ROBERT F. BUKATY - Associated Press
FORT KENT, Maine (AP) — A nurse who vowed to defy Maine's
voluntary quarantine for health care workers who treated Ebola patients
followed through on her promise Thursday, leaving her home for a bike ride.
Kaci Hickox and her boyfriend stepped out of their home
Thursday morning and rode away on bicycles, followed by state police who were
monitoring her movements and public interactions. Police couldn't detain her
without a court order signed by a judge.
Nurse Kaci Hickox leaves her home on a rural road in Fort
Kent, Maine, to take a bike ride with her boyfriend Ted Wilbur, Thursday, Oct.
30, 2014. Hickox contends there's no need for quarantine because she's
showing no symptoms. She's also tested negative for the deadly disease.
State officials were going to court in an effort to detain
Hickox for the remainder of the 21-day incubation period for Ebola that ends on
Nov. 10
It was the second time Hickox broke quarantine. She left her
home Wednesday evening briefly to speak to reporters, even shaking a hand that
was offered to her.
"There's a lot of misinformation about how Ebola is
transmitted, and I can understand why people are frightened. But their fear is
not based on medical facts," Norman Siegel, one of her attorneys, said
Wednesday.
Hickox, who volunteered in Sierra Leone with Doctors Without
Borders, was the first person forced into New Jersey's mandatory quarantine for
people arriving at the Newark airport from three West African countries. Hickox
spent the weekend in a tent in New Jersey before traveling to the home she
shares with her boyfriend, a nursing student at the University of Maine at Fort
Kent.
Nurse Kaci Hickox leaves her home on a rural road in Fort
Kent, Maine, to take a bike ride with her boyfriend Ted Wilbur, Thursday, Oct.
30, 2014. "I'm not willing to stand here and let my civil rights
be violated when it's not science-based," she told reporters Wednesday
evening.
Generally, states have broad authority when it comes to such
matters. But Maine health officials could have a tough time convincing a judge
that Hickox poses a threat, said attorney Jackie L. Caynon III, who specializes
in health law in Worcester, Massachusetts.
"If somebody isn't showing signs of the infection, then
it's kind of hard to say someone should be under mandatory quarantine," he
said.
Ebola, which is spread through direct contact with the
bodily fluids of an infected person, has killed thousands of people in Africa,
but only four people have been diagnosed with it in the United States. People
can't be infected just by being near someone who's sick, and people aren't
contagious unless they're sick, health officials say.
Guidelines from the federal Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention recommend daily monitoring for health care workers like Hickox who
have come into contact with Ebola patients. But some states like Maine are
going above and beyond those guidelines.
The defense department is going even further. On Wednesday,
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel ordered military men and women helping fight
Ebola to undergo 21-day quarantines that start upon their return — instead of
their last exposure to an Ebola patient.
President Barack Obama warned that overly restrictive
measures imposed upon returning health care workers could discourage them from
volunteering in Africa. But Maine Gov. Paul LePage, who canceled campaign events to
keep tabs on the situation, maintained that the state must be
"vigilant" to protect others.
State law allows a judge to grant temporary custody of
someone if health officials demonstrate "a clear and immediate public
health threat." The state's court filing was expected Thursday, officials
said.
Nurse Kaci Hickox leaves her home on a rural road in Fort
Kent, Maine, to take a bike ride with her boyfriend Ted Wilbur, Thursday, Oct.
30, 2014. If a judge grants the state request, then Hickox will appeal
the decision on constitutional grounds, necessitating a hearing, Siegel said.
Siegel said the nurse hopes her fight against the quarantine
will help bring an end to misinformation about how the Ebola virus is
transmitted.
"She wants to have her voice in the debate about how
America handles the Ebola crisis. She has an important voice and
perspective," he said.
See More Of Her Photos
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Source
Huffing ROBERT F. BUKATY, Associated Press and other Associated
Press writers David Sharp in Portland and Alanna Durkin in Augusta contributed
to this report.
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