Anonymous wrote: I hope she'll recover and that the transfer to Emory isn't a sign of a downward spiral.
Anonymous wrote:The CDC website has had detailed Ebola guidance and instructions for hospitals and health care workers on its website for months. http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/hcp/index.html Texas Presbyterian is a large urban hospital with its own, apparently incompetent, infectious diseases staff. No one wore full PPE for the 1st 3 days Duncan was in the hospital?? Are you kidding me? Some guy jokes on a plane that he has Ebola after sneezing and 4 guys in hazmat suits show up to escort him off. But a guy from Liberia, with a 103 fever, who's projectile vomiting, having continuous diarrhea and bleeding from his eyes doesn't merit the hazmat suits?? It's not the CDC's job to hold everyone's hands when a hospital can't even get the basics right.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I felt bad after the first nurse got it but this second one must be a complete fucking idiot. She exposed her entire family? Wtf? Is she clueless? What sort of nursing school did she go to?
Agree. The first nurse only had contact with her boyfriend and dog. The second nurse already had a fever when she got on a plane! WTF!
Nurses are frequently near patients with infectious diseases (though none like ebola). Are they supposed to sit in their house the rest of lives? They stepped up to help another person and were ensured that the safety protocols would protect them. Let's keep the blame where it belongs--the CDC.
Let's not. I know personal responsibility is about dead in this day and age but she, more than the average lay person, knows about the dangers of Ebola. Nurses regularly stay home when they are sick so they don't infect patients with compromised immune systems (anyone who has worked in a hospital knows this). To think that she didn't grasp that when they told her to monitor herself for possible infection is ridiculous.
It appears she was monitoring herself. Monitoring =/= quarantine. I do not expect US hospitals and staff to be experts in an infectious disease that has never been here. That is the CDC's responsibility. The CDC should have set up regional centers with space suits so that they could be distributed when a case appeared. They should have conducted training and required all hospital staff to attend. They should've been clear about how ebola is transmitted. By not planning properly, they caused unnecessary panic and are responsible for the transmission of the disease beyond Duncan.
Tgank you. Outstanding post. We must have cofee sometime
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I felt bad after the first nurse got it but this second one must be a complete fucking idiot. She exposed her entire family? Wtf? Is she clueless? What sort of nursing school did she go to?
Agree. The first nurse only had contact with her boyfriend and dog. The second nurse already had a fever when she got on a plane! WTF!
Nurses are frequently near patients with infectious diseases (though none like ebola). Are they supposed to sit in their house the rest of lives? They stepped up to help another person and were ensured that the safety protocols would protect them. Let's keep the blame where it belongs--the CDC.
Let's not. I know personal responsibility is about dead in this day and age but she, more than the average lay person, knows about the dangers of Ebola. Nurses regularly stay home when they are sick so they don't infect patients with compromised immune systems (anyone who has worked in a hospital knows this). To think that she didn't grasp that when they told her to monitor herself for possible infection is ridiculous.
It appears she was monitoring herself. Monitoring =/= quarantine. I do not expect US hospitals and staff to be experts in an infectious disease that has never been here. That is the CDC's responsibility. The CDC should have set up regional centers with space suits so that they could be distributed when a case appeared. They should have conducted training and required all hospital staff to attend. They should've been clear about how ebola is transmitted. By not planning properly, they caused unnecessary panic and are responsible for the transmission of the disease beyond Duncan.
Tgank you. Outstanding post. We must have cofee sometime
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I felt bad after the first nurse got it but this second one must be a complete fucking idiot. She exposed her entire family? Wtf? Is she clueless? What sort of nursing school did she go to?
Agree. The first nurse only had contact with her boyfriend and dog. The second nurse already had a fever when she got on a plane! WTF!
Nurses are frequently near patients with infectious diseases (though none like ebola). Are they supposed to sit in their house the rest of lives? They stepped up to help another person and were ensured that the safety protocols would protect them. Let's keep the blame where it belongs--the CDC.
Let's not. I know personal responsibility is about dead in this day and age but she, more than the average lay person, knows about the dangers of Ebola. Nurses regularly stay home when they are sick so they don't infect patients with compromised immune systems (anyone who has worked in a hospital knows this). To think that she didn't grasp that when they told her to monitor herself for possible infection is ridiculous.
It appears she was monitoring herself. Monitoring =/= quarantine. I do not expect US hospitals and staff to be experts in an infectious disease that has never been here. That is the CDC's responsibility. The CDC should have set up regional centers with space suits so that they could be distributed when a case appeared. They should have conducted training and required all hospital staff to attend. They should've been clear about how ebola is transmitted. By not planning properly, they caused unnecessary panic and are responsible for the transmission of the disease beyond Duncan.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone remember when Osama got killed? We woke up one morning and boom, dead, as far as we civilians were concerned. Obama - of whom I am no fan due to his center-right governing and frequent attempts to negotiate with Republicans, whose governance style can be best described as "domestic terrorism" at this point - even appeared jovial at some big deal dinner. So I kind of guess (and hope) that there are numerous preparations to which we are not privy.
