Anonymous wrote:
Sure, a few individuals would know about it, but it wouldn't be all over the news and there wouldn't be multiple threads about it. It likely would have been a brief one line in a world news segment and not even brought up on DCUM.
Ebola Spreads to Guinea Capital Conakry With at Least 59 Deaths
By Ougna Camara and Franz Wild Mar 23, 2014 6:08 AM ET
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-03-23/ebola-spreads-to-guinea-capital-conakry-with-at-least-59-deaths.html?
Ebola detected in Guinea victims, 50 dead
Boubacar Diallo, The Associated Press 3:21 p.m. EDT March 23, 2014
http://www.wtsp.com/story/news/health/2014/03/23/ebola-breakout-guinea-50-dead/6790991/
CONAKRY, Guinea (AP) - Samples from victims of a viral hemorrhagic fever that has killed more than 50 people in Guinea have tested positive for the Ebola virus, government officials said Sunday, marking the first time an outbreak among humans has been detected in this West African nation.
Guinea Ebola outbreak: Tons of medicine, protection kits arrive to contain virus
There are fears the virus could spread to neighbouring countries
Thomson Reuters Posted: Mar 23, 2014 6:22 PM ET Last Updated: Mar 24, 2014 10:10 AM ET
http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/guinea-ebola-outbreak-tons-of-medicine-protection-kits-arrive-to-contain-virus-1.2583628?cmp=rss
Health officials fighting an outbreak of Ebola in Guinea have dispatched specialized medical equipment, imposed restrictions on funerals and are seeking to contain panic to prevent the fever from spreading.
There have been 29 confirmed deaths from the hemorrhagic fever among 59 people killed by a mysterious illness in southeastern Guinea since early February, international medical charity Doctors Without Borders said.
U.N. health officials have expressed concern that the disease, which has a fatality rate of 90 percent and has not been recorded in the West African state before, may spread to Sierra Leone after cases showing similar symptoms, including diarrhea, vomiting and bleeding, were reported there.
Ebola outbreak in Guinea may spread to Liberia
AP 4:19 p.m. EDT March 24, 2014
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2014/03/24/ebola-outbreak-may-spread-to-liberia/6835825/
CONAKRY, Guinea (AP) — An outbreak of the deadly Ebola virus is believed to have killed at least 59 people in Guinea and may already have spread to neighboring Liberia, health officials said Monday.
Health workers in Guinea are trying to contain the spread of the disease which causes severe internal bleeding. In neighboring Liberia, health officials said they are investigating five deaths after a group of people crossed the border from Guinea in search of medical treatment.
Canada rules out suspected case of Ebola
The severely ill patient remained quarantined in Saskatoon. He became sick after returning from Liberia, which along with neighboring Guinea is fighting an outbreak of the virus that is suspected to have killed at least 64.
BY STEPHEN REX BROWN NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Tuesday, March 25, 2014, 8:33 AM
http://www.nydailynews.com/life-style/health/man-hospitalized-canada-symptoms-ebola-article-1.1732853
A sick man traveling returning from Liberia to Canada did not contract the Ebola virus, officials said.
A traveler who became seriously ill after returning from Liberia did not contract the Ebola virus as was feared, health officials said Tuesday.
The man showed symptoms of hemorrhagic fever after arriving in Canada and remains quarantined in a Saskatchewan hospital.
Senegal shuts border with Guinea to prevent Ebola spreading
March 30, 2014 | Filed under: World | Author: Editor
http://businessdayonline.com/2014/03/senegal-shuts-border-with-guinea-to-prevent-ebola-spreading/#.UzjtQlyScW8
Senegal closed its land border with Guinea on Saturday to try to prevent the spread of the Ebola virus, which Guinean authorities say is suspected of killing 70 people in what would be the deadliest outbreak in seven years.
The discovery of 11 people suspected to have died of Ebola in Sierra Leone and Liberia in recent days has stirred concern that one of the most lethal infectious diseases known to man could spread in a poor corner of West Africa, where health systems are ill-equipped to cope.
