EBOLA MAIN EBOLA DISCUSSION THREAD 11/01/14 to 11/15/14

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
previous thread: http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...LA-DISCUSSION-THREAD-10-16-2014-TO-10-31-2014


MS State Med Assn @MSMA1 · 35m 35 minutes ago

CDC "Possible 130 Ebola cases in US by end of the year" #health #ebola #CDC http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_EBOLA_HOW_BAD_CAN_IT_GET?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2014-11-01-10-25-24 …



posted for fair use

Nov 1, 10:27 AM EDT


Scientists try to predict number of US Ebola cases

By MARTHA MENDOZA
AP National Writer


STANFORD, Calif. (AP) -- Top medical experts studying the spread of Ebola say the public should expect more cases to emerge in the United States by year's end as infected people arrive here from West Africa, including American doctors and nurses returning from the hot zone and people fleeing from the deadly disease.

But how many cases?

No one knows for sure how many infections will emerge in the U.S. or anywhere else, but scientists have made educated guesses based on data models that weigh hundreds of variables, including daily new infections in West Africa, airline traffic worldwide and transmission possibilities.

This week, several top infectious disease experts ran simulations for The Associated Press that predicted as few as one or two additional infections by the end of 2014 to a worst-case scenario of 130.

"I don't think there's going to be a huge outbreak here, no," said Dr. David Relman, a professor of infectious disease, microbiology and immunology at Stanford University's medical school. "However, as best we can tell right now, it is quite possible that every major city will see at least a handful of cases."

Relman is a founding member of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services advisory board for biosecurity and chairs the National Academy of Sciences forum on microbial threats.

Until now, projections published in top medical journals by the World Health Organization and the Centers for Disease Control have focused on worst-case scenarios for West Africa, concluding that cases in the U.S. will be episodic, but minimal. But they have declined to specify actual numbers.

The projections are complicated, but Ebola has been a fairly predictable virus - extremely infectious, contagious only through contact with body fluids, requiring no more than 21 days for symptoms to emerge. Human behavior is far less predictable - people get on airplanes, shake hands, misdiagnose, even lie.

Pandemic risk expert Dominic Smith, a senior manager for life risks at Newark, California-based RMS, a leading catastrophe-modeling firm, ran a U.S. simulation this week that projected 15 to 130 cases between now and the end of December. That's less than one case per 2 million people.

Smith's method assumes that most cases imported to the U.S. will be American medical professionals who worked in West Africa and returned home.

Smith said the high end may be a bit of an overestimate as it does not include the automatic quarantining measures that some areas in the U.S. are implementing.

Those quarantines "could both reduce the number of contacts for imported cases, as well as increase the travel burden on - and perhaps reduce the number of - U.S. volunteers planning to support the effort in West Africa," he said.

In a second simulation, Northeastern University professor Alessandro Vespignani projected between one case - the most likely scenario - and a slim chance of as many as eight cases though the end of November.

"I'm always trying to tell people to keep calm and keep thinking rationally," said Vespignani, who projects the spread of infectious diseases at the university's Laboratory for the Modeling of Biological and Socio-Technical Systems.

In an article in the journal PLOS ONE, Vespignani and a team of colleagues said the probability of international spread outside the African region is small, but not negligible. Longer term, they say international dissemination will depend on what happens in West Africa in the next few months.

Their first analysis, published Sept. 2, proved to be accurate when it included the U.S. among 30 countries likely to see some Ebola cases. They projected one or two infections in the U.S., but there could be as many as 10.

So far, eight Ebola patients have been treated in the U.S. and one has died. Six became infected in West Africa: three doctors, a nurse, an NBC News cameraman and Thomas Eric Duncan, the first to arrive undiagnosed and the first to die. He was cared for at a Dallas hospital, where two of his nurses were also infected.

Duncan, who was initially misdiagnosed and sent home from the emergency room, is Vespignani's worst-case scenario for the U.S.

A similar situation, if left unchecked, could lead to a local cluster that could infect, on the outside, as many as 20 he said.

The foreseeable future extends only for the next few months. After that, projections depend entirely on what happens in West Africa. One scenario is that the surge in assistance to the region brings the epidemic under control and cases peter out in the U.S. A second scenario involves Ebola spreading unchecked across international borders.

"My worry is that the epidemic might spill into other countries in Africa or the Middle East, and then India or China. That could be a totally different story for everybody," Vespitnani said.
Dr. Ashish Jha, a Harvard University professor and director of the Harvard Global Health Institute, said he's not worried about a handful of new cases in the U.S. His greatest worry is if the disease goes from West Africa to India.

"If the infection starts spreading in Delhi or Mumbai, what are we going to do?"

Dr. Peter Hotez, founding dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine and director of the Texas Children's Hospital Center for Vaccine Development pegs the range of cases in the U.S. between five and 100.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention prefers not to focus on a particular number. But spokeswoman Barbara Reynolds said Ebola will not be a widespread threat as some outside the agency have warned.

"We're talking about clusters in some places but not outbreaks," she said.

The CDC is using modeling tools to work on projections in West Africa, but "there isn't enough data available in the U.S. to make it worthwhile to go through the exercise."

University of Texas integrative biology professor Lauren Ancel Meyers said there are inherent inconsistencies in forecasting "because the course of action we're taking today will impact what happens in the future."

Her laboratory is running projections of Ebola's spread in West Africa.

The U.S. simulations run for the AP had fairly consistent results with each other, she said. And they are "consistent with what we know about the disease."

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/storie...ME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2014-11-01-10-25-24
 
Last edited:

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Ebola Pope ‏@EbolaPope 39m39 minutes ago

RT FluTrackers: #Indonesia - Madiun, East Java: Suspected #ebola patient being investigated http://ift.tt/1DGu58F h/t nola_mnr


posted for fair use
http://translate.google.com/transla...no-jatim-dicurigasi-suspect-ebola&prev=search

Patients in hospitals) dr Soedono Suspect Java suspected of Ebola
Saturday, November 1st, 2014 15:21 pm

Patients in hospitals) dr Soedono Suspect Java suspected of Ebola
islamianews.com
Ilustrai patients infected with Ebola virus

NEWS CITY, JAKARTA - Regional General Hospital (Hospital) Dr. Soedono, Madiun, East Java, is currently caring for a patient suspected or "suspect" Ebola virus.


Head of Medical Services Soedono Madison dr, dr Sjaiful SpJP Anwar said Monday that the patient is Muk (29), District residents Gemarang, Madison County. Currently, patients in the intensive care isolation room Wijaya Kusuma B local hospital.

"When the status is still suspect ebola, but positive malaria. The patient had a fever up to 38 degrees Celsius," said Dr. Sjaiful Anwar told reporters.

According to him, the determination of suspect Ebola because the patient had been in the area believe the patient had become endemic Indonesian workers (TKI) in Liberia (Africa), which many people found the virus.

Muk worked in Liberia since eight months ago. Before sent back to Indonesia, the patient had a fever and was quarantined for a week.

On his return to Indonesia, Muk also briefly quarantined at Soekarno-Hatta Airport, Jakarta, but only a day and eventually return to Madison.

After five days in his hometown, Muk fevers until finally referred back to the dr Soedono.

Sjaiful explained on suspicion of Ebola virus, the WHO standard reference treatment, dI among nurses must wear headgear, goggles, mask type N95, as well as clothes triplicate.

In addition, nurses should also wear gloves and boots. Clothing triplicate include linen, gowns, gowns and disposable plastic. After the clothing worn immediately discarded.

"The implementation of the SOP so that the patient does not transmit the virus to others, especially medical personnel who handle it," he explained.

He added that it was coordinating with dr Soetomo, Surabaya, to monitor the patient's condition. It could be, the patient will be referred to Surabaya if the condition does not improve.

"We still continue to be monitored. Patients continue to be followed in isolation," he said. (Antara)
 

mzkitty

I give up.
1h
Photo: Ebola survivor Nina Pham and her dog Bentley are reunited in Dallas -
@1500Marilla
 

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Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Sterling Holmes ‏@STERLINGMHOLMES 53s54 seconds ago

Condition of New York doctor with Ebola upgraded to 'stable' http://ift.tt/1qfFUMY


posted for fair use
http://news.yahoo.com/condition-york-doctor-ebola-upgraded-stable-152206235.html


Condition of New York doctor with Ebola upgraded to 'stable'

Reuters
14 minutes ago


NEW YORK (Reuters) - The condition of a New York City doctor who is being treated for Ebola after returning from West Africa has improved to "stable" from "serious from stable," hospital officials said on Saturday.

Dr. Craig Spencer remains in isolation at New York City's Bellevue Hospital, where he was admitted on Oct. 23. He had worked with Ebola patients in Guinea.

