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No, Ebola Didn’t Have To Kill Duncan.

Posted by Michelle Moquin on October 17th, 2014

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It didn’t need to. Racism stepped in and handled it. 

Good morning!

From Dallas News:

 

Exclusive: Ebola didn’t have to kill Thomas Eric Duncan, nephew says

On Friday, Sept. 25, 2014, my uncle Thomas Eric Duncan went to Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas. He had a high fever and stomach pains. He told the nurse he had recently been in Liberia. But he was a man of color with no health insurance and no means to pay for treatment, so within hours he was released with some antibiotics and Tylenol.

Two days later, he returned to the hospital in an ambulance. Two days after that, he was finally diagnosed with Ebola. Eight days later, he died alone in a hospital room.

Now, Dallas suffers. Our country is concerned. Greatly. About the lack of answers and transparency coming from a hospital whose ignorance, incompetence and indecency has yet to be explained. I write this on behalf of my family because we want to set the record straight about what happened and ensure that Thomas Eric did not die in vain. So, here’s the truth about my uncle and his battle with Ebola.

Thomas Eric Duncan was cautious. Among the most offensive errors in the media during my uncle’s illness are the accusations that he knew he was exposed to Ebola — that is just not true. Eric lived in a careful manner, as he understood the dangers of living in Liberia amid this outbreak. He limited guests in his home, he did not share drinking cups or eating utensils.

And while the stories of my uncle helping a pregnant woman with Ebola are courageous, Thomas Eric personally told me that never happened. Like hundreds of thousands of West Africans, carefully avoiding Ebola was part of my uncle’s daily life.

And I can tell you with 100 percent certainty: Thomas Eric would have never knowingly exposed anyone to this illness.

Thomas Eric Duncan was a victim of a broken system. The biggest unanswered question about my uncle’s death is why the hospital would send home a patient with a 103-degree fever and stomach pains who had recently been in Liberia — and he told them he had just returned from Liberia explicitly due to the Ebola threat.

Some speculate that this was a failure of the internal communications systems. Others have speculated that antibiotics and Tylenol are the standard protocol for a patient without insurance.

The hospital is not talking. Until then, we are all left to wonder. What we do know is that their error affects all of society. Their bad judgment or misjudgment sent my uncle back into the community for days with a highly contagious case of Ebola. And now, officials suspect that a breach of protocol by the hospital is responsible for a new Ebola case, and that all health care workers who care for my uncle could potentially be exposed.

Their error set the wheels in motion for my uncle’s death and additional Ebola cases, and their ignorance, incompetence or indecency has created a national security threat for our country.

Thomas Eric Duncan could have been saved. Finally, what is most difficult for us — Thomas Eric’s mother, children and those closest to him — to accept is the fact that our loved one could have been saved. From his botched release from the emergency room to his delayed testing and delayed treatment and the denial of experimental drugs that have been available to every other case of Ebola treated in the U.S., the hospital invited death every step of the way.

When my uncle was first admitted, the hospital told us that an Ebola test would take three to seven days. Miraculously, the deputy who was feared to have Ebola just last week was tested and had results within 24 hours.

The fact is, nine days passed between my uncle’s first ER visit and the day the hospital asked our consent to give him an experimental drug — but despite the hospital’s request they were never able to access these drugs for my uncle. (Editor’s note: Hospital officials have said they started giving Duncan the drug Brincidofovir on October 4.) He died alone. His only medication was a saline drip.

For our family, the most humiliating part of this ordeal was the treatment we received from the hospital. For the 10 days he was in the hospital, they not only refused to help us communicate with Thomas Eric, but they also acted as an impediment. The day Thomas Eric died, we learned about it from the news media, not his doctors.

Our nation will never mourn the loss of my uncle, who was in this country for the first time to visit his son, as my family has. But our nation and our family can agree that what happened at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas must never happen to another family.

In time, we may learn why my uncle’s initial visit to the hospital was met with such incompetence and insensitivity. Until that day comes, our family will fight for transparency, accountability and answers, for my uncle and for the safety of the country we love.

*****

Readers: The write says that “…the lack of answers and transparency coming from a hospital whose ignorance, incompetence and indecency has yet to be explained.” That may all be true but what it doesn’t mention is that racism was involved. Yeah, Duncan didn’t have insurance but that wasn’t the reason they let him go. They let him go because he was a black man, and they just didn’t care enough about him to do what they would have done had he not been black.

As always, they make the black man out to be the bad guy…accusing Duncan of knowing that he was exposed to Ebola. He’s the victim and they’re treating him like he’s a perpetrator. Same same old story. If he was a white guy, they would be feeling so sorry for him and immediately blaming the hospital for their incompetency, etc.

They didn’t care about him and now other lives have been affected and the country risks the spreading of a very infectious and fatal disease.

No, Ebola didn’t have to kill Duncan. It didn’t need to. Racism stepped in and handled it – people who let him go with a 103-degree fever, stomach pains, and the knowledge that they had been informed by Duncan that he was in Liberia.

