The Texas hospital has two secondary infections. Other facilities in the US that have treated Ebola patients have zero so far. It seems that Ebola can be treated without infecting caregivers, but the hospital in Texas was doing something wrong.
The problem is that with something like Ebola *everything besides utter and complete preparedness* is wrong.
Here in Dallas the guy wasn't wheeled into the hospital in a sealed tube, into a waiting isolation unit properly equipped. They admitted him normally and had to scramble to deal with the issues that came up on the fly.
Furthermore apparently there is no established procedure in the vast majority of U.S. hospitals to deal with such a situation, and certainly healthcare workers in all those hospitals have little to no training in dealing with such situations. So this could, and probably would, happen in almost any other setting. Dallas just got unlucky, being where this guy's relatives live, and being where a tired and somewhat incompetent set of workers was on staff when things got dicey ( why did the doctor in the first visit not read the nurses notes, why did the nurse not speak to the doctor directly, why did they attempt dialysis and other procedures when he was already a goner, procedures likely to distribute infected particles around the room, etc ).
Have you seen the "protocol" for keeping yourself sterile if you are a healthcare worker treating an ebola patient? It is ludicrous, and it is no wonder so many of them eventually come down with it themselves. The statistics just aren't in their favor -- trying to properly wear and then remove multiple protective layers, without getting *any* possible droplets on yourself, like playing a game of pickup sticks. And they have to do that over and over !!
I'm not defending the hospital, or the doctors or nurses, I'm just saying there actually *is* a systemic issue. Hospitals are stubborn, doctors are stubborn, humanity is stubborn and doesn't like to admit when we don't know all the answers. The CDC itself is pretty stubborn in not recognizing that their own recommendations just don't seem to be something that is easy enough for people to follow.
The fact that the stupid second infected worker was selfish enough to
travel by plane well into the danger window
after they had cared for an ebola patient is testament to just how stubborn people are.