American doctor with Ebola evacuated to Germany as wife and four children are monitored in Congo

by | May 19, 2026 | Science

By the time the American surgeon who contracted Ebola in Congo was flown to Germany for treatment Tuesday, he was barely able to stand on his own, according to two leaders of the Christian missionary group where he worked.Dr. Scott Myhre, the East and Central Africa area director for the group, called Serge, described the scene as Dr. Peter Stafford departed.“There were people in full — we call it PPE — the personal protective equipment, and they’re completely covered, and he’s hanging on them barely strong enough to walk,” Myhre said. “He looked really tired and really sick.”AdvertisementAdvertisementStafford worked at Nyankunde Hospital, which is in Congo’s Ituri province, where the Ebola outbreak is centered. Days before the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed the outbreak, Stafford operated on a 33-year-old patient with severe abdominal pain, Myhre said. At the time, doctors thought the patient had a gallbladder infection.Stafford “did an abdominal procedure and found that the gallbladder was normal and closed him up, but this patient subsequently died the next day,” Myhre said.Days later, they realized the patient, who was buried before he could be tested, most likely died of Ebola. Stafford developed symptoms over the weekend and tested positive for Ebola on Sunday, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.“He’s a very meticulous professional, and for every surgical case he does, he would be completely gowned in sterile garb and gloves and hats and glasses,” Myhre said. “But that’s not quite enough to prevent an Ebola exposure.”AdvertisementAdvertisementStafford’s wife, Rebekah Stafford, is also a doctor and treated the same patient. She and the couple’s four young children for now remain in Congo, where they are being monitored, Myhre said. Another physician, Patrick LaRochelle, is thought to have been exposed through a second patient and is being monitored, as well. None has shown signs of illness.“We don’t see a lot of pediatric Ebola cases, and we sure hope that’s not the case here,” Myhre said.Stafford quarantined himself as soon as he developed symptoms, Myhre said, which included chills, fever, muscle aches, fatigue and nausea.For the flight to Germany, Myhre said, Stafford was placed in a tube-shaped plastic bed, “about the si …

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