The independent panel ruled the 40-year-old Scottish medical worker's fitness to practise was "not impaired".
A nurse who contracted Ebola has been cleared of misconduct over her return to the UK with the virus.
Pauline Cafferkey will still be able to practise medicine after a
panel at the Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) in Edinburgh found
three charges against her were not proven.
Ms Cafferkey became infected with Ebola during a six-week deployment to Sierra Leone in 2014.
The NMC had alleged Ms Cafferkey allowed an incorrect temperature to
be recorded during the screening process at Heathrow Airport towards the
end of December that year and that she left a screening area without
reporting her true temperature.
But the panel concluded Ms Cafferkey had not set out to mislead Public Health England.
In agreed evidence put before the panel, it was said screening staff
from Public Health England at the airport "were not properly prepared to
receive so many travellers from at-risk countries", and this resulted
in the area being described as "busy, disorganised and even chaotic".
The hearing was told that a doctor took Ms Cafferkey's temperature
and found it to be up to 38.3C. A high temperature can be an early sign
of an infection.
However, a lower temperature of 37.2C was entered on the screening form.
The nurse was eventually cleared for onward travel, arrived in
Glasgow late in the evening and awoke feeling "very unwell" the
following day, December 29 2014.
She was diagnosed with Ebola - with one of the highest viral loads
ever recorded - and spent almost a month being treated in an isolation
unit at London's Royal Free Hospital.
Medics said the early symptoms would have impaired her judgement and
an allegation she had acted dishonestly at Heathrow were dropped on
Tuesday.
In submissions on Tuesday, the NMC said Ms Cafferkey "potentially put
the public at risk" through her actions and that her conduct had
"undermined" public trust and confidence in the nursing profession.
But the nurse's legal team pointed to her "previously unblemished
record" and insisted the legal threshold for a finding of misconduct
against her has not been met.
Joyce Cullen told the panel that, in going to Sierra Leone, Ms Cafferkey had strengthened the reputation of the profession.
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