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Nurse Who Protested States' Ebola Quarantines Makes Dramatic Decision
Nurse Kaci Hickox is accompanied by her boyfriend Ted Wilbur as she speaks to the media outside their home, Friday, Oct. 31, 2014, in Fort Kent, Maine. A Maine judge gave Hickox the OK to go wherever she pleases, handing state officials a defeat Friday in their bid to restrict her movements as a precaution against Ebola. (AP/Robert F. Bukaty)

Nurse Who Protested States' Ebola Quarantines Makes Dramatic Decision

"I'm concerned that the wrong people are leading the debate."

PORTLAND, Maine (TheBlaze/AP) — The nurse from Maine who battled politicians over her quarantine after she returned from treating Ebola patients in West Africa will be moving out of the state with her boyfriend this week, according to the Portland Press Herald.

It is unclear exactly where Kaci Hickox, whose 21-day state-ordered quarantine lifts Tuesday, will be going to, but the newspaper reported that she and her boyfriend, Ted Wilbur, who withdrew from University of Maine at Fort Kent where he was a nursing student, will leave before the week is up.

“We’re going to try to get our lives back on track,” Wilbur told the Press Herald Friday.

Nurse Kaci Hickox is accompanied by her boyfriend Ted Wilbur as she speaks to the media outside their home, Friday, Oct. 31, 2014, in Fort Kent, Maine. A Maine judge gave Hickox the OK to go wherever she pleases, handing state officials a defeat Friday in their bid to restrict her movements as a precaution against Ebola. (AP/Robert F. Bukaty) Nurse Kaci Hickox is accompanied by her boyfriend Ted Wilbur as she speaks to the media outside their home, Friday, Oct. 31, 2014, in Fort Kent, Maine. A Maine judge gave Hickox the OK to go wherever she pleases, handing state officials a defeat Friday in their bid to restrict her movements as a precaution against Ebola. (AP/Robert F. Bukaty)

As for Hickox, she said she will continue speaking out on behalf of public health workers.

Monday marks the 21st day since Hickox's last exposure to an Ebola patient, a 10-year-old girl who suffered seizures before dying alone without family. On Tuesday, she will no longer require daily monitoring for Ebola symptoms, and said she looks forward to stepping out her front door "like normal people."

But the Texas native said she won't back away from the debate over treatment of health care workers.

"In the past, a quarantine was something that was considered very extreme. I'm concerned about how lightly we're taking this concept today," said Hickox, who defied state-ordered quarantine attempts in New Jersey and Maine. "I'm concerned that the wrong people are leading the debate and making the decisions."

She said the U.S. needs a public education campaign to better explain the virus that has killed nearly 5,000 in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea. However, Hickox said she wouldn't let her experience prevent her from returning to West Africa.

"Something like quarantine is not going to scare me from doing the work that I love," Hickox said, adding that she would "return to Sierra Leone in a heartbeat."

Hickox said she plans to have dinner with her boyfriend to mark the end of the deadly disease's incubation period, but she's not sure what kind of reception she'll get. She has been hailed by some and vilified by others for refusing to be quarantined.

Nurse Kaci Hickox leaves her home on a rural road in Fort Kent, Maine, to take a bike ride with her boyfriend Ted Wilbur, Thursday, Oct. 30, 2014.  The couple went on an hour-long ride followed by a Maine State Trooper.  State officials are going to court to keep Hickox in quarantine for the remainder of the 21-day incubation period for Ebola that ends on Nov. 10. Police are monitoring her, but can't detain her without a court order signed by a judge. (AP/Robert F. Bukaty) Nurse Kaci Hickox leaves her home on a rural road in Fort Kent, Maine, to take a bike ride with her boyfriend Ted Wilbur, Thursday, Oct. 30, 2014. The couple went on an hour-long ride followed by a Maine State Trooper.  (AP/Robert F. Bukaty)

Most people have been supportive, she said, but others have been hateful. She received a letter from one person who said he hoped she would catch Ebola and die.

"We're still thankful we've had a lot of great support in this community but I'd be lying if I said that it didn't make me a little bit nervous thinking about people from the other side of the debate and how they might react to me," Hickox said.

A volunteer with Doctors Without Borders, she spent a month at a hospital where there were never enough beds for all of the Ebola patients who needed help. It was so hot that volunteers could only spend about an hour at a time treating patients in their protective suits. They were drenched in sweat when they finished their shifts, she said.

On the morning she left Sierra Leone, the weary nurse learned that the girl she'd treated hours earlier had died. She was debriefed by Doctors Without Borders in Brussels before flying to the U.S.

It was after three hours of questioning at the Newark Liberty International Airport that she resolved that she'd have to make a stand on behalf of all returning health care workers.

"I said I'm going to have to do something about this because I can't possibly let my colleagues go through this. This is completely unacceptable," she said.

Hickox was sequestered in a medical tent for days because New Jersey announced new Ebola regulations the day she arrived.

She eventually was allowed to travel to Maine, where the state sought to impose a "voluntary quarantine" before trying and failing to create a buffer between her and others. A state judge rejected attempts to restrict her movements, saying she posed no threat as long as she wasn't demonstrating any symptoms of Ebola.

Hickox said health care professionals like those at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — not politicians like New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Maine Gov. Paul LePage — should be in charge of making decisions that are grounded in science, not fear.

Hickox said she's considering her options as she looks for work. She holds a nursing degree from the University of Texas at Arlington and master's degrees in nursing and public health from Johns Hopkins University and said she may opt to go back to school.

"I have been over the last couple of days been toying with the idea of maybe getting a doctorate degree and focusing on quarantine law," she said.

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