Scottish govt confirms Glasgow Ebola case

Scotland says the risk to anyone exposed to a healthcare worker diagnosed with Ebola is low because she is in the early stages of the disease.

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The Royal Free Hospital in London, which is equipped to treat patients with the Ebola virus, will reportedly treat a healthworker who returned to Glasgow with the virus (EPA/SEAN DEMPSEY)

A healthcare worker recently returned from Sierra Leone has been diagnosed with Ebola by doctors in Scotland's largest city.

Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon confirmed on Monday that the patient was a female health worker who had been working on the "front line" with Ebola patients, and was currently in a stable condition in hospital.

The patient returned to Scotland late on Sunday via Casablanca and London Heathrow, arriving at Glasgow Airport around 11.30pm local time, according to a Scottish government press release.

She was admitted to Gartnavel Hospital campus on Monday after feeling unwell and placed in isolation at 7.50am.

"All possible contacts with the patient are now being investigated and anyone deemed to be at risk will be contacted and closely monitored," said the government.

"However, having been diagnosed in the very early stages of the illness, the risk to others is considered extremely low."

Alastair McConchie from the Scottish health service explained that the patient had been transferred using a specialist ambulance service and was "not showing any great clinical concern".

The patient was being treated in the hospital's Brownlee Unit for Infectious Diseases, but a transfer was being arranged to move her to the high-level isolation unit in London's Royal Free hospital "as soon as possible", according to protocol laid down by the government in London.

British Prime Minister David Cameron later said that "all measures would be taken to protect public health".

The Scottish government is currently contacting the 71 other people on board the British Airways flight from London to Glasgow, but stressed there was "negligible risk" as the patient "displayed no symptoms" of the type that could cause transmission.

"Our first thoughts at this time must be with the patient diagnosed with Ebola and their friends and family. I wish them a speedy recovery," said Sturgeon at a press conference.

"Scotland has been preparing for this possibility from the beginning of the outbreak in west Africa and I am confident that we are well prepared."


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Source: AAP



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