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To: GOPJ
Trust breaks down when the same government that oversees labs send soldiers into ebola hot zones with 4 hours of training and a bottle of hand sanitizer.

You clearly do not know the requirements to work in a lab, and your opinion of our military's competence is obviously low.

How about informing yourself of the preparations our military is making for the Ebola fight:

Overview of the Ebola fight.

Pentagon briefing on Ebola operation.

FYI, the military has been active in the Ebola fight ever since it was first identified, decades ago. Just as our military is active in a lot of other infectious disease fights: AIDS, monkeypox, cholera, etc. The military has other roles than enforcement of foreign policy.

Would you rather the military go in now and contain this threat while it is still in Africa, or would you rather no one do anything to contain the thread, and let it spread across Africa, into Europe and Asia, until it is impossible to keep it from spreading into the Americas? Personally, I'd rather see it contained.

Or allows plane loads of eloba carriers into the country.

Bringing infected Americans home for treatment is hardly "allowing plane loads of eloba carriers" into the country. It's not like there are tons of Africans traveling outside of Africa; most countries are screening passengers from Africa. Screening for infectious disease is not unusual at airports.

55 posted on 10/18/2014 5:40:13 AM PDT by exDemMom (Current visual of the hole the US continues to dig itself into: http://www.usdebtclock.org/)
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To: exDemMom
Would you rather the military go in now and contain this threat while it is still in Africa

This, 'threat', has NOT been contained in Africa. It is popping up all over the world including the US of A. Sending the military in now is a day late and a dollar short. This outbreak should have been contained in West Africa. Our military should not be going to West Africa for any reason, much less to fight this outbreak. It's the African's outbreak, let them deal with it...and kill anyone attempting to leave the infected countries...too harsh, not PC?...too bad...

67 posted on 10/18/2014 7:03:52 AM PDT by Delta Dawn (Fluent in two languages: English and cursive.)
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To: exDemMom

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/10/17/u-s-soldiers-get-just-four-hours-of-ebola-training.html

Where do you get your information from exDem?

“U.S. Soldiers Get Just Four Hours of Ebola Training
As the U.S. military rushes to combat Ebola in West Africa, soldiers are receiving on-the-fly instructions on how to protect themselves against the deadly virus.

American military operations to fight Ebola in Africa are unfolding quickly—forcing the military to come up with some procedures and protocols on the fly.

Soldiers preparing for deployment to West Africa are given just four hours of Ebola-related training before leaving to combat the epidemic. And the first 500 soldiers to arrive have been holing up in Liberian hotels and government facilities while the military builds longer-term infrastructure on the ground.

For soldiers at Fort Campbell and Fort Bragg preparing for their deployments to West Africa, Mobile Training Teams from the United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID), based out of Fort Detrick, have been tasked with instructing them on Ebola protocols.

A team of two can train as many as 50 personnel over that four-hour time frame, USAMRIID told The Daily Beast. The training includes hands-on instruction on how to put on, remove, and decontaminate personal protective equipment, followed by a practical test to ensure that soldiers understand the procedures.

“All training is tiered to the level of risk each person may encounter,” said USAMRIID spokeswoman Caree Vander Linden.

The training process sounds daunting: One USA Today report described soldiers being told that Ebola “basically causes your body to eat itself from the inside out” and that Ebola is “worse” than what soldiers encountered in Afghanistan. Others reportedly heard that the disease is “catastrophic” and “frightening… with a high fatality rate,” though the chances of contracting it are low.

“I’ll be honest with you,” one soldier told the newspaper. “I’m kind of scared.”

The military maintains that the risk of contracting the virus is minimal. Ebola is not an airborne disease, and there are no plans for U.S. service members deployed to West Africa to have any contact with sick patients.

“I’m not an epidemiologist, but it’s been shown that this disease is most manifest when handling bodily fluid—blood, other sorts of fluids, and there is no plan right now for U.S. soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines to do that,” Maj. Gen. Darryl Williams, the officer in charge of America’s operations center in Liberia, told reporters Thursday. “As long as you exercise basic sanitation and cleanliness sort of protocols … I think the risk is relatively low.”

There are just over 500 military service members in West Africa, serving in Senegal and Liberia. A major part of their mission is logistics and construction: The U.S. military is building a 25-bed hospital and 17 Ebola treatment units, as well as training health-care providers in Liberia.

A small number of specially trained soldiers from USAMRIID are at the highest risk, and an exception to Williams’ comment that soldiers are not handling bodily fluids. These service members have been supporting a laboratory in Liberia to run Ebola tests on patient samples, but are also are highly prepared to deal with infectious diseases.

The first 500 American troops in Liberia are so far living in improvised quarters in hotels and government building, according to congressional and military sources. The military is working to transition in the future to “life support areas” that will house the thousands of soldiers who eventually arrive to support the U.S. mission to combat Ebola in West Africa, according to a military spokesman. They are also utilizing local drivers and vehicles to support their movements.

“The hotels are fairly well controlled in terms of access… They have a fairly well-structured screening process going in and out,” a Senate aide briefed by the Pentagon on the military’s procedures told The Daily Beast. “It sounds like they have an adequate level of screening and protective measures in place. That being said, once they move to a self-contained quarters, that will probably be better.”


78 posted on 10/18/2014 9:18:21 AM PDT by GOPJ (The beast roams the earth... there's been a seismic shift in our world. Rabbi Shalom Lewis)
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