The first reported case of Ebola in the United States is spooking ******* investors and raising the prospect that some frightened travellers might stay home despite repeated reassurances from public-health experts.
Details of the man’s 28-hour trip from western Africa emerged Wednesday. He flew on two airlines, took three flights, and had lengthy airport layovers before reaching Texas on Sept. 20.
Still, federal officials say other passengers on the flights are at no risk of infection because the man had no symptoms at the time of his trip.
Thomas Eric Duncan left Monrovia, Liberia, on Sept. 19 aboard a Brussels Airlines *** to the Belgian capital, according to a Belgian official. After layover of nearly seven hours, he boarded United Airlines Flight 951 to Dulles International Airport near Washington, D.C. After another layover of nearly three hours, he then flew Flight 822 from Dulles to Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport, the ******* confirmed.
According to the Centers for ******* Control and Prevention, Duncan sought medical care Sept. 25 in Dallas after falling ill the day before.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious ******* at the National Institutes of Health, told The Associated Press that even though Duncan took several flights to reach the U.S., his lack of symptoms at the time made it “extraordinarily unlikely” that he infected anyone else on the planes.
Still, the ******** spooked ******* investors. Shares of United and other leading U.S. ******* companies dropped 2.8 per cent or more. Shares of European carriers fell by similar margins.
“The fear is if this gets worse, it would affect people’s travel behaviour,” said Joseph DeNardi, an analyst with Stifel, Nicolaus & Co. Health officials “sound confident that they’ve got it under control. Hopefully they’re right.”
The *** typically notifies an ******* when it learns that an infectious person travelled on that carrier. The ******* then turns over the flight manifest to the ***, and health officials notify other passengers while the ******* deals with crew members.
In this case, the *** told United but not the public what flights the man took. In an interview Wednesday with the AP, Dr. Thomas Frieden, director of the ***, suggested that doing so would divert public-health resources away from controlling an outbreak of the *****. He said the *** was focused on finding and tracking anyone who came in contact with Duncan after he began showing symptoms.
Public health officials have assured fliers that airports in Africa, Europe and the U.S. are taking all necessary precautions to prevent the spread of the *****, including screening passengers for *****.
An outbreak of **** – ************************ syndrome – crippled air travel in Asia in 2003. Michael Derchin, an analyst with CRT Capital Group, said it is too early to draw a comparison between one Ebola patient and the 2003 **** outbreak. He noted that **** is an airborne ******* that health officials say is transmitted more easily than Ebola.