Italy's Ebola patient gets experimental treatment
By Associated Press
Nov 25, 2014 7:58 AM CST
In this photo provided by the Italian Air Force, a KC 767 plane is parked on the tarmac as personnel in biohazard suits disembark a doctor lying in a plastic sealed stretcher, top right, who has tested positive for the Ebola virus, at the Pratica di Mare military airport near Rome, Tuesday, Nov. 25,...   (Associated Press)

ROME (AP) — An Italian doctor who contracted Ebola while working in Sierra Leone has arrived back in Italy and is being treated with the same experimental drugs used in the U.S. and other European countries to treat people infected with the virus.

The doctor, whose name wasn't released and is in his 50s, has Italy's first confirmed case of Ebola. He arrived at a Rome military air base early Tuesday and was immediately transported in a biohazard-equipped ambulance to a Rome hospital specializing in infectious diseases.

Officials at the hospital told reporters that the patient was stable, had only had one episode of vomiting and diarrhea — without blood — and was being treated with the same experimental drugs used in the U.S. and elsewhere in Europe.

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