(Bloomberg) — Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas, where two health care workers contracted Ebola after treating a patient with the deadly illness, lacked protocols for dealing with the virus and resisted employee calls for stricter isolation and sanitation measures, a nurses union said.
National Nurses United said there was inadequate protective equipment for the nurses who initially cared for Thomas Eric Duncan, the Ebola patient from Liberia who died in Dallas last week. The union said the allegations came from nurses who were reluctant to be identified for fear of retaliation.
The hospital left Duncan for hours in an area with other patients, supplied safety suits whose exposed necklines forced nurses to use medical tape to cover their skin, played down the need for more face masks and handled Duncan's lab specimens without special seals, the group said.
The protective gear used by the health care workers when officials from U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention arrived "did allow exposure of some parts of the skin," said director Thomas Frieden in a call with reporters today.
Some workers were using three or four layers of gear, which becomes harder to remove and the risk of contamination "gets much higher," Frieden said.
"Patient and employee safety is our greatest priority and we take compliance very seriously," Wendell Watson, a hospital spokesman, said in an e-mailed statement. "We will continue to review and respond to any concerns raised by our nurses and all employees."
Sent home
The nurses' assertions raised new questions about the performance of Texas Presbyterian in dealing with the Ebola outbreak. National Nurses said there is no union representation in Dallas hospitals.
"I have no reason to not believe what those nurses are saying at all," Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases said in a CNN interview. "If that's true, that's clearly not acceptable."