(Reporting by Ellen Wulfhorst; Editing by Frank McGurty)
 

Shacknasty Shagrat

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Sterling Holmes ‏@STERLINGMHOLMES 53s54 seconds ago

Condition of New York doctor with Ebola upgraded to 'stable' http://ift.tt/1qfFUMY


posted for fair use
http://news.yahoo.com/condition-york-doctor-ebola-upgraded-stable-152206235.html


Condition of New York doctor with Ebola upgraded to 'stable'

Reuters
14 minutes ago


NEW YORK (Reuters) - The condition of a New York City doctor who is being treated for Ebola after returning from West Africa has improved to "stable" from "serious from stable," hospital officials said on Saturday.

Dr. Craig Spencer remains in isolation at New York City's Bellevue Hospital, where he was admitted on Oct. 23. He had worked with Ebola patients in Guinea.

(Reporting by Ellen Wulfhorst; Editing by Frank McGurty)
Lilbitsnana,
Here is a slightly different wording.
''October 31, 2014
Ebola in the US: Dr. Spencer's condition

I've been searching the New York city and state health departments, and the newspapers, for an update on Dr. Craig Spencer's condition. Bellevue Hospital has a one-line statement from October 30: "The patient with Ebola, Dr. Spencer, remains in serious but stable condition." That's it.....
http://crofsblogs.typepad.com/h5n1/2...condition.html
The grammar of improved to "stable" from "serious from stable" is not clear to me. When normally trusted sources put out garbled information, I then distrust both the source and the alleged "experts". The usual break down in my AO is (stable or not stable), and then break the situation down into critical(two systems needing intervention) serious(one system in trouble), fair, good and so on. Different jurisdictions have different classifications.
It looks more like a political force with little medical background chose to emend the first iteration of the story.
SS
 

Shacknasty Shagrat

Has No Life - Lives on TB
And the Russkis are having their own issues regarding blacks. Appreciating the challenges of translations, referring to 'blacks' as 'things' is a slur that is new to me.
SS
'Ebola follies in Russia: Soccer coach doesn't want black players

Via The Guardian: FC Rostov coach: I don’t want any black players in case Ebola spreads. Excerpt:

The coach of the Russian Premier League team FC Rostov says he will not sign black players and expressed fears that Ebola could spread to the club.

Igor Gamula told local media the club had “enough dark-skinned players. We’ve got six of the things,” when asked on Friday about rumours Rostov would sign Cameroon defender Benoît Angbwa.

Gamula also said that five of his Russian players were ill and “I’m already worrying it’s Ebola”.

Rostov midfielder Moussa Doumbia is from Mali, which has seen sporadic Ebola cases, but there is no suggestion he is infected. Indeed Doumbia played for Rostov in Friday’s 1-0 win over Ural Yekaterinburg.'
http://crofsblogs.typepad.com/h5n1/
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Lilbitsnana,
Here is a slightly different wording.
''October 31, 2014
Ebola in the US: Dr. Spencer's condition

I've been searching the New York city and state health departments, and the newspapers, for an update on Dr. Craig Spencer's condition. Bellevue Hospital has a one-line statement from October 30: "The patient with Ebola, Dr. Spencer, remains in serious but stable condition." That's it.....
http://crofsblogs.typepad.com/h5n1/2...condition.html
The grammar of improved to "stable" from "serious from stable" is not clear to me. When normally trusted sources put out garbled information, I then distrust both the source and the alleged "experts". The usual break down in my AO is (stable or not stable), and then break the situation down into critical(two systems needing intervention) serious(one system in trouble), fair, good and so on. Different jurisdictions have different classifications.
It looks more like a political force with little medical background chose to emend the first iteration of the story.
SS

The article I posted was from today, November 1, so I think he probably improved some since the article you mentioned was posted and it was quoting info from two days ago, October 30.


As far as the grammar, the Reuters reporter was having a bad day.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
FluTrackers.com ‏@FluTrackers 1h1 hour ago

#Vietnam - Da Nang City: Patient being investigated for #ebola tests positive for malaria http://www.flutrackers.com/forum/showthread.php?t=229790 … @Treyfish


from article
http://tuoitrenews.vn/society/23738/possible-ebola-patient-hospitalized-in-central-vietnam



‘Possible Ebola patient’ hospitalized in central Vietnam
Tuoi Tre News
Updated : 11/01/2014 22:27 GMT + 7


A hospital staff member in Da Nang Hospital wears protective clothes before contacting a suspected Ebola patient on November 1, 2014.
Tuoi Tre News

JPbtGgC5.jpg



A Vietnamese man who arrived from Guinea five days ago is suspected of having Ebola after showing a high fever and was quarantined in a hospital in central Vietnam’s Da Nang City on Saturday.
Initial information found that Hoan My Hospital based in Da Nang admitted a patient who arrived from Guinea, one of three countries in West Africa worst affected by Ebola, at some 10:30 am on November 1.

The patient, identified as 26-year-old Chu Van Chung, had a high fever and headache upon his arrival at the hospital, according to Hoan My Hospital.

On the afternoon the same day, Chung was transported to Da Nang Hospital where he is being fully isolated and receiving special medical attention. About 4 to 5 staff members of the hospital in protective clothes are taking care of him.

Before returning to Vietnam, Chu had worked in Guinea for two years. He departed from Guinea five days ago and went through Morocco, Qatar before landing in Vietnam through Ho Chi Minh City-based Tan Son Nhat airport.

On October 31, Chung arrived in Da Nang City and stayed in a hotel on Le Dinh Duong Street.
With regard to this suspected Ebola case, the Department of Health of Da Nang organized an emergency meeting on the same day.

At the meeting, a representative from Da Nang Hospital said the suspected Ebola patient had a high fever (up to 40 degrees C) and was in a panic when he was admitted to the hospital.

According to the representative, the hospital received the suspected patient in accordance with guidelines for diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of the Ebola virus disease (EVD) promulgated by Vietnam’s Ministry of Health.

The representative said the hospital has taken a sample of blood from the patient for testing and will announce the results in the next two days.

Pham Hung Chien, director of the Da Nang Department of Health, required Da Nang hospital to set up a special force to isolate the suspected Ebola patient and the hospital staff members who have contacted him alike.

WHO announced on Friday that there have been 13,567 reported Ebola cases in eight affected countries since the outbreak began, with 4951 reported deaths.

The latest figures showed Liberia with 2,413 deaths in 6,535 cases of Ebola; Sierra Leone with 1,510 dead out of 5,338 reported cases; and Guinea had 1,018 deaths in 1,667 cases.
 

Countrymouse

Country exile in the city
Sterling Holmes ‏@STERLINGMHOLMES 53s54 seconds ago

Condition of New York doctor with Ebola upgraded to 'stable' http://ift.tt/1qfFUMY


posted for fair use
http://news.yahoo.com/condition-york-doctor-ebola-upgraded-stable-152206235.html


Condition of New York doctor with Ebola upgraded to 'stable'

Reuters
14 minutes ago


NEW YORK (Reuters) - The condition of a New York City doctor who is being treated for Ebola after returning from West Africa has improved to "stable" from "serious from stable," hospital officials said on Saturday.

Dr. Craig Spencer remains in isolation at New York City's Bellevue Hospital, where he was admitted on Oct. 23. He had worked with Ebola patients in Guinea.

(Reporting by Ellen Wulfhorst; Editing by Frank McGurty)

The media is CONSTANTLY doing this---treating "stable" as if it means "getting better'.

That is NOT what it means----it means they are STABLE as in, NOT GETTING WORSE.

So, if the patient was "serious but stable" and is now "stable," then his condition is STILL "serious"---

it means he has NOT been downgraded to "critical"

but it also does NOT mean he has been upgraded to "fair" or "good."

Here's an article explaining:

What hospitals mean when they list a patient's condition

Critical information
Terms can be vague, even misleading


November 13, 1990|By Phyllis Brill | Phyllis Brill,Evening Sun Staff

WHAT DOES it mean when you hear that a dear friend has had a heart attack and is in the hospital in critical condition? Just how bad is critical? You might call the hospital the next day and be told his condition is stable. Does that mean he is out of danger now?

Perhaps you read about an accident on I-95 in which three local teen-agers are hurt. The paper says one of the passengers was hospitalized in critical condition. The next day you read that the teen's condition is guarded. Does that mean he is getting better or worse?

People are understandably curious and concerned when someone they know and care about has been admitted to the hospital. They want to be informed about how a patient is doing, and indeed if they are family they deserve as much information as they can get.

Maryland hospitals have cooperated by adopting a rough glossary of terms, devised in cooperation with the Maryland Hospital Association, to describe a patient's condition. These few key adjectives -- released to the public through the media or through hospital information desks-- are intended to satisfy the needs of friends, relatives and the curious public.

But the terms used to describe a patient's condition can be vague, simplistic and even misleading. And hospital personnel xTC agree that they are not meant to be medically definitive.

