The police officer who was hospitalized after rushing to help a former Russian spy and his daughter suffering from a poison attack in Salisbury, England, was discharged Thursday. In a statementreleased by police, Detective Sergeant Nick Bailey said he needs more time to regroup and recover but that normal life "will never be the same."Bailey was treated at Salisbury District Hospital for several weeks after being exposed to the same deadly and rare nerve agent that the U.K. government says was used to target former intelligence officer Sergie Skirpal, 66, and Yulia, 33. "People ask me how I am feeling - but there are really no words to explain how I feel right now," Bailey wrote. "Surreal is the word that keeps cropping up - and it really has been completely surreal."The Telegraph reporteda second police officer was hospitalized Thursday after investigating the nerve agent. The paper says he is being treated as an outpatient for minor symptoms, including skin irritation. Authorities believe he came into contact with an object that could have had secondary contamination from the nerve agent used in the attack on the Skirpals. As NPR's Geoff Brumfiel reported, the poison is called Novichok, which means "newcomer" in Russian. It was developed in a top-secret laboratory in Moscow and was once a closely held secret of the Russian government. The chemicals were developed in the 1980s as a new weapon in the waning days of the Cold War. Earlier Thursday a British judge in the Court of Protection ruledthat doctors could draw blood samples from the Skirpals for expert testing. The father and daughter remain in critical condition under heavy sedation, and, according to the judge, lack the mental capacity to give their consent. He also agreed with experts from the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, hoping to analyze the blood, who argued "that samples taken from living individuals are of more scientific value than post mortem samples."Also today, the Associated Press reports the 28 European Union leaders, who had been meeting about the poisoning and how they should respond, announced that "there is no plausible alternative explanation" than that Russia ordered the attack.