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By Dennis Thompson
HealthDay Reporter
THURSDAY, Nov. 6, 2014 (HealthDay News) -- A New York City doctor who became infected with Ebola while treating patients in West Africa apparently feels well enough now to ride a stationary bike, practice yoga and play the banjo while under quarantine.
Dr. Craig Spencer, who has been undergoing treatment at Bellevue Hospital in New York City, has been strumming his favorite tunes in his hospital room this week, according to the New York Post.
"He is an avid little banjo player and he's self-taught," Chriselle Gardner, the mother of Spencer's fiancee Morgan Dixon, told The Post. "I can tell you, he's keeping his doctors amused."
The 33-year-old Spencer has been receiving treatments that have proven effective for Ebola patients at Emory University Hospital in Atlanta and Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha. He became infected while working with Ebola patients in Guinea, one of three West African countries ravaged by the outbreak that has caused more than 13,000 infections and nearly 5,000 deaths.
In related news, the Texas Department of State Health Services on Thursday said that, "the last person being monitored in connection with the state's three diagnosed Ebola patients will be cleared from twice-daily monitoring by the end of the day Friday."
The three Texas patients included Liberian national Thomas Eric Duncan, who died of Ebola in a Dallas hospital on Oct. 8, and two of his nurses, Nina Pham and Amber Vinson, who became infected but have since recovered. In total, 177 people who were deemed at risk because they were in close contact with at least one of the three patients were being monitored, the health department said in a statement.
By late Friday, all of these contacts will have reached the 21-day mark, the longest incubation period for Ebola, officials said.
Spencer is the only Ebola patient currently being treated in the United States. He was working for Doctors Without Borders. He returned to New York City on Oct. 14, and by Oct. 23 had developed a 100.3-degree fever. He immediately alerted Doctors Without Borders. Emergency medical workers in full personal protective gear transported him from his Manhattan apartment to an isolation unit at Bellevue Hospital, The New York Times reported.
Before Spencer developed symptoms, he visited a park and ate at a restaurant in Manhattan, traveled by subway from Manhattan to Brooklyn, and then took a taxi back to Manhattan.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says someone infected with Ebola is not contagious until they show symptoms, such as fever.
Spencer's diagnosis and travels throughout New York City prompted the governors of New York and New Jersey to declare a mandatory quarantine for travelers exposed to Ebola in West Africa.