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Ebola Breakout is a real threat to the world
Posted on 7/3/14 at 12:07 pm
Posted on 7/3/14 at 12:07 pm
Could this big ebola outbreak become tomorrow's world-wide pandemic? I've been watching this one simmer for some time now; seems like the WHO and UN have beed dithering, the West African countries involved seem paralyzed, and nobody has been heeding the dire warnings coming out from Doctors Without Borders and other groups on the front lines of this. Somebody better start paying attention before Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan and ISIS, plus climate change/global warming (whatever) all become moot issues. Ebola is like all hell breaking out, and if it goes global, say goodbye to more than just this year's football season.
This post was edited on 7/3/14 at 12:11 pm
Posted on 7/3/14 at 12:11 pm to JawjaTigah
I'd think that Ebola is something which isn't exactly *able* to go wide.
It thrives in a tropical climate and has such a low incubation period that it's hard to spread it without realizing that you're shitting your guts out.
It thrives in a tropical climate and has such a low incubation period that it's hard to spread it without realizing that you're shitting your guts out.
Posted on 7/3/14 at 12:17 pm to teke184
quote:And you'd be mostly right. The "help" is what it would get (and is getting) from people who have contracted the disease. They are acting as carriers and are bringing it outside it's normal range. If you do any reading about this particular outbreak, you'll notice it has already spread across several nations in West Africa. And credible medical groups do already say it is capable (in our modern air-conditioned world) of finding happy habitation globally.
I'd think that Ebola is something which isn't exactly *able* to go wide.
In the 1931 film, Dracula, Dr. Van Helsing says: "The strength of the vampire is that people will not believe in him." Likewise, the power of ebola to become a pandemic is that people don't believe it is possible. Until then it is too late...
This post was edited on 7/3/14 at 12:18 pm
Posted on 7/3/14 at 12:18 pm to JawjaTigah
Did someone at wnd just watch the 1995 movie outbreak?
Posted on 7/3/14 at 12:22 pm to cwill
Posted on 7/3/14 at 12:36 pm to JawjaTigah
I read a good book (true story) about an Ebola outbreak a few years ago called The Hot Zone. Really good book.
Posted on 7/3/14 at 12:37 pm to JawjaTigah
Once it gets to Europe (and it will), all bets are off.
Posted on 7/3/14 at 12:43 pm to Diamondawg
Hot Zone is a great book.
Posted on 7/3/14 at 12:47 pm to JawjaTigah
quote:
And you'd be mostly right. The "help" is what it would get (and is getting) from people who have contracted the disease. They are acting as carriers and are bringing it outside it's normal range. If you do any reading about this particular outbreak, you'll notice it has already spread across several nations in West Africa. And credible medical groups do already say it is capable (in our modern air-conditioned world) of finding happy habitation globally.
The disease being able to thrive in certain temperatures is separate from the incubation period involved and its tendency to make people die horribly in short order.
Diseases which kill people in short order and show immediate symptoms have a lot of trouble being spread far because carriers would get quarantined very quickly.
This isn't like AIDS where you can be asymptomatic for years.
Posted on 7/3/14 at 12:47 pm to JawjaTigah
quote:
Ebola is one of the deadliest diseases on Earth, with a fatality rate as high as 90%. It causes bleeding from the eyes, ears, mouth and rectum and a bloody full-body rash leading to a quick demise. It’s one of a handful of diseases that are so deadly that governments consider it a threat to national security. Luckily, so far the cumulative death toll from Ebola has been limited to sporadic epidemics in Africa, although that may change. Here, courtesy of Blooomberg, is a map of Ebola's African outbreaks in recent history.
