HEALTH chiefs have identified more contacts of Ebola nurse Pauline Cafferkey as she continues to fight for her life in hospital.

The 39-year-old was readmitted to a specialist isolation unit at the Royal Free Hospital in London last week after becoming unwell in Glasgow.

Ms Cafferkey, 39, from Cambuslang in South Lanarkshire, contracted Ebola while working at a treatment centre in Sierra Leone last year.

Medics have now identified 65 close contacts and 26 of those individuals have been given a trial vaccine.

On Wednesday the hospital released a statement saying she is now deemed “critically ill” after her condition “deteriorated”.

She is being treated for Ebola in the Hampstead hospital’s high level isolation unit.

Ms Cafferkey was flown from Glasgow in a military aircraft in the early hours of Friday morning.

She had become unwell earlier in the week and was treated at the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital in Glasgow before being transferred.

A total of 58 close contacts of the nurse have been identified, with 40 of those offered vaccinations as a precaution.

Officials confirmed 25 of them accepted the vaccine while 15 have either declined or were unable to receive it due to existing medical conditions.

The 58 people are a mixture of healthcare workers and friends, family and community contacts.

Ms Cafferkey’s illness came just days after she won an award at the Pride of Britain Awards in central London on September 28.

She met the Prime Minister’s wife Samantha Cameron the following day at Downing Street, alongside other winners.

Ms Cafferkey, who is from South Lanarkshire, was diagnosed with Ebola in December after returning to Glasgow from Sierra Leone via London.

She spent almost a month in an isolation unit at the Royal Free before being discharged in late January.

Scientists agree that bodily tissues can harbour the Ebola infection months after the person appears to have fully recovered.

Ms Cafferkey’s family have claimed doctors “missed a big opportunity” to spot she had fallen ill with Ebola again.

Her sister Toni Cafferkey said the way she had been treated was “absolutely diabolical”. She said Ms Cafferkey had gone to a GP out-of-hours clinic at the Victoria Hospital in Glasgow on Monday night but the doctor who assessed her diagnosed a virus and sent her home.

She had contracted Ebola while working as a nurse at the Save the Children treatment centre in Kerry Town.

A report from the charity in February said she was probably infected as a result of using a visor to protect her face rather than goggles.

It said she was unable to use the standard protective goggles because she could not get them to fit properly.

Ms Cafferkey’s temperature was tested seven times before she flew from Heathrow to Glasgow in December, and she had been cleared for travel.