Posted on 08/07/2014 2:05:46 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
Renowned neurosurgeon and possible 2016 presidential hopeful, Dr. Benjamin Carson criticized the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Monday for bringing two Ebola infected missionaries to the U.S. for treatment, citing the highly contagious and deadly nature of the disease.
"Why would we bring that into our country? Why would we expose ourselves when we already know that there are problems that can occur and have occurred," said Carson, who is a former director of Pediatric Neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins University and Hospital, in an interview with Newsmax TV.
"Ebola is a terrifying disease. If you don't treat it, close to 90 percent of the people will die," said Carson.
Two missionaries, Dr. Ken Brantly, 33, who works with Samaritan's Purse and Nancy Writebol, 59, an aid worker with SIM, are both being treated at a special unit set up at Emory University Hospital in collaboration with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, Georgia, after being infected with the deadly virus while working in Liberia. They were both flown to the U.S. in the last few days after receiving doses of a trial serum call ZMapp and are now reportedly improving.
Dr. Carson, however, does not believe it was a wise move to treat them stateside.
"I'm a little concerned that we're bringing it back here. I think we have the ability to treat it in other places," said Carson.
"The reason I would be concerned about bringing it back here is because it is transmitted primarily through bodily fluids. And it can actually survive outside of the host, outside of the body for several days at least. Which means that, let's say a container or urine or vomit or whatever for whatever reason, gets disseminated into the public, you got a big problem," he noted.
"Why do we even risk such a thing when we can send experts elsewhere? We can send a plane equipped to handle this somewhere to land. We can create parts of a hospital somewhere. We have lots of options," explained Carson.
When asked if he thought it was a mistake for the CDC and Emory University Hospital to bring the missionaries back to the U.S. for treatment, Carson said: "I certainly would treat it where it is and then once we have cured the individuals, bring them back with open arms."
"It is a highly contagious disease and all it requires is infractions in some procedures and all of a sudden you got more spread, and that's what I am afraid of," said Carson.
Serious Communicable Disease Unit (Isolation Unit) in Emory University Hospital
""Emory University Hospital has a special isolation unit, called a Serious Communicable Disease Unit, that was set up in collaboration with the CDC to house CDC scientists and others who have traveled abroad and become exposed to infectious diseases. This unit has unique equipment and infrastructure that provides an extraordinarily high level of clinical isolation with very different capabilities than are normally provided to isolate patients in other hospitals. It is one of only four such facilities in the country.""
Your fear and panic has you wanting to forbid our Americans working on the front lines of Ebola, including our military and CDC employees from coming home to be treated at our special facilities for that very purpose.
Ok. You don’t make sense, I don’t argue with stupid people. Goodbye!
Care to point out what didn’t make sense in post 61?
I should have said “I don’t discuss anything with stupid people”
If you don’t see your own non sequitur (sp?) then I’m not going to hold your hand.
If 200 people with ebola showed up in the ER of Emory, what would their healthcare techniques look like 2 or 3 weeks later?
""Among those facilities is a network of quarantine stations, where the CDC can legally detain anyone who may have been exposed to cholera, diphtheria, infectious tuberculosis, plague, smallpox, yellow fever, SARS, new strains of flu, orrelevantlyviral hemorrhagic fevers like Ebola.""
So if a couple hundred cases showed up at EACH of those centers every week, what would their treatment conditions look like a month or two later?
What if we all had flying bicycles?
Ben Carson was wrong.
Who mentioned carson?
I asked a question.
You post pictures of deplorable conditions and assume it’s always been that way.
I asked what you thought OUR medical institutions would look like several months later if ebola victims began showing up at the ER in the hundreds per week?
Remember Ben Carson?
You have gotten so chatty and wanting to start getting into hypotheticals that you are drifting away from the thread.
I never mentioned Ben Carson.
Why are you failing to answer my question.
What, specifically, do you think our medical institutions would look like after several months of an ebola outbreak?
You are the very one posting pictures of deplorable conditions with the assumption that it’s always been like that.
We have precisely 4 centers that can provide the healthcare that Brantley is receiving right now. If 100 people with Ebola presented at Emory ER over the course of 2 or 3 weeks, what sort of healthcare would they receive?
Your argument seems to be, posting those pictures, ‘their healthcare system collapsed because of ebola, they deserve to get ebola’.
But another question. Do you think the treatment center Brantly was directing had the same conditions as the ones in the picture you keep posting? Why or why not?
Very good point. We could have setup an area to threat them in over there or some deserted island. But that would be racist.
It's too late now.
Actually we can take an island and set up a comprehensive Treatment Center and keep it isolated.
I think they finally closed down the Plum Island facility, no one really knows exactly what the research done there was but I keep thinking it was more than research on farm animals.
Cremation would make sense here.
You aren’t even making sense on this thread about Ben Carson.
Would you like to link the posts of mine where I am doing what you just claimed? Your post doesn’t reflect my posts at all.
“with the assumption that its always been like that.” huh?
“Your argument seems to be, posting those pictures, their healthcare system collapsed because of ebola, they deserve to get ebola.” huh?
And drop the hypotheticals, I’m not interested in long chats with you about whatever you can dream up.
You are the one that keeps posting pictures of the PPE gear drying on sticks in the sun.
I asked you what you thought OUR healthcare system would look like after several months of an ebola outbreak of several hundred in a major metro area.
You refuse to answer the question.
Telling.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/3189443/posts?page=119#119
For example, right there.
http://www.baptistmedicalcenter.org/photo_gallery/theateror/
That’s what one of these rural clinics looks like prior to an ebola outbreak.
Sorry, but in your anger and determination to argue, you just aren’t making sense.
Ben Carson was wrong, it was right to bring these two American Ebola missionaries home for treatment, at the center designed for that purpose.
What do you think our healthcare system would look like 2 or 3 months after an ebola outbreak of several hundred per major city?
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