A Spanish
nurse who treated an Ebola victim in Madrid has become the first person
in the world to contract the deadly virus outside of Africa.
The
44-year-old is said to have spent the last 15 years working at Madrid's
Carlos III Hospital, where the two Spanish missionaries infected with
Ebola died.
The
woman, who is married, was part of the team that treated Spanish priest
Manuel Garcia Viejo, who was brought back from Africa last month so
that he could be treated for the deadly virus.
The medical workers donned full protective clothing as they transported the nurse between Spanish hospitals
The 44-year-old Spanish woman was moved between the hospitals in a special fully-incubated stretcher
Medical staff could be seen removing the woman on an enclosed stretcher out of the ambulance last night
The woman has moved from Alcorcon Hospital to Madrid's Carlos III Hospital by those in full protective suits
Two separate tests confirmed that the woman, who has yet to be named, had contracted the disease.
Colleagues
tonight expressed their surprise at news that the nurse, from Galicia
in northwest Spain, had caught the virus, saying that there had been
'extreme' measures in place to protect staff.
One told Spanish daily El Pais that nurses were equipped with two protective overalls, two pairs of gloves and glasses.
All medics had to use a special card to access the hospital's sixth floor - where the two men were treated.
The
Carlos III Hospital was evacuated before the arrival of the first
missionary, Miguel Pajares, who contracted the disease in Liberia, but
not for Mr Viejo as the sixth floor had already been hermetically
sealed.
Mr
Pajares, the first person in Europe to be treated for Ebola, died at
Madrid's Carlos III Hospital in August despite receiving experimental
drug ZMapp after he returned.
The
Spanish nurse was part of the team that treated Spanish priest Manuel
Garcia Viejo, who was brought back from Africa last month so that he
could be treated for the deadly virus pictured. He died on September 26
Mr Viejo was a member of the Hospital Order of San Juan de Dios who worked in the Western city of Lunsar
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