EBOLA Catholic Priest in Democratic Republic of Congo Has Tested Postive For Ebola

2Trish

Veteran Member
More articles about the people with ebola who left the hospital and ended up in the church are out there. I'll try to post them.

https://www.christiantoday.com/uk/catholic-priest-quarantined-as-drcs-ebola-virus-spreads/129391.htm


Catholic priest quarantined as DRC's Ebola virus spreads
Christian Today staff writer Fri 25 May 2018 8:52 BST

A Catholic priest has been quarantined after infection by the Ebola virus in the river port city of Mbandaka, in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

An anonymous source told AFP yesterday: 'We have quarantined a priest from the diocese of Mbandaka-Bikoro who tested positive'.

The DRC's ninth recorded outbreak of the disease is thought to have killed at least 22 people so far, according to government figures released on Wednesday. A previous count put the toll at 27, though several of those deaths are now believed not to be related to Ebola.
Ebola
ReutersResidents arrive at the Wangata Reference Hospital in Mbandaka, Democratic Republic of Congo, May 20, 2018. DRC is to begin vaccinations on Monday.

DRC health officials have launched a targeted vaccination effort this week in a bid to restrain the Ebola outbreak: 58 cases have been identified since early April, while last Thursday saw the first reported incident in a city, in Mbandaka.

Ebola is a deadly, highly infectious virus that spreads through bodily fluids including vomit and sweat.

Yesterday it was revealed that two dying Ebola patients had been taken from a Congo hospital by their relatives on motor-bikes, then taken to a prayer meeting with 50 other people, potentially exposing all to the deadly virus.

Both patients were vomiting and infectious and died hours after the prayer session in Mbandaka, Dr Jean-Clement Cabrol, emergency medical coordinator for Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders), said.

'The escape was organised by the families, with six motorcycles as the patients were very ill and couldn't walk,' Cabrol said.

'They were taken to a prayer room with 50 people to pray. They were found at two in the morning, one of them dead and one was dying. So that's 50-60 contacts right there. The patients were in the active phase of the disease, vomiting.'

'All it takes is one sick person to travel down the Congo River and we can have outbreaks seeded in many different locations...that can happen at any moment, it's very hard to predict,' Dr Peter Salama, head of emergency response at the WHO told Reuters.

'It is going to be at least weeks and more likely months before we get this outbreak fully under control.'

The WHO's three-month budget for the crisis has already been doubled to $57 million.

There have been major advances in medical treatment of the virus since it ravaged West Africa in 2014-2016, including an experimental vaccine that can protect medical staff.

However, local scepticism about the dangers of Ebola and the need to isolate infection continues to complicate efforts to contain it. In previous outbreaks, mourning relatives have caught the haemorrhagic disease by laying hands on the highly-contagious bodies of dead loved ones.

Additional reporting by Reuters
 

2Trish

Veteran Member
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...he-disease-may-spread/?utm_term=.b32c0f3267f2


Two Ebola patients who fled quarantine may have exposed dozens to virus
by Siobhán O'Grady May 24 at 10:11 AM Email the author

A team from Doctors Without Borders dons protective clothing and equipment as they prepare to treat Ebola patients in an isolation ward of Mbandaka hospital in Congo. (Louise Annaud/Doctors Without Borders/AP)

Health officials in Congo are anxious to contain the country's deadly Ebola outbreak — which has already spread to an urban area — before the situation gets any worse. But controlling the virus may have just gotten tougher.

On Thursday, a senior Doctors Without Borders aid worker said that two patients infected with Ebola who fled their hospital on Monday night potentially exposed dozens of more people to the virus.

In a briefing in Geneva, Jean-Clement Cabrol, a doctor who had just returned from Congo, said "the patients were in the active phase of the disease, vomiting" when their families removed them from the hospital, put them on motorcycles, and took them to a religious gathering of 50 people. Ebola is contagious through bodily fluids, and both patients, who were at an acute phase of the illness, died within hours.

Those two were among the three Ebola patients who left a hospital isolation ward and reentered the general population, according to the Doctors Without Borders mission in the Congolese city of Mbandaka.

One patient left Sunday, shortly before being discharged, and is still alive, according to the aid group. The two others who attended the prayer gathering left overnight Monday; one died outside of quarantine, and another was brought back to the hospital and died there.

