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Pete Pan's video: British National Positive for Deadly Ebola Flying to London

@British National , Positive for Deadly Ebola, Flying to London
Plans are being drawn up to fly home a British person who has tested positive for the ebola virus in Sierra Leone. Government sources say the unnamed patient could be flown back to RAF Northolt near Heathrow before being taken to the Royal Free Hospital in north London. The hospital has the UK's only "high-level isolation" unit at their High Secure Infectious Disease department, which has been on standby for weeks due to the spread of ebola. A specially designed tent with controlled ventilation is set up around each of the two beds in the unit. A decision on whether to fly the Briton home will reportedly be taken today, although the Department of Health would not confirm this. Professor Tom Solomon, director of the Institute of Infection and Global Health at the University of Liverpool, said the "strains" on the healthcare system in Sierra Leone may be the reason for moving the patient."We do have facilities in the UK for caring for people with haemorrhagic fevers," he said. "There is a high-level isolation unit at the Royal Free Hospital in London which is very well set up for things like this. "The medical services in Sierra Leone are very strained at the minute so it may well be the case that this person is brought to the UK for treatment." Prof Solomon said the chances of the infection spreading are minimal, adding the patient would be transported "in what is effectively a bubble". It is the first confirmed case of a British person catching the tropical infection, which kills up to 90% The Foreign Office has advised Britons to "carefully assess" whether they really need to travel to Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea, where the current outbreak began in March. Since then the World Health Organisation says there have been 2,615 confirmed cases and 1,427 deaths. Medical charity Medicine Sans Frontieres has warned infections are spreading faster than authorities can handle and it could take six months to bring the outbreak under control. Professor John Watson, Britain's deputy chief medical officer for England, insisted the risk to the public remained "very low". Ebola is contracted through contact with an infected person's bodily fluids and no cure or vaccine is currently available. Symptoms of the virus appear as a sudden onset of fever, headache, sore throat, intense weakness and muscle pain.of those who contract it.

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This video was published on 2014-08-24 16:44:48 GMT by @Peter-Wild on Youtube. Pete Pan has total 1.2K subscribers on Youtube and has a total of 48 video.This video has received 1 Likes which are lower than the average likes that Pete Pan gets . @Peter-Wild receives an average views of 3.1K per video on Youtube.This video has received 0 comments which are lower than the average comments that Pete Pan gets . Overall the views for this video was lower than the average for the profile.

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