Posted on 10/29/2024 8:55:18 AM PDT by BenLurkin
gnip
Geez, how awful
Patient Zero.
Sounds like a movie...
Africans are flooding the U.S. border, unvetted and disease-ridden.
Mayorkas and Kamala have blood on their hands.
What’s this “them” horsehockey? How many people went home to visit Africa and brought this crap back with them?
From CDC
About Lassa Fever
KEY POINTS
Lassa fever is a viral illness spread by a rat found in parts of West Africa.
People can get Lassa fever by having contact with infected rats or their saliva, urine or droppings.
Lassa fever can spread between people.
Most people with Lassa fever have mild symptoms.
Lassa fever can be deadly.
What it is
Lassa fever is a severe viral illness that comes on quickly once someone is infected. It is spread by the “multimammate rat” or Mastomys natalensis (Mastomys), which is found throughout Sub-Saharan Africa. Currently, only West African multimammate rats are known to carry Lassa virus.
Lassa fever is found in parts of West Africa, including Sierra Leone, Liberia, Guinea and Nigeria. People who live in neighboring countries are also at risk because the rat that spreads Lassa fever lives throughout the region.
The first documented case occurred in 1969. Lassa fever is named after the town in Nigeria where the first cases occurred.
Lassa fever is found primarily in West Africa.
Healthcare providers:
Review guidance on emergency services, screening, testing, infection control and PPE for viral hemorrhagic fevers, like Lassa fever, here: VHFs for Healthcare Providers
Signs and symptoms
About 8 in 10 people who are infected have mild symptoms and are not diagnosed.
Mild symptoms include:
Slight fever
Feeling tired and weak
Headache
In some people, the disease may cause more serious symptoms like:
Bleeding
Difficulty breathing
Vomiting
Facial swelling
Pain in the chest, back, and abdomen
Shock
How long it takes for signs to show
Signs and symptoms of Lassa fever typically occur 1 to 3 weeks after a person is infected.
Complications
Lassa fever can lead to hearing loss, with about 1 out of 3 cases experiencing various levels of deafness. Deafness can occur in both mild and severe cases of Lassa fever. In many cases, the hearing loss is permanent.
If a pregnant person is infected, there is a high risk of miscarriage. In these cases, about 95% of fetuses do not survive.
Exposure risks
Although Lassa fever is found in West Africa, there’s a risk of Lassa virus infection wherever the multimmamate rat is found.
How it spreads
Lassa fever is caused by infection with the Lassa virus, which is spread by rodents. These rodents breed quickly and carry the virus in their urine and droppings. They often live in areas where peoples’ food supplies are stored.
People mostly get Lassa fever by eating or breathing in the virus, for example:
Touching contaminated objects
Eating food that has the virus
Getting the virus in open cuts or sores
Eating rodents
Breathing in air that has infected urine or droppings
This may occur when cleaning or sweeping.
Infection can also occur after coming in contact with the body fluids of an infected person. People with Lassa fever are not contagious until after their symptoms begin. Lassa fever is not spread through casual contact, such as hugging, shaking hands, or sitting near someone.
The Lassa virus can spread in health care settings when not using proper personal protective equipment (PPE) or properly sterilizing equipment.
Prevention
If you go to West Africa, prevent Lassa fever by keeping away from rats. You can also:
Put food away in rat-proof containers and keep the home clean.
Avoid eating these rats.
Trap rats in and around homes.
Healthcare providers caring for patients with Lassa fever, should take precautions like:
Wearing protective clothing (masks, gloves, gowns, and goggles)
Properly sterilizing equipment
Taking infection control measures
Isolating infected patients until they are cured
Controlling rodents at home
Decreasing rat populations at home in high-risk areas helps control and prevent Lassa fever.
Diagnosis
Diagnosing Lassa fever can be difficult because symptoms vary and are similar to symptoms caused by other diseases. Healthcare workers should contact their health department if they suspect Lassa fever in a returning traveler.
Diagnostic testing can be done in a laboratory with a high level of biosafety and enhanced infection prevention and control precautions.
The ability to diagnose Lassa fever in areas where it is commonly found can be difficult. This is due to limited laboratory capacity to test patient samples easily and safely.
Treatment
Ribavirin, an antiviral drug, has been used to successfully treat patients with Lassa fever. It is most effective when given soon after a patient becomes sick. Patients should also receive supportive care, including rest, hydration, and treatment of symptoms.
[[multimmamate rat]]
Misread that at first- thought it said the ‘miltikamala rat’
It seems we should have better controls around disease from other countries.
Actually, for this illness, it was a book and not a movie, released in 1974. This disease has been around awhile.
https://www.amazon.com/Fever-hunt-new-killer-virus/dp/0883490129
Calling Dr. Fauxci in 3, 2, 1!
Prevention
If you go to West Africa, prevent Lassa fever by keeping away from rats. You can also:
Put food away in rat-proof containers and keep the home clean.
Avoid eating these rats.
Speechless...
You can tell you’ve got a severe 2 out of 10 case of Lassa when blood starts coming out of your eyes.
I don't believe this... how many days AFTER getting off the plane did this 'resident' get sick?
I hate when that happens.
Note to self: Don’t leave the farm! It’s CrAzY out there! ;)
There was a time in America when that didn’t happen.
Notice it was a “resident,” and not a “citizen?”
Not to mention mosquitos are biting said African invaders, putting the nation’s population at risk from these very nasty diseases that are endemic on the African continent.
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