Singapore heightens Ebola screening at airport

Changi Airport. INQUIRER.net FILE PHOTO

Changi Airport. INQUIRER.net FILE PHOTO

SINGAPORE — Regional aviation hub Singapore will step up Ebola virus screening for passengers arriving at Changi Airport, the health ministry said Tuesday.

From Wednesday travelers arriving from countries with reported Ebola virus activity “will be directed to a screening station, where they will be screened for temperature and exposure to Ebola through a questionnaire,” the ministry said in a statement.

They will be asked to fill up a health declaration card that will include their contact details while in the city-state.

Those found to have a fever will be taken by ambulance to hospital for further assessment.

“Travelers who are well but who are identified as having possible exposure to Ebola virus infection will be quarantined or put under surveillance depending on the risk assessment,” it added.

The ministry said it had been “closely watching the Ebola situation, including developments in Spain and the United States” and “these show that an imported case and the potential for community exposure from imported cases cannot be ruled out.”

Singapore welcomed nearly 16 million travelers last year.

It was one of the countries severely hit by the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome outbreak in 2003, suffering 33 deaths.

The Ebola epidemic has killed more than 4,000 people this year, mostly in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia.

A UN employee infected with the virus in West Africa has died after arriving in Germany last week for treatment.

In Dallas a nurse tested positive after caring for a Liberian Ebola patient. She is in isolation and said to be in stable condition.

In Spain a nurse who fell sick after caring for two missionaries with Ebola remains in a “very serious condition.”

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