Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We won't know for a few more weeks given its 21-day lag time from first exposure. New cases are on a plane daily too.
Well, the doctors he saw, the nurses, hospital staff, the relatives he stayed with, random strangers he met in two days and whoever touched anything after him.
CDC really dropped the ball.
Anonymous wrote:
We won't know for a few more weeks given its 21-day lag time from first exposure. New cases are on a plane daily too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can get it from shaking hands, touching something that person has touched.
We all have tiny breaks--cracks in our skin--especially during winter.
The long incubation time makes this a real fucker to contain.
Signed, a former Hazleton (Reston lab from Hot Zone) immunologist
If it was that difficult to contain we would have all been dead a long time ago. The disease is actually pretty self containing because symptoms are so awful - symptomatic people aren't going out to dinner parties/the office.school and the disease is very lethal to the host.
And yet here it is, not being effectively contained
How many people actually have it now (in the U.S.)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can get it from shaking hands, touching something that person has touched.
We all have tiny breaks--cracks in our skin--especially during winter.
The long incubation time makes this a real fucker to contain.
Signed, a former Hazleton (Reston lab from Hot Zone) immunologist
If it was that difficult to contain we would have all been dead a long time ago. The disease is actually pretty self containing because symptoms are so awful - symptomatic people aren't going out to dinner parties/the office.school and the disease is very lethal to the host.
And yet here it is, not being effectively contained
How many people actually have it now (in the U.S.)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can get it from shaking hands, touching something that person has touched.
We all have tiny breaks--cracks in our skin--especially during winter.
The long incubation time makes this a real fucker to contain.
Signed, a former Hazleton (Reston lab from Hot Zone) immunologist
If it was that difficult to contain we would have all been dead a long time ago. The disease is actually pretty self containing because symptoms are so awful - symptomatic people aren't going out to dinner parties/the office.school and the disease is very lethal to the host.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can get it from shaking hands, touching something that person has touched.
We all have tiny breaks--cracks in our skin--especially during winter.
The long incubation time makes this a real fucker to contain.
Signed, a former Hazleton (Reston lab from Hot Zone) immunologist
If it was that difficult to contain we would have all been dead a long time ago. The disease is actually pretty self containing because symptoms are so awful - symptomatic people aren't going out to dinner parties/the office.school and the disease is very lethal to the host.
And yet here it is, not being effectively contained
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can get it from shaking hands, touching something that person has touched.
We all have tiny breaks--cracks in our skin--especially during winter.
The long incubation time makes this a real fucker to contain.
Signed, a former Hazleton (Reston lab from Hot Zone) immunologist
If it was that difficult to contain we would have all been dead a long time ago. The disease is actually pretty self containing because symptoms are so awful - symptomatic people aren't going out to dinner parties/the office.school and the disease is very lethal to the host.
Anonymous wrote:You can get it from shaking hands, touching something that person has touched.
We all have tiny breaks--cracks in our skin--especially during winter.
The long incubation time makes this a real fucker to contain.
Signed, a former Hazleton (Reston lab from Hot Zone) immunologist
Anonymous wrote:You can get it from shaking hands, touching something that person has touched.
We all have tiny breaks--cracks in our skin--especially during winter.
The long incubation time makes this a real fucker to contain.
Signed, a former Hazleton (Reston lab from Hot Zone) immunologist
Anonymous wrote:We had an Ebola scare right over in Reston a number of years ago. Read The Hot Zone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, there is this:
http://scgnews.com/ebola-what-youre-not-being-told
This is terrifying.