“In all three cases, every effort was made by staff at the hospital to convince the patients — and their families — not to leave and to continue their treatment,” Brienne Prusak, a press officer for MSF, as Doctors Without Borders is frequently known, said in a statement.

“It is unfortunate but not unexpected,” said WHO spokesman Tarik Jasarevic. “It is normal for people to want the loved ones to be at home during what could be the last moments of life.”

The World Health Organization administered May 22 an experimental vaccine against the Ebola virus to dozens of people in Congo, following a deadly outbreak. (World Health Organization)

Now comes the challenge of determining who the patients may have come into contact with once they left the hospital in the city of more than 1 million people. There have been 58 confirmed, probable and suspected cases of Ebola — and 27 deaths — as of Tuesday. That number could dramatically increase if the disease were to spread widely in a major city.

Knowing who has been exposed to Ebola is also critical to the effectiveness of the new Ebola vaccine that has been deployed to Congo. Proper use of the vaccine relies on identifying every person who may have come into contact with an infected individual, then working outward from there in what experts call “rings” of people, which includes contacts of contacts.

The idea is to quickly immunize those at highest risk of contracting the virus before they could potentially become infected and spread it themselves. As of this week, the WHO said 628 such contacts had been listed in Congo.

When Ebola hit West Africa in 2014, some of the obstacles that impeded the medical response included lack of trust among communities dealing with outbreaks and religious practices — such as washing the body of the dead — that spread the disease, which is contagious through bodily fluids. Community outreach to religious leaders in particular helped familiarize communities with the proper safety protocols.

But lack of trust between patients and doctors is often the reason those sick with Ebola would attempt to evade treatment, which can be intimidating when it involves isolating them from their families and only interacting with medical professionals dressed in hazmat suits. In previous Ebola outbreaks, patients have also left the hospital despite doctors urging them not to.

MSF is warning against seeing “forced hospitalization” as the solution to the outbreak.

“Patient adherence is paramount,” Prusak said. “The quicker patients are admitted, the greater their chance of survival and the greater the chance of limiting the spread of Ebola.”
 

2Trish

Veteran Member
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...fected-Ebola-Congo-praying-dying-patient.html

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Saturday, May 26th 2018 5-Day Forecast
Priest is infected with Ebola in Congo after praying with a dying patient – as death toll rises to 31

Priest working in diocese of Mbandaka, the area where the disease broke out
He was tending to a patient who later died of the disease, has been quarantined
Disease spread to the city of Mbandaka, provincial capital and transport hub
It emerged that three patients escaped from hospital in city to pray in a church

By Tariq Tahir For Mailonline and Afp

Published: 04:43 EDT, 25 May 2018 | Updated: 05:56 EDT, 25 May 2018

e-mail

A Catholic priest has been quarantined after being infected with the Ebola virus in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

World Health Organization has warned that the fight to stop the country's ninth confirmed outbreak of the deadly fever has now reached a critical point.

Congo's health ministry reported 31 confirmed Ebola cases, 13 probable cases and eight suspected cases.
A Medecins Sans Frontieres team dons protective clothing as they prepare to treat Ebola patients in an isolation ward of Mbandaka hospital
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A Medecins Sans Frontieres team dons protective clothing as they prepare to treat Ebola patients in an isolation ward of Mbandaka hospital
A World Health Organization worker prepares to administer a vaccination for Ebola
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A World Health Organization worker prepares to administer a vaccination for Ebola

'We have quarantined a priest from the diocese of Mbandaka-Bikoro who tested positive' for the Ebola virus, a medical official said.

It emerged yesterday that three Ebola patients escaped from a hospital in the Congo and were taken by their familes to pray in a church with 50 people.

The patients left the hospital holding them in quarantine in Congo city of Mbandaka, a World Health Organisation spokesperson said.

Two of the patients were found dead on Tuesday, while a third was taken back to the hospital and is now under observation.
An International Red Cross Committee worker walks in front of a quarantine zone at the hospital of Wangata in Mbandaka on Tuesday
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An International Red Cross Committee worker walks in front of a quarantine zone at the hospital of Wangata in Mbandaka on Tuesday
UNICEF are providing clean water for schoolchildren to wash their hands to help contain the Ebola outbreak before entering a classroom in the north-western city of Mbandaka
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UNICEF are providing clean water for schoolchildren to wash their hands to help contain the Ebola outbreak before entering a classroom in the north-western city of Mbandaka

Katherine Overcamp of Catholic Relief Services said the priest contracted Ebola while 'taking care of someone who passed away' though it is unclear if was one of the patients who left the hospital.

