Angelo State University freshman student Eric Karsiah Duncan Jr. did not have any physical contact with his father, Thomas Eric Duncan, either immediately before or after his father’s diagnoses and death via the Ebola virus. By the time the ASU student traveled to Dallas, his father was already isolated and quarantined, said ASU spokesperson Rebekah Brackin.
Concerns were expressed by multiple emails and phone calls to the San Angelo LIVE! office that there was a public health risk in San Angelo because of the student’s close association with the virus.
“He was given ‘flex time’ for two weeks so that he could help with making arrangements for his father,” Brackin said. “We’d give this to any student experiencing a death of a parent.” Brackin acknowledged that this incident has the added burden of being a very public thing.
“We have professors working with him and [University President] Dr. Brian May has a conversation with him daily,” she said. “We expect him back in class and to finish this semester.”
Brackin stressed that there was no window of opportunity for Karsiah to be exposed to the Ebola virus.
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