"In reality, doctors don't make their rounds saying this patient is now in fair condition, this one is critical and so forth," says Dr. William Davidson, head of the intensive care unit and chief of pulmonary medicine at Mercy Hospital.

In most hospitals, patient conditions are generally reported by nurses in each unit once a day (usually at midnight or 7 a.m.) based on information on the patient's chart, the care and observation of the patient over the last 24 hours and consultation with the physician.

The condition becomes part of a daily census report that eventually is relayed to an information desk, which takes calls from outside the hospital.

Here are the patient conditions generally agreed upon, as outlined in the Maryland Hospital Association handbook, and their definitions:

* Good: Vital signs such as pulse, temperature and blood pressure are stable and within normal limits. The patient is conscious and comfortable. His outlook for recovery is good or excellent.

* Fair (also satisfactory or stable): Vital signs are stable and within normal limits. The patient is conscious, but he is uncomfortable or may have minor complications. His outlook is favorable.

* Serious (also poor or guarded): The patient is acutely ill with questionable outlook. Vital signs may be unstable or not within normal limits. A chance for improved outlook.

* Critical: Questionable outlook. Vital signs are unstable or not within normal limits. There are major complications. Death may be imminent.


Obviously, some conditions are easier to determine than others, says Kathy McCullough, director of neuroscience nursing and acting director of surgical nursing at University Hospital. A patient in good condition is probably nearly ready for discharge, she says.

On the other hand, a patient in fair condition might be someone who has just gone through elective surgery. "He may be recently in post-op and may be a little uncomfortable or have a minor complication."

A patient in serious condition would be more acutely ill and his vital signs would be unstable, she says. "It might be a post-operative patient with more complications.

"Or it might be someone who has had a stroke in the last 24 hours, and you're not yet able to make a determination about his prognosis." Stroke victims are usually reported in guarded or serious condition for the first 24 hours, she says.

It's in the serious and critical range where definitions as well as interpretations can get fuzzy, medical experts agree.

Stable, for instance, is used with increasing frequency today, sometimes as a substitute for fair, but more often in conjunction with the terms serious and critical. Technically, stable means that a person's pulse, temperature and blood pressure are unchanged and within a normal range. But it also implies a leveling off, which some people mistakenly interpret as an improved outlook.

"Sometimes you'll hear that a person is in critical but stable condition," says Dr. James Ricely, chief of cardiology at Greater Baltimore Medical Center. "Well, that person could be dying of AIDS," he says. "He might be critical because he's on a respirator, but because he's had no new problems in the last 24 hours, he is stable."

Similarly, he says, "anybody who has a heart attack by definition is critical for the first 24 to 48 hours." Yet a patient's family may be told that he is stable once his vital signs have stabilized.

"But that's not necessarily positive information," says Ricely. "A critical but stable person could drop dead at any time."

Patient conditions are "extremely misleading," he says, but they are used because there is a demand for them. "People want to know something. They want an answer. The family expects one."

The word guarded is another vague description, says Davidson, but it is used for the same reason as critical but stable. A patient with a life-threatening illness whose vital signs have been stabilized and is now well-supported is still in danger, he says. "A nurse might choose to say guarded, knowing the patient is very sick but not knowing which way he will go," he says.

The thing to remember, doctors and nurses agree, is that these quick takes are not prognostic information. They do not refer to "medical conditions," and they are not meant to be conclusive.


http://articles.baltimoresun.com/19...ient-conditions-critical-condition-adjectives
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
Kris, despite the spin control efforts of WHO and CDC in West Africa, the situation continues to collapse into chaos and anarchy at a staggering rate. Here again we have DOCUMENTED DATA by NGO groups saying the WHO IS WRONG ABOUT EBOLA IN WEST AFRICA.

Mali, gang, Keep your eyes on Mali.

http://news.yahoo.com/leone-ebola-outbreak-catastrophic-aid-group-msf-223833151.html

S.Leone Ebola outbreak 'catastrophic': aid group MSF
AFP
20 hours ago
A team of Ebola funeral agents carry a body at the Fing Tom cemetery in Freetown, on October 10, 2014 (AFP Photo/Florian Plaucheu

Ebola death toll soars to 4,555 out of 9,216 cases: WHO AFP
WHO: Mali case put many at risk for Ebola Associated Press
WHO revises Ebola toll AFP
UN: We botched response to the Ebola outbreak Associated Press
Ebola deaths near 4,500 as virus spreads in W. Africa -WHO Reuters

Barcelona (AFP) - Ebola has wiped out whole villages in Sierra Leone and may have caused many more deaths than the nearly 5,000 official global toll, a senior coordinator of the medical aid group MSF said Friday.

Rony Zachariah of Doctors Without Borders, known by its French initials MSF, said after visiting Sierra Leone that the Ebola figures were "under-reported", in an interview with AFP on the sidelines of a medical conference in Barcelona.

"The situation is catastrophic. There are several villages and communities that have been basically wiped out. In one of the villages I went to, there were 40 inhabitants and 39 died," he said.

The World Health Organization (WHO) published revised figures on Friday showing 4,951 people have died of Ebola and there was a total of 13,567 reported cases.

"The WHO says there is a correction factor of 2.5, so maybe it is 2.5 times higher and maybe that is not far from the truth. It could be 10,000, 15,000 or 20,000," said Zachariah.

He stressed that "whole communities have disappeared but many of them are not in the statistics. The situation on the ground is actually much worse."

He added that in some places the local healthcare systems were overwhelmed.

"You have one nurse for 10,000 people and then you lose 10, 11, 12 nurses. How is the health system going to work?"

After isolated cases in Europe, "we might get a vaccine and a treatment... but even now we need to go much faster because the clock is ticking," he said. "We want action now."





 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
posted for fair use

Sierra Leone: 'Over One Thousand' Health Workers Strike as Ebola Outbreak Worsens

by Frances Martel 1 Nov 2014, 10:46 AM PDT post a comment

The Ebola virus outbreak's toll in West Africa has expanded at such a grand scale that the devastation has begun to vary from country to country. Liberia has experienced some reduction in the acceleration of cases, but Sierra Leone's condition worsens, just as health workers reportedly strike for unreceived pay.

Describing the situation on the ground as "catastrophic," Rony Zachariah of Doctors Without Borders warned this week that Sierra Leone's Ebola outbreak was particularly devastating, and government had, to some extent, contributed. Zachariah noted that the official numbers coming out of the nation were "under-reported"--something for which local media has been condemning the government for months--and that entire communities had been completely destroyed. "There are several villages and communities that have been basically wiped out," he explained. "In one of the villages I went to, there were 40 inhabitants and 39 died."

It is in this context that the Awareness Times, Sierra Leone's largest newspaper, reports that "over one thousand" health workers are going on strike.

"Over one thousand workers at the Ebola treatment centre have gone on sit down strike demanding their one month backlog," reports the newspaper, referring to the Kenema Government Hospital, one of the most active Ebola treatment centers in the country. The health personnel, which reportedly includes "burial teams, drivers, surveillance officers and a host of other teams who prefer to remain anonymous," have refused to work until they receive their salaries, demanding that the risk they place on their lives interacting with Ebola patients be recompensed. They have taken to chanting "no pay, no work" during their protests.

The Awareness Times also reports that the number is significantly lower than the total number of health workers who have not received pay. The government confirmed that workers in "over 800 communities" have not received weekly salaries for more than a month.

The article ends ominously: "Meanwhile a team of police personnel arrived at the Kenema Government Hospital to quell down the situation as it was gradually becoming riotous.
"

The issue of public order has plagued Sierra Leone's Ebola efforts potentially more than the other affected countries. Sierra Leone's Ebola workers have gone on strike before--most notably when burial workers refused to handle the bodies this October. Ebola patients have become their own concern, as well. In one prominent case, a riot broke out in response to healthcare workers attempting to come to the aid of a well-known neighborhood gangster's 91-year-old mother.

The prominence of healthcare workers and a strong medical infrastructure are directly correlated with the ability to control the outbreak; the difference between contamination incidents in Spain and Liberia, for example, makes the case clear. Yet another strike in Sierra Leone's hospitals could potentially wreak even more devastation than the current outbreak has already done.

http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Peace/...ens?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
Lil, there was also the lockdown for three days, the 30,000 people who fled into Guinea, the riots, chaos and infected police in Sierra Leone. I said at the time sealing the entire population inside their houses was a sure fire to increase Ebola infections. This is the first confirmation that I was correct. Sierra Leone is a failed state now. It is Black Death time in both Liberia and Sierra Leone.
 

bev

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Interesting to note this hospital is isolating the staff members caring for this patient. (I agree with this move, BTW.)

