The two Dallas nurses who took care of the Liberian man who died are clear of the Ebola virus.

Texas nurse Nina Pham was discharged from the National Institutes of Health on Friday after doctors declared her clear of the virus. She was taken to meet with President Obama in the Oval Office, who hugged her, according to The Associated Press.

Pham said she felt "fortunate and blessed to be standing here today" as she left the hospital, but she said it could take her a while to get all of her strength back.

Pham became infected with Ebola while treating the Liberian patient, Thomas Duncan, who traveled to the United States, and died of the virus Oct. 8.

The second nurse, Amber Vinson, tests revealed she has no virus in her blood. She is being treated at Emory University Hospital in Atlanta, which said in a statement issued Friday said she "is making good progress." There is no discharge date yet for Vinson.

In New York, Mayor Bill de Blasio's office said the New York City Ebola patient is in "relatively stable" condition. Dr. Craig Spencer was checked into Bellevue Hospital on Thursday with a temperature of 100.3 degrees Fahrenheit and stomach paints. His apartment in Hamilton Heights is sealed.

Spencer returned a week ago from working with Doctors without Borders in Guinea treating patients with Ebola. Spencer's fiancee is also in hospital isolation at Bellevue and two of their friends are being monitored. Disease detectives are investigating Spencer's movements prior to his developing Ebola symptoms.

In New Jersey, a healthcare worker who had contact with Ebola patients in Africa has been quarantined. Initially, she had no symptoms but later developed a fever. She is in isolation and being evaluated at a hospital in Newark. The woman landed at Newark Liberty Airport in New Jersey on Friday.

The governors of New Jersey and New York say they're issuing a mandatory quarantine for travelers who had contact with Ebola-infected patients in West Africa, according to the Associated Press. The quarantine covers any person traveling from Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone who had contact with infected, or possibly infected, people will automatically be quarantined for 21 days, including doctors. The program will be coordinated with local health departments.