EBOLA Czar: Fight against Ebola reaching 'pivot point,' but more domestic cases expected

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
US Ebola czar: Fight against deadly disease reaching 'pivot point,' but more domestic cases expected
Published December 28, 2014
FoxNews.com

The United States’ months-long effort to stop the deadly Ebola outbreak is reaching a “pivot point,” but Americans should expect more domestic cases, White House Ebola czar Ron Klain said Sunday.

“We will see (cases) from time to time,” Klain told CBS’ “Face the Nation.” “There’s still work to be done in Sierra Leone and Guinea. But we’re nearing a pivot point.”

Klain was appointed to the post in October by President Obama to lead the U.S. response to Ebola, days after the first death on U.S. soil as a result of the disease.

Thomas Eric Duncan died October 8 at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital, in Dallas, after returning for Liberia, one of the countries in West Africa where Ebola has killed roughly 7,600 people this year.

Duncan went to the hospital days earlier with Ebola-like symptoms, but was treated and released. The situation combined with two of Duncan’s nurses becoming infected raised widespread concerns about lapses in protocol and the potential for a U.S. outbreak.

Among the roughly 19,340 cases recently confirmed by the World Health Organization, Sierra Leone has the most with 8,939, followed by Liberia at 7,830 and Guinea with 2,571.

In September, Obama assigned 3,000 U.S. military members to West Africa to help with the outbreak, providing medical and logistical support for the region’s overwhelmed health care systems.

Klain, a long-time Democratic operative and former chief of staff to Vice President Biden, also told CBS that the number of cases in that region is now at five to 10 a day, compared to 50 to 100 daily.

“But this won’t be over until we get to zero,” he said.

The most recent case of Ebola being diagnosed in the U.S. occurred on October 23 when the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene reported one in a medical aid worker who had returned to the city from Guinea, where he had served with Doctors Without Borders.

The patient recovered and was discharged from Bellevue Hospital Center on Nov. 11, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Klain called the CDC’s mishandling last week of an Ebola sample “unacceptable” but said the technician involved has so far shown no signs of infection.

He called the use of an Ebola blood test at the “point of care” a “very significant step” in the fight to stop the outbreak in West Africa.

Klain said the Ebola vaccine recently approved by the Food and Drug Administration is scheduled for release in three to four weeks and will help “tens of thousands of people.”

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/201...-disease-but-more-domestic/?intcmp=latestnews
 

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
Czar: Fight against Ebola reaching 'pivot point,' but more domestic cases expected


Which is, of course, why we'll never hear a word about it in the MSM....


:kk1:
 

DHR43

Since 2001
IMHO, the Ebola story in North America isn't a story. At some point, it may be wise to conclude that.

I suggest now.

It isn't that the story is being kept hidden, under wraps, and is part of a great conspiracy of silence. There's nothing to report.
 

Hawkgirl_70

Veteran Member
If there are a lot of hidden cases in the U.S., which I believe there is, why aren't the families or friends speaking out??? If one of my family members had it, I would report it to the news. How can they keep all these patients family, extended family quiet???

IMHO, the Ebola story in North America isn't a story. At some point, it may be wise to conclude that.

I suggest now.

It isn't that the story is being kept hidden, under wraps, and is part of a great conspiracy of silence. There's nothing to report.
 

Codeno

Veteran Member
If there are a lot of hidden cases in the U.S., which I believe there is, why aren't the families or friends speaking out??? If one of my family members had it, I would report it to the news. How can they keep all these patients family, extended family quiet???

It would be virtually impossible to silence absolutely everyone in the know about even an isolated case or two, let alone the multiple cases alleged by those seeking to keep the U.S. side of this story alive. This would involve family, friends, media, paramedics, ambulance crews, hospital staff, neighbors, employers, co-workers etc. For each and every case.

In the age of cell phones, internet, facebook & twitter? Not a chance.

While it is still well within the realm of possibility that Ebola could make it's way here on a bigger scale in the future, for the time being this is a non-story within the U.S. Those of us who said so from the beginning were vilified by the true believers, but the short run scenario has proven us right.
 

Broccoli

Contributing Member
I am seeing weird attempts to cover the story up out there on the internet. Big money has been thrown down to keep the net quiet. Not good. How they can cover up a pandemic and camouflage it as a bad flu season boggles my mind. But the numbers will eventually prevail and break the facade. Understand if infected people can be taken out (in key locations); the rate of spread can be kept down at this point for a bit, but not much longer. Thus this report.
 

Knoxville's Joker

Has No Life - Lives on TB
If there are a lot of hidden cases in the U.S., which I believe there is, why aren't the families or friends speaking out??? If one of my family members had it, I would report it to the news. How can they keep all these patients family, extended family quiet???

Because there are 50 plus tv markets and news does not travel across markets unless it is news worthy. The media ban would mean it would not travel outside of whatever region tv wise.
 

Oreally

Right from the start
I am seeing weird attempts to cover the story up out there on the internet. Big money has been thrown down to keep the net quiet. Not good. How they can cover up a pandemic and camouflage it as a bad flu season boggles my mind. But the numbers will eventually prevail and break the facade. Understand if infected people can be taken out (in key locations); the rate of spread can be kept down at this point for a bit, but not much longer. Thus this report.

i agree with this. the exponential growth in WA hasn't stopped. the reason the official numbers are what they are is because the nation systems are breaking down there, people aren't going to the "treatment" centers and are dying in the bush or at home, and the epidemic has fragmented into myriad of small pockets. eventually, given that we are not stopping people from there coming here, there will be an ever increasing number of cases and the clampdown will fail.

i figure this will occur sometime around may or june.

by the same token, i don't believe there are many unreported cases going on here. . . now.
 

Broccoli

Contributing Member
Ebola case numbers top 20,000, deaths approach 8,000: WHO
http://news.yahoo.com/ebola-case-nu...h-162418519.html;_ylt=A0LEVir1gKFUuWkAgA0PxQt.


GENEVA (Reuters) - The number of people infected by Ebola in the three countries worst affected by the outbreak has passed 20,000, with more than 7,842 deaths in the epidemic so far, the World Health Organization said on Monday.

Cumulative case numbers in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea stood at 20,081, the WHO said in a statement. More than a third are laboratory-confirmed cases in Sierra Leone, which has become the worst-hit country in the worst outbreak of the disease on record.

(Reporting by Tom Miles; Editing by Alison Williams)
 
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