FluTrackers.com ‏@FluTrackers 1h1 hour ago

#Vietnam - Da Nang City: Patient being investigated for #ebola tests positive for malaria http://www.flutrackers.com/forum/showthread.php?t=229790 … @Treyfish


from article
http://tuoitrenews.vn/society/23738/possible-ebola-patient-hospitalized-in-central-vietnam



‘Possible Ebola patient’ hospitalized in central Vietnam
Tuoi Tre News
Updated : 11/01/2014 22:27 GMT + 7


A hospital staff member in Da Nang Hospital wears protective clothes before contacting a suspected Ebola patient on November 1, 2014.
Tuoi Tre News

JPbtGgC5.jpg



A Vietnamese man who arrived from Guinea five days ago is suspected of having Ebola after showing a high fever and was quarantined in a hospital in central Vietnam’s Da Nang City on Saturday.
Initial information found that Hoan My Hospital based in Da Nang admitted a patient who arrived from Guinea, one of three countries in West Africa worst affected by Ebola, at some 10:30 am on November 1.

The patient, identified as 26-year-old Chu Van Chung, had a high fever and headache upon his arrival at the hospital, according to Hoan My Hospital.

On the afternoon the same day, Chung was transported to Da Nang Hospital where he is being fully isolated and receiving special medical attention. About 4 to 5 staff members of the hospital in protective clothes are taking care of him.

Before returning to Vietnam, Chu had worked in Guinea for two years. He departed from Guinea five days ago and went through Morocco, Qatar before landing in Vietnam through Ho Chi Minh City-based Tan Son Nhat airport.

On October 31, Chung arrived in Da Nang City and stayed in a hotel on Le Dinh Duong Street.
With regard to this suspected Ebola case, the Department of Health of Da Nang organized an emergency meeting on the same day.

At the meeting, a representative from Da Nang Hospital said the suspected Ebola patient had a high fever (up to 40 degrees C) and was in a panic when he was admitted to the hospital.

According to the representative, the hospital received the suspected patient in accordance with guidelines for diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of the Ebola virus disease (EVD) promulgated by Vietnam’s Ministry of Health.

The representative said the hospital has taken a sample of blood from the patient for testing and will announce the results in the next two days.

Pham Hung Chien, director of the Da Nang Department of Health, required Da Nang hospital to set up a special force to isolate the suspected Ebola patient and the hospital staff members who have contacted him alike.

WHO announced on Friday that there have been 13,567 reported Ebola cases in eight affected countries since the outbreak began, with 4951 reported deaths.

The latest figures showed Liberia with 2,413 deaths in 6,535 cases of Ebola; Sierra Leone with 1,510 dead out of 5,338 reported cases; and Guinea had 1,018 deaths in 1,667 cases.
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
http://seattletimes.com/html/nationworld/2024931692_ebolariskestimatexml.html
(fair use applies)


More U.S. Ebola cases likely, medical experts say
Top medical experts studying the spread of Ebola say the public should expect more cases to emerge in the United States by year’s end as infected people arrive here from West Africa, including American doctors and nurses returning from the hot zone and people fleeing from the deadly disease.

By Martha Mendoza
Originally published November 1, 2014 at 2:47 PM
Page modified November 1, 2014 at 3:45 PM

STANFORD, Calif. — Top medical experts studying the spread of Ebola say the public should expect more cases to emerge in the United States by year’s end as infected people arrive here from West Africa, including American doctors and nurses returning from the hot zone and people fleeing from the deadly disease.

But how many cases?

Scientists have made educated guesses based on data models that weigh hundreds of variables, including daily new infections in West Africa, airline traffic worldwide and transmission possibilities.

Last week, several top infectious-disease experts ran simulations for The Associated Press that predicted as few as one or two additional infections by the end of 2014 to a worst-case scenario of 130.

“I don’t think there’s going to be a huge outbreak here, no,” said Dr. David Relman, a professor of infectious disease, microbiology and immunology at Stanford University’s medical school. “However, as best we can tell right now, it is quite possible that every major city will see at least a handful of cases.”

Relman is a founding member of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services advisory board for biosecurity and chairs the National Academy of Sciences forum on microbial threats.

Until now, projections published in top medical journals by the World Health Organization and the Centers for Disease Control have focused on worst-case scenarios for West Africa, concluding that cases in the U.S. will be episodic, but minimal. They have declined to specify actual numbers.

The projections are complicated, but Ebola has been a fairly predictable virus — extremely infectious, contagious only through contact with body fluids, requiring no more than 21 days for symptoms to emerge. Human behavior is far less predictable — people get on airplanes, shake hands, misdiagnose, even lie.

Pandemic-risk expert Dominic Smith, a senior manager for life risks at Newark, Calif.-based RMS, a leading catastrophe-modeling firm, ran a U.S. simulation this week that projected 15 to 130 cases between now and the end of December. That’s less than one case per 2 million people.

Smith’s method assumes most cases imported to the U.S. will be American medical professionals who worked in West Africa and returned home.

Smith said the high-end number may be a bit of an overestimate because it does not include the automatic quarantining measures that some areas in the U.S. are implementing.

Those quarantines “could both reduce the number of contacts for imported cases, as well as increase the travel burden on — and perhaps reduce the number of — U.S. volunteers planning to support the effort in West Africa,” he said.

In a second simulation, Northeastern University professor Alessandro Vespignani projected between one case — the most-likely scenario — and a slim chance of as many as eight cases through the end of November.

“I’m always trying to tell people to keep calm and keep thinking rationally,” said Vespignani, who projects the spread of infectious diseases at the university’s Laboratory for the Modeling of Biological and Socio-Technical Systems.

In an article in the journal PLOS ONE, Vespignani and a team of colleagues said the probability of international spread outside the African region is small, but not negligible. Longer term, they say international dissemination will depend on what happens in West Africa in the next few months.

Their first analysis, published Sept. 2, proved to be accurate when it included the U.S. among 30 countries likely to see some Ebola cases. They projected one or two infections in the U.S., but there could be as many as 10.

The foreseeable future extends only for the next few months. After that, projections depend entirely on what happens in West Africa. One scenario is that the surge in assistance to the region brings the epidemic under control and cases peter out in the U.S. A second scenario involves Ebola spreading unchecked across international borders.

“My worry is that the epidemic might spill into other countries in Africa or the Middle East, and then India or China. That could be a totally different story for everybody,” Vespitnani said.

Dr. Ashish Jha, a Harvard University professor and director of the Harvard Global Health Institute, said he’s not worried about a handful of new cases in the U.S. His greatest worry is if the disease goes from West Africa to India.

“If the infection starts spreading in Delhi or Mumbai, what are we going to do?”

Dr. Peter Hotez, founding dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine and director of the Texas Children’s Hospital Center for Vaccine Development pegs the range of cases in the U.S. between five and 100.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention prefers not to focus on a particular number. But spokeswoman Barbara Reynolds said Ebola will not be as widespread a threat as some outside the agency have warned.

“We’re talking about clusters in some places but not outbreaks,” she said.
 

the watcher

Inactive
I saw they took the door knob poster down after what, a few days? No doubt the CDC is in hardcore spin control. Embedded hyperlinks aat source.

CDC admits it has been lying all along about Ebola transmission; "indirect" spread now acknowledged


(NaturalNews) Defying its own quack advice that the agency has been propagandizing for months, the CDC has now released a document on Ebola that admits the virus can spread through aerosolized droplets. The document, quietly released on the CDC website, also admits Ebola can contaminate surfaces such as doorknobs, causing infections to be spread through indirect means. [1]

Here's a backup source of the PDF just in case the CDC scrubs it:
www.naturalnews.com/files/infections-spread-...

In other words, the CDC is now admitting it lied all along and that Natural News was correct from day one when we warned you about indirect transmission routes of the Ebola virus. (The CDC has always insisted it could only spread via "direct contact.")

"Ebola is spread through droplets," the CDC document now reads. Mirroring exactly what I've been telling millions of people in my free audio course at www.BioDefense.com the CDC now says "A person might also get infected by touching a surface or object that has germs on it and then touching their mouth or nose."

Yeah, we know. In fact, everybody in the independent media has known this for months, while all those who watch mainstream media sources are just now realizing this because they've been repeatedly lied to by CDC and NIH spokespeople.

The CDC has offered no apology whatsoever for intentionally misleading the public up to this point. Apparently, lying to the public is such a common activity at the highest levels of the CDC that they don't think there's anything wrong with it.

CDC also admits Ebola can contaminate surfaces and spread through indirect contact
"Droplets can contaminate objects like doorknobs," the CDC document goes on to admit. This also means that Ebola can contaminate all sorts of surfaces, including ATM keypads, subway car hand rails, airplane tray tables, taxicab door handles and much more.

This also means the CDC's previous assertion that Ebola could only spread through "direct contact" is utterly false. It's just one more reason to never trust anything the CDC tells you. (The CDC has already lost tremendous credibility in all this, and it's going to lose even more before this is finished...)

