21-day quarantine ordered for U.S. troops on Ebola mission to Africa

{{{Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel signed an order Wednesday requiring all U.S. troops returning from Ebola-stricken West Africa to be quarantined for 21 days to guarantee they don’t have the virus.}}}

The Joint Chiefs of Staff had recommended on Tuesday that all military personnel involved in the humanitarian mission in West Africa should undergo “controlled, supervised monitoring.”

The Pentagon’s move goes beyond precautions recommended by the White House and Centers for Disease Control and Preventions for doctors and other civilians returning from areas with Ebola.

President Obama said Tuesday that the military situation is different, however, because the troops are not in West Africa “voluntarily.”

Some 1,030 U.S. troops are currently building isolation wards, training healthcare workers, processing laboratory samples and providing other assistance in Liberia, the hardest-hit country, and neighboring Senegal, where the military has set up a staging area to move supplies.

Hagel ordered a detailed implementation plan within 15 days on how the quarantine effort will work.

Hagel “believes these initial steps are prudent given the large number of military personnel transiting from their home base and West Africa and the unique logistical demands and impact this deployment has on the force,” Pentagon spokesman Rear Adm. John Kirby said in a statement.

The Joint Chiefs will review the plan within 45 days to determine if controlled monitoring is still necessary and should continue, officials said.

Sanitized gloves and boots hang to dry as a burial team collects Ebola victims from a Ministry of Health treatment center for cremation on Oct. 2 in Monrovia, Liberia.

Medical personnel at the Ebola treatment center at Island hospital in Monrovia, Liberia, disinfect people who had brought patients suspected of having the Ebola virus on Oct.

Maj. Gen. Darryl A. Williams, commander of U.S. Army Forces in Africa, and 11 other soldiers have been isolated and are being monitored at a U.S. military installation at Vicenza, Italy.

Williams flew to Liberia last month to form an advance team before another commander took over Sunday.

{{Source: Los Angeles Times}}

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