WASHINGTON (AP) — The government will begin taking the temperatures
of travelers from West Africa arriving at five U.S. airports as part of a
stepped-up response to the Ebola epidemic.
President Barack Obama said the new efforts would provide yet another tier of protection at key U.S. points of entry.
"As long as Ebola continues to spread in Africa, we can't make the risk zero, here," he said.
At
the White House, spokesman Josh Earnest said the additional layer of
screening would begin at New York's JFK International and the
international airports in Newark, Washington Dulles, Chicago and
Atlanta. He said the new steps would include taking temperatures and
would begin Saturday at JFK.
Frieden said temperatures would be taken with a device that would avoid direct contact with the travelers.
Obama
said the new measures also will include more screening questions for
passengers arriving from the countries worst hit by the outbreak —
Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea. He says the procedures will allow
United States officials to isolate, evaluate and monitor travelers and
collect any information about their contacts.
Earnest
said the five airports cover the destinations of 94 percent of the
people who travel to the U.S. from the three heavily hit countries in
West Africa — Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea. He estimated that about
150 people would be checked a day under the new procedures.
A
Liberian man who had come to the U.S. with Ebola died Wednesday.
Forty-two-year-old Thomas Eric Duncan, the first person diagnosed in the
U.S. with the disease, had come to Dallas in late September but did not
display obvious signs of having Ebola when he entered the U.S.
Also
on Wednesday, Homeland Security Deputy Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas
said Customs and Border Protection agents are handing out information
sheets to travelers with details of what symptoms to look for and
directions to call doctors if they become sick within 21 days — the
incubation period for Ebola.
Homeland
Security agents at airports and other ports of entry already had begun
observing travelers coming into the United States for potential signs of
Ebola infection.
The fact sheet to be given
to arriving travelers says: "You were given this card because you
arrived to the United States from a country with Ebola." It tells
passengers to "please watch your health for the next 21 days" and to
"take your temperature every morning and evening, and watch for symptoms
of Ebola," which are listed on the sheet.
Mayorkas
said agents would observe all travelers for "general signs of illness"
at the points of entry. He spoke at an airport security conference.
The
White House, in a fact sheet this week, generally described Customs and
Border Protection practices of being alert to passengers with obvious
illnesses, but did not specify exactly what would be done to find
potentially infected passengers.
The Obama
administration has wrestled in recent weeks with what it can do, since
arriving passengers may not be symptomatic when they arrive.
Mayorkas said the department was aware of those issues and is "taking a layered approach."
Ebola
has killed more than 3,400 people in West Africa and infected at least
twice that many, according to the World Health Organization. The virus
has taken an especially devastating toll on health care workers,
sickening or killing more than 370 of them in the hardest-hit countries
of Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone — places that already were short on
doctors and nurses before Ebola.
President
Barack Obama has said the U.S. will be "working on protocols to do
additional passenger screening both at the source and here in the United
States." Extra screening measures are in effect at airports in the
outbreak zones. Departing passengers are screened for fever and asked if
they have had contact with anyone infected with the disease.

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