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FeaturesEbola

Ebola victim’s family and Dallas hospital reach settlement

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TIME
TIME
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By
TIME
TIME
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November 12, 2014, 1:38 PM ET
Josephus Weeks, Les Weisbrod, Mai Wureh
Josephus Weeks, left, nephew of Thomas Eric Duncan, and Mai Wureh, center, sister of Duncan, look on as attorney Les Weisbrod speaks during a news conference in Dallas, Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014. The hospital that treated Duncan, the only Ebola patient to die in the United States, will pay his relatives an undisclosed sum and create a charitable foundation in his name, Weisbrod said. (AP Photo/LM Otero)Photograph by LM Otero — AP

This post is in partnership with Time. The article below was originally published at Time.com.

By Sam Frizell, TIME

The family of the first patient diagnosed with Ebola in the United States announced Wednesday that a settlement had been reached with the Dallas hospital that treated him before his death.

The deal with Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital was “as good or better than we would have done in court,” Les Weisbrod, a lawyer for the family of Thomas Eric Duncan, said at a news conference.

Medical malpractice suits in Texas have an upper liability limit of $250,000 for a claimant. If the Duncan family had taken the hospital to court, it would have had to reach a very high legal bar, proving the hospital knew its staff was causing harm when they treated Duncan.

Staffers at Texas Health Presbyterian had originally sent Duncan home after he went to the emergency room, even though he had a fever and was recently in Liberia, among the three hardest-hit nations in an outbreak that has killed more than 5,000 people. He died Oct. 8; two nurses who were a part of Duncan’s medical team would later contract Ebola but, after treatment elsewhere, be declared virus-free.

The hospital has also agreed to create a foundation in Duncan’s name to fund the construction of a facility to combat Ebola in Liberia. The fund will be administered by one of the existing foundations of Texas Health Resources, and the family said it is seeking contributions.

“I can never replace Thomas Eric Duncan, but we can make sure that we make this better for everyone else,” said Josephus Weeks, Duncan’s nephew.

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