quote:
This map is relevant because as has been reported previously, In March, Ebola was reported in Guinea and neighboring Liberia, killing 93 people out of 151 suspected cases in the worst outbreak in seven years. While previous epidemics have affected larger populations, what’s unusual this time is how the disease has spread. Originating in small towns in southeast Guinea, the virus traveled 660 kilometers (410 miles) to the coastal capital of Conakry. Earlier outbreaks have been in remote locations. The spread of the disease is fueled by poor health infrastructure and hygiene practices. Western Africa has an acute shortage of doctors; Guinea has just 0.1 physicians per 1,000 people, among the lowest ratios in the world. International aid groups such as Doctors Without Borders sent specialist teams with biohazard suits to set up isolation units and contain the outbreak. Ebola jumps to humans from infected animals that live in the rainforest through contact with blood and other secretions from chimpanzees, gorillas, bats and other species. It spreads among humans the same way. Sick people begin to erupt with symptoms two to 21 days after exposure, leaving health-care workers and family members the most at risk. To prevent the disease from spreading, Guinea has forbidden the sale and eating of bats. Senegal closed its southern border with Guinea and governments around the world are on high alert
Researchers think fruit bats are the most likely host of Ebola, which was first identified in 1976 near the Ebola River in what is now the Democratic Republic of Congo. Outbreaks have also been reported in Congo Republic, Uganda and Sudan and are typically contained within a few months. Prior to the current wave, a total of 2,387 cases had led to 1,590 deaths, according to the World Health Organization. There are no drugs or vaccines approved to treat or prevent Ebola. The rarity of the disease and its prevalence in rural areas of poor African nations doesn’t provide enough incentive for big drugmakers to tackle the virus. Instead, smaller biotechnology firms and government-funded labs have taken up the challenge. The quick and horrible death of Ebola victims and the potential threat of an epidemic was captured in the 1994 best-selling non-fiction thriller “The Hot Zone.” It’s also considered a possible vehicle for terrorism. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention lists the virus as a Category A bioterrorism agent, alongside anthrax and smallpox, compelling an expensive search for remedies.
Ebola doesn’t travel through the air, making it harder to transmit than other pathogens, such as influenza, as long as adequate health-care practices are followed. Other diseases kill many more people. Influenza kills up to half a million people a year around the globe, and resurgent diseases such as tuberculosis and the growth of antibiotic resistance are a bigger focus for global public health organizations. While Ebola is unlikely to leave Africa, the stigma and fear associated with it can prompt people to flee to hospitals outside the affected area, spreading the disease across borders and around the continent. That panic gives governments an excuse to impose travel and trade restrictions on the affected countries each time Ebola emerges from the forest.
LINK
Pertaining to the bolded part...get your flu shot.
Posted on 7/3/14 at 1:07 pm to JawjaTigah
Posted on 7/3/14 at 1:11 pm to dr smartass phd
quote:
Who needs Ebola, when you have a moron create a virus that can wipeout humanity.
I'm pretty sure that this sounds like the opening chapter of The Stand.
Posted on 7/3/14 at 1:12 pm to GumboPot
flu shots are useless because the flu is a constantly mutating virus. A flu shot of last years flu won't help you against this year's flu.
Ebola is never a real threat to global pandemic (only localized epidemic) due to the simple fact that it kills its' victims too quickly for them to spread it very far.
Ebola is never a real threat to global pandemic (only localized epidemic) due to the simple fact that it kills its' victims too quickly for them to spread it very far.
Posted on 7/3/14 at 1:20 pm to JawjaTigah
First of all I don't care about what The Who says. None of those limey fricker are Doctors.
Second, I ain't eating no fruit bats. Why would anyone eat a fricking fruit bat?
Second, I ain't eating no fruit bats. Why would anyone eat a fricking fruit bat?
Posted on 7/3/14 at 1:20 pm to dr smartass phd
quote:
Who needs Ebola, when you have a moron create a virus that can wipeout humanity.
Wow! Who needs a nuclear bombs when you have this?
Posted on 7/3/14 at 1:23 pm to GumboPot
It would be no threat at all if the rest of the world simply quarantined those countries.
Posted on 7/3/14 at 1:23 pm to GumboPot
This looks like one racist disease.
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