Spanish nurse who survived Ebola leaves hospital

Teresa Romero (44) offers to give blood to help find vaccine or cure other people

Spanish nursing assistant Teresa Romero at a news conference at the Carlos III hospital in Madrid after being discharged yesterday. Photograph: Andrea Comas
Spanish nursing assistant Teresa Romero at a news conference at the Carlos III hospital in Madrid after being discharged yesterday. Photograph: Andrea Comas

The Spanish nurse who contracted Ebola in Madrid, a case that caused alarm and political recriminations, today said she hoped her infection could be of use and offered to give blood to treat potential sufferers as she left hospital.

Teresa Romero (44) overcame the deadly virus after becoming the first known person to catch Ebola outside West Africa in the current outbreak, which has so far killed nearly 5,000 people.

The contagion, after Ms Romero cared for two priests repatriated from west Africa and who later died in Madrid, caused a backlash against the Spanish government, with health workers claiming they had received inadequate training and equipment to deal with Ebola.

“I don’t know what went wrong, I don’t even know if anything went wrong,” an emotional Ms Romero told a news conference, referring to the source of the contagion, which is still being investigated.

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“I only know that I am not reproachful or resentful, but if my infection can be of some use, so that the disease can be studied better or to help find a vaccine or to cure other people, here I am,” she said.

Ms Romero was given antibodies from a missionary nun who had caught Ebola in Liberia and who had also survived, as well as an experimental drug called favipiravir, doctors said. They added it was not clear exactly which part of the treatment had been key to her recovery.

All of the people who had come into close contact with Ms Romero before she was diagnosed, who were being monitored for signs of the disease in hospital, have now been declared free of Ebola. These included Ms Romero’s husband.

The couple’s dog, Excalibur, was put down last month by Madrid authorities on fears it might pose an infection risk, prompting a public outcry.

The Carlos III Hospital said medical staff who attended Ms Romero and room cleaners would now be monitored remotely for Ebola symptoms, by checking their temperature regularly until the end of the month. A fever is one of the symptoms of the disease, which can also cause bleeding, vomiting and diarrhea.

It is spread through direct contact with bodily fluids of an infected person.

Reuters