Please get your facts straight. According to WHO:
"No specific treatment is available. New drug therapies are being evaluated" It doesn't much matter where you are when you contract the disease there is not treatment and mortality rates are around 90%.
Anonymous wrote:In a developed country with millions of people living close together it would be worse. Do you really think that the WHO is going to TELL people that you could get it easily? Mass panic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have to be in contact with body fluids in order to catch it. The medical professionals dealing with the outbreak get exhausted and let their guard down and are exposed to this very messy disease that way. Imagine a scenario where they wear the biohazard suits all day but slip up when they take it off and touch the outside of the suit with bare hands, etc.
But, they are only allowed to wear the hot suits for 1 hour at a time, then they have go to through a decontamination station and are helped out of the suits by a decontamination team (they do not remove them themselves, and the outside of the suits are sprayed down with disinfectant before removing anything), then they have to re-hydrate for 2 hours after that because of all the fluids they loose while inside the suits. It seems like infection would be pretty difficult given all those procedures
But yet the lead doctor got it and died yesterday.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have to be in contact with body fluids in order to catch it. The medical professionals dealing with the outbreak get exhausted and let their guard down and are exposed to this very messy disease that way. Imagine a scenario where they wear the biohazard suits all day but slip up when they take it off and touch the outside of the suit with bare hands, etc.
But, they are only allowed to wear the hot suits for 1 hour at a time, then they have go to through a decontamination station and are helped out of the suits by a decontamination team (they do not remove them themselves, and the outside of the suits are sprayed down with disinfectant before removing anything), then they have to re-hydrate for 2 hours after that because of all the fluids they loose while inside the suits. It seems like infection would be pretty difficult given all those procedures
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have to be in contact with body fluids in order to catch it. The medical professionals dealing with the outbreak get exhausted and let their guard down and are exposed to this very messy disease that way. Imagine a scenario where they wear the biohazard suits all day but slip up when they take it off and touch the outside of the suit with bare hands, etc.
But, they are only allowed to wear the hot suits for 1 hour at a time, then they have go to through a decontamination station and are helped out of the suits by a decontamination team (they do not remove them themselves, and the outside of the suits are sprayed down with disinfectant before removing anything), then they have to re-hydrate for 2 hours after that because of all the fluids they loose while inside the suits. It seems like infection would be pretty difficult given all those procedures
Anonymous wrote:You have to be in contact with body fluids in order to catch it. The medical professionals dealing with the outbreak get exhausted and let their guard down and are exposed to this very messy disease that way. Imagine a scenario where they wear the biohazard suits all day but slip up when they take it off and touch the outside of the suit with bare hands, etc.
Anonymous wrote:You have to be in contact with body fluids in order to catch it. The medical professionals dealing with the outbreak get exhausted and let their guard down and are exposed to this very messy disease that way. Imagine a scenario where they wear the biohazard suits all day but slip up when they take it off and touch the outside of the suit with bare hands, etc.
Anonymous wrote:This is really scary. The physicians over there wear the "hot suits" when they are in contact with Ebola patients, so how the heck did they catch it?
And, if this suspected case of the woman in Hong Kong who was returning from Kenya turns out to in fact be Ebola, HOLY CRAP! Can you imagine an Ebola outbreak in such a highly populated and internationally connected city as Hong Kong?
This is really getting scary![]()