Thanks for clarifying! |
I actually feel much better after reading this -- hope the posters are correct! (and I'm ignoring the usual nasty posters). Thanks to those with scientific knowledge, helping out the rest of us. |
Yes, thanks to those who read webmd or the cdc site! Your intelligence dazzles us. |
It's almost as impressive as your kindness. |
Hong Kong screens all arrivals for high temperatures on arrivals so they are at least a bit better prepared than most countries. After SARS, they will not hesitate to quarantine people so I would probably trust them to handle this situation better than the UK or US. |
So sad that others only begin to see a problem when it becomes a possibility that it will reach their shores. The selflessness of those battling this monstrous outbreak overseas is astounding and the only kindness that matters at this point. |
Scientists don't know everything about ebola. It hasn't been around to be studied for very long.
It looks like some believe ebola can live on surfaces for several days. The doctors that are suiting up and getting sick are an indication that it is highly contagious. Most of those doctors are not used to biohazard protocol, but some are and are still getting sick. It's not airborne, but perhaps it is heartier than previously anticipated. I don't think it can spread here because of the practices of our hospitals and health care workers. Do these ebola tents in Liberia even have running water? -mom who's been obsessed with viruses for many, many years |
Brother planning a business trip to Sierra Leone next week. Thank goodness the Peace Corps is pulling out and (hopefully) he won't go.
West Africa is far away and not a threat to us here, but if you go there ... |
I really do not want to find out first hand! |
How do they scan everyone? Thermal sensitive cameras? |
West Africa isn't so "far away" anymore. Ebola was just a plane ride away from making landfall in the U.S. |
Good point--glad someone noted this. |
We shouldn't be too concerned about Ebola spreading to the US or other wealthy countries. It's transmitted entirely through exposure to bodily fluids. In settings with Ebola, there's bleeding in a variety of places and the virus is present in those excretions, and people need to come into contact with that to get the virus. The people at risk are the family members who are taking care of sick people, those who are preparing bodies for burial, and health-care workers.
The virus is not transmitted through coughing and sneezing, or through sitting next to someone on a bus, plane or the like. The idea that the virus can somehow mutate and become more readily transmissible from person to person through coughing or sneezing—those are Hollywood scenarios. The idea that Ebola can become more readily transmissible through casual contact is unrealistic. |
Some viruses mutate more quickly than others. That's the reason an effective HIV vaccine hasn't been found. |
Isn't that pretty much exactly what happened with Ebola Reston in The Hot Zone? |