A five-year-old boy who returned from Guinea Saturday night is being tested for Ebola at Bellevue Hospital in Manhattan, according to the New York Post.

From the Post:

The child was vomiting and had a 103-degree fever when he was carried from his Bronx home by EMS workers wearing hazmat suits, neighbors said. "He looked weak," said a neighbor.

"He was really, really out of it."

The Post, citing law enforcement sources, reports that the boy was rushed to the hospital on Sunday. Five members of his family have reportedly been quarantined inside their apartment.

On MSNBC this morning, Dr. Mary Bassett, NYC's health commissioner, confirmed that the boy had been taken Bellevue and said results from his test should be in by early afternoon today. Bassett also said the boy had a "one-hundred-point-something" degree fever when he was admitted to Bellevue.

If he tests positive, the boy would become the second person infected with the deadly virus in New York City; last week, Dr. Craig Spencer tested positive for the disease several days after returning from Guinea, where he was working with Doctors Without Borders to treat Ebola patients.

UPDATE 11:15 am: According to Bassett, the boy didn't develop a fever until Monday morning. From the New York Post:

The boy, who was transported by EMS workers in hazmat suits, did not have a fever when he was initially examined Sunday night at Bellevue, according to the New York City Health and Hospitals Corp. He developed the fever about 7 a.m. Monday.

...

The city Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, after consulting with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, decided to test the boy for the virus because of his recent travel history and pattern of symptoms. He also is being evaluated for other childhood illnesses.

[Image via AP]