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     NEW YORK     (AP) -- An American doctor infected with the Ebola 
virus is the first being flown to the U.S. for treatment and expected to
 arrive Saturday in Atlanta, a missionary group said.
Two
 seriously ill American aid workers will be treated at Atlanta's Emory 
University Hospital. Samaritan's Purse missionary group spokesman Todd 
Shearer tells The Associated Press that a plane carrying Dr. Kent 
Brantly has left West Africa. Brantly works for the group that is paying
 for the trip.
The private jet outfitted with a
 special, portable tent designed for transporting patients with highly 
infectious diseases was due to arrive at Dobbins Air Force Base in 
Marietta, Georgia, just outside Atlanta.
From 
there, the doctor will be whisked into one of the most sophisticated 
hospital isolation units in the country at the hospital about 15 miles 
away. The second patient will follow a few days later, the hospital has 
said.
Outside Emory, a gaggle of about 20 
members of the media had gathered to chronicle the arrival. There was no
 noticeable police presence and all roads were open. It will be the 
first time anyone infected with the disease is brought into the country.
 U.S. officials are confident the patients can be treated without 
putting the public in any danger.
The 
specialized unit at Emory University Hospital was opened a dozen years 
ago to care for federal health workers exposed to some of the world's 
most dangerous germs. Health experts say a specialized isolation unit, 
though, is not needed for treating an Ebola patient. The virus does not 
spread through the air, so standard, rigorous infection control measures
 should work at any hospital.
Now it's being 
pressed into service for the two seriously ill Americans who worked at a
 hospital in Liberia, one of the three West Africa countries hit by the 
largest Ebola outbreak in history.
The Emory 
hospital unit is located just down a hill from the Centers for Disease 
Control and Prevention. It is one of about four such units around the 
country for testing and treating people infected with dangerous, 
infectious germs.
The unit has its own 
laboratory equipment so samples don't have to be sent to the main 
hospital lab. Located on the ground floor, it's carefully separated from
 other patient areas, said Dr. Eileen Farnon, a Temple University doctor
 who formerly worked at the CDC and led teams investigating past Ebola 
outbreaks in Africa.
The two Americans - 
Brantly and Nancy Writebol - worked for U.S. aid groups Samaritan's 
Purse and SIM at a Liberian hospital that treated Ebola patients. Late 
last week, the North Carolina-based Samaritan's Purse said Brantly, 33, 
had been diagnosed with Ebola. Then, Writebol's infection was disclosed.
The
 government is working to ensure that any Ebola-related evacuations "are
 carried out safely, thereby protecting the patient and the American 
public," State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said in a statement 
released Friday.
Ebola is considered one of 
the world's deadliest diseases. The current outbreak in Liberia, Guinea 
and Sierra Leone has sickened more than 1,300 people and killed more 
than 700 this year.
The virus is spread 
through direct contact with blood, urine, saliva and other bodily fluids
 from an infected person. It is not spread through the air so it is not 
as infectious as a germ like the flu.
The 
Americans will travel on a Gulfstream jet fitted with a collapsible, 
clear tent built to transfer CDC employees exposed to contagious 
diseases. The CDC said the private jet can only accommodate one patient 
at a time.
An Emory emergency medical team in 
Liberia has evaluated the two aid workers, and deemed both stable enough
 for the trip to Atlanta, said Emory's Dr. Bruce Ribner.
"If
 there's any modern therapy that can be done," such as better monitoring
 of fluids, electrolytes and vital signs, workers will be able to do it 
better in this safe environment, said Dr. Philip Brachman, an Emory 
University public health specialist who for many years headed the CDC's 
disease detectives program.
"That's all we can
 do for such a patient. We can make them feel comfortable" and let the 
body try to beat back the virus, he said.
There's
 no specific treatment for Ebola so doctors try to ease the symptoms, 
which include fever, headache, vomiting and diarrhea. Some cases suffer 
severe bleeding.
Emory's Ribner, one of the 
doctors who will be seeing the Ebola patients, stressed that safety 
precautions will be taken by staff.http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_MED_EBOLA_AMERICANS?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2014-08-02-11-09-46
"I have no
 concerns about even my personal health or the health of the other 
health care workers who will be working in that area," Ribner said.


