Posted on 11/09/2014 9:03:29 AM PST by Enlightened1
Time Map of Ebola Spread And Future Estimates
(Excerpt) Read more at youtube.com ...
bfl
One problem. In the last two weeks the new infection rate has plummeted.
Or maybe that was for the election?
I’ve heard Hospitals, Police and Firemen have all been told to not report any new Ebola cases.
Time will tell.
Rates have gone down significantly in Africa. Here in the US no new cases since the NYC Dr. I have a pipeline to someone in the know. There are however hundreds under watch quarantine within CONUS.
Well I hope it’s true and not more smoke and mirrors.
Like I said we will know for sure in time. They will have a hard time covering this up. If it’s still spreading.
Ping.
This state of ‘non-epidemic’ may not have been counted on. What’s the army going to do with all those Ebola Quarrantine shelters and hospitals their building now in Liberia?
They may be better off structuring some of the facilities in a way they can also be used as housing and old folks homes.
Has it, or is that apparent reduction a function of a breakdown in reporting/recording?
A link to this thread has been posted on the Ebola Surveillance Thread
We have some friends in medicine that work in hospitals. They said that nursing staffs consider Ebola to be a non issue.
One problem. In the last two weeks the new infection rate has plummeted.
It is looking more and more like this is just another third world disease.
I hope so.
http://www.foxnews.com/health/2014/11/05/is-ebola-outbreak-entering-new-phase/
http://time.com/3556049/ebola-infection-sierre-leone/
But I suspect (hope) that it will eventually burn out there as well.
The thing about many of the purely mathematical models projecting future infections and deaths that Ive seen posted here is that they assume, are based on a set point of current infection rates, a steady and constant rate of the spread of infection over time. That is not however typically how viruses work and there are way too many human and microbial variables at play such as people changing behaviors that contribute to its spread and the very nature of viruses.
For reasons not fully understood, after a period of intense spread, they tend to burn out and retreat. The 1918 Spanish Flu and the Bubonic Plague did very much the same. There was no reason why the Spanish Flu retreated and vanished nearly as quickly as I came and killed it could have raged for decades instead of only two years, except that it infected as many people as it was going to infect. And enough people who were infected survived and built immunity and created pockets of herd immunity. If we were to use the estimated infection and death rates of the Justinian Plague or any of the Black Death plagues that followed, by all rights none of us here should be alive today.
Also viruses, once they infect enough people, tend to mutate into less lethal forms. Sometimes they also mutate to become more easily transmitted but overall they tend to become less lethal.
I dont think that Ebola is going away and predict there will be more pockets of outbreaks in coming years and a few cases here. But as evidenced by the Americans and Europeans who contracted it either in West Africa or by treating Ebola patients here, receiving early and good medical care makes all the difference as does living in a country were our dead are not washed by and prepared for burial at home, not eating bats and monkeys, indoor plumbing and an overall a much cleaner manner of living.
Or as a friend posted to me on FB, More Americans have been married to Kim Kardashian than have died from Ebola.
That is not to make light of Ebola. It is certainly a very deadly disease. But to put things somewhat into perspective; in this current outbreak of Ebola, the worst to date so far, has infected 13,000 people and claimed at least 4,951 lives. But then there was an estimated 627 000 malaria deaths worldwide in 2012. In 2006, an estimated 242,000 people in Africa died of measles; about 217,000 of these deaths were among children under 5 years of age. And maternal and neonatal tetanus is responsible for an average 110,000 deaths a year in the African Region. And Rabies kills 24,000 people every year in Africa.
I work on the electronic medical record system at a major academic medical center. My son works on the Emergency Department part of the system there, too, and my daughter is a nurse in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit in the same hospital. I can assure you they are taking it very seriously. All sorts of changes to our policies and procedures. Changes to the workflows in the EMR, in both the administrative and clinical parts of the system. Training for clinicians, lab techs, front desk staff, clerks, housekeeping, etc. It is very much in the forefront of things and has bumped many other important projects to the back burner.
So in other words, a major academic medical center was completely caught off guard, completely unaware of and completely unprepared to deal with any dangerous and highly infectious diseases prior to this most recent outbreak of Ebola? They are just now training their staff?
If find that hard to believe but if true, that is truly frightening, Ebola or no Ebloa.
Thank you for that good reply.
Speaking of Malaria....
Rumor has it THAT is what they are now calling Ebola for any new cases. Even though it’s rare for someone with Malaria to die bleeding out all of their Orpheus (including, nose, ears, eyes, etc). Supposedly they are doing this in order not to create a panic. I would be interested to see if there has been a sudden increase in Malaria cases in Africa?
Nevertheless, if the above is true, then we will find out in time.
You bring up some excellent points and explain them well. Those are the reasons I have always emphasized that my projections are not predictions of what is going to happen. My point isn’t that there will be x number of cases by y date. My point is that the historical rate of spread is a good indicator of the seriousness of the situation and why we should not ignore it.
So, what would Obama really do with 6 billion if we handed it to him?
If the IRS are going to go after anyone it should be the people who stole the money that was originally slated for ebola.
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