Save the Children is considering 'urgently reviewing' their Ebola protocols as they continue investigations on how British nurse Pauline Cafferkey, had contracted the disease.
Mr. Rob MacGillivray, Sierra Leone Director of the UK-based charity told BBC News, "We are constantly reviewing our protocols and procedures to ensure staff working in the Kerry Town centre and outside take all measures possible to prevent themselves becoming infected with Ebola."
He added, "Because of this very serious event, we've put in an extraordinary review to ensure that we do everything and leave no stone unturned to as far as is possible to identify the source of this infection."
Pauline Cafferkey volunteered at the Kerry Town Centre for three weeks since November 23. She departed from Sierra Leone via Casablanca, Morocco on a Royal Air Maroc on December 28. She then had a connecting flight from Casablanca via London's Heathrow to Glasgow in Scotland, however, after feeling unwell, she was then brought back to London and confined at the Royal Free Hospital on December 30.
Nurse Cafferkey is the 20th patient to be treated outside of West Africa, where more than 20,000 people have been infected and more than 8,000 patients have died of the disease.
Out of the 20 patients, who were mostly treated in the US and UK, 5 of them have died.