Anonymous wrote:The first nurse who was infected said that she remembered touching her face with her protective glove after leaving the quarantine area. It sounds like the Spanish hospital workers were not wearing the kinds of hazmat suits that I have been seeing on the news. I feel bad for all of the healthcare workers.
Anonymous wrote:I am not speculating when I point out that it is impossible for Ebola to survive after being soaked with a 50/50 bleach mixture.
Biohazard cleanup protocol is 10% bleach/90% water. Ebola is an enveloped virus, which is the least resistant to the chemicals used to clean up biohazard spills.
Again, it is impossible for Ebola to have survived if it was done properly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NBC cameraman with ebola was spray cleaning a car with water and chlorine mixture. Chlorine didnt kill it apparently
Something to know...
There's no way it survives a bleach bath. That's absurd.
Hes lying?
Don't be ridiculous. He doesn't know for sure how he was exposed. He's been living in Liberia for a long time. For all anyone knows, it could have happened on an entirely different day, in an entirely different setting.
You are speculating while he was there. How can you be so presumptious to feel you know more than the man who is actually there!?
Ill bite though. If he didnt work with ebola patients directly, the how do suppose he caught it? How was he directly exposed to their bodly fluids?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NBC cameraman with ebola was spray cleaning a car with water and chlorine mixture. Chlorine didnt kill it apparently
Something to know...
There's no way it survives a bleach bath. That's absurd.
He's lying?
There is zero chance that he messed up in some way?
He was helping in a professional decontaminatiom As per standards
and he followed those standards 100%? you know that because you were there?
The solution was 50/50. That should have killed the virus.
and he didn't miss one little spot? maybe it got on his clothes that he touched later when his guard was down? no one can say that he didn't make an error/oversight along the way.
what about the Spanish nurse - she probably made an error too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NBC cameraman with ebola was spray cleaning a car with water and chlorine mixture. Chlorine didnt kill it apparently
Something to know...
There's no way it survives a bleach bath. That's absurd.
He's lying?
There is zero chance that he messed up in some way?
He was helping in a professional decontaminatiom As per standards
and he followed those standards 100%? you know that because you were there?
The solution was 50/50. That should have killed the virus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NBC cameraman with ebola was spray cleaning a car with water and chlorine mixture. Chlorine didnt kill it apparently
Something to know...
There's no way it survives a bleach bath. That's absurd.
He's lying?
There is zero chance that he messed up in some way?
He was helping in a professional decontaminatiom As per standards
and he followed those standards 100%? you know that because you were there?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NBC cameraman with ebola was spray cleaning a car with water and chlorine mixture. Chlorine didnt kill it apparently
Something to know...
There's no way it survives a bleach bath. That's absurd.
He's lying?
There is zero chance that he messed up in some way?
He was helping in a professional decontaminatiom As per standards
and he followed those standards 100%? you know that because you were there?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NBC cameraman with ebola was spray cleaning a car with water and chlorine mixture. Chlorine didnt kill it apparently
Something to know...
There's no way it survives a bleach bath. That's absurd.
He's lying?
There is zero chance that he messed up in some way?
He was helping in a professional decontaminatiom As per standards
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NBC cameraman with ebola was spray cleaning a car with water and chlorine mixture. Chlorine didnt kill it apparently
Something to know...
There's no way it survives a bleach bath. That's absurd.
He's lying?
There is zero chance that he messed up in some way?