Anonymous wrote:But Obama says you can't get it sitting next to a person on a bus. So since he is our president how is a bus different from a plane? Obama thinks it's ok for people like Duncan to fly on in and so does Jesse Jackson. If those countries were Finland, Denmark, and Sweden I bet our admin would have reacted .....Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"We will from this moment forward ensure that no other individual who is being monitored for exposure undergoes travel in any way other than controlled movement," Dr Frieden said, meaning, for example, in chartered flights or ambulances."
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-29632433
Doesn't this seem like it was a common sense action that should've been done from the outset?
Why is the CDC always one step behind?
Also, please tell me they will now monitor every passenger on that plane. Though seeing how effective they've been so far, I doubt it.
It's not just the plane - it's anyone who was behind her in her travels - public bathroom, cab, coffee shop.
This is why I worry about unrestricted travel from West Africa. How do we know what public bathrooms they will contaminate. On airplanes, airports, coffe shops. Everyone is mad the nurse traveled but it is even worse that more people like Mr. Duncan will be roaming free to spread Ebola.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It seems that she had the symptoms after the flight, not before. So, if she is telling the truth, then she didn't have a fever and then hop on a plane to get back home. But, still, she shouldn't have been on planes in the first place, right? I thought the ones who were around Duncan were supposed to be careful.
http://news.yahoo.com/ebola-diagnosed-in-second-dallas-nurse-105542930.html
Cleveland has better health care so it would not make sense to fly to Dallas.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone remember when Osama got killed? We woke up one morning and boom, dead, as far as we civilians were concerned. Obama - of whom I am no fan due to his center-right governing and frequent attempts to negotiate with Republicans, whose governance style can be best described as "domestic terrorism" at this point - even appeared jovial at some big deal dinner. So I kind of guess (and hope) that there are numerous preparations to which we are not privy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I felt bad after the first nurse got it but this second one must be a complete fucking idiot. She exposed her entire family? Wtf? Is she clueless? What sort of nursing school did she go to?
Agree. The first nurse only had contact with her boyfriend and dog. The second nurse already had a fever when she got on a plane! WTF!
Nurses are frequently near patients with infectious diseases (though none like ebola). Are they supposed to sit in their house the rest of lives? They stepped up to help another person and were ensured that the safety protocols would protect them. Let's keep the blame where it belongs--the CDC.
Let's not. I know personal responsibility is about dead in this day and age but she, more than the average lay person, knows about the dangers of Ebola. Nurses regularly stay home when they are sick so they don't infect patients with compromised immune systems (anyone who has worked in a hospital knows this). To think that she didn't grasp that when they told her to monitor herself for possible infection is ridiculous.
It appears she was monitoring herself. Monitoring =/= quarantine. I do not expect US hospitals and staff to be experts in an infectious disease that has never been here. That is the CDC's responsibility. The CDC should have set up regional centers with space suits so that they could be distributed when a case appeared. They should have conducted training and required all hospital staff to attend. They should've been clear about how ebola is transmitted. By not planning properly, they caused unnecessary panic and are responsible for the transmission of the disease beyond Duncan.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I felt bad after the first nurse got it but this second one must be a complete fucking idiot. She exposed her entire family? Wtf? Is she clueless? What sort of nursing school did she go to?
Agree. The first nurse only had contact with her boyfriend and dog. The second nurse already had a fever when she got on a plane! WTF!
Nurses are frequently near patients with infectious diseases (though none like ebola). Are they supposed to sit in their house the rest of lives? They stepped up to help another person and were ensured that the safety protocols would protect them. Let's keep the blame where it belongs--the CDC.
Let's not. I know personal responsibility is about dead in this day and age but she, more than the average lay person, knows about the dangers of Ebola. Nurses regularly stay home when they are sick so they don't infect patients with compromised immune systems (anyone who has worked in a hospital knows this). To think that she didn't grasp that when they told her to monitor herself for possible infection is ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I felt bad after the first nurse got it but this second one must be a complete fucking idiot. She exposed her entire family? Wtf? Is she clueless? What sort of nursing school did she go to?
Agree. The first nurse only had contact with her boyfriend and dog. The second nurse already had a fever when she got on a plane! WTF!
Nurses are frequently near patients with infectious diseases (though none like ebola). Are they supposed to sit in their house the rest of lives? They stepped up to help another person and were ensured that the safety protocols would protect them. Let's keep the blame where it belongs--the CDC.
Let's not. I know personal responsibility is about dead in this day and age but she, more than the average lay person, knows about the dangers of Ebola. Nurses regularly stay home when they are sick so they don't infect patients with compromised immune systems (anyone who has worked in a hospital knows this). To think that she didn't grasp that when they told her to monitor herself for possible infection is ridiculous.
Bridezilla wanted to plan her wedding.