President of Behavioral-based Improvement Solutions in
Atlanta, Sean Kaufman, on Friday said people who contracted Ebola in West
Africa could get through airport screenings and onto a plane. Kaufman said that
more must be done to identify infected travelers who could lie and take a lot
of ibuprofen to beat the airport authorities.
"People can take ibuprofen to reduce their fever enough to
pass screening, and why wouldn’t they? If it will get them on a plane so they
can come to the United States and get effective treatment after they’re exposed
to Ebola, wouldn’t you do that to save your life?" he said.
Report says on Thursday that the first Ebola patient to be
diagnosed in the United States had lied on a questionnaire at the Monrovia
airport about his exposure to an Ebola patient.
He flew to Brussels and then Dulles airport outside
Washington, DC, before landing in Dallas on 20 September. The traveler, Thomas
Duncan, had no symptoms when he left Liberia, and fever scans there had shown a
normal body temperature of 97.3 degrees Fahrenheit, US health officials said.
He therefore could not have been identified through
examination as carrying the Ebola virus.
His arrival and hospitalisation in Dallas have underscored how much US authorities are relying on their counterparts in West African countries to screen passengers and contain the worst Ebola outbreak on record.
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