What do you guys think about this?
Private jet dispatched to transfer American Ebola victims from Africa | Fox News
Private jet dispatched to transfer American Ebola victims from Africa | Fox News
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it will likely be instructive.
Considering the tight controls there will undoubtably be on those patients
several doctors dead after taking every precaution known to man...
When i got my biology degree, the hot zone book came out, and it will definitely twist your head around. A true story, by the way. A good read, just don't read it before bed...
I have worked in sterile labs and in sterile environments, and it is stunning the amount of medical personnel that have died due to ebola. They took every precaution and still contracted ebola and died...
Tough to acquire? Has to be through body fluids, right?
Well, suppose someone is sweating due to the fever, wipes their forehead, touches a door knob, gets into a car, sneezes and coughs a bunch, and then is finally dropped off at the hospital. What then? Wasn't it the who that stated in 1981 that aids wouldn't become a pandemic? That the pandemic wouldn't happen because education was available and every precaution was being taken?
Even with education and precautions, aids has become a pandemic, despite what the who was stating all along. Why should ebola be any different?
I can't tell you how many times i have flown on a plane healthy, and then deplane with a head cold or flu symptoms. Any place where people are stuffed into small quarters like sardines will be a breeding ground for anything transmissible. Classrooms and dormitories are famous for contagion. As are airplanes, buses, subways, taxi cabs, etc.
Stay calm, see what develops. Wait and see, stay smart and wise.
Several doctors dead after taking every precaution known to man...
When I got my Biology degree, The Hot Zone book came out, and it will definitely twist your head around. A true story, by the way. A good read, just don't read it before bed...
I have worked in sterile labs and in sterile environments, and it is stunning the amount of medical personnel that have died due to Ebola. They took every precaution and STILL contracted Ebola and died...
Tough to acquire? Has to be through body fluids, right?
Well, suppose someone is sweating due to the fever, wipes their forehead, touches a door knob, gets into a car, sneezes and coughs a bunch, and then is finally dropped off at the hospital. What then? Wasn't it the WHO that stated in 1981 that AIDS wouldn't become a pandemic? That the pandemic wouldn't happen because education was available and every precaution was being taken?
Even with education and precautions, AIDS has become a pandemic, despite what the WHO was stating all along. Why should Ebola be any different?
I can't tell you how many times I have flown on a plane healthy, and then deplane with a head cold or flu symptoms. Any place where people are stuffed into small quarters like sardines will be a breeding ground for anything transmissible. Classrooms and dormitories are famous for contagion. As are airplanes, buses, subways, taxi cabs, etc.
Stay calm, see what develops. Wait and see, stay smart and wise.
This is exactly how I would transport one of the most deadly virus infected people ever....yep I would stop at traffic lights and have no police escort. I would also make sure to break every protocol of every medical transport company out there and let the "patient" who's been infected with one of the deadliest viruses ever and into his second week with it and should be bleeding out and turning to jelly internally, walk out of an ambulance across the fucking ground and into the hospital under their own power? Any one buying this and need a bitch slap?
Breaking News : American Ebola Patient arrives at Emory University in Atlanta Georgia (Aug 02, 2014) - YouTube
Agreed here on many levels, but several problems are entailed with "first-rate care".Potential catastrophe on so many levels. 90% mortality rate in Third World shitholes, and I doubt that if it gets going here we'll be able to stop, cure, or quarantine it. Oh sure, the first reported victims will get first-rate care, but the unreported ones? Once this disease gets a grip, the0re won't be any first-rate care, because the caregivers will all be dead, and our infrastucture collapsed.
1911fan
So, if they can get a jump start on learning about this virus now then they better
I see a whole lot of people freaking out like this is some kind of highly contagious flu-like virus, which it's nothing of the sort. The CDC know what they're doing, they aren't going to take unnecessary risks, and ebola isn't contagious the way so many here seem to be assuming, nor would it spread in the West anywhere close to the way it has in west Africa.
Ignorance will make you scared; a little education will make you prepared.
I see a whole lot of people freaking out like this is some kind of highly contagious flu-like virus, which it's nothing of the sort. The CDC know what they're doing, they aren't going to take unnecessary risks, and ebola isn't contagious the way so many here seem to be assuming, nor would it spread in the West anywhere close to the way it has in west Africa.