Just this week, a stunning new scientific study found that Ebola can survive on contaminated surfaces for up to 50 days. This means an infected Ebola carrier like Dr. Spencer could have sneezed on a doorknob or other surface, causing viable Ebola droplets to be deposited there. Another person could have come along and touched the same doorknob, then infected themselves with Ebola by touching their own eyes, nose or mouth.

Dr. Spencer, we have now learned, lied to police and claimed he was "self quarantined" when in fact he was riding the subway and visiting restaurants and bowling alleys. As the NY Post reports: [3]

The city's first Ebola patient initially lied to authorities about his travels around the city following his return from treating disease victims in Africa, law-enforcement sources said. Dr. Craig Spencer at first told officials that he isolated himself in his Harlem apartment -- and didn't admit he rode the subways, dined out and went bowling until cops looked at his MetroCard the sources said.

CDC still lying about how far a sneeze spreads
The art of lying is so instilled in the culture of the CDC that even when it reveals one stunning truth, it feels compelled to spread another lie at the same time.

In this document that admits Ebola can be spread via aerosolized droplets, the CDC falsely insists those droplets can only travel a maximum distance of 3 feet:



But a recent MIT study published in the Journal of Fluid Mechanics found that coughs could propel droplets up to 20 feet. [4]

"When you cough or sneeze, you see the droplets, or feel them if someone sneezes on you," said John Bush, a professor of applied mathematics at MIT and co-author of the study. "But you don't see the cloud, the invisible gas phase. The influence of this gas cloud is to extend the range of the individual droplets, particularly the small ones."

So now, even though the CDC has finally admitted Ebola can spread through the air, it is falsely claiming the maximum distance it can spread is only 3 feet.

By the way, the alternative media -- sources like www.TruthStreamMedia.com and www.TheCommonSenseShow.com -- have been reporting the truth about the aerosolized spread of Ebola for months.
http://www.naturalnews.com/047457_Ebola_transmission_CDC_quackery_aerosolized_particles.html
 

ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
The CDC's integrity has sunk lower than a priest who gossips about what he heard in the confessional, or a cop on the take, or a junkie's promise. They should be court ordered to reveal the truth like a "hostile witness"!!
 

Hfcomms

EN66iq
True. But a gossiping priest, a crooked cop or a junkie's promise won't kill you. The CDC obfuscating the truth just might kill some health care workers who were taking it's guidance as gospel.
 

psychgirl

Has No Life - Lives on TB
The info coming out is few and far between if the lamestream is any indication. Or I've missed a lot. Our computer is needing work and I had to come up here to work to just check things and get my TB fix, lol....:( Indiana isn't breathing a WORD about the ones being "monitored" OR where they are. And nothing being said on the TeeVee that I've heard.
 

bobfall2005

Veteran Member
The feds are sitting on this till after Nov 4. Their complete game plan is about keep the lid on the pot till than.
After that the truth comes out, and the gloves come off.

just wait.
 

Countrymouse

Country exile in the city
True. But a gossiping priest, a crooked cop or a junkie's promise won't kill you. The CDC obfuscating the truth just might kill some health care workers who were taking it's guidance as gospel.

Plus the rest of us as well.


Maybe I should just stock up on copies of The Hot Zone (am reading it now) and give that for Christmas presents to all my relatives. At least it tells the truth (several times over, in different chapters of the book) about Ebola Zaire being spread airborne, and about what it truly DOES to a human body.
 

Countrymouse

Country exile in the city
Here's their old one. Notice what is missing?

1414771604629_wps_2_ebola_graphic.jpg

Do you have a link for this older one? I'd like to download & save it, and I can't do that via attachments to TB. Or PM me if you would, and I'll give you my email so you can send me the file.

Here's the language in the newer one, for easy comparison:

HOW EBOLA
IS SPREAD
November 1, 2014
CS252291

Is Ebola airborne?

Ebola is not a respiratory disease and is not spread
through the airborne route.


Can Ebola be spread by coughing or sneezing?

There is no evidence that Ebola is spread by coughing or sneezing. Ebola is transmitted
through direct contact with the blood or body fluids of a person who is sick with Ebola;
the virus is not transmitted through the air (like measles virus). However, large droplets
(splashes or sprays) of respiratory or other secretions from a person who is sick with Ebola
could be infectious, and therefore certain precautions (called standard, contact, and droplet
precautions) are recommended for use in healthcare settings to prevent the transmission of
Ebola from patients to healthcare personnel and other patients or family members.


Is Ebola spread through droplets?

To get Ebola, you have to directly get body fluids (blood, diarrhea, sweat, vomit, urine, semen,
breast milk) from someone who is sick with Ebola in your mouth, nose, eyes or through
a break in your skin or through sexual contact. That can happen by being splashed with
droplets, or through other direct contact, like touching infectious body fluids.
Healthcare providers caring for Ebola patients and the family and friends in close contact
with Ebola patients are at the highest risk of getting sick when they touch or are splashed by
infectious blood or body fluids from a sick patient.

DROPLET SPREAD

Droplet spread happens when fluids in large droplets
from a sick person splash the eyes, nose, or mouth of
another person or through a cut in the skin. Droplets may
cause short-term environmental contamination, like a
soiled bathroom surface or handrails, from which another
person can pick up the infectious material.
Germs like plague and meningitis can be spread
through large droplets. Ebola might be spread
through large droplets but only when a person is
very sick.
 
Appinions Confirms Unprecedented Magnitude of Attention on Ebola

Appinions Ebola Active Attention Index hits 452,730. Largest score ever recorded

http://dj.appinions.com/appinions-confirms-unprecedented-magnitude-of-attention-on-ebola/

The Ebola epidemic burning across West Africa, and smoldering in the United States, is one of the biggest news stories of 2014. Ebola nets lots of ink, rides high on “Trending Now” lists, and infects droves of social media users with Ebola monomania.

Time magazine reported earlier this month that the day news broke about Texas Ebola victim Thomas Eric Duncan, Twitter users sent some 6,000 tweets per minute with the Hashtag #Ebola. This week, news about New York and New Jersey’s controversial Ebola quarantine policy and flight attendants’ concerns about the disease, saw thousands of social media shares on Mashable. Charles Blow’s NYTimes.com op-ed titled “Ebola Hysteria” ranks 5th for most frequently shared article on Facebook.

Yet the array of digital analytics provided by these and other companies about the attention and influences on the Ebola conversation at best allows only a fragmented look into what people are talking about and whose driving the discussion. Only the Appinions Platform provides that unique, dynamic perspective on this and other social issues.

This week, Appinions Data Journalism Group conducted a study of offline, online, and social media activity related to Ebola. The analysis reveals the unprecedented degree to which influential opinions are being shared and reacted to concerning the illness.

Appinions uses patented technology to monitor, analyze, and score the quantity and quality of attention and influence found in opinions shared in tens of millions of articles and posts. The resulting ‘Active Attention Index’ (AAI) for Ebola hit 452,720 on October 31st – the largest score ever recorded. The magnitude of influential opinions and reactions on the disease is evident when compared to other major news topics over the last three months. Ebola scored 14-times higher than the 2016 U.S. Presidential Elections, 13-times larger than the Israeli-Gaza Conflict and 13-times bigger than the Ferguson, Missouri protests over the police shooting of Michael Brown.

The chart below plots Ebola’s AAI time-series between August 2nd and October 31th against the cumulative number of Ebola cases and deaths for the same period as reported by the World Health Organization. The trajectory of Ebola’s AAI roughly parallels the growth of the epidemic. In August, the degree of attention and the number of infections followed a similar pattern. Attention in September dropped as the press shifted its focus to the murder trial of Oscar Pistorius, the Hong Kong democracy protests, and the U.S. bombing campaign against the Islamic State (ISIL) in Iraq and Syria.

View Interactive Chart at link:
[video]http://plot.ly/~jamie.p.chandler/3.embed?width=800&height=600[/video]

Ebola’s 130,191 AAI on September 30th, the day the Centers for Disease Control reported that Thomas Duncan was the first Ebola patient diagnosed in the U.S, grew 242 percent by the end of October. Due in part to a convergence of news reports on the infection of two Dallas healthcare workers who treated Duncan, his death from the disease, New York and New Jersey’s controversial Ebola quarantine policies, and the October 23rd announcement of New York City’s first Ebola case. Dr. Craig Spencer, an assistant professor at Columbia University, began showing symptoms a few days after he returned from treating Ebola patients in Guinea while volunteering for Médecins Sans Frontières.

Not only is Ebola getting tremendous attention, people and organizations talking about Ebola have generated some 1.3 million opinions. The total of which were selected by Appinions patented Natural Language Processing technology. The opinions extracted from this process offer a much richer, dynamic view of public attitudes toward the disease than those measured by traditional media opinion polls.

