Fortunately, Ebola incubation doesn't matter until it's contagious (with symptoms), so this doctor coming in doesn't bother me. Even that he went bowling
But if we had enough people coming in who were incubating, people could get exposed who just shouldn't. I was so afraid for the kids around Duncan. Or the fiance of the nurse who flew to Chicago (wouldn't they have sex on a romantic visit planning their wedding?).
I don't think 21 days in a dorm (or bootcamp-like) environment would be that horrible a thing to go through, myself. I think a lot of people might be happy to have a place to go for quarantine. In Spain, many of those being monitored did so in the hospital, voluntarily.
Hospitals are expensive, so I'd go with dorms where possible, but a decent place where folks could wait out the waiting period doesn't have to be something they'd hate. The idea would be to keep them isolated enough for a relatively short period of time, imho.
It might end up less costly, because all of these contact-tracing teams don't come cheap! In the US, we've had schools and businesses close for a while due to exposure, too. That seems avoidable to me.
In any case, I don't mean Gitmo or anything