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Ebola...

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Have we had any confirmation of transmission by droplet infection (coughing) I thought traditionally the fluid "exchange" needed to be more significant than that? If its changing vector transmission then this could get really bad really quickly
 
The guy in Dallas was screened before he left on his flight. Screening comes in the form of checking for a fever. Average incubation is currently pegged at 8-10 days...as long as 21.

Personally i'd make anyone wanting to board a flight from there stay in a clean zone for 21 days.

Would be unnecessary because you aren't infectious to others until you show symptoms, and fever is the most obvious. Also this guy is an African citizen visiting family here. Again, multiple factors here in why Ebola has exploded after being a disease that was contained prior- and they are not because the disease has become more infectious. The CDC is not the Sierra Leone health agency and they are on it. It is a tried and true protocol they are following.
 
Since most of us in the USA aren't eating bats and licking dead bodies, I think we'll be fine.
 
So, I found on Twitter, maybe Max can get the link, but apparently five children in Dallas could have Ebola.
 
What a cluster fuck, they sent the guy home when he went to initially get medical attention. There is no telling how many things he touched or people he coughed on. Why are they even letting people from these infected regions fly overseas right now? Its not like there isn't a deadly pathogen that is trying to be contained.
 
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Personally i'd make anyone wanting to board a flight from there stay in a clean zone for 21 days.

Would be unnecessary because you aren't infectious to others until you show symptoms, and fever is the most obvious....

Maybe I'm missing something machdog, but your response to Maximus doesn't make a lot of sense to me. Seems to me that Maximus' idea to not let people (or at least, non-citizens) into the country who have been in an infected country within the last 21 days makes sense. Not foolproof, but much more effective than what we have right now.

Say some guy wanting to enter the U.S. is infected, but not yet infectious. He boards a plane, shows no fever, then arrives in the U.S.. At some point following his arrival in the U.S., the guy who was infected now starts showing symptoms, and is infectious to others. Bingo -- ebola is now in the U.S., and this guy -- who is perfectly free to move about the country -- is able to infect others.

How does the protocol that let this guy enter the country protect us from that scenario?
 
Apparently the infected guy was "accidentally released" from the hospital and has come in contact with/infected up to 18 people. How do you accidentally release a possible pandemic from a hospital?
 
Better warn the Canadian border patrol agents. Some paranoid RCFers might be heading up their way.
 
Apparently the infected guy was "accidentally released" from the hospital and has come in contact with/infected up to 18 people. How do you accidentally release a possible pandemic from a hospital?

Now, apparently, up to 80 people....

 
Now, apparently, up to 80 people....



Here is the actual Reuters article:

http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/10/02/us-health-ebola-usa-contacts-idUSKCN0HR1KC20141002

More than 80 people had direct or indirect contact with Ebola patient - Dallas
AUSTIN Texas Thu Oct 2, 2014 10:41am EDT

(Reuters) - More than 80 people were exposed in some way to the patient infected with Ebola, a spokeswoman for Dallas County's public health department said on Thursday.

The department said 12 to 18 people came into direct contact with the Ebola patient and the rest came into contact with members of that group. They are all being monitored and no one has shown any symptoms, said Erikka Neroes, a spokeswoman for the Dallas County Department of Health and Human Services.

The Texas Department of State Health Services said separately it was working from a list of about 100 potential or possible contacts and will soon have an official contact tracing number that will be lower.

"Out of an abundance of caution, we're starting with this very wide net, including people who have had even brief encounters with the patient or the patient's home," said Carrie Williams, a spokeswoman with the Texas Department of State Health Services.


(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz and Marice Richter; Editing by Doina Chicu)
 
Fucking Hell man.. what in the fuck.. Now in Honolulu???!!? I go home this weekend!

God must hate me.. :(

Patient in isolation at Queen’s Medical Center, officials say Ebola a possibility
By Kristine Uyeno and Web StaffPublished: October 1, 2014, 4:10 pm Updated: October 1, 2014, 9:55 pm
What is Ebola and how does the virus spread?[/paste:font]
The Department of Health has confirmed a patient is currently in isolation and undergoing testing in Honolulu.

The Hawaii Nurses Association said the person is being treated at The Queen’s Medical Center.

Officials told KHON2 Ebola is a possibility, however the patient has yet to be specifically tested for the virus.