The most influential opinion contributing to Ebola’s AAI came from President Obama’s Weekly Radio Address on October 18th. His explanation of the government’s efforts to combat Ebola and his assurance “Ebola is a difficult disease to catch” was at the center of a significant conversation.

The Appinions study also revealed some of the most common themes dominating the discussion. The below world cloud indicates that “healthcare workers” and “protective gear” are the two of most prominent, likely due to attention paid to the breakdown of protection protocols at the Dallas hospital. However, despite the recent political focus on quarantining healthcare workers who’ve recently returned to the U.S. after treating West African Ebola patients, “travel restrictions” is one of the least commonly discussed terms.

Ebola-Themes-Word-Cloud-10-31.png


Main themes dominating Ebola conversations

One of the most important questions explored by the study and one that the Appinions Platform is uniquely able to answer is: who are the key people and organizations influencing the Ebola conversation? Appinions data reveals that the World Health Organization is the most important influencer with an AAI of 8,979, followed by CDC director Thomas Freiden with 8,979, and President Obama with 8,714.

10-31-Top-Influencers-Ebola.jpg


Given that these global influencers are now actively engaged in the Ebola conversation, we’re likely to see much more attention paid to solutions to this public health crisis, and less on controversy.

Jamie P. Chandler is a political scientist and statistician. He teaches at The Colin L. Powell School for Civic and Global Leadership at City College of New York and the Graduate School of Political Management at George Washington University.

===

.
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
The news from Mali keeps getting worse.

http://www.thedailysheeple.com/child-infected-with-ebola-had-contact-with-141-people-in-mali_102014

The first leg of the girl’s journey took her from the border to Bamako by bus. Six of the 10 passengers remain unknown. She then went to and from the Bagadadji neighborhood in 5-seater taxis, with one person in each taxi ride still unknown. It was not clear from the presentation if those were the drivers.

She then sat by the window on a bus from Bamako to Kayes, and 34 contacts from that journey remain unaccounted for.

Nobody at WHO was immediately available to answer questions about the data contained in the presentation.

Contact tracing is seen as the key to stopping new outbreaks. Nigeria and Senegal have already beaten Ebola by meticulous contact-tracing and regular checks on all the contacts who were identified.

The risk of the disease spreading to new areas comes just as the first glimmer of hope appeared at the disease’s epicenter, with some signs of a slowdown in its spread in Liberia, although the WHO has said Ebola remains “rampant” in Sierra Leone.



While the United States continues to ignore the threat of Ebola, and refuses to enact any kind of travel ban for West Africa, the nation of Mali witnessed first hand just how difficult it can be to contain the disease. After traveling from Guinea, a little girl managed to slip past the screening process at the border, despite having symptoms. It goes to show you that even when you try your best to regulate the flow of people, somebody will always slip through the cracks.

What’s truly frightening is how many people are unaccounted for. Less than half of 141 individuals she came into contact with have been found, and only a handful have been tested for the disease.

Also keep in mind, that whatever procedures the nation of Mali has in place to stop the infected from crossing over into their country, they’re still far superior to what the United States has done. We’ve left our borders wide open, and have done next to nothing to prevent the virus from spreading onto U.S. soil. Other Western countries like Canada and Australia have taken the threat very seriously, and have enacted some of the first travel bans to West Africa. Why can’t we?

Instead, our government is covering its ears, and pretending there’s nothing there. They continue to assure us that everything is under control, while behind the scenes they speak the truth.

So even when a country does its best to stop the spread of a disease, bad thing can still happen. But, what happens when a nation does absolutely nothing to mitigate the risk of a pandemic? Time will tell.


- See more at: http://www.thedailysheeple.com/chil...-in-mali_102014#sthash.9eDgvsaY.vYDYVo8J.dpuf
 

naturallysweet

Has No Life - Lives on TB
With 100 cases before the end of the year, does anyone believe we will still have a functioning heath care system at that point. We need nurses to keep our system going. Most nurses don't want to commit suicide. Once they all quit, who will care for everyone else?
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
We are in the very early phase of the Ebola epidemic. The issue of a global pandemic is still in doubt.

The real issue is what Africa will look like in the 3 to 5 year time frame from now. 100 million dead, social anarchy, failed states, hordes of hysterical refugees; a total economic collapse directly impacting key resources the West needs.

Africa is bad now. It will get worse. And then the bottom will fall out and modern life will be redefined. Ebola is going to turn Africa into a slaughterhouse for sure.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Memuna ‏@memuna 2h2 hours ago

Oh no! Another SL doctor #ebola positive. We must find a way to stop this. http://abcnews.go.com/Health/wireStory/sierra-leone-doctor-tests-positive-ebola-26635030

posted for fair use
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/wireStory/sierra-leone-doctor-tests-positive-ebola-26635030

Home> Health
Sierra Leone Doctor Tests Positive for Ebola
FREETOWN, Sierra Leone — Nov 2, 2014, 11:29 AM ET
By CLARENCE ROY-MACAULAY Associated Press
Associated Press

Authorities in Sierra Leone said Sunday that another doctor there has tested positive for Ebola, marking a setback for efforts to keep desperately needed health care workers safe in the West African country ravaged by the deadly virus.

Government Chief Medical Officer Dr. Brima Kargbo confirmed on Sunday that a fifth doctor in Sierra Leone had tested positive. The other four all have died from the virus that has killed nearly 5,000 across West Africa.

The sick physician has been identified as Dr. Godfrey George, medical superintendent of Kambia Government Hospital in northern Sierra Leone. He was driven to the capital, Freetown, after reporting he wasn't feeling well.

Doctors and nurses have been the most vulnerable to contracting Ebola, as the virus is spread through bodily fluids. Some 523 health workers have contracted Ebola, and about half of them have died.

France said it was treating a U.N. employee who had contracted Ebola while working in Sierra Leone.

France's government announced in a statement late Saturday that a U.N. employee had been evacuated there by a special flight and was undergoing treatment in "high-security isolation" in the Begin Army Training Hospital in Saint-Mande, near Paris.

It didn't identify the patient or the U.N. agency where the patient works.

France previously had taken in a French medic with Doctors Without Borders in September who had Ebola. She later recovered from the infection.
 
Sunday, November 2, 2014
Fear Mongering: Not So Much

http://raconteurreport.blogspot.com/2014/11/fear-mongering-not-so-much.html

In his cultural landmark paper in 1993, the late great Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan coined the brilliant phrase Defining Deviancy Down. In that scholarly work (which you should read sometime, if you're intellectually curious) he wasn't describing anything like a rising tide of prurient perversions, but rather, speaking in sociological terms consistent with his long scholarly affiliation, speaking to the near-timeless tendency of the altruistic engineers of society to cope with the burgeoning growth of the problems their do-gooding inflicts, to make what was once "outside the norm" AKA a statistical deviant, into "the new Normal".

As proof of the genius of the last great honest political liberal of modern times, we see exactly that phenomenon now with regard to our recent close brush with Ebola. We've had precisely two unexpected deliveries of that virulent pathogen arrive here so far (plus five deliberate imports, and two unfortunate hospital-acquired infections). For a grand total of nine patients. Of these, every American has survived (and those infected now are likely to fully recover as well), while the one unfortunate Liberian who came here died the expected horrible death via multisystem organ failure, as his insides turned to jelly and squirted out his orifices.

This statistical hiccup, which anyone familiar with numbers let alone disease would entirely disregard, is treated with hosannas by both the media and the architects of the insane policy of importing more such Index Patients, whereas in comparison to the thousands of African Ebola victims would be treated as nothing more important than a rounding error in tabulating the daily horrific toll of the infected and dead.

Because that's all this is.

Does it tell us anything about Ebola? Yes.
It tells us that if we get a single case at a time, or at worst, a bare few, and no closer than several days apart, and if we detect the new-onset cases immediately, and throw astronomical amounts of American medical care and attention at them from the start, damn the cost, we can drastically decrease the mortality of this disease. The honest historical death rate is up to 90%; the fudged rate from WHO in this outbreak is over 70%; the current American mortality rate, as it stands now, is 11%.
So what's wrong with that? Everything.

Let's start with the "Ifs":
If we're looking for it
If they had recent African travel or contact with Ebola patients
If their temperatures are checked
If they self-monitor
If they don't live in denial
If they don't traipse hither and yon about the greater community
If they seek immediate care
If they get rapidly diagnosed
If we can identify, locate, and monitor or isolate their contacts
If we have the level of hospital care and treatment required
Assigning each of those "IFs" a bare 50/50 probability, that's a chain of intention vs. coincidence of 0.0976% in any random patient.
In other words, if we get patients one at a time, like Dr. Spencer, or nurse Nina Pham, and everything goes right, they have a better than 89% shot at making a full recovery.
If not, they end up like Thomas Duncan. And if we get 1000 Duncans, one might be expected to fully recover, and possibly 100-300 would survive the disease (the exact same survival rate in Africa with no essentially no medical care whatsoever.)
A minimum of 700 would be expected to die.

