TB Patient Transferred to Colo. Hospital

Published 12:00 am Monday, December 26, 2005

DENVER – A man who had been quarantined with a drug-resistant form of tuberculosis for nearly a year was transferred to a hospital in Colorado on Thursday for treatment.

Robert Daniels, 27, has an multiple drug-resistant form of TB. He was placed in a jail ward at Maricopa Medical Center in Phoenix last August under court order after medical authorities complained that he had endangered others.

Thursday morning, Daniels was taken to Denver’s National Jewish Medical and Research Center, which specializes in treating respiratory diseases. Under an agreement worked out between Arizona and Colorado authorities, Daniels will have a security guard outside his door around the clock, hospital spokesman William Allstetter said.

Email newsletter signup

Atlanta attorney Andrew Speaker, who caused an international health scare in May after he flew to Europe knowing he had a drug-resistant form of tuberculosis, is being treated at the same Denver hospital and underwent successful surgery this week.

Linda Cosme, a lawyer for Daniels, said her client’s transfer to Denver was sought by Maricopa County medical experts because Daniels’ condition was deteriorating.

Cosme said her client was finding it hard to be separated from his family and was despondent from months of solitary confinement.

“Even if he was a criminal, which he isn’t, he would have more rights than he does as a patient,” Cosme said.

Though Daniels wasn’t charged with a crime, Arpaio said his office was examining whether Daniels endangered others by disobeying instructions from health officials such as wearing a mask.

The American Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit claiming Daniels was being treated like a criminal while in the Phoenix hospital and his rights were being violated.

A service of the Associated Press(AP)