Guinea reports Ebola death toll rises to 78; Liberia confirms first death from virus
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MARCH 31, 2014 8:53 AM
http://www.canada.com/health/Guinea+reports+Ebola+death+toll+rises+Liberia+confirms+first+death/9680820/story.html
CONAKRY, Guinea - Health authorities in the West African nation of Guinea say at least 78 people now have died after contracting the Ebola virus.
Victims develop several internal and external bleeding from the virus, which has no cure.
Guinea's Health Ministry says the disease first emerged in the forests of southern Guinea and then spread to the capital of some 2 million people after an infected patient travelled there with his family.
Scale of Guinea's Ebola epidemic unprecedented: aid agency
BY SALIOU SAMB
CONAKRY Mon Mar 31, 2014 10:43am EDT
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/03/31/us-guinea-ebola-idUSBREA2U10E20140331?feedType=RSS&feedName=healthNews
(Reuters) - Guinea faces an Ebola epidemic on an unprecedented scale as it battles to contain confirmed cases now scattered across several locations that are far apart, medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres said on Monday.
The warning from an organization used to tackling Ebola in Central Africa comes after Guinea's president appealed for calm as the number of deaths linked to an outbreak on the border with Liberia and Sierra Leone hit 80.
The outbreak of one of the world's most lethal infectious diseases has spooked a number of governments with weak health systems, prompting Senegal to close its border with Guinea and other neighbors to restrict travel and cross-border exchanges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The fact that CDC is voluntarily bringing two ebola patients into the country is insane to me.
The fact that I can do nothing to stop it, or even show my displeasure in any meaningful way, is also frightening.
Leave them where they are - I have yet to find a good explanation of the risk - benefit analysis that makes sense (other than the patriotic but not particularly rational 'they are American and deserve to be at home.' Their desserts do not trump the safety of everyone on the continent).
The CDC is looking for a research project.
That's what I think too. Good luck to them in finding a vaccine or a cure! Hopefully it will take less long than it did with AIDS.
There's a cure and a vaccine for AIDS? Or do you mean it's still taking a very long time?
Anonymous wrote:Yikes! Scary. 90% death rate. They should just stay where they are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The fact that CDC is voluntarily bringing two ebola patients into the country is insane to me.
The fact that I can do nothing to stop it, or even show my displeasure in any meaningful way, is also frightening.
Leave them where they are - I have yet to find a good explanation of the risk - benefit analysis that makes sense (other than the patriotic but not particularly rational 'they are American and deserve to be at home.' Their desserts do not trump the safety of everyone on the continent).
The CDC is looking for a research project.
That's what I think too. Good luck to them in finding a vaccine or a cure! Hopefully it will take less long than it did with AIDS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If two Americans hadn't been infected, no one would even know or care about what was happening in western Africa. The news here picked it up because two Americans were involved.
I've been following it for months. You being oblivious doesn't mean everyone else is too.
Sure, a few individuals would know about it, but it wouldn't be all over the news and there wouldn't be multiple threads about it. It likely would have been a brief one line in a world news segment and not even brought up on DCUM.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The fact that CDC is voluntarily bringing two ebola patients into the country is insane to me.
The fact that I can do nothing to stop it, or even show my displeasure in any meaningful way, is also frightening.
Leave them where they are - I have yet to find a good explanation of the risk - benefit analysis that makes sense (other than the patriotic but not particularly rational 'they are American and deserve to be at home.' Their desserts do not trump the safety of everyone on the continent).
The CDC is looking for a research project.
That's what I think too. Good luck to them in finding a vaccine or a cure! Hopefully it will take less long than it did with AIDS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The fact that CDC is voluntarily bringing two ebola patients into the country is insane to me.
The fact that I can do nothing to stop it, or even show my displeasure in any meaningful way, is also frightening.
Leave them where they are - I have yet to find a good explanation of the risk - benefit analysis that makes sense (other than the patriotic but not particularly rational 'they are American and deserve to be at home.' Their desserts do not trump the safety of everyone on the continent).
