Mandatory Quarantines Alarm Ebola Workers About to Come Home

Gregg Ramm fears he will spend Thanksgiving in quarantine if he comes home now.

He also believes that the mandatory quarantine policy by New Jersey and New York will make recruiting doctors and nurses to care for Ebola patients -- already difficult -- even harder.

“Of course this does not make me happy and it also doesn’t make sense,” said Ramm, the interim country director in Liberia for Save the Children.

Ramm, 52, has been in the Ebola-ravaged West African country for four weeks and plans to return to the U.S. in about two weeks. He said he is worried that he will be stuck in quarantine for three weeks.

“I was planning on spending Thanksgiving with my family,” said Ramm, who lives in Washington, D.C. “It is difficult to imagine remaining in a tent for 21 days like that nurse I saw on the news today.”

Hickox was held in quarantine in New Jersey because there were no immediate plans to get her safely to Maine and she then briefly developed a fever while in quarantine.

Ramm, who would land in Washington's Dulles Airport, said that aid and healthcare workers based in Liberia are buzzing about the new quarantine rules. Most people find them confusing and unclear, he said, and the prevailing opinion is that mandatory quarantine is an unnecessary and unscientific step.

Since the virus cannot spread unless a person shows symptoms, they believe it is a waste of time to keep people segregated when they are healthy and monitoring body temperature on a regular basis, he said. Ramm said taking your temperature several times daily is already a way of life in Liberia.

Ramm said he and others are also worried about what the quarantines will do to their recruiting efforts.

“Getting people to come here and help is already a difficult job. This will only make it harder,” he said.