As news
helicopters swarmed over Dallas' Love Field on Wednesday evening to
watch the second U.S. nurse to contract Ebola board a private plane
bound for Atlanta, one lone mysterious man stood out from the pack.
Holding
a clipboard and directing the transfer, the unidentified man seemed to
be the only person on the tarmac without protective clothing, wearing
just a button down shirt and slacks.
While
Ebola is not an airborne disease, his presence so close to patient
Amber Vinson's medical team sparked fears after he was seen grabbing a
container and hazmat trash bag from one of the workers' in
full-protective gear and later boarding the flight.
He
then flew with Vinson and the other hazmat-suited medical staff to
Atlanta and local television crews spotted him with the stricken nurse
as she disembarked at the airport in Georgia to be transferred to Emory
University Hospital.
ABC News reports that the man is a supervisor for Phoenix Air, the company that flew Miss Vinson from Dallas to Atlanta.
When
the plane landed in Atlanta, the man had still not donned any
protective clothing and was seen openly interacting with Vinson and the
other medical professionals caring for the nurse.
Is he with the CDC? Both the ambulance
company and Emory University Hospital said the unprotected man with the
clipboard (center) is not one of their employees - meaning he is likely
a CDC employee

A man in plain clothes was seen on the
tarmac Wednesday afternoon, as the second Ebola patient (in yellow
hazmat suit) boarded a flight to Atlanta, Georgia

The man is seen boarding the flight, after exchanging several objects with the hazmat crew

Clipboard man appears to have flown on
the same flight as infected Miss Vinson, as he is seen in footage of
her getting into an ambulance at an airport in Atlanta
Members of the public watching were struck with disbelief at the man's decision to throw caution to the wind.
'He
needs to be put on watch the second the plane lands so he does not
infect anyone in Atlanta. This needs to be contained and I for one will
be ticked of I hear a report next week that he is the next victim!' Dean
Pitts wrote on NBC Dallas' website.
Phoenix Air, which operates the special air ambulances that have
also flown all five American Ebola patients from West African to the
US, claimed the unprotected man actually made the process safer.
'Our
medical professionals in the biohazard suits have limited vision and
mobility and it is the protocol supervisor’s job to watch each person
carefully and give them verbal directions to insure no close contact
protocols are violated,' a Phoenix Air spokesman told ABC.
'There is absolutely no problem with this and in fact insures an even higher level of safety for all involved.'
Vinson landed in Atlanta, Georgia before 8pm Eastern Time to be treated at Emory University Hospital
A CDC spokesman told KTVT that they didn't think anything was wrong with the interaction since he 'kept a safe distance'.
Miss Vinson's flight landed in Atlanta around 7:45pm Eastern Time.
Social
media was as equally impressed as they were dumbfounded by the man who
has quickly become known as 'clipboard man' online.
Dan
Hevia said what many shocked viewers must have immediately thought when
they saw the brave or foolhardy individual when he wrote, 'I'd like to
know who the dude with the clipboard is so I can avoid him. C'mon!
Another
incredulous witness was staggered, asking, 'My infectious disease
training may be a bit limited but fairly sure that clipboard isn't Ebola
proof.'
Others
went straight to the heart of the matter, with Lib Media Exposed
asking, 'Who's the idiot who thinks all the protection he needs from
Ebola is a f******' clipboard?'
Another
Twitter user, Luke Murray pointed out that 'clipboard man' might be the
recipient of a dubious prize, should the worst come to the worst.
'So
much for protocols,' wrote Lurray. 'Clipboard dude in the pic with
nurse 2 is up for a Dawrin Award should something happen to him.'
The
mystery man on the tarmac is just the latest questionable practice
highlighted in the CDC's handling of the Ebola outbreak in America,
which started when Liberian patient Thomas Eric Duncan was initially
turned away from Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital last month after
reporting a high fever.

The man
with the clipboard is seen grabbing various objects from the hazmat
team, raising questions about whether he could have been contaminated
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