In my opinion, those who let Duncan go knew he was exposed to Ebola and had the potential of testing positive for it, and just didn’t give a damn.

This is just a microcosm, albeit one that has the potential of escalating into something much greater, of what is happening all over the world. Racism is so deeply ingrained that racists risk the demise of people and the country because they can’t see past their racism.

That’s just my opinion. Thoughts? Blog me. 

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12 Responses to “No, Ebola Didn’t Have To Kill Duncan.”

  1. Zen Lill Says:

    I’ll come back for the read, have clients all day and then party again tonight …

    Thank you – Larry, Kristal, georgeWN, Crag, Martin, Remo, Shawn, Minnie (and haha), Caroline and 4 cuzs!, Steve, So, Donald, Ma Qin (merci beau coup), Eric (I like your confidence), Reba, Delaney, Sam, Stacey, Lill on Guam, Uwela esp because I know you have to travel to post so extra thank you to you, MikeTM, Alycedale, Sarah, Grace, Tom, Susan and more tips are coming, been revising my program and you’ll see it, thanks for asking, Owen, there were several posted but I think I’m overdue for a leg shot ; ), Maple!, Victor and Ito … that was a beautiful and pleasant surprise this am, really appreciate the LUV.
    Howie, you’ve been acknowledged but I’ll do it again my blogging bro, thank you.

    Luv, Zen Lill

  2. David Says:

    You nailed it Michelle. I work at the place. It is as bigoted as you can get. A few whites run it like it was a plantation. It is no accident that the two young women were OTWs.

    They were definitely forced to attend Duncan without the proper protection or lose their jobs.

  3. Kenneth Says:

    Every time I read your posts about aliens I think I have seen your best. Pleasantly you continue to surprise me.

    Thanks Howie, you are truly the man who knows.

  4. Zen Lill Says:

    It’s pathetic, reckless and incorrigible behavior…

    firstly, he’s a human, treat him!
    Secondly, take proper precautions for the people in contact with him, all hospitals have procedures in place for communicative (requiring quarantine) illnesses

    …and thirdly, by not doing the right things (1 & 2) they’ve left so many others at risk.

    They should be sentenced to ebola, unfortunately, that won’t bring back this man that they literally let die by NOT applying the basic tenets of their hippocratic oath (or is it hypocrite oath now?) …

    just another American example of how you should never behave, we just don’t seem to get it, too busy judging by standards of skin tone (and exercising racist god complexes out loud).

    Disgusted…

    - Zen Lill

  5. Erica Says:

    I am a white nurse at a hospital in Texas. I can tell you that racism plays a part in every patient’s experience when he/she comes to the hospital that I work at. This is not out of the ordinary. I have worked at other hospitals in Texas and it has always been the same.

    If you are not white, you will be treated differently at just about any medical facility in Texas. White medical professionals are very much aware of this, but we never mention it outside our own cliques.

    There is no doubt in my mind that Mr. Duncan never had a chance to survive once he minute he landed in Texas.

  6. HOWIE Says:

    They didn’t care about Duncan and the country risks the spreading of a very infectious and fatal disease turning Pandemic. The Koch Brothers and their cronies would love it if half the population of the world died due to an Ebola Epidemic.

    Racism and simple hatred killed Duncan. The Hospital and people who worked there let him go with a 103-degree fever, stomach pains, and the knowledge that they had been informed by Duncan that he was in Liberia.

    They didn’t need to know any more than that. He needed to be quarantined immediately. They KNEW he was at least a serious candidate for the Ebola Virus. They should never have discharged him to spread the disease to anyone he came into contact with outside the Hospital. As Michelle wrote: “They just didn’t give a damn” because he was a Black Man.

    Racism is so deeply ingrained in people worldwide that it could bring the departure of people and their countries who inhabit this planet because it is passed down from generation to generation.

    It is time for an intervention. We live on one planet and must get along with the limited resources we have been given. No one is better than anyone else. No color skin is prettier than any other. We are all the same, We want the same things in life. We are just so split because of Racism and the wedge of hatred it brings out in different races toward other races.

    Too bad . . . We must live together on this little blue marble . . . Or die together.

    HOWIE

  7. P Says:

    That about sums it up Howie

  8. Diana Says:

    It couldn’t have been said better Howie. I wish you would comment more on other topics that Michelle posts. You have a keen insight that should be shared.

  9. RG Says:

    We will soon see how the rest of the world treats the US and their ebola possibles. Belize has refused to allow one to enter their shows. Another Texas idiot that couldn’t wait 21 days before exposing the rest of the world to ebola.

    That is one selfish state.

  10. Abam Says:

    I agree with you Howie. It seems that racism has exposed the rest of Texas and the US to ebola.

  11. Perry Says:

    It is interesting that only blacks die in the US if they get ebola.

  12. Vivian Says:

    Why don’t the rest of the US shut their boarders to Texas? It is that racist state that is exposing the rest of us and the world http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/18/health/us-ebola/index.html?hpt=hp_t1 these are just idiots.

    What do you expect from a state that votes color over common sense and even their own best interest.

    Texas Health Presbyterian is a cesspool example of that.