She added the priest 'responding well to treatment', the Catholic News Service reported.

The first case in the latest outbreak was reported in Mbandaka, a provincial capital of 1.2 million and a transport hub located on the Congo River, last Thursday.

Meanwhile, UNICEF said Thursday it was committed to helping schools and children in the fight against the spread of the virus.

The charity's DRC representative Gianfranco Rotigliano told AFP if a student becomes infected, he or she would be promptly taken care of.
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A man walks past the Church of Christ during Pentecost in Mbandaka. It has emerged a priest tending to a patient who died from Ebola has himself now become infected
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A man walks past the Church of Christ during Pentecost in Mbandaka. It has emerged a priest tending to a patient who died from Ebola has himself now become infected

Following a visit to schools in Bikoro, Rotigliano said: 'I spoke with the schoolchildren, and they know the basic rules including washing their hands regularly, and not shaking hands.'

Ebola spreads through contact with bodily fluids and is both highly infectious and extremely lethal.

In Mbandaka, several families have installed buckets of water and soap at the entrance of the house for hand-washing,.

'I asked my children to be careful not to shake hands with people and stop playing with their friends in games that would cause contact between them,' Claude, a father of several children
Congo buys up all available thermometers in bid to fight disease

Congo's fight to rein in a deadly Ebola outbreak has seen the authorities crossing the border to buy up available thermometers, a World Health Organization official said.

Hand held thermometers are used to detect even a slight an increase in body temperature that indicates a person may have contracted the virus.

The spread of the disease to the provincial capital Mbandaka has had health officials scrambling to monitor for Ebola at busy ports in the capital, Kinshasa, which is downstream from the infected city on the Congo River.

'We want to ensure that ports and airports are effectively protected,' said WHO's Congo representative Allarangar Yakouide.
A health official uses a thermometer to measure the temperature of disembarking passengers at the airport at Mbandaka
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A health official uses a thermometer to measure the temperature of disembarking passengers at the airport at Mbandaka

'I assure you, we have already taken all the thermometers that are in Kinshasa, practically all the thermometers, and there are even colleagues who are going on the other side to Brazzaville to buy thermometers.'

The Republic of Congo's capital is across the river from Kinshasa, a city of 10 million.

Mbandaka is one of three health zones with confirmed Ebola cases, complicating efforts to find and monitor hundreds of people who have been in contact with those infected.

Two of the zones are rural and remote, with few roads or other infrastructure.

In Kinshasa, travelers streamed off boats at ports on the Congo River and ran a gauntlet of health officials watching for signs of infection.
 

kytom

escapee from reality
how come it doesnt say catholic pedophile? they either did it or covered it up!
 

jazzy

Advocate Discernment
what proof do you have he is a pedo? seems like a huge assumption. God help all those people an those trying to take care of them.
 

night driver

ESFP adrift in INTJ sea
Let me know when the numbers get to the high 3 figures to low 4 figures.

Until then they're just going to play math games.

=================================================================================================

A friend of mine once pointed out that we sometimes must ignore the ignorant. screw it.
 
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TerryK

TB Fanatic
how come it doesnt say catholic pedophile? they either did it or covered it up!

So a priest who opened his church to comfort and care for sick and dying people, came down with Ebola.
Do you hate all Catholics, or just the ones trying to do God's work in caring for sick and dying people. :shk:

"Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me" (Matthew 25:40, 45

Hey imagine me, an atheist having to quote the bible. Hell has truly frozen over. :lol:
 

Bardou

Veteran Member
Families Steal Ebola Patients from Hospital in DR Congo

International public health authorities confirmed 52 cases and 22 deaths in the ongoing outbreak of Ebola virus in Democratic Republic of Congo this week, where locals’ fear that medical professionals are intentionally spreading the disease has triggered at least two cases of families stealing patients out of hospitals.

Some locals believes that Ebola is a curse, not a medical condition, and prefer traditional healers to use magic against the curse rather than modern medicine. Others suspect the international relief organizations trying to prevent the disease from spreading are the ones who brought the virus into their communities, making containment and treatment difficult.