Ignorance will make you scared; a little education will make you prepared.[/
sorry dog, I missed your resume on virology and deadly contagions. Especially your thesis on how virus sequences continue to outsmart us like the common cold? Please post it up
I'm afraid it will be destructive. Not this particular move (i hope) but all those unchecked moves from African countries towards Europe or elsewhere. Even if it becomes 10-30% lethal (and i'm being overly optimistic here) in developed countries as opposed to 60-90% mortality in shit holes it still spells disaster (if its really as virulent as media would have us believe) just imagine your biggest city having up to 50% of population sick, instant crash of everything civilized and with state of our societies what do you think happens next... This will either be contained as many outbreaks before and we'll have time to fuck up our societies for a while longer (as global pandemic is only a question of time) with other means or we'll have a bio reset in a few weeks/months on a global scale.
I never would have thought SnipersHide had so many virologists as members.
I'm uncomfortable with bringing two Ebola patients into the US as I generally think quarantine protocols should be complied with. That said, Emory and CDC are basically co-located and there's no better place in the world for somebody with this God-awful disease to get treatment, or for therapies for the disease to be practiced.
And anybody that thinks the care available in Sierra fucking Leone is the same as one could get in the USA, a few miles from CDC headquarters, is a fool.
Also, the red byline is rather applicable:
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If treatment was of such a concern for these two Americans why the fuck wouldn't you go get them in the critical first 24-48hrs of the onset of a contagion that generally kills within the second week or sooner? Not to mention are you telling me you either believe that they incredibly and carelessly transported this dude via ambulance across town with no escorts or traffic control and then let him walk in the open? That doesn't even pass the smell test for a retard. Now I am also to believe this weakened looking person getting out of that ambulance is a person who has had Ebola for almost 2 weeks? Sorry dude....I ain't buying it. It's either complete bullshit and they staged that for show and you never saw the actual patient due to security concerns which could be but why the show or this dude is long dead and they want to study just wtf happened. I don't need to be a virologist to have common fucking sense
....I'm certain I've seen video of a white Tahoe/Suburban in front of it........
There are some bright folks here, so by all means correct me, but this has been an ancillary area of interest for me for quite some time:
My understanding is that Hunta, Ebola, and Marburg have the potential to be world-killers. I further understand that each of these has mutated/morphed over the course of outbreaks, and at least some if not all of them are capable of trans-species transmission and there was suspicion several years ago that at least Marburg (one strain at least) had gone airborne but I don't know that it was ever confirmed.
One of the reasons that there has not been the cataclysmic outbreak yet is that these diseases typically "reside" in areas of incredible poverty and non-existent infrastructure so that the people most likely to contract them tend to die very close to home and aren't likely to engage in long-distance or international travel.
These super-pathogens have been studied by U.S. researchers for quite some time, and no cure, or even reasonable hope for a cure currently exists.
The CDC has proven, very recently, that their procedures fucking SUCK. Anthrax is a spore, not a virus. It is exponentially larger than a virus and is therefore easier to contain, yet they exposed over 80 people to it through a procedural mixup. Imagine 80 people "accidentally" exposed to Ebola, who were free to go home, on vacation, to sporting events, etc. Anthrax relies on direct exposure, it's not contagious in the sense that a hemorrhagic pathogen is.
We have just done the hardest part for this virus by bringing 2 living hosts to the U.S., on purpose.
I just don't see the benefit on the "cost/benefitf" or "risk/reward" tally sheet for this one. The closest parallel I can draw to my own experience is doing counter-IED work. We didn't go hunting IEDs that weren't in our way; if we found them in the course of getting where we needed to go then we dealt with them, but we didn't go out of our way to fuck with them. That was "petting the burning dog" and we were doing the hardest part of the IED emplacers job for them. If they could put an IED anywhere and get us to go fuck with it, then they held all the cards. Bringing this to the U.S. on purpose seems akin to the same thing to me.
Also in addition to BB's questions, if one of you guys smart on this could comment on lethality...is this virus too lethal to ho worldwide? It seems that it is so lethal that it kills before the victim has a chance to spread it much. Does this limit the virus?
Also in addition to BB's questions, if one of you guys smart on this could comment on lethality...is this virus too lethal to ho worldwide? It seems that it is so lethal that it kills before the victim has a chance to spread it much. Does this limit the virus?
Boiler you can say whatever you want. The fact is someone on foot walking into a hospital infected with a virus like Ebola breaks about every protocol out there. If you can't see that alone I don't know what to tell you
No no shot it doesn't kill instantly. What part of the fact he has had for nearly two weeks had been lost on you?
I'm not gonna argue what I saw for protection and escort. Apparently it's not the same you seen through your rose colored glasses.
It has in the past, as the very rural areas that have seen outbreaks have been isolated from population centers and mass international transit (ie. airports).
The American citizen that died in Lagos, Nigeria of Ebola last week was a few days and one flight away from returning to the US. Had his symptoms been delayed by 5-6 days, the picture would look MUCH different.
THE NEEDS OF A FEW NEVER OUTWEIGH THE NEEDS OF MANY..........