“We are early in the investigation of a patient — very, very early — who we’re investigating that might have Ebola,” said Dr. Melissa Viray, deputy state epidemiologist. “It’s very possible that they do and they have Ebola. I think it’s also more likely that they have another condition that presents with similar symptoms.”

Dr. Viray said the patient could have a number of illnesses including Ebola, flu, malaria and typhoid.

Dr. Viray wouldn’t confirm any details about the patient, symptoms, or if the person had recently traveled to West Africa. But she did say red flags for Ebola include fever and recent travel to that area.

“Why is this person being isolated?” KHON2 asked.

“What we’ve asked the hospitals to tell us about is anyone with a travel history, and anyone with a fever. And when those things come together, we’ve asked them to be very careful and in an abundance of caution while you’re working, for whatever else might be going on, also make sure you isolate against Ebola, just in case,” she said.

“So it sounds like this person does have a fever and recently traveled to West Africa,” KHON2 asked.

“Again, I can’t be the one to confirm that,” Dr. Viray said.

The patient is currently being kept in a regular room, and anyone who goes in or out must wear protective gear, officials said.

“They’re monitoring who goes in and out of that room, and making sure that everybody is as safe as possible, while the patient is being evaluated for Ebola and what other conditions that patient might have,” Dr. Viray said.

“Should the public concerned?” KHON2 asked.

“No, absolutely not. Like I said, this is a possible case we’re investigating. We don’t know if this is Ebola or a number of other conditions,” she said.

Health officials say it’s too early to say if the person will be tested for Ebola.

There are 1,400 nurses assigned to work at The Queen’s Medical Center. The hospital has assured them that procedures are in place to protect them while the patient is being monitored.

A message sent to all employees Wednesday said that the hospital is “evaluating a patient for possible symptoms that may be consistent with Ebola.”

The union that represents the nurses was tipped off about the message Wednesday afternoon.

Joan Craft, president of the Hawaii Nurses Association, immediately contacted the hospital for assurance that safety procedures are in place to protect her members.

“Blood and fluid procedures are safe, but there are a lot of contagious things you can come in contact with,” she told KHON2. “Ebola is very frightening, but procedures are safe, and we just want to make sure everyone knows that.”

The HNA also wanted to make sure that if someone is pregnant or otherwise uncomfortable dealing with the patient, that he or she does not have to be involved in the monitoring of the patient.

Experts gave us that reassurance last month and said then that unless you traveled to an area that was experiencing an outbreak, the risk of contracting Ebola is very low.

There is no room designed specifically for Ebola at The Queen’s Medical Center, but the hospital says it is equipped to deal with the virus if needed.

“If someone showed up in the ER with suspected Ebola symptoms, they would immediately be placed in an isolation room,” Erlaine Bello, The Queen’s Medical Center infectious disease specialist, previously told KHON2. “The door would be closed at all times. There would be a facilities log kept of everyone who entered the room and anyone who entered the room at a minimum would be wearing gloves, eye protection, goggles and a mask, and impermeable gown.”

Dr. Bello said major hospitals and the health department have a good relationship with the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and that the state itself has the resources and the expertise to handle a case of Ebola if it were to appear here in the islands.
 
UN Ebola chief raises 'nightmare' prospect that virus could mutate and become airborne if it is not quickly brought under control
  • UN warns Ebola virus currently plaguing West Africa could become airborne
  • The longer it moves between human hosts the greater possibility of mutation
  • The risk grows the longer virus is living within the human 'melting pot'
  • NGOs have said the Ebola virus is currently infecting five people every hour
  • More than 3,300 people have died from Ebola since the outbreak first began
  • Officials call for 1,000 new Sierra Leone isolation centres to contain virus
By COREY CHARLTON FOR MAILONLINE

PUBLISHED: 08:25 EST, 2 October 2014 | UPDATED: 09:48 EST, 2 October 2014

The longer the Ebola epidemic continues infecting people unabated the higher the chances it will mutate and become airborne, the UN's Ebola response chief has warned.

Anthony Banbury, the Secretary General's Special Representative, has said there is a 'nightmare' prospect the deadly disease will become airborne if it continues infecting new hosts.

His comments come as organisations battling the crisis in West Africa warn that the international community has just four weeks to stop it before it spirals 'completely out of control'.



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...pect-virus-mutate-airborne.html#ixzz3F0IAOeMI
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
 

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