2014 Global Ebola Outbreak

I'm pretty sure America has at least an experimental vaccine just in case there's an air borne outbreak in the US.

Something like that could potentially wipe out the US population.
If it mutates to become airborne, it won't be the same virus and thus they can't use the vaccine. They don't have a vaccine in mass storage for this. Probably doing research for it. But not ready for mass production.

I mean, half the time we can't even predict the right flu strain to vaccinate for this year.
 
In Dallas, the fear currently isn't Ebola but West Nile.
 
I thought some of y'all might find this interesting. There isn't any disturbing or gory images so the squeamish need not worry.

How does Ebola Kill? - DNews

[YT]J6WI0AbB3lk[/YT]

Basically it's your own immune system that kills you. Your immune system goes to Defcon 1 and nukes your body throwing everything it's got at the virus and like thermo-nuclear war would destroy our entire planet this full assault by your immune system destroys your own body in an attempt to destroy the Ebola virus attacking your body. It's equal parts scary and amazing. Our immune systems even when they harm us is still an amazing system. That it can attack and systematically fight a living virus as if it were a microscopic army just blows my mind.
 
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/19/w...on=Footer&module=MoreInSection&pgtype=article

Fear of Ebola Drives Mob to Kill Officials in Guinea

The bodies of eight officials and journalists who went to a remote village in Guinea to dispel rumors about the deadly Ebola outbreak gripping the region were discovered after a rock-hurling mob attacked the delegation, claiming that it had come to spread the illness...

“They went on a mission to try to sensitize the local population about Ebola, but unfortunately they were met with hostility by people throwing rocks,”

...“Among the only survivors we found of those who tried to hide in the bush was the 5-year-old son of the sub-prefect, who was left hiding in the wild.”

:wow:

How do you fight this level of fear :huh:
 
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I was just on my way to bump this thread. Here's confirmation.

CDC confirms: Ebola Diagnosed In U.S. For The First Time

A patient was diagnosed with Ebola in the United State for the first time, CNBC reported, citing the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Until Tuesday, Ebola patients had only been treated in the U.S. after being diagnosed elsewhere.

The CDC said they would make a statement Tuesday afternoon.

This is a developing story...

http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/5909394?utm_hp_ref=tw
 
Yeah, i was just coming to post about it. Here's another article with a bit more info: http://news.yahoo.com/texas-patient-confirmed-as-first-ebola-case-diagnosed-in-us-205031312.html

Texas patient confirmed as first Ebola case diagnosed in US

DALLAS – A Texas man just back from West Africa has been confirmed as having the first case of Ebola to be diagnosed in the U.S.

Authorities with the Centers for Disease Control revealed the finding Tuesday, two days after the unidentified patient arrived at a Dallas hospital with suspicious symptoms.

Officials at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas put the man into “strict isolation” and sent a blood specimen to the state public health lab for testing.

The CDC said results show the man has the deadly disease which has been linked to more than 3,000 recent deaths in Africa. According to the World Health Organization, there have been more than 6,500 cases confirmed in Africa, with Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone among the hardest hit.

Dr. Christopher Perkins with the Dallas County health department told reporters that the Texas man didn’t start showing symptoms until he arrived home.

“We know at this time this person was not symptomatic during travel but became symptomatic once arriving here and being home for several days,” said Perkins, according the Dallas Morning News. “So that decreases the threat that might be to the general population.”

CDC officials are scheduled to release more details within the hour.

The CDC has a team enroute to North Texas to help health officials re-trace the man's contacts since he has been back in the states.

Ebola is highly contagious and deadly, but only spread through contact with bodily fluids. Dallas County Health and Human Services Director Zachary Thompson spent most of his day trying to calm the fears of North Texans.

“It is easier to get the flu than it is to get the Ebola virus,” Thompson told KTVT-TV. "You have to get it through secretion, blood, that type of transmission. So this is not a situation where you go to the grocery store and you get infected with the virus.”

Ebola symptoms include sudden fever, fatigue and headache. Officials said symptoms may appear anywhere from two days to three weeks after exposure.

Four American aid workers have contracted Ebola in West Africa and been evacuated to the U.S. for treatment since late July. Three of them were released after making full recoveries. A fourth patient arrived in Atlanta on Sept. 9, but spokespersons at Emory University Hospital have said privacy laws prevent the release of an updated condition. On Sunday, a U.S. doctor who had been volunteering in an Ebola clinic in Sierra Leone was brought to the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland as safety precaution after he was exposed to the disease.

In past years Ebola has killed up to 90 percent of those it has infected, but the death rate in the current outbreak is closer to 60 percent due to early treatment.

(Updated at 5:25 p.m. ET. This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.)
 
And let the exaggerated panic and fear-mongering begin. Remember when Fukashima went up and people were certain a radioactive dust cloud of death was going to invade?
 
Glad to hear he wasnt symptomatic during air travel. That could have been ugly. Since theyve caught it early and he's already in the US he has the best chance possible.

And the US really should make it harder to travel to Africa until this Ebola outbreak there is controlled. Only Aid Workers and Doctors should be allowed to travel back and forth betwesn the US and Africa while this is going on, and they should be required to undergo quarantine upon returning. Impractical or not, Ebola is no joke.
 
All of Africa? Including Northern Africa?

