Pool/Getty.

Pool/Getty.

A nurse from Texas who was treated for Ebola at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda has been released as she is now virus free, according to her doctors.

Nina Pham was transferred from Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital, where she treated a man who later died from Ebola, to the NIH Clinical Center Special Clinical Studies Unit on October 16. Her condition was upgraded from fair to good on Tuesday.

Speaking at a press conference today, Pham said she felt “fortunate and blessed,” and thanked the team at NIH, God and Kent Brantly, a doctor cured of Ebola who donated plasma. She asked for prayers for her colleague, Amber Vinson, who is being treated for Ebola in Atlanta, and for privacy as she recovers in Texas.

Pham then met with President Obama in the Oval Office, where the two embraced. Press was not allowed in the meeting, but a pool report says Pham’s mother Diana Pham, sister Catherine Pham, Human Services Secretary Sylvia M. Burwell and doctors from NIH were in attendance.

The good news comes one day after a doctor in New York City, who recently returned from treating Ebola patients in West Africa, tested positive for the virus. Dr. Craig Spencer is currently quarantined at Bellevue.

Pham’s dog, Bentley, is currently being quarantined by Dallas Animal Services. As the below video shows at around the 2:45 mark, he’s doing just fine.