Posted on 10/29/2014 2:02:04 PM PDT by Nachum
(CNSNews.com) Of the 68,541 unaccompanied illegal alien children who entered the U.S. in fiscal year 2014, none were reported to have the enterovirus, according to the Department of Health and Human Services.
CNSNews.com asked, Just to clarify, youre saying that none of the unaccompanied minors who have entered the U.S. had the enterovirus?
There were none reported to the Office of Refugee Resettlement, Kenneth Wolfe, spokesman for the Administration of Children and Families for the Department of Health and Human Services, told CNSNews.com in an emailed response.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the enterovirus 68 is one of more than 100 non-polio enteroviruses. The first case of enterovirus 68 in the United States was diagnosed in 1962 in California.
(Excerpt) Read more at cnsnews.com ...
You would like to believe that but there's absolutely zero evidence that this strain of Enterovirus is endemic ANYWHERE in the world.
Well let’s see, how many angels can dance on the head of a pin?
HHS. The absolute deception, the perfidy, the sociopathy of this regime never abates, they just keep doubling down don’t they?
there hadnt been any cases “reported” here since the 1960’s which made it “nearly” extinct, until..... the arrival of the “youths” from central America
I don’t think they tested any of them!
So they do know where the illegals are hiding. Return them to their families.
None of these precious little invaders is a refugee.
None of them.
In the USSA, "reported" is all that matters.
Oh right. (This thread needs that quick video of the blond girl actress(?) giving the thumbs up/yeah okay deal!)
That’s because they have an immunity to what they carry.
Weasel Words. They are lying and statistically impossible. It depends on what the "meaning of is is."
I've seen this claimed, but not any evidence yet.
Do you have scientific evidence of the presence or frequency of the presence of this virus in Central America?
That's not true. The strain was first identified here in the 1960s, but there have been cases reported between then and now. It's been rarely reported in the U.S., because it's been rarely reported anywhere:
From a 2012 article in the Journal of General Virology:
Human enterovirus 68 (EV-D68) was first isolated from samples obtained in California in 1962 from four children with pneumonia and bronchiolitis (Schieble et al., 1967). Along with EV-D70, EV-D94 and EV-D-111, EV-D68 is one of four serotypes assigned to HEV-D. Unlike other enteroviruses, EV-D68 is acid-labile and biologically more similar to human rhinoviruses in being mainly associated with respiratory disease; however, until recently, reports of respiratory disease due to EV-D68 were rare (Oberste et al., 2004). Between 1970 and 2005 only 26 clinical isolates of EV-D68 were reported in the USA, representing 0.1% of all clinical EV isolates (Khetsuriani et al., 2006). Over the past 3 years, however, outbreaks in Japan, the Philippines and the Netherlands, as well as several clusters in the USA, have implicated EV-D68 as an emerging respiratory pathogen (Hasegawa et al., 2011; Imamura et al., 2011; Kaida et al., 2011; Meijer et al., 2012; Rahamat-Langendoen et al., 2011; Tokarz et al., 2011; Ikeda et al., 2012; Jacobson et al., 2012). The clinical presentation of EV-D68 infections in these outbreaks has ranged from mild illness to complications requiring hospitalization and, in rare instances, death. In all reports, children represented the majority of symptomatic infections. In several clusters, novel genetic variants were described (Hasegawa et al., 2011; Imamura et al., 2011; Kaida et al., 2011; Meijer et al., 2012; Rahamat-Langendoen et al., 2011; Ikeda et al., 2012; Jacobson et al., 2012).
It's rare--here and elsewhere--but it exists. There is no evidence that it is any more prevalent in Central America than it is here. By all accounts, it is pretty rare all over.
I guess we were wasting time for all those 200 odd years of comprehensively screening/quarantining immigrants for disease before admitting them.
Nope. I have only what I’ve heard - and my common sense.
Went looking for percentage of Enterovirus in Central America.
This is what I found: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3854537/
3% of Central American kids have EV.
68,000 times 3% is 2,040. So, statistically speaking, without testing, 2,040 kids crossed the border with the virus.
Think that is enough to cause the current outbreak?
Your link doesn’t even mention EV D-68, much less say it is endemic to Central America.
In fact, of the clusters or outbreaks of this disease that have occurred since it was discovered, none were in Central or Latin America.
Those clusters were in Philippines, Japan, the Netherlands, and the states of Georgia, Pennsylvania, Arizona and California.
Common sense, of course, does not require evidence to reach alarming conclusions.
You and others keep using that word (well, actually it’s a phrase). I do not think it means what you think it means.
How can you report on what never screened or asked for? Dissembling liars
But they slip up and tell how many they scattered among us.
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