1、CRS InsightsTreating Ebola Patients in the United States: Health Care Delivery ImplicationsAmanda K. Sarata, Specialist in Health Policy (asaratacrs.loc.gov, 7-7641)November 4, 2014 (IN10173)On September 30, 2014, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) confirmed the first caseof Ebola
2、diagnosed in the United States. This patient was the first in the United States to be treated forEbola outside of a specialty hospital with a biocontainment unit. Shortly after this diagnosis, CDCDirector Thomas Frieden expressed his confidence in the U.S. health care system, stating that we willsto
3、p Ebola in its tracks. Despite the assurances, two nurses who cared for the patient were diagnosedwith and have since recovered from Ebola. In the wake of these additional cases, Dr. Frieden statedthat the agency has had to reconsider its approach to containing the disease. In addition, the hospital
4、where the patient received his care, Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital, has stated that it may havedone things differently.While the U.S. health care system has the resources to effectively identify and treat Ebola cases, asituation that is novel, emergent, and resource-intensive may test the syste