These concerns echo the struggles of fighting Ebola in Guinea, Sierra Leone, and Liberia in 2014, when an outbreak there killed over 11,000 people.

The incidents in which families stole patients out of hospitals occurred on Monday in Mbandaka, a port city near the urban capital of Kinshasa. According to Reuters, family members smuggled the relatives out by “walking them out of the hospital before putting them on the back of motorcycles.”

One of the patients died at home hours later. The other patient died dramatically in a local evangelical church, where an unidentified witness told Reuters she “came to testify that God had cured her of her illness” but died shortly after hospital officials found her in the church and brought her back to their care.

At least 19 people attended the church meeting where she had last spoken, leaving them exposed to the virus.

“It is unfortunate but not unexpected. It is normal for people to want their loved ones to be at home during what could be the last moments of life,” World Health Organization spokesman Tarik Jasarevic told CNN. “We are working with local community leaders, traditional leaders and healers, and religious leaders to better engage with communities so that we understand each other better and can work together in stopping the outbreak.”

Reuters notes that these two cases of suspicion, while the most dramatic among them, were not the last. Some reports have begun to trickle in that locals near Mbandaka have begun to threaten medical staff attempting to enter their villages to stay away.

Such hostility was a staple of the West African Ebola outbreak that lasted from 2014-2016. Relatives struggled to steal away patients from hospitals in Sierra Leone, Guinea, and Liberia, fearing that they were being killed. Local publications claimed that the United States had fabricated Ebola to kill Africans.

In a particularly violent incident in Guinea in 2014, an angry mob attacked a Doctors Without Borders treatment station, throwing rocks at the doctors and tents where patients were being held in isolation. Local residents believed Doctors Without Borders had brought the virus to their village to kill them. Doctors Without Borders was forced to withdraw.

Families also attacked health workers for incinerating bodies, preventing a traditional burial but also the traditional washing of bodies, which allows for easy transmission of Ebola.

An Ebola outbreak often begins with the consumption of “bush meat” – monkeys, rats, bats, and other smaller creatures consumed in areas of Africa where sources of protein are scarce. From there, humans can spread the virus to each other through bodily fluids like blood, sweat, and saliva. Ebola can be sexually transmitted.

Among the biggest challenges in containing the Ebola virus is tracking who has come into contact with an Ebola patient or may have inadvertently touched a contaminated bodily fluid. Medical professionals are struggling now, reports state, to find and test anyone who may have come into contact with the two quarantined patients during their escape. Doing so in an urban area, where many people can come into contact with each other or touch doorknobs, guard rails, and other common items, is significantly more challenging than in rural areas.

To prevent the current Ebola outbreak from triggering as much panic as the 2014 one, international aid groups are reaching out to local religious organizations and traditional healers in the hopes of using them to ensure locals that going to hospitals is not a death sentence.

“We try to raise awareness and tell people that, no matter their beliefs, it is crucial for patients to remain in health centers for treatment,” DR Congo’s Health Minister Dr. Oly Ilunga Kalenga told Voice of America this week. “Religious and traditional leaders must be involved, because there are many beliefs surrounding the Ebola virus.”

According to the UN Children’s fund in a report released Wednesday, the WHO has confirmed 31 cases of Ebola, has documented 13 probable cases, and 8 suspected cases of infection. 22 people have died since May 3, 2018.

Unlike the 2014 outbreak, an experimental Ebola vaccine exists, which the Congolese government has allowed the WHO to distribute in an attempt to contain the virus.

http://www.breitbart.com/national-s...congo-families-take-patients-out-of-hospital/
 

vestige

Deceased
Side note:

Africa in general (meaning one country or the other over time) has been in some sort of disaster/disarray as long it has existed.

All the aid, missionaries, doctors and money in the world will never change that.
 

Faroe

Un-spun
Side note:

Africa in general (meaning one country or the other over time) has been in some sort of disaster/disarray as long it has existed.

All the aid, missionaries, doctors and money in the world will never change that.

Aid makes the suffering worse, for both them and us. The population is way beyond the area's carrying capacity for the level of infrastructure the population itself is capable of maintaining. So, the surplus hops on a plane or boat, and comes to the West. Oh that glorious and enriching diversity!