Then there's the re-infection rate:
Duncan, exactly like in Africa, produced two additional patients within 21 days of symptomatic infection.
Pham, Vinson, and Spencer have produced none.
Because they were rapidly placed in isolation (Pham within literally minutes, Vinson and Spencer less rapidly, but still fairly early in the course of the disease, when the amounts of viral load in their systems was relatively small.)
To date, and likely permanently, none of the hundreds of people Vinson and Spencer exposed have become infected.
Out of two, rapidly isolated cases among 13,000+ Ebola victims.

How many more times are we going to keep rolling those dice with airliners full of people?
Say there's only a 1% chance of passing it on early.
After 100 patients, that becomes a statistical probability of happening.

And what can we expect?
A study in the UK medical journal Lancet says we can expect 2-8 more Duncans per month, worldwide, at least 1-2 of whom will come to the US.
In the next few months, the US can expect 1 to 8 such patients, with a cluster of up to 20 patients, and perhaps as many as 130 by the end of December, according to the latest study done for the AP.

Excuse me? "Perhaps" 130 patients? A cluster of 20?!?

Remain calm. All is well.

My ass.

A cluster of 20 patients would sink the abilities of even NYFC to cope with, right this minute. For any city or town smaller and less provided with care options, it would be a calamity.
We saw how well Dallas responded to one case (and everyone - not working for the CDC that is - now concedes THP-Dallas' response is the norm to expect, not an aberration).
Now imagine it breaking out in picturesque and quaint Fort Kent ME.

Or think about the extreme likelihood of an asymptomatic carrier going to a flophouse or garage full of people precisely least likely to self-monitor, assess the implications, and seek immediate care and treatment upon initial fever: like say a household of illegal immigrants from West Africa who've overstayed their visas, hiding in plain sight.

What happens when they don't rush to the ER at the first fever, instead waiting until everyone in the house has it? The kids go to school at the local public education warehouse: free lunch. Mom keeps showing up sick for work at Burger King, because they need the money. Dad does the same with his night shift job stocking Wal-Mart shelves. Neither of them with medical insurance. And our import Index Patient goes to his bachelor flat dive, gets sick, and dies alone at home without alerting the authorities to his immediate predicament.

And then a week or two later, like a zombie horror movie, the infected 5-10-20 all show up with well-advanced cases of Ebola, bleeding out the eyes, and squirting their internal organs out of both ends in streams of bloody vomit and diarrhea, at the local ER?
Howzat going to play, do you suppose?
Twitter, anyone? E-mail? TMZ?

Remain calm. All is well.

And the next day, it becomes known that the number of contacts to trace is 5,000, 10,000, or more. They think.
All the kids at a couple of schools. All the teachers. All the families of both. Everybody who ate at Burger King #XXXX since a week ago Tuesday. Everyone who shopped at Wal-Mart for the same period. Everyone who rode in his neighbor Joe's taxicab. All the people his girlfriend Mary served at the local greasy spoon diner.

Remain calm. All is well.

You tell me how long you're staying put when that info gets out.
What store shelves will look like an hour later.
How many hospital staff will call off sick that night, and the next morning.
What the interstates outbound will resemble.
And what will happen the first time someone on a plane infects a member of cabin staff, who then flew on 20 flights with 3000 passengers and crew members before becoming ragingly symptomatic, and finally correctly diagnosed with more than just seasonal flu.

And all that, just based on what we can expect to come here in the next few months.
Because the flights keep coming.
After that, the likelihood "depends on further developments in West Africa".

Word to your mother, Sherlock:
West Africa is going to complete shit, day by day, at 100 MPH.

Fear mongering?
Ahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha!
The government has assigned Top. Men.

Remain calm. All is well.

So far, I'm the calm, rational one in this discussion.

So, how's your supply of canned good looking, folks?
Posted by Aesop at 10:59 AM
Labels: Ebola

===

I can think of a few more ifs.

===

.
 
Pentagon: DOD personnel to handle Ebola bodies
Memo describes training for troops, civilians making contact with 'exposed remains'
Published: 2 days ago
F. Michael Maloof

http://www.wnd.com/2014/10/pentagon-dod-personnel-to-handle-ebola-bodies/#07LScdbQz4aZG5RX.99

WASHINGTON – A Department of Defense memo confirms DoD personnel – which could include civilians and/or troops – will have direct contact with “exposed remains” of Ebola victims.

While the DoD has issued new guidance on how military personnel and civilians will undergo pre- and post-deployment training while in the Ebola-affected areas of West Africa, buried in the 19-page memorandum in an attachment is an indication that the personnel will have direct exposure to the affected population.

The statement is in a memorandum from Jessica L. Write, undersecretary of defense for personnel and readiness. Broken down into three levels, Level II training will be for personnel who “interact with the local populace,” and Level III training for personnel “assigned to supporting medical units or expected to handle exposed remains.”

The memo does not indicate whether both DoD civilians and troops will be required to complete Levels II and III of training. If military members must complete the training, it appears to be contrary to previous statements from DoD that the 4,000 deployed U.S. troops will not be exposed to Ebola patients but will undertake only a “supportive role.”

For such exposure, there is a more intense level of training for U.S. military and civilian personnel than the minimally required training for all deployed service members.

The following are screenshots of Level II and Level III training requirements as outlined in the memo:

Level2.jpg

Level3.jpg


Civilian personnel returning from the Ebola-affected areas won’t be required to undergo the 21-day mandatory quarantine described as “controlled monitoring for military members.”

Instead, civilian personnel will have the option either of undergoing the 21-day required “controlled monitoring regimen” for military personnel or undergo an “active monitoring” regimen while being allowed to go about their daily business. Monitoring will include checking the individual’s temperature.

At a news conference, Pentagon spokesman Rear Adm. John Kirby said civilians cannot be forced to undergo the post-deployment “controlled monitoring regimen.”

“Because they’re civilian employees and not uniformed service members, we legally can’t force them to undergo a controlled monitoring regimen the way we can with uniformed troops,” Kirby said.

WND recently reported that the estimated 4,000 U.S. troops being deployed in response to the Ebola crisis would undertake a “supportive” role to the Center for Disease Control and the U.S. Public Health Service in a mission officially dubbed Operation United Assistance.

In that capacity, the troops would construct a command center and treatment and training centers along with housing for U.S. military and civilian personnel.

In exclusive interviews recently with WND, retired U.S. Army Lt. Gen. William “Jerry” Boykin and retired U.S. Army Maj. Gen. Paul E. Vallely condemned Obama’s decision to deploy troops to West Africa, arguing they could bring the virus to the United States or to other units.

The generals said the mission of U.S. troops is to fight wars, not disease.

The concern is that these soldiers, who will be exposed to the environment where the virus is prevalent, could bring it to the U.S. and potentially spread Ebola as they return home and are assigned to other units.

Kirby had said the soldiers would not be exposed to patients, except for Navy units that will maintain labs to test samples for the Ebola virus. Already two such portable labs have been set up. They can process some 100 samples in one day.

“This is a president who thinks like a community organizer and not like a commander in chief who takes his responsibility for his troops seriously,” Boykin said of President Barack Obama.

“At a time when our military has been at war for 13 years, suicide is at an all-time high, [post-traumatic stress disorder] is out of control and families are being destroyed as a result of 13 years of war, the last thing the president should be doing is sending people into West Africa to fight Ebola.”

Echoing Boykin’s concern over the use of the military to fight Ebola, Vallely not only said it’s a “bad idea,” but he also warned the U.S. military already has been “put through so much.”

“There are plenty of other assets that America has if it wants to go over there and build hospitals and clearing centers and things like that,” Vallely said. “So, I think it is a very bad misuse especially when [U.S. troops] now are being asked to step up to the plate again in Iraq. So, I think it is a very bad decision on Obama’s part.”

For emergency leave while deployed or following deployment, Wright’s memo said only that requests will be handled on a “case-by-case” basis.

“This requires compliance with CDC, State and local public health authorities’ guidance and twice daily self-monitoring of temperature and symptoms,” Wright wrote in her Oct. 31 memo.

In a second attachment, Wright said there would be no force health protection measures such as with Ebola for malaria and dengue fever, which also are prevalent in the region. Malarone will be the primary anti-malarial medication used.

She said exposure to yellow fever should be minimal since deployed personnel will receive the required immunization.

Prior to departure, all personnel also will receive immunizations for hepatitis A and B, tetanus-diphtheria, measles, polio virus, seasonal influenza, varicella, typhoid, meningococcal and rabies.


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Although this was likely posted elsewhere on TB in the last day or two...

