Posted on 10/06/2014 2:26:07 PM PDT by blam
The first known outbreak killed about 300 people over a similar time frame, and was not a slow burn. Neither was the 1995 outbreak.
THE STAND here we come!
Let’s face it, Bill Ayres would do it in a NY nano second. Not the slightest doubt in my mind...
In other words, it's easy to get infected.
Plus it’s in a cooler climate now. Its offspring might like that since it known that it survives longer without a host the lower the temp gets.
The proper term is aerosol.
Wow. This gets more interesting. The FDA and WHO sure has a lot of influence in Africa.
http://www.thescoopng.com/fg-says-will-longer-give-nano-silver-ebola-patients/
ummm - they’re already said it cold b e transported thru a victims sneezes - that’s AIRBORNE
Wow. This gets more interesting.
http://www.thescoopng.com/fg-says-will-longer-give-nano-silver-ebola-patients/
For anyone who has a nose. Take my posts here in order.
There’s no known precedent for a virus to change in that way.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
http://richardpreston.net/preston-books/hot-zone
“Infectious dose is believed to be 1-10 virus particles by aerosol. So says:”
Aerosol, does that have something to do with air, like in airborne ?
Yes, by all means - when threatened by a lethal plague, endorse taking comfort from... cheery wishing and hoping.
It’s already “airborne” in the respect that we still inexplicably* have unrestricted international flights landing here from risk nations ...
NPR has a recent article explaining this by comparing the contagiousness of Ebola to other diseases, which is worth reading.
The reason medical personnel wear protective gear when treating Ebola patients is that they are in close proximity to symptomatic patients who are thus actively shedding Ebola virons. Unless you are in close proximity to an infected individual who is in this state, there is very little danger of contracting the disease.
The one "wildcard" in the equation is the mobility of the host population. In remote African villages people tend to stay close together, which is why it spreads locally but doesn't move around a lot. But as people become more mobile, an infected individual can cover a wider area, potentially shedding virus along the way, before not being able to move further, thereby containing their ability to propagate the virus to new areas. So the time between onset of symptoms and how far you can go before you're bed-ridden, is one of the key measures that I don't believe anyone is really addressing right now.
It needn't be airborne to spread, though. the CDC says: "Ebola dried on surfaces such as doorknobs and countertops can survive for several hours."
A link to this thread has been posted on the Ebola Surveillance Thread
Right about Hantavirus. There was an outbreak in Montana years back, too.
Thanks for the ping!
Youre Welcome, Alamo-Girl!
no matter how slim the chance it mutates like that its simply too high considering the devastating nature of the disease to act in any fashion except to assume it will. Never has the phrase better safe than sorry been more applicable.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.