Trouble Ahead For NBC Medical Correspondent Who Violated Quarantine

Sarah Palin, who is co-hosting NBC News' "Today" show, talks as Dr. Nancy Snyderman sits next to her in New York on Tuesday, April 3, 2012. Palin was the much-hyped guest co-host on NBC's "Today," going head-to-head ... Sarah Palin, who is co-hosting NBC News' "Today" show, talks as Dr. Nancy Snyderman sits next to her in New York on Tuesday, April 3, 2012. Palin was the much-hyped guest co-host on NBC's "Today," going head-to-head against former "Today" anchor Katie Couric, who this week is subbing on "Good Morning America" at her current workplace, ABC. (AP Photo/NBC, Peter Kramer) MORE LESS
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NEW YORK (AP) — The quarantine against possible Ebola exposure ends this week for Dr. Nancy Snyderman, but the troubles clearly aren’t over for NBC News’ chief medical editor.

An admitted lapse in the quarantine, combined with a curiously imprecise explanation, unleashed a furious response. NBC must now decide whether Snyderman’s credibility is too damaged for her to continue reporting on Ebola or other medical issues and, if so, for how long. The network would not comment.

Snyderman, a surgeon who spent 17 years as a medical correspondent for ABC News and has been at NBC since 2006, covered the Ebola outbreak in West Africa and worked briefly with Ashoka Mukpo, the cameraman who caught the virus and is now being treated in Nebraska. Upon returning to the United States, Snyderman and her crew voluntarily agreed to quarantine themselves for 21 days, the longest known incubation period for the disease. They have shown no symptoms.

Yet New Jersey health officials ruled that her quarantine should be mandatory after Snyderman and her crew were spotted getting takeout food from a New Jersey restaurant.

NBC won’t give details about who actually went into the restaurant, or even how many of its employees are being quarantined. Snyderman issued a statement saying “members of our group” violated their pledge.

More than 1,100 people have subsequently written on Snyderman’s Facebook page, many expressing anger. There were suggestions she should be fired or lose her medical license, and some viewers said they wouldn’t trust her again. Snyderman’s failure to be more specific about the lapse or take greater responsibility was another flashpoint.

Snyderman’s “arrogance and dismissiveness” create a huge PR and credibility problem for NBC, said Kelly McBride, an expert on ethics for the journalism think tank the Poynter Institute.

“People are so freaked out about Ebola that the problem NBC has now is that whenever they put her on the air, some news consumers are going to see the woman who put others at risk, rather than the reporter and professional with great experience,” McBride said.

McBride suggested that Snyderman “lay low” or take a leave of absence. Certainly she should not report on Ebola anymore for the network, she said.

Susan Dentzer, a longtime health journalist and commentator for National Public Radio and the PBS “NewsHour,” said people shouldn’t forget that Snyderman put herself at risk to travel to Africa and cover the story. The public is reacting to a fear of Ebola instead of science, she said.

“She and her team clearly should have observed the terms of their quarantine, and she has said clearly that they made a mistake,” Dentzer said. “But let’s put it in a broader perspective.”

Before Snyderman’s trip for takeout, ABC News’ medical expert arguably had bigger problems. ABC health editor Dr. Richard Besser was in Africa at the same time asSnyderman and did not quarantine himself upon his return. That led ABC News President James Goldston to send his staff a memo explaining that the network was following medical advice.

Still, Besser was disinvited to a speaking engagement at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, he wrote last week in the Washington Post. Some colleagues have avoided him.

“I’ve been surprised by how many colleagues have waved from across the room and quickly made an exit,” Besser wrote. “Others won’t enter my office.”

NBC could face a competitive disadvantage if Snyderman is taken off medical stories. Robert Bazell, the network’s longtime health and science correspondent, left last year to teach at Yale.

An important first step for Snyderman will be to explain to viewers exactly what happened, perhaps on a venue like the “Today” show, said Bill Wheatley, a longtime NBC executive who now teaches journalism at Columbia University.

“If she and the network are more forthcoming about the whole matter, I believe that her credibility can be preserved,” Wheatley said.

___

Follow David Bauder at twitter.com/dbauder. His work can be found at http://bigstory.ap.org/content/david-bauder.

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  1. Avatar for pmm080 pmm080 says:

    “Susan Dentzer, a longtime health journalist and commentator for National
    Public Radio and the PBS “NewsHour,” said people shouldn’t forget that
    Snyderman put herself at risk to travel to Africa and cover the story.
    The public is reacting to a fear of Ebola instead of science, she said.”

    Not true. A physician should know better, and quarantine is quarantine. The reaction is to her being arrogant and thinking she is “better” than the rest of us! She didn’t even really apologize but made excuses for “us” NOT herself. She would have been fine riding around in a car. But, somebody walked into the diner and violated the quarantine. Yes, the fear in America is ridiculous, but a celebrity doctor should have known better!

  2. Avatar for phd9 phd9 says:

    Since no one is infectious until they are symptomatic, she was in a unique position to determine whether it was safe for her to go out. If she wasn’t sick, then it was safe. That doesn’t mean it was okay but there is absolutely no question that this disease makes people stupid well before they come into contact with it. A little perspective goes a looong way.

  3. Not good public relations but if asymptomatic the chances she was contagious are almost nil. But it she WAS infected, and had an accident somehow that caused her to splatter blood–and it got on someone else face–uh, oh. THAT is the reason for quarantine. You do not know till you know.

  4. Call me old-fashioned, but I think someone in Snyderman’s position needs to be a role model. And when she selfishly went into a diner for take-out, she did not set a good example for anybody.

  5. Is that her good side?

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