I personally know a guy whose church sponsors him to go over there to dig wells.
I wish he would STOP!
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
If/when Ebola really gets going in Africa, it will eventually come to the US, and here is how that will happen.


https://www.theorganicprepper.com/ebola-outbreak-us/

A new Ebola outbreak is on the radar in the Congo and just over a week ago had reached a city of more than a million people. Well, things likely got a whole lot worse over the weekend when family members of 3 infectious patients with confirmed cases of Ebola broke them out of quarantine and took them to a prayer meeting with at least 50 people. That may seem like it’s a long way from the US but read on.

People at the prayer meeting were definitely exposed, as two of the patients were in the most infectious stages of the disease, with vomiting and diarrhea.

Two of the three escapees are dead and the third was returned to the quarantine center.

The UK Independent interviewed Dr. Jean-Clement Cabrol, emergency medical coordinator for Medecins Sans Frontiers (Doctors Without Borders):

“The escape was organized by the families, with six motorcycles as the patients were very ill and couldn’t walk,” Dr. Cabrol told a news briefing in Geneva after returning from the affected region.

“They were taken to a prayer room with 50 people to pray. They were found at two in the morning, one of them dead and one was dying. So that’s 50-60 contacts right there. The patients were in the active phase of the disease, vomiting.” (source)

It’s not unusual in the Congo for this to happen, according to WHO spokesperson Tarik Jasarevic.

He said that both of the deceased had been given a safe and dignified burial and added that “it was only human” that sick people wanted to be with their families “in what could be the last moments of life”.

“It is very unfortunate that people fled the treatment centre, but it is not unexpected. We had this in previous outbreaks,” he said. (source)

Jasarevic said that this makes it particularly important to engage with the community so they can understand how Ebola spreads and the urgency of getting medical attention.
Tracking down the contacts of the escaped Ebola patients

Now the work begins of tracking down everyone with whom the escaped patients may have been in contact to try and prevent the outbreak from getting out of the city into an even more populated area.

Because Ebola has a 21-day incubation period, an infected person might not realize they have contracted the disease until it’s too late and they’ve exposed uncounted others to it.

Health officials started trying to trace the motorcycle drivers and other people who came into contact with the patients as soon as the escape was reported, Dr. Peter Salama, head of emergency response at the WHO, told Reuters.

“From the moment that they escaped, the health ministry, WHO, and partners have been following very closely every contact,” he said.

“All it takes is one sick person to travel down the Congo River and we can have outbreaks seeded in many different locations … that can happen at any moment. It’s very hard to predict,” he said, referring to the river linking the trading hub of Mbandaka to the capital Kinshasa, whose population is 10 million.

More than 600 contacts have been identified so far.
Could this Ebola outbreak spread to Europe and the US?

If a person with Ebola gets to the capital city, that’s when people in other areas really need to begin paying attention. Kinshasa is a major transportation hub.

Software called FLIRT (FLIght Risk Tracker) has determined where the virus could potentially spread from there.
They used flight date from the airports in Mbandaka, Kinshasa, and Brazzaville to predict the places most at risk for infection and found that these cities are the most closely connected to the point of origin.



Pointe-Noire, Republic of Congo
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Brazzaville, Republic of Congo
Lubumbashi, Democratic Republic of Congo
Brussels, Belgium
Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo
Paris, France
Nairobi, Kenya
Johannesburg, South Africa
Kisangani, Democratic Republic of Congo

The countries which are the most connected are:

Democratic Republic of Congo
Republic of Congo
Ethiopia
Belgium
France
Kenya
South Africa
Gabon
Morocco
Côte d’Ivoire

It’s not hard to see how easily this outbreak could reach highly populated parts of Europe. And then, it could go anywhere.

