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Hong Kong medical workers 'put at risk in Ebola scare'

Hospital staff who handled sick Nigerian patient wore only flimsy protective gear and no eye protection, says microbiologist

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Prince of Wales Hospital frontline nursing staff inside the ICU ward during the Sars outbreak in 2003. Photo: Martin Chan

Public hospitals should upgrade protection for medical workers who deal with any possible infections of the fatal Ebola virus, a microbiologist said yesterday as he condemned how staff were equipped to deal with Hong Kong's first suspected case.

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Preventive measures should also be stepped up at public places such as Chek Lap Kok, according to a top pharmacist.

The calls for caution came as life at Chungking Mansions in Tsim Sha Tsui returned to normal yesterday after a brief Ebola scare at the weekend. No one was seen wearing the surgical masks that Hongkongers often reach for during the flu season.

Watch: What do Hongkongers think about Ebola?

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The health scare was triggered when a 32-year-old Nigerian man who was staying at one of the many guest houses in the high-rise complex was taken to hospital on Sunday morning with vomiting and diarrhoea - early symptoms of the disease that has broken out in West Africa, claiming almost 1,000 lives. By Sunday night tests had confirmed the man did not have Ebola.

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