The government plans to begin taking the
temperatures of travelers from West Africa arriving at five U.S. airports as
part of a stepped-up response to the Ebola epidemic.
At the White House, spokesman Josh Earnest said an
additional layer of screening would begin at New York's JFK International and
the international airports in Newark, Washington Dulles, Chicago and Atlanta.
He said the new steps would include taking temperatures and would begin
Saturday at JFK.
Earnest said the five airports cover the
destinations of 94 percent of the people who travel to the U.S. from the three
heavily hit countries in West Africa — Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea. He
estimated that about 150 people would be checked a day under the new
procedures.
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