Tuesday, November 18, 2014

UNMC's third Ebola patient, Dr. Martin Salia, dies in Omaha

Dr. Martin Salia of Sierra Leone succumbed to the Ebola virus on Monday morning 
A West African surgeon, who contracted the deadly Ebola virus in his native Sierra Leone and was flown to Omaha for treatment, received aggressive treatment at University of Nebraska Medical Center (UNMC) over the weekend but died Monday morning.

The medical director of UNMC's Biocontainment Unit did not have good news
to report on Monday when Dr. Martin Salia succumbed to Ebola virus
Dr. Martin Salia's death is a reminder of just how deadly the Ebola virus is and how important it is to receive treatment as soon as possible, said Dr. Jeff Gold, chancellor of the UNMC in Omaha.

"In the very advanced stages, even the modern techniques we have at our disposal are not enough to help these patients once they reach a critical threshold," Gold said at a news conference announcing the medical center’s first fatality from Ebola.

Salia, 44, was diagnosed with the virus Nov. 6, 2014. By the time he was flown to Omaha for treatment on Saturday, he was in already in an advanced stages of shock in critical condition with no kidney function and in severe respiratory distress.


He was placed on dialysis and intubated on a ventilator, and was given several supportive medications to support his failing organ systems, the hospital said in a statement. 

Thursday, October 23, 2014

The second patient treated for Ebola at the UNMC in Omaha has been released after testing negative for the virus

NBC News videographer Ashoka Mukpo on assignment
The second patient treated for an Ebola at the University of Nebraska Medical Center's Biocontainment Unit in Omaha has been released after testing negative for the virus in two consecutive blood tests over 24 hours.

NBC News cameraman and Ebola survivor Ashoka Mukpo ready to leave
UNMC to go home after a two-week ordeal recovering from the Ebola virus
Ashoka Mukpo was working as a free-lance videographer for NBC News in Liberia when he contracted the deadly Ebola virus earlier this month. After his diagnosis, Mukpo was transported via jet to UNMC's Biocontainment Unit for quarantine and treatment. 

He was released Wednesday afternoon after about two weeks of treatment at the hospital’s Level-4 Biocontainment Unit.

Mukpo bounced back quicker and was in the hospital five fewer days than Dr. Richard Sacra, the first U.S. Ebola patient to be treated at UNMC.

Mukpo received the same basic treatment as Sacra, but was able to take an experimental drug against Ebola in pill form, where as Sacra needed an IV. There still is no cure to the deadly Ebola virus, which can have a mortality rate of up to 90 percent in those infected who are left untreated.

At a news conference, Dr. Phil Smith, medical director of UNMC's Biocontainment Unit, who treated both men’s treatment, said with each case treated at UNMC, the medical community gains valuable insight and information about how to deal with the deadly Ebola virus.

Friday, September 26, 2014

Dr. Rick Sacra back home after leaving Nebraska Medical Center

Dr. Angela Hewitt, Dr. Rick Sacra, and Dr. Phil Smith at the UNMC Biocontainment Unit
The first patient who has been treated at the University of Nebraska Medical Center (UNMC) for an Ebola viral infection, Dr. Rick Sacra, has been let out his isolation room in the Biocontainment Unit after three weeks, and has headed home. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has confirmed that two consecutive separate blood samples taken from Dr. Sacra 24 hours apart show the virus is no longer in his bloodstream.

Dr. Rick Sacra out of trouble and ready to go home after contracting the deadly
Ebola Virus in West Africa
“It was very gratifying for the entire team that treated Dr. Sacra to see him walk out the doors healthy again,” said Dr. Phil W. Smith, medical director of the Biocontainment Unit and professor of infectious disease and epidemiology at UNMC. “When he arrived three weeks ago, he was extremely ill with a virus the world doesn’t have a lot of experience treating. To know that we were able to play a role in helping his body fight off the virus so he could be reunited with his family and continue doing the work he’s so passionate about makes the years we’ve spent training and preparing for something like this more than worth it.”

"I am so grateful,” said Dr. Sacra. “Just so incredibly grateful to have gotten through this illness! Many were praying for me, even people I did not know personally. During the time I was here, there was a growing confidence that God was answering those prayers, and that I was steadily improving. Thanks to God and to the team here at The Nebraska Medical Center!"


“It was very gratifying for the entire team that treated Dr. Sacra to see him walk out the doors healthy again,” said Phil Smith, M.D., medical director of the Biocontainment Unit at The Nebraska Medical Center.