PDA

View Full Version : TB patient ID'd as Atlanta lawyer



Nbadan
06-01-2007, 01:49 PM
the TB case takes several unual turns....

TB patient ID'd as Atlanta lawyer
By GREG BLUESTEIN and DEVLIN BARRETT, Associated Press Writers Thu May 31, 7:56 PM ET


ATLANTA - A globe-trotting Atlanta lawyer with a dangerous strain of tuberculosis was allowed back into the U.S. by a border inspector who disregarded a computer warning to stop him and don protective gear, officials said Thursday.

The inspector has been removed from border duty.

The unidentified inspector explained that he was no doctor but that the infected man seemed perfectly healthy and that he thought the warning was merely "discretionary," officials briefed on the case told The Associated Press. They spoke on condition of anonymity because the matter is still under investigation.

The patient was identified as Andrew Speaker, a 31-year-old personal injury lawyer who returned last week from his wedding and honeymoon trip through Italy, the Greek isles and other spots in Europe. His new father-in-law, Robert C. Cooksey, is a CDC microbiologist whose specialty is TB and other bacteria.

Cooksey would not comment on whether he reported his son-in-law to federal health authorities. Nor did the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention explain how the case came to their attention. However, Cooksey said that neither he nor his CDC laboratory was the source of his son-in-law's TB.

Speaker is now under quarantine at a hospital in Denver. He is the first infected person to be quarantined by the U.S. government since 1963.

The disclosure that the patient is a lawyer — and specifically a personal injury lawyer — outraged many people on the Internet and elsewhere. Some travelers who flew on the same planes with Speaker angrily accused him of selfishly putting hundreds of people's lives in danger.

"It's still very scary," 21-year-old Laney Wiggins, one of more than two dozen University of South Carolina-Aiken students who are getting skin tests for TB. "That is an outrageous number of people that he was very reckless with their health. It's not fair. It's selfish."

Speaker said in a newspaper interview that he knew he had TB when he flew from Atlanta to Europe in mid-May for his wedding and honeymoon, but that he did not find out until he was already in Rome that it was an extensively drug-resistant strain considered especially dangerous.

Despite warnings from federal health officials not to board another long flight, he flew home for treatment, fearing he wouldn't survive if he didn't reach the U.S., he said. He said he tried to sneak home by way of Canada instead of flying directly into the U.S.

He was quarantined May 25, a day after he was allowed to pass through the border crossing at Champlain, N.Y., along the Canadian border.

The inspector ran Speaker's passport through a computer, and a warning — including instructions to hold the traveler, don a protective mask in dealing with him, and telephone health authorities — popped up, officials said. About a minute later, Speaker was instead cleared to continue on his journey, according to officials familiar with the records.

The Homeland Security Department is investigating.

"The border agent who questioned that person is at present performing administrative duties," said Homeland Security spokesman Russ Knocke, adding those duties do not include checking people at the land border crossing.

Colleen Kelley, president of the union that represents customs and border agents, declined to comment on the specifics of the case, but said "public health issues were not receiving adequate attention and training" within the agency.

On Thursday, a tan and healthy-looking Speaker was flown from Atlanta to Denver, accompanied by his wife and federal marshals, to Denver's National Jewish Medical and Research Center, where doctors planned to isolate him and treat him with oral and intravenous antibiotics.

Dr. Charles Daley, chief of the hospital's infectious-disease division, said he is optimistic Speaker can be cured because he is believed to be in the early stages of the disease.

Dr. Gwen Huitt of National Jewish described Speaker as "a young, healthy individual" who is "doing extremely well."

"By conventional methods that we traditionally use in the public health arena ... he would be considered low infectivity at this point in time," she said. "He is not coughing, he is healthy, he does not have a fever."

Doctors hope also to determine where he contracted the disease, which has been found around the world and exists in pockets in Russia and Asia.

He will be kept in a special unit with a ventilation system to prevent the escape of germs. "He may not leave that room much for several weeks," hospital spokesman William Allstetter said.

Speaker's father-in-law has worked at the CDC for 32 years and is in the Division of Tuberculosis Elimination, where he works with TB and other organisms. He has co-authored papers on diabetes, TB and other infectious diseases.

"As part of my job, I am regularly tested for TB. I do not have TB, nor have I ever had TB," he said in a statement. "My son-in-law's TB did not originate from myself or the CDC's labs, which operate under the highest levels of biosecurity."

In a brief telephone interview with the AP, Cooksey said that he gave Speaker "fatherly advice" when he learned the young man had contracted the disease.

