Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please people, get a grip. Not a single person in this country has contracted Ebola from casual contact. Not a one. The only people who have contracted it were nurses working with an end stage patient's bodily fluids and wearing inappropriate protection. No one living with Duncan, or who came in contact with Duncan, contracted the disease. Not a single health care worker who has treated an Ebola patient outside of this rinky dink hospital in Texas has contracted the disease.
Please tell me how somehow who works at the world bank is going to be exposed to an Ebola patient's bodily fluids. I don;t think these folks are putting in IVs and cleaning up vomit.
So many of you are just being ridiculous.
You are stunningly stupid. Is it denial?
Wha? These are the facts.
A world bank employee on a work trip to monrovia could absolutely come into contact with ebola patients just by virtue of being in a city with an epidemic.
How does being in a city with ebola patients expose him to their bodily fluids?
The reason it spread so badly in Africa is because people were caring for dying family members themselves, they were exposing themselves to highly infectious bodily fluids during traditional funeral ceremonies and their hospitals did not have enough people to clean the bodily fluids produced by patients.
We've had Ebola patients walking around our cities. Duncan and the two nurses. They infected no one.
Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Funny, not so long ago it was all about "one, only one" on these boards. Now it's "only two." When do we drop the "only"? When someone actually crokes? I guess wanting to prevent unnecessary deaths is qualified as hysterical now. Sad, kinda.
The "two" are from the same incident. What's more notable about that incident is that the other 70 some personnel involved didn't get infected. Nor did Duncan's family who spent two days with him after he had a fever. The obvious conclusion to draw from this is that hysteria is not justified.
All 4000 or however many victims are from the same incident. There was one patient zero. That is how viruses work.
So first is was, don't worry about Ebola, it won't get here
Then, if it gets here, it will be ok because of our great medical system
Then, oops, that ONE hospital screwed up Duncan's first visit, but don't worry, Ebola is hard to catch
Then, oops, the nurses got it, but don't worry, Vinson wasn't contagious on the plane
Then, oops, she was sicker sooner than we thought, maybe we better track everyone on the plane, but don't worry, because Ebola is hard to catch
And don't worry, because we are screening travelers
And don't worry, because now we're making them all come through screened airports...
At every juncture, we have screwed this up. It is only because Ebola *IS* indeed harder than some other viruses to catch, that we don't have a very serious problem on our hands. This whole thing has been an incompetent clown show. No one is competent, from the CDC down to the Dallas ER to whoever let this guy come home and go back to his regular schedule. He should have been in self quarantine at least for 21 days.
Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Funny, not so long ago it was all about "one, only one" on these boards. Now it's "only two." When do we drop the "only"? When someone actually crokes? I guess wanting to prevent unnecessary deaths is qualified as hysterical now. Sad, kinda.
The "two" are from the same incident. What's more notable about that incident is that the other 70 some personnel involved didn't get infected. Nor did Duncan's family who spent two days with him after he had a fever. The obvious conclusion to draw from this is that hysteria is not justified.
All 4000 or however many victims are from the same incident. There was one patient zero. That is how viruses work.
So first is was, don't worry about Ebola, it won't get here
Then, if it gets here, it will be ok because of our great medical system
Then, oops, that ONE hospital screwed up Duncan's first visit, but don't worry, Ebola is hard to catch
Then, oops, the nurses got it, but don't worry, Vinson wasn't contagious on the plane
Then, oops, she was sicker sooner than we thought, maybe we better track everyone on the plane, but don't worry, because Ebola is hard to catch
And don't worry, because we are screening travelers
And don't worry, because now we're making them all come through screened airports...
At every juncture, we have screwed this up. It is only because Ebola *IS* indeed harder than some other viruses to catch, that we don't have a very serious problem on our hands. This whole thing has been an incompetent clown show. No one is competent, from the CDC down to the Dallas ER to whoever let this guy come home and go back to his regular schedule. He should have been in self quarantine at least for 21 days.
Anonymous wrote:I am happily surprised that both nurses are healthy again.
The death rate seems much lower here that it is supposed to be. I wonder if the trick is in the transfusion of antibodies from survivors or just good intensive care.
Anonymous wrote:I am happily surprised that both nurses are healthy again.
The death rate seems much lower here that it is supposed to be. I wonder if the trick is in the transfusion of antibodies from survivors or just good intensive care.
Anonymous wrote:Nurse Nina Pham is being released from NIH today! Yaaay!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dr Spencer is 33 and saw ebola in Africa. He [unless living under a rock] knew of healthcare workers who got ebola in Africa. Perhaps because he is youngish and successful there was a feeling of invulnerability.http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/24/health/new-york-ebola-timeline/
Flew into JFK, rode 3 subway lines, went to a bowling alley. Nurse Vinson was on Frontier Air. Dr Nancy Snyderman was cavorting around Manhatten when she was supposed to be on a 21 day quarantine in NJ.
Since medical professionals have exhibited reckless behavior it is time to require 21 day quarantine for all who have been in the hotzone. One US airport not five should funnel the passengers and there should be designated supervised quarantine locations.
I don't know why untrue statements are being made around here. Dr. Nancy Snyderman was seen in a car in her hometown in NJ, where a companion got out of the car to pick up food. She was never seen "cavorting around Manhattan". Why do you have to make things up?
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Funny, not so long ago it was all about "one, only one" on these boards. Now it's "only two." When do we drop the "only"? When someone actually crokes? I guess wanting to prevent unnecessary deaths is qualified as hysterical now. Sad, kinda.
The "two" are from the same incident. What's more notable about that incident is that the other 70 some personnel involved didn't get infected. Nor did Duncan's family who spent two days with him after he had a fever. The obvious conclusion to draw from this is that hysteria is not justified.
Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Funny, not so long ago it was all about "one, only one" on these boards. Now it's "only two." When do we drop the "only"? When someone actually crokes? I guess wanting to prevent unnecessary deaths is qualified as hysterical now. Sad, kinda.
The "two" are from the same incident. What's more notable about that incident is that the other 70 some personnel involved didn't get infected. Nor did Duncan's family who spent two days with him after he had a fever. The obvious conclusion to draw from this is that hysteria is not justified.
I fail to see the "hysteria." You obviously haven't witnessed the real hysteria. Otherwise, you'd rethink your choice of words.
I've fallen on the wrong end of very favorable statistics before. Believe me, it's not fun. If however few people can be helped, they should be helped regardless "the needs of the many."
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Funny, not so long ago it was all about "one, only one" on these boards. Now it's "only two." When do we drop the "only"? When someone actually crokes? I guess wanting to prevent unnecessary deaths is qualified as hysterical now. Sad, kinda.
The "two" are from the same incident. What's more notable about that incident is that the other 70 some personnel involved didn't get infected. Nor did Duncan's family who spent two days with him after he had a fever. The obvious conclusion to draw from this is that hysteria is not justified.
Anonymous wrote:Funny, not so long ago it was all about "one, only one" on these boards. Now it's "only two." When do we drop the "only"? When someone actually crokes? I guess wanting to prevent unnecessary deaths is qualified as hysterical now. Sad, kinda.