Just the effected countries and regions until its over. Im certainly not advocating a permanent halt of travel back and forth to all of Africa.
 
And let the exaggerated panic and fear-mongering begin. Remember when Fukashima went up and people were certain a radioactive dust cloud of death was going to invade?

Better to be a little paranoid than under-prepared. This could become a serious threat.

Also, the spread of a virus isn't comparable to Fukashima, and I don't know why you think it is. You're complacent.
 
Is the 90% death rate because Ebola is so deadly, or because the affected regions have such crappy healthcare and medication?

Like, how feasible is it for this to become an epidemic in the US?
 
Is the 90% death rate because Ebola is so deadly, or because the affected regions have such crappy healthcare and medication?

Like, how feasible is it for this to become an epidemic in the US?
Both. There's no treatment for Ebola besides giving the patients fluids to support their self-recovery. Well, and that super-new, undoubtedly super-expensive immune system booster they just came up with. In Africa they are running out of beds to put the patients in, let alone have 24/7 fluids for everybody.

Unless it becomes airborne, and keep in mind the HIV virus hasn't become airborne yet either, an "epidemic" is pretty impossible in the US. Ebola is only transmissible if the patient is showing symptoms (the viral load is too low before then) and it kills extremely quickly once that happens. In Africa, the transmission is exacerbated because of funeral customs too. When bodies are freshly dead, there's still a ton of live virus in them, and many customs involves relatives touching the dead body. We don't have that kind of thing in the US.

So no, I'm not worried. [/biology major]
 
Is the 90% death rate because Ebola is so deadly, or because the affected regions have such crappy healthcare and medication?

Like, how feasible is it for this to become an epidemic in the US?



I would think it's the latter, evident by the two Americans that got it initially and are now cured.
 
Better to be a little paranoid than under-prepared. This could become a serious threat.

Also, the spread of a virus isn't comparable to Fukashima, and I don't know why you think it is. You're complacent.
You're saying that as if we can DO something about it as individuals. We can't. I've never been to West Africa. I don't know anyone who's traveled there recently. There's nothing I can do on my own about this, besides make myself paranoid.

Really, the best things you can do to keep yourself healthy in general is to eat right, exercise, don't smoke, sleep, don't drink to excess, and wash your damn hands. Everything else, you can't help, so there's no use worrying about it and accusing people of being "complacent." That's just you going around making people feel bad because they're not as paranoid as you.

Believe me, people in the healthcare industry that I've talked to, on the clinical side, they're getting warnings about Ebola. Every hospital knows about it. They have protocols in place. That's the best anyone can do.
 
You're saying that as if we can DO something about it as individuals. We can't. I've never been to West Africa. I don't know anyone who's traveled there recently. There's nothing I can do on my own about this, besides make myself paranoid.

Really, the best things you can do to keep yourself healthy in general is to eat right, exercise, don't smoke, sleep, don't drink to excess, and wash your damn hands. Everything else, you can't help, so there's no use worrying about it and accusing people of being "complacent." That's just you going around making people feel bad because they're not as paranoid as you.

Some believe the US can always be on top of everything, and that we've moved well beyond the times when things like plagues could pose a danger.

We're doing really well in this area, but there's still a risk. I feel safer in the US than I would anywhere else, but then again.

Believe me, people in the healthcare industry that I've talked to, on the clinical side, they're getting warnings about Ebola. Every hospital knows about it. They have protocols in place. That's the best anyone can do.

Good to know.
 
Is the 90% death rate because Ebola is so deadly, or because the affected regions have such crappy healthcare and medication?

Like, how feasible is it for this to become an epidemic in the US?

Mostly your last part here.That doesn't mean it can't ever get over here and the CDC NEVER said it couldn't/wouldn't come to the US.

They simply stated that if it did come over here the likelihood of it becoming anywhere close to epidemic levels such as in West Africa is slim to none.
 
Not airborne, but can coughing and sneezing spread it?
If so only directly person to person?
Or can it also be through something coughed or sneezed on, then touched by another?

Also it sais he was tested before he came, but it only could be detected after he was here and sick.
So there is no way to detect someone who is carrying it? Only after they are sick?
 
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Remember when the United States didn't have Ebola and then decided to just bring infected people into the country so we could have it too.
 
Not airborne, but can coughing and sneezing spread it?
If so only directly person to person?
Or can it also be through something coughed or sneezed on, then touched by another?

Also it sais he was tested before he came, but it only could be detected after he was here and sick.
So there is no way to detect someone who is carrying it? Only after they are sick?
I believe the viral load is too small for droplet transmission specifically. It isn't a respiratory illness. Very ill Ebola patients are puking and pooping, not sneezing or coughing.

And yeah, detection does depend on viral load, for any illness. If he had just picked up the virus when he first got tested, the levels would be too low to detect. It's the same with HIV. For that, you need tests months apart to be sure. For Ebola, you'd already be dead then. :oldrazz:
 
Some believe the US can always be on top of everything, and that we've moved well beyond the times when things like plagues could pose a danger.

We're doing really well in this area, but there's still a risk. I feel safer in the US than I would anywhere else, but then again..
I mean, we can never be 100% sure, but we're doing the best we possibly can. That's all you can really hope for.
 
My hypochondria loves this news. :dry:
 

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