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MY MUSIC CELEBRITY PHOTO ALBUM

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

#HNNHealth Ebola Survivor Dr Kent Brantley's BLOOD flown in to #Nebraska to save NBC Cameraman Ashoka Mukpo


Asoka Mukpo of NBC News
Dr Kent Brantley
The first American flown back to the U.S. after contracting Ebola has donated blood to an NBC News freelance cameraman who was also diagnosed with the virus. Photojournalist Ashoka Mukpo’s family told NBC News early Wednesday that Dr. Kent Brantly was contacted by the Nebraska Medical Center and asked to give plasma. Experts hope the survivor’s antibodies will kick-start Mukpo's immune system. Brantly was on a road trip from Indiana to Texas when he received a call from the medical center telling him his blood type matched Mukpo’s. Within minutes, he stopped off at the Community Blood Center in Kansas City, Missouri, and his donation was flown to Omaha. Brantly, who continues to work for Christian relief organization Samaritan's Purse, alsodonated blood to Ebola-stricken aid worker Dr. Rick Sacra. He subsequently recovered. Mukpo's father Dr. Mitchell Levy was touched by Brantly's intervention. "This act of kindness and generosity makes me believe in the goodness of humanity," he told NBC News.

Mukpo is being given an experimental drug called brincidofovir, which has never been used on Ebola patients. “We are in a brave new world here,” Dr. Angela Hewlett, associate medical director at the Nebraska Medical Center, told NBC News. Thomas Eric Duncan, who is being treated in Dallas, has also been prescribed the drug. Duncan remains hospitalized in critical but stable condition. At least 3,400 people have died during the current Ebola outbreak.

With files from NBC news


UPDATE to this NBC article: Dr Hewlett said that the antiviral Brincidofovir has never been used on Ebola patients however that's not true and I think that was an oversight as things are moving quickly in drug therapy, prevention and education in this war against EBOLA. 24 hours before she made that statement October 6th, the drug was already being administered to Liberian Thomas Eric Duncan at Texas Presbyterian the same day the FDA approved it as an Investigative New Drug (IND) on an emergency basis. The hospital's parent company actually tweeted it.

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