.. the area emphasized in bold is of concern.



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Countrymouse

Country exile in the city
Sunday, November 2, 2014
Fear Mongering: Not So Much

http://raconteurreport.blogspot.com/2014/11/fear-mongering-not-so-much.html

In his cultural landmark paper in 1993, the late great Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan coined the brilliant phrase Defining Deviancy Down. In that scholarly work (which you should read sometime, if you're intellectually curious) he wasn't describing anything like a rising tide of prurient perversions, but rather, speaking in sociological terms consistent with his long scholarly affiliation, speaking to the near-timeless tendency of the altruistic engineers of society to cope with the burgeoning growth of the problems their do-gooding inflicts, to make what was once "outside the norm" AKA a statistical deviant, into "the new Normal".

As proof of the genius of the last great honest political liberal of modern times, we see exactly that phenomenon now with regard to our recent close brush with Ebola. We've had precisely two unexpected deliveries of that virulent pathogen arrive here so far (plus five deliberate imports, and two unfortunate hospital-acquired infections). For a grand total of nine patients. Of these, every American has survived (and those infected now are likely to fully recover as well), while the one unfortunate Liberian who came here died the expected horrible death via multisystem organ failure, as his insides turned to jelly and squirted out his orifices.

This statistical hiccup, which anyone familiar with numbers let alone disease would entirely disregard, is treated with hosannas by both the media and the architects of the insane policy of importing more such Index Patients, whereas in comparison to the thousands of African Ebola victims would be treated as nothing more important than a rounding error in tabulating the daily horrific toll of the infected and dead.

Because that's all this is.

Does it tell us anything about Ebola? Yes.
It tells us that if we get a single case at a time, or at worst, a bare few, and no closer than several days apart, and if we detect the new-onset cases immediately, and throw astronomical amounts of American medical care and attention at them from the start, damn the cost, we can drastically decrease the mortality of this disease. The honest historical death rate is up to 90%; the fudged rate from WHO in this outbreak is over 70%; the current American mortality rate, as it stands now, is 11%.
So what's wrong with that? Everything.

Let's start with the "Ifs":
If we're looking for it
If they had recent African travel or contact with Ebola patients
If their temperatures are checked
If they self-monitor
If they don't live in denial
If they don't traipse hither and yon about the greater community
If they seek immediate care
If they get rapidly diagnosed
If we can identify, locate, and monitor or isolate their contacts
If we have the level of hospital care and treatment required
Assigning each of those "IFs" a bare 50/50 probability, that's a chain of intention vs. coincidence of 0.0976% in any random patient.
In other words, if we get patients one at a time, like Dr. Spencer, or nurse Nina Pham, and everything goes right, they have a better than 89% shot at making a full recovery.
If not, they end up like Thomas Duncan. And if we get 1000 Duncans, one might be expected to fully recover, and possibly 100-300 would survive the disease (the exact same survival rate in Africa with no essentially no medical care whatsoever.)
A minimum of 700 would be expected to die.

Then there's the re-infection rate:
Duncan, exactly like in Africa, produced two additional patients within 21 days of symptomatic infection.
Pham, Vinson, and Spencer have produced none.
Because they were rapidly placed in isolation (Pham within literally minutes, Vinson and Spencer less rapidly, but still fairly early in the course of the disease, when the amounts of viral load in their systems was relatively small.)
To date, and likely permanently, none of the hundreds of people Vinson and Spencer exposed have become infected.
Out of two, rapidly isolated cases among 13,000+ Ebola victims.

How many more times are we going to keep rolling those dice with airliners full of people?
Say there's only a 1% chance of passing it on early.
After 100 patients, that becomes a statistical probability of happening.

And what can we expect?
A study in the UK medical journal Lancet says we can expect 2-8 more Duncans per month, worldwide, at least 1-2 of whom will come to the US.
In the next few months, the US can expect 1 to 8 such patients, with a cluster of up to 20 patients, and perhaps as many as 130 by the end of December, according to the latest study done for the AP.

Excuse me? "Perhaps" 130 patients? A cluster of 20?!?

Remain calm. All is well.

My ass.

A cluster of 20 patients would sink the abilities of even NYFC to cope with, right this minute. For any city or town smaller and less provided with care options, it would be a calamity.
We saw how well Dallas responded to one case (and everyone - not working for the CDC that is - now concedes THP-Dallas' response is the norm to expect, not an aberration).
Now imagine it breaking out in picturesque and quaint Fort Kent ME.

Or think about the extreme likelihood of an asymptomatic carrier going to a flophouse or garage full of people precisely least likely to self-monitor, assess the implications, and seek immediate care and treatment upon initial fever: like say a household of illegal immigrants from West Africa who've overstayed their visas, hiding in plain sight.

What happens when they don't rush to the ER at the first fever, instead waiting until everyone in the house has it? The kids go to school at the local public education warehouse: free lunch. Mom keeps showing up sick for work at Burger King, because they need the money. Dad does the same with his night shift job stocking Wal-Mart shelves. Neither of them with medical insurance. And our import Index Patient goes to his bachelor flat dive, gets sick, and dies alone at home without alerting the authorities to his immediate predicament.

And then a week or two later, like a zombie horror movie, the infected 5-10-20 all show up with well-advanced cases of Ebola, bleeding out the eyes, and squirting their internal organs out of both ends in streams of bloody vomit and diarrhea, at the local ER?
Howzat going to play, do you suppose?
Twitter, anyone? E-mail? TMZ?

Remain calm. All is well.

And the next day, it becomes known that the number of contacts to trace is 5,000, 10,000, or more. They think.
All the kids at a couple of schools. All the teachers. All the families of both. Everybody who ate at Burger King #XXXX since a week ago Tuesday. Everyone who shopped at Wal-Mart for the same period. Everyone who rode in his neighbor Joe's taxicab. All the people his girlfriend Mary served at the local greasy spoon diner.

Remain calm. All is well.

You tell me how long you're staying put when that info gets out.
What store shelves will look like an hour later.
How many hospital staff will call off sick that night, and the next morning.
What the interstates outbound will resemble.
And what will happen the first time someone on a plane infects a member of cabin staff, who then flew on 20 flights with 3000 passengers and crew members before becoming ragingly symptomatic, and finally correctly diagnosed with more than just seasonal flu.

And all that, just based on what we can expect to come here in the next few months.
Because the flights keep coming.
After that, the likelihood "depends on further developments in West Africa".

Word to your mother, Sherlock:
West Africa is going to complete shit, day by day, at 100 MPH.

Fear mongering?
Ahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha!
The government has assigned Top. Men.

Remain calm. All is well.

So far, I'm the calm, rational one in this discussion.

So, how's your supply of canned good looking, folks?
Posted by Aesop at 10:59 AM
Labels: Ebola

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I can think of a few more ifs.

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I love this essay.

this is one for the "keep" file....to pull out and show (if it matters by then) to the oh-so-sure crowd now...
 
Guinea buries Cuban Ebola worker killed by malaria

on November 02, 2014 / in News 1:36 pm /

http://www.vanguardngr.com/2014/11/guinea-buries-cuban-ebola-worker-killed-malaria/

Guinea authorities buried a Cuban man Saturday who died of malaria while working in the west African nation to help battle the killer Ebola virus.

Jorge Juan Guerra Rodriguez, 60, was an administrator with a team of Cuban medical personnel sent to west Africa in October to stem the spread of the virus.

He died of cerebral malaria on Sunday, the Guinean government and Cuban officials said.

His funeral in the capital Conakry was attended by work colleagues and aid workers, as well as Cuban and Guinean officials, according to an AFP journalist at the ceremony.

“We will always remember him and we pray for the repose of his soul because he died on the soil of Cuba’s friend, Guinea,” government spokesman Albert Damantang Camara said.

Cuba’s health ministry says Rodriguez had not been in contact with Ebola patients, but he was given two tests for Ebola, both of which were negative.

He was initially treated for diarrhoea, a symptom of both malaria and Ebola, before his health rapidly deteriorated and he suffered multiple organ failure.

The economist, from Sancti Spiritus in central Cuba, travelled to Guinea on October 6 and began showing signs of illness on October 22.

Cuba has sent around 250 doctors and nurses to Ebola-stricken west Africa — some 165 of them to Sierra Leone — help combat the spread of Ebola.

The virus has already killed almost 5,000 people, mostly in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia.

Malaria kills hundreds of thousands of people around the world each year, mainly children in sub-Saharan Africa.

Both ailments have similar symptoms, including fever, aches, vomiting and diarrhoea. While Ebola is passed by contact with bodily fluids, malaria is transmitted by mosquitoes.

Cuba’s response to the Ebola epidemic has won plaudits from humanitarian workers who say the international community’s reaction has been lacking.

Eventually, Cuba plans to deploy more than 450 medical personnel to west Africa.

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