"I'm hoping and praying that he's getting the proper treatment, that my daughter is holding up mentally and physically," Cooksey said. "Had I known that my daughter was in any risk, I would not allow her to travel."

According to a biography posted on a Web site connected with Speaker's law firm, the young lawyer attended the U.S. Naval Academy, graduated from the University of Georgia with a degree in finance, then attended University of Georgia's law school. He is in private practice with his father, Ted Speaker, an unsuccessful candidate for a judgeship in 2004.

Speaker's father told WSB-TV: "The way he's been shown and spoken about on TV, it's like a terrorist traveling around the world escaping authorities. It's blown out of proportion immensely."

Andrew Speaker recently moved from an upscale condominium complex in anticipation of his wedding, former neighbors said. He also wrote in an application to become a board member of his condo association that he was going to Vietnam for five weeks as part of the Rotary Club to act as an ambassador.

His wife, Sarah, is a third-year law student at Atlanta's Emory University.

"He's a great guy. Gregarious," said Pam Hood, a former neighbor. "He's a wonderful guy. Just a very, very pleasant man."

Health officials in North America and Europe are now trying to track down about 80 passengers who sat near him on his two trans-Atlantic flights, and they want passenger lists from four shorter flights he took while in Europe.

However, other passengers are not considered at high risk of infection because tests indicated the amount of TB bacteria in Speaker was low, said Dr. Martin Cetron, director of the CDC's division of global migration and quarantine.

Health law experts said Speaker could be sued if others contract TB.

"There are a number of cases that say a person who negligently transmits an infectious disease could be held liable," said Lawrence Gostin, a public health law expert at Georgetown University. "So long as he knew it was infectious, and knew about the appropriate behavior but failed to comply, he could be held liable."

Speaker told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that he wasn't coughing and that doctors initially did not order him not to fly and only suggested he put off his long-planned wedding. "We headed off to Greece thinking everything's fine," he told the newspaper.

___

Devlin Barrett contributed to this story from Washington. Associated Press writers Lara Jakes Jordan in Washington; Mike Stobbe in Atlanta; Jim Davenport in Columbia, S.C.; and Colleen Slevin in Denver also contributed to this report, along with AP news researcher Judy Ausuebel in New York.



This particular strain of TB has a 30% fatality rate. This means that this man flew many times on an airplane there and back and this strain typically takes about 4 weeks to get to a point where it is mature enough to be identified. The doctor told his patient not to fly but he knew better than someone who gets paid to diagnose and take care of patients for a living.

If this man infected only ten people then chances are 3 of them (remember the 30% fatality rate) will die because he disregarded a doctor's orders and flew. Doctors are in a very fragile position when dealing with possibly contagious patients because on one hand you do not want to take away the patient's liberties but on the other hand you have a responsibility to protect the public.

When the doctors realized what strain of TB this was, they immediately contacted him. He made his own plans to get back to the US even though he should not have gone overseas to begin with. At this point he knows he has something that is infectious and could kill people but he only cares about his own skin and not who else might die. The fact that he tried to get back here because he did not want to die says that he knew that this strain does, indeed, cause fatalities but as long as he survived he did not care. What he did not realize - but would have if he had remained in contact with our CDC officials is that they were not mad but rather worried about how to get him back without risk to others. As he secretly made his way back to the US, they were working on a way to get him a plane so he could fly back in safety. (for himself and others)

At the very least you must see that coming back, when he knew how contagious and dangerous the disease was, showed a reckless and wanton disregard for the safety of others. And if he has infected others and killed 30% of them (or even one of them) then he should not be surprised at the consequences that follow.

Maybe others are not articulating exactly what is so horrendous about this whole incident. I hope you understand why so many people are upset that this person would choose to save his own life at the selfish risk of possibly killing others. That is simply inexcusable.

Nbadan
06-04-2007, 03:16 AM
This story has taken some strange turns...first...

June 3, 2007
TB Patient's Relative to Be Investigated
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS


DENVER (AP) -- A federal microbiologist, the father-in-law of the man quarantined with a drug-resistant form of tuberculosis, will be investigated to see how he was involved in the case, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Saturday.

NY Times (http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-Tuberculosis-Infection.html)

and..


DENVER, Colorado (CNN) -- Rejecting earlier claims made by a local Greek official, tuberculosis patient Andrew Speaker said he did marry his fiancee in a small Greek town during his trans-Atlantic trip.

"I know we went over and had a ceremony and that local officials (in Greece) had me sign all these documents. I know we exchanged rings," said the 31-year-old Atlanta attorney in a Newsweek magazine interview conducted on late Friday.

Speaker recently traveled from the United States to Europe with a dangerous form of tuberculosis.

