace/...omiting-When-Initially-Released-from-Hospital
CNN notes, however, that his symptoms were not only clearly indicative of a grave problem, but that they were precisely the sort of symptoms that make an Ebola patient contagious. Duncan, according to a friend, arrived at the hospital suffering from a fever and vomiting, but the hospital designated symptom instead as "abdominal pain":
His friend said that Duncan had a fever and vomiting during this first visit to the Dallas hospital. The hospital, in a statement Wednesday, said he had a "low grade fever and abdominal pain." [...]
"His condition did not warrant admission," the hospital said. "He also was not exhibiting symptoms specific to Ebola."
Ebola is exclusively contagious, to the best knowledge of medical experts, to those exposed to the bodily fluids of an Ebola patient, whether sweat, blood, or vomit. The difference between vomiting and "abdominal pain" in the difference between exposing up to 100 people in the Texas area to the Ebola virus.
When he got to the hospital he was vomiting according to CNN.
The article from CNN makes it clear the hospital knew he was from Monrovia Liberia and he presented with symptoms of Ebola... (the hospital seems to have downplayed the vomiting and called it abdominal pain)
Is it possible the hospital did not take him in because of some interaction with Obamacare and Medicaid cuts and Texas?
Its seems to me that if a doctor saw him... he would have thought Ebola? Doctors have to be fairly smart.
http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Peace/...omiting-When-Initially-Released-from-Hospital
CNN notes, however, that his symptoms were not only clearly indicative of a grave problem, but that they were precisely the sort of symptoms that make an Ebola patient contagious. Duncan, according to a friend, arrived at the hospital suffering from a fever and vomiting, but the hospital designated symptom instead as "abdominal pain":
His friend said that Duncan had a fever and vomiting during this first visit to the Dallas hospital. The hospital, in a statement Wednesday, said he had a "low grade fever and abdominal pain." [...]
"His condition did not warrant admission," the hospital said. "He also was not exhibiting symptoms specific to Ebola."
Ebola is exclusively contagious, to the best knowledge of medical experts, to those exposed to the bodily fluids of an Ebola patient, whether sweat, blood, or vomit. The difference between vomiting and "abdominal pain" in the difference between exposing up to 100 people in the Texas area to the Ebola virus.