Jan 24, 2015
Ebola nurse: Pauline Cafferkey 'happy to be alive'
"Obviously at the back of my mind I had seen what could happen and what could potentially happen to me."
After three or four days Ms Cafferkey said her condition began to deteriorate, with the hospital announcing she had become critically ill on 4 January.
Asked if there was a point she felt she would not make it, Ms Cafferkey said: "There was a point, which I remember clearly. I do remember saying: 'That's it, I've had enough'."
She said she had "no sense of time" in hospital and cannot remember an entire week when the virus took hold.
'Selflessness and courage' She said she received letters and cards from people around the world, including people in Sierra Leone and from other nurses who wrote to say she made them proud of their profession.
Asked if she wanted to return to Sierra Leone, she said: "I would have to think seriously about it. I am definitely going to give aid work a break for a while.
"I just want to go back to my normal job, my normal life and I think my family will be happy with that as well."
Dr Michael Jacobs, from the hospital's infectious diseases team, said Ms Cafferkey had now completely recovered and was "not infectious in any way".
He said Ms Cafferkey was treated with blood plasma from an Ebola survivor and an experimental treatment drug closely related drug to ZMapp, which UK nurse Will Pooley was treated with after he contracted Ebola.
Nurses and patients at the Blantyre Health Centre, in South Lanarkshire, where Ms Cafferkey works as a public health nurse, were "overjoyed" to hear the news of her recovery, BBC Scotland reporter Laura Bicker said.
Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt he was "delighted" Ms Cafferkey had been discharged from hospital, hailing her "selflessness and courage".
"She represents the very best of NHS values," he added.
Chief Medical Officer Dame Sally Davies said her recovery was testament to the "hard work and dedication" of the team at the Royal Free who "worked around the clock to help bring about this happy outcome".
Save the Children is investigating how Ms Cafferkey contracted the disease.
BBC