Speaker's comments followed an earlier statement by Mayor Angelos Roussos of Santorini, Greece -- where the couple were believed to have recently wed -- that there had been no wedding at all.

Roussos said a clerk from the municipality office informed him that Speaker and his fiancee, Sarah Cooksey, did not have the necessary paperwork for a civil marriage.

"He made no previous contact with the town hall about arranging a civil marriage," Roussos said. "So the wedding never happened. He stayed instead at a hotel for two days, the Majestic Hotel, before setting back for the United States. It was his first time here."

Speaker balked at the claim.

"If there's some loophole and the local mayor didn't check some box, I don't know. Heck, we've even got the marriage pictures," he said.

A member of the Speaker family provided CNN with a photograph from the wedding ceremony.

Greg Fansler, Speaker's former roommate, said there were documentation problems with the Greek authorities but that the couple held a wedding ceremony anyway and planned to take care of those problems when they returned to the United States.

Cnn (http://www.cnn.com/2007/HEALTH/conditions/06/01/tb.flight/index.html?xid=rss-world)

Nbadan
06-04-2007, 01:00 PM
All 26 Americans Who Sat Nearest TB Patient Found
Officials Will Monitor Airline Passengers Potentially Exposed to 'Extensively Drug-Resistant' Strain
By David Brown
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, June 2, 2007; A03




Public health authorities have found all 26 Americans who sat near a man infected with untreated "extensively drug-resistant" tuberculosis on a transatlantic flight last month and will be able to test them for exposure to the often-fatal organism, federal officials said yesterday.

The man's good health and the small amount of TB bacteria in his lungs make it unlikely that he infected anyone on the round-trip flights to Europe, which he took against medical advice. However, it will take at least two months to rule that out -- or to discover that he did infect someone.

In the interim, the exposed people who are under surveillance should not think that they -- unlike the TB-infected traveler -- can infect anyone, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Julie L. Gerberding, said yesterday...There were 435 passengers on an Atlanta-to-Paris flight that the infected man and his fiancee took on May 12. (The couple were going to Europe to be married on a Greek island and then honeymoon in Italy.) Of that total, 310 were U.S. citizens or residents.

Health authorities, however, are most interested in people sitting in the man's row and in two rows in front of and behind him -- a zone where studies have shown passengers are at greatest risk in such situations. There were 26 Americans in that zone. On the return trip, a Prague-to-Montreal flight on May 24, the couple were the only Americans in the potential exposure zone.

How many countries had citizens among the approximately 50 people in the exposure zone on the outgoing flight, and the 30 exposed on the return flight, is unknown. Gerberding said she did not know how many of those people have been found, although she said that Canada had located all 28 of its citizens who sat in the zone...The exposed passengers will undergo skin testing for TB now, and again in eight to 10 weeks...

....Exactly how people in that situation would be treated was not available yesterday.

Washington Post (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/06/01/AR2007060100528_pf.html)

If it was so important to find those who sat near TB man on the planes, why no urgency to find the original source of the TB?

Where did it come from? Was the FIL the source? If the source was the CDC itself is there a coverup?

Nbadan
06-04-2007, 01:44 PM
DENVER (CNN) -- The first two of three planned sputum test results for Andrew Speaker, the 31-year-old lawyer who has extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis, have come back negative, National Jewish Hospital said Monday in a written statement.

If the third test result, expected later Monday, also proves negative, Speaker -- whose air travel last month to his wedding in Greece set off international concerns for the safety of his fellow passengers -- would be considered "relatively non-contagious," the statement said.

Speaker is confined to his room, which is equipped with special air filters and negative air pressure to ensure he does not infect others with the drug-resistant bacteria, which can prove fatal.

CNN (http://edition.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/europe/06/04/monday/index.html)

Wild Cobra
06-04-2007, 05:34 PM
If it was so important to find those who sat near TB man on the planes, why no urgency to find the original source of the TB?
They probably suspect an illegal alien.

Actually, joking aside, with the long incubation period of TB, it is impossible to trace.

Cant_Be_Faded
06-04-2007, 06:16 PM
This asshole's actions are exactly how every outbreak/deadly plague/mass extinction book and movie start.

He should be destroyed.

medstudent
06-04-2007, 06:43 PM
Actually, joking aside, with the long incubation period of TB, it is impossible to trace.

:tu

Bob Lanier
06-04-2007, 06:54 PM
outraged many people on the Internet and elsewhere.
What a lazy fucking hack this journalist is.

I'd put $50 on his having been infected by his wife's family.

Oh, Gee!!
06-05-2007, 10:28 AM
I knew it, he's a secular progressive.