THE FRONT PAGES: EBOLA IN THE UK- MIRROW UK

Daily Mirror front page
As the first Briton to have caught Ebola in the current outbreak is flown back to London for treatment, the Monday press go big with the story. The Daily Mirror pictures the departure of the patient from Sierra Leone, where he had been working, in an isolation unit tent.


Man infected with Ebola arriving back into UK
Strict isolation measures were used when Mr Pooley arrived at RAF Notholt near London, having been flown from Sierra Leone

The news that the a Briton infected in the Ebola outbreak in West Africa has been flown for treatment in London makes headlines throughout Monday's press.
The Daily Mail names the health worker involved as 29-year-old William Pooley from Woodbridge in Suffolk, who had been working in Sierra Leone since March.
For the last five weeks, the paper says, he had worked at a specialist Ebola centre.
His boss from another West African health clinic tells the Mail, "Will said he felt a strong responsibility to the patients there as they were being abandoned by doctors and nurses who were fearful of contracting the Ebola virus".
Mr Pooley will be treated in a specialist ward at the Royal Free Hospital in Hampstead, London, which the paper says will be his "home for months".
Among the strict hygiene measures are a special £25,000 bed which will be destroyed rather than being re-used by another patient.
The Daily Mirror notes the health worker - the first Briton to catch Ebola since a laboratory worker accidentally infected himself in 1976 - was described as "not currently seriously unwell".
Dr Paul Cosford, England's public health protection chief, is quoted as saying, "UK hospitals have a proven record of dealing with imported infectious diseases and this patient will be isolated and receive the best care possible."
An American doctor who helps run the facility tells the Sun: "He is a popular member of staff... everyone at the hospital speaks very highly of him. He was playing a pivotal role."
As news comes that an experimental antiviral drug has been used successfully to save lives from Ebola - having been approved for use before the conclusion of formal testing - Maurice Saatchi writing in the Daily Telegraph calls for the same approach to be used on new cancer therapies.
Pointing out that 150,000 Britons will die from cancer this year, he says"doctors should be encouraged to try new treatments and protected when they do so".
He quotes a medical expert, who says "there will be no cure for cancer until real doctors with real patients in real hospitals are allowed to innovate."



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