The CDC is looking for a research project.
Anonymous wrote:The fact that CDC is voluntarily bringing two ebola patients into the country is insane to me.
The fact that I can do nothing to stop it, or even show my displeasure in any meaningful way, is also frightening.
Leave them where they are - I have yet to find a good explanation of the risk - benefit analysis that makes sense (other than the patriotic but not particularly rational 'they are American and deserve to be at home.' Their desserts do not trump the safety of everyone on the continent).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The fact that CDC is voluntarily bringing two ebola patients into the country is insane to me.
The fact that I can do nothing to stop it, or even show my displeasure in any meaningful way, is also frightening.
Leave them where they are - I have yet to find a good explanation of the risk - benefit analysis that makes sense (other than the patriotic but not particularly rational 'they are American and deserve to be at home.' Their desserts do not trump the safety of everyone on the continent).
Your purportedly one-sided risk/benefit analysis does not take into account the realities of the risk, which is relatively small for a non-airborne hemorraghic fever that kills as quickly as Ebola does. The risk of some sort of uncontrolled and widespread outbreak based on one patient crossing the border is basically nil.
I don't think that this will turn into the Black Death Mark 2, no, but I do think there is a chance some people in Atlanta area (probably other health workers) will get infected. No protocol is perfect. I don't see the point of risking this at all for no benefit - the only rationale that would make sense to me is that they want to study this in live patients under controlled conditions ebcause arrival of Ebola in this country via some sick passenger who doesn't know he is sick is inevitable and they want to get a head start. But then I am not sure why they aren't quarantining anyone coming from that part of the world as a matter of course, in the first place.
Or they might want to study this in live patients so that they can develop life saving techniques to be used in Africa where the disease is killing people.
Do the lives of non-Americans really matter to you so little that you can't imagine that someone else would care about them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The fact that CDC is voluntarily bringing two ebola patients into the country is insane to me.
The fact that I can do nothing to stop it, or even show my displeasure in any meaningful way, is also frightening.
Leave them where they are - I have yet to find a good explanation of the risk - benefit analysis that makes sense (other than the patriotic but not particularly rational 'they are American and deserve to be at home.' Their desserts do not trump the safety of everyone on the continent).
Your purportedly one-sided risk/benefit analysis does not take into account the realities of the risk, which is relatively small for a non-airborne hemorraghic fever that kills as quickly as Ebola does. The risk of some sort of uncontrolled and widespread outbreak based on one patient crossing the border is basically nil.
I don't think that this will turn into the Black Death Mark 2, no, but I do think there is a chance some people in Atlanta area (probably other health workers) will get infected. No protocol is perfect. I don't see the point of risking this at all for no benefit - the only rationale that would make sense to me is that they want to study this in live patients under controlled conditions ebcause arrival of Ebola in this country via some sick passenger who doesn't know he is sick is inevitable and they want to get a head start. But then I am not sure why they aren't quarantining anyone coming from that part of the world as a matter of course, in the first place.
Anonymous wrote:I just read this article: http://abcnews.go.com/Health/americans-ebola-flown-back-us/story?id=24799794
"Emory University Hospital has a specially built isolation unit set up in collaboration with the CDC to treat patients who are exposed to certain serious infectious diseases," hospital officials said. "It is physically separate from other patient areas and has unique equipment and infrastructure that provide an extraordinarily high level of clinical isolation. It is one of only four such facilities in the country."
"Emory University Hospital physicians, nurses and staff are highly trained in the specific and unique protocols and procedures necessary to treat and care for this type of patient. For this specially trained staff, these procedures are practiced on a regular basis throughout the year so we are fully prepared for this type of situation."
It sounds like there is no opting out, except for maybe folks with significant health concerns, but it also sounds like this is what they're trained for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OMG an infectious disease. We're all going to die!
Come on people, we have highly trained medical professionals dealing with this.
The infected that they're bringing back to America ARE highly trained medical professionals! But they got infected anyway!