Including the United States. EcoHealth Alliance reports:

The analysis ranks the United States 17th on the list, with 0.5 percent of outgoing passengers entering the country. The U.S. cities with the highest percentage (greater than 0.01 percent) of incoming passengers coming from the Democratic Republic of Congo are:



New York (JFK): 0.13% of US-bound passengers coming from the Region of Interest (ROI)
Miami (MIA): 0.11% of US-bound passengers coming from ROI
Atlanta (ATL): 0.06% of US-bound passengers coming from ROI
Boston (BOS): 0.05% of US-bound passengers coming from ROI
Los Angeles (LAX): 0.05% of US-bound passengers coming from ROI
Detroit (DTW): 0.04% of US-bound passengers coming from ROI
Washington, D.C. (IAD): 0.02% of US-bound passengers coming from ROI
Cincinnati (CVG): 0.01% of US-bound passengers coming from ROI
Dallas-Ft. Worth (DFW): 0.01% of US-bound passengers coming from ROI
Newark (EWR): 0.01% of US-bound passengers coming from ROI
Chicago (ORD): 0.01% of US-bound passengers coming from ROI
Ft. Lauderdale (FLL): 0.01% of US-bound passengers coming from ROI

It only takes one sick person on any of these flights to result in a global pandemic that could wipe out millions of people.

“While the percentage of overall passengers entering the U.S. from that region is low,” said Dr. Peter Daszak, President of EcoHealth Alliance. “With approximately half a million passengers traveling from the Democratic Republic of Congo each year, the disease requires just one infected traveler to cause a global public health emergency, and this helps us be forewarned and prepared.” (source)

The last time Ebola reached our shores, we got very, very lucky. One patient completely overwhelmed an entire hospital. If there were hundreds or thousands of patients across the country, it wouldn’t take long for things to devolve into absolute chaos. Ebola can have a death rate as high as 90%.

Like I said in the previous article I wrote on this topic, it isn’t time to batten down the hatches but it’s certainly time to be watchful and make sure that you are prepared for the potential of a pandemic. As you can see, it isn’t a stretch of the imagination to think that the deadly disease could once again reach the US.

Learn more about prepping for a pandemic
Stock up on emergency food
Learn about going into lockdown

Ebola could easily spread outside the Congo and by the time it does, everyone else will be vying for the same supplies.
Daisy Luther

Please feel free to share any information from this site in part or in full, leaving all links intact, giving credit to the author and including a link to this website and the following bio. Daisy is a coffee-swigging, gun-toting, homeschooling blogger who writes about current events, preparedness, frugality, and the pursuit of liberty on her website, The Organic Prepper. Daisy is the publisher of The Cheapskate's Guide to the Galaxy, a monthly frugality newsletter, and she curates all the most important news links on her aggregate site, PreppersDailyNews.com. She is the best-selling author of 4 books and lives in the mountains of Virginia with her two daughters and an ever-growing menagerie. You can find Daisy on Facebook, Pinterest, and Twitter.
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
21 DAYS UNTIL EBOLA CHAOS

Barbou posted her article here on May 28th. The article stated the "Ebola breakout," happened on Monday, May 21st. Further, the article stated the "incubation period," for Ebola was 21 days.

THIS MEANS THE 50 TO 60 PEOPLE EXPOSED TO THE LATE STAGE, HIGHLY, HIGHLY INFECTIOUS EBOLA PATIENTS WERE EXPOSED ON MAY 21ST. FURTHER, "THEY" NOW THINK UP TO 600 ADDITIONAL PEOPLE WERE EXPOSED, WHO THEN EXPOSED STILL MORE PEOPLE.

THE BOTTOM LINE IS THREE WEEKS FROM MAY 21ST IS JUNE 11TH. FINALLY, IF ANY OF THOSE ORIGINAL PEOPLE WERE INFECTED, AND THEY THEN INFECTED OTHERS DURING THE THREE WEEK PERIOD, WE WILL SEE A SPIRAL TYPE INCREASE IN TOTAL EBOLA PATIENTS STARTING ON JUNE 11TH, AND THEN CONTINUING TO INCREASE IN NUMBERS OVER THE NEXT MONTH OR SO.

WE SHOULD ALSO BEAR IN MIND THAT IF ANY OF THE INFECTED TRAVELED IT WILL FURTHER SPREAD THE DISEASE IN AFRICA. IT MAY ALSO SPREAD GLOBALLY DEPENDING ON WHO WAS EXPOSED, HOW MANY WERE EXPOSED, AND WHERE THEY WENT FROM THAT ONE CITY. IF ANY OF THEM GOT ON THE RIVER AND WENT ANYWHERE, YOU WILL HAVE ADDITIONAL, SEPARATE EBOLA OUTBREAKS START TO HAPPEN.

Oh yeah, mid June may be the start date for the real Ebola outbreak.
 
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