Number of Ebola Cases DOUBLES Overnight?

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Officials: Second person being monitored for Ebola

DALLAS — Health officials are closely monitoring a possible second Ebola patient who had close contact with the first person to be diagnosed in the U.S., the director of Dallas County's health department said Wednesday.
All who have been in close contact with the man diagnosed are being monitored as a precaution, Zachary Thompson, director of Dallas County Health and Human Services, said in a morning interview with WFAA-TV.
"Let me be real frank to the Dallas County residents: The fact that we have one confirmed case, there may be another case that is a close associate with this particular patient," he said. "So this is real. There should be a concern, but it's contained to the specific family members and close friends at this moment."

Takes 21 days to incubate? Not contagious until symptom present?

Bull Scat!!!
 

It's bad juju

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That's the way it works with few exceptions. An nothing doubled so get a grip. Worry if it becomes airborne or if your rubbing up against a sick person.
 

Okies ... you have an opinion too. Hope you're right, but too many funny things going on ... why are they not shutting down the Liberian nationals from being able to travel?
 

There are a few bans on traveling out there right now. As to how the person in Dallas got here~ our country has not set up any means of checking all travelers from those areas. Apparently the person was not showing symptoms and had valid documentation to be in this country however the newsies aren't saying if the person is a citizen or someone on a visa. And quite honestly if you want to go somewhere and you have an idea that you will be blocked from going there by answering a question like "Do you feel sick?" or "Have you been in contact with anyone who was sick?" people are likely to lie about it. Heck I've seen crews who travel thru middle east countries get a piece of paper for customs stamped in only to trash it later because they had to travel thru another country that would interrogate them if their pass port showed they had traveled there.
People will lie. As to funny business about Ebola~ well you got a continent that's more than half populated by fools concerned with superstition who are not cooperating with people who are really trying to help stop the problem. Tell me that's not funny business. Problem is it isn't so funny for anyone.
 

Check with the State Department for traveling warnings if you want to travel outside CONUS otherwise it's not a pandemic. Remember the news likes to "sensationalize" even the smallest of stories to keep your attention...... See it's working.

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*USA TODAY



NATION

Putting Ebola's risks into perspective
Liz Szabo, USA TODAY

The diagnosis of the first Ebola patient on U.S. soil this week may have put people in a panic, fearing the exotic virus more than mundane germs – such as influenza – that pose a far greater threat to the average American.


The Ebola outbreak in West Africa – the largest in the 40-year history of the virus – has infected 7,178 and killed 3,338, according to the World Health Organization.



Still, because Ebola is rare and relatively difficult to transmit, it kills far fewer people than diseases of which Americans are no longer afraid, such as measles and influenza, says Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine and professor at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston.



"It's important to keep these things in perspective," says Lisa Maragakis, associate hospital epidemiologist at the Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore.

Tony Gutierrez, AP

Dallas Emergency Management specialist Greg Guthrie works with other branches*more

She compared Americans' fear of Ebola to the fear of flying. Though many people are afraid to fly, Maragakis points out that far more people are killed in cars.

•Influenza, which many people mistake for a "bad cold," claims up to 49,000 lives a year and sends more than 200,000 to the hospital, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Half of the more than 100 children who died from flu in the USA last year were healthy kids with nothing to suggest they were more vulnerable than other children.

•Measles,*one of the most infectious diseases in the world, is far easier to catch than Ebola. If a person with measles comes in contact with 10 susceptible people — those who have never had measles or who are unvaccinated — nine of those people will come down with measles, says Julia Shaklee Sammons, medical director of infection prevention and control at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.

On average, people with measles spread the disease to 12 to 18 other people, according to the Michigan Center for Public Health Preparedness. In contrast, people with Ebola in West Africa spread the disease to one to two others, according to the WHO.

Unlike Ebola, measles spreads through the air. The measles virus is so hardy that it can linger in the air for two hours after an infected person leaves the room – and still infect the next person to walk by, according to the WHO.

Measles is much stealthier than Ebola. People infected with measles can spread the virus for four days before breaking out in tell-tale red spots, according to the WHO.

Even with a mortality rate of 2% to 15% — far lower than the 70% mortality rate seen in the West African Ebola outbreak — measles kills 122,000 people around the world each year, Hotez says. Before vaccines, measles killed 2.2 million every year.

•Norovirus, the most common cause of both food-borne illness and stomach-related misery in the USA, can live on surfaces for days, so people can pick up the virus just from touching a door handle or a toy, Sammons says.

Norovirus – which causes diarrhea, vomiting and stomach cramps – afflicts up to 21 million Americans a year and kills up to 800, according to the CDC.



If Ebola spread that easily, there would be millions of cases, not thousands, Hotez says.

"In general, Ebola is not easy to get," Sammons says.

Unlike people with measles, patients infected with Ebola can spread the virus only after they begin to show symptoms, such as a fever, Tom Frieden, director of the CDC, said at a news conference Tuesday. Ebola can't spread through the air. It can spread only through direct contact with bodily fluids, primarily blood, Sammons says.

Chances are, anyone exposed to Ebola is going to know about it, Sammons says. That gives them time to seek medical help and isolate themselves to prevent them from spreading the virus.

Ebola could be far less lethal in a developed country that has access to modern intensive care and basic measures, such as keeping patients hydrated and maintaining a steady blood pressure.



One reason Ebola has spread so widely in Africa – in spite of all of these obstacles – is that the countries most affected are extremely poor. Many people lack running water and soap in their homes. So do many hospitals, according to the CDC.

If one family member comes down with Ebola, there's a good chance that others in the home will become infected, especially if patients bleed and vomit profusely. Families without modern toilets and washing machines have trouble cleaning up after patients who lose control of their bowels and produce huge amounts of diarrhea.

Even burying the dead can spread Ebola in these countries, because common burial rites involve washing the dead and preparing the bodies.

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/10/01/comparing-ebola-flu/16554689/
 

Yes, I know it is a movie --- fantasy --- but this is what comes to mind:

 

What seems odd to me, was what I saw on the evening news last night.

Not Ebola, but a respiratory virus that is causing paralysis, and death in children. the odd part is that it has affected "several hundred children" across the US, in all but 3 or 4 states.

How can something like this get spread so thinly over the entire US???

I would expect a few state "hot" zones, and spreading from there, but the first we hear about it, it's all across the country.
 

This guy Duncan lied on his Liberian travel questionnaire and said he HAD NOT been in contact with anyone who had been diagnosed with Ebola. He had been living with and caring for a women who was 8 months pregnant and DIED from Ebola on 9/15/14.

Then he flies 8000 miles to Brussels, Washington D.C.(with a 3 hour layover to spread his venom)and Dallas Tx where he went to a picnic and was in DIRECT CONTACT with dozens of people.

Nice
 

Last edited:
Please keep politics out of thread.
 

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