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Ebola (1 Viewer)

lod01 said:
President Barack Obama called Monday for new protocols to help stop the spread of Ebola. "We're also going to be working on protocols to do additional passenger screening, both at the source and here in the United States," he said. "Here in the United States, at least, the chances of an outbreak -- of an epidemic here -- are extraordinarily low," the President said.

:lmao: The lack of concern by this doofus and his cronies (or whoever takes his spot down the road) pretty much tells me that when that day comes and it's an airborne killer, the population will be wiped out fast.
Don't worry, he's hardly ever wrong.You can keep your doctor. Ebola won't make it to the USA. ISIS is the JV team.

"I'm here with the Girardo family here in St. Louis." --speaking via satellite to the Democratic National Convention, while in Kansas City, Missouri, Aug. 25, 2008

"I've now been in 57 states -- I think one left to go." --at a campaign event in Beaverton, Oregon

"In case you missed it, this week, there was a tragedy in Kansas. Ten thousand people died -- an entire town destroyed." --on a Kansas tornado that killed 12 people
Jesus. You people.
Jesus was a republican.

 
Parrothead said:
Gary Coal Man said:
I'm shocked.. SHOCKED that they would turn Ebola into a race issue.. :lol:
I am kinda honestly. You would think people lying about coming into contact with Ebola and bringing it to the US would bring people in this country together to keep it the hell out. I didn't even think MSNBC was that stupid.
 
Dallas patient has died.

http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/08/health/ebola-up-to-speed/index.html?hpt=hp_t1

Quote from article:

Duncan's family claims bias in treatment:

Thomas Eric Duncan, the first person diagnosed with Ebola in the United States, is on a ventilator and on dialysis for his failing kidneys, health officials say.

Duncan received an experimental medicine nearly a week after being admitted into a hospital -- a far longer wait than experienced by four other Ebola patients treated in the U.S. The others are Americans; Duncan is Liberian. "They don't consider him as important as the other three," his nephew says. The hospital treating him denies the claim.

 
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The Ebola outbreak may dominate the headlines, but few Americans are opening up their wallets. Four major U.S. aid organizations surveyed by CNNMoney have received a combined total of $19.5 million so far. Much of that came from nonprofit foundations, not individual donors. Last month, the United Nations said it would need nearly $1 billion to fight the virus.
From FC's link.

Sounds like they need some awesomely fun ice-bucket something challenge to kick-start donations...

 
Dallas patient has died.

http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/08/health/ebola-up-to-speed/index.html?hpt=hp_t1

Quote from article:

Duncan's family claims bias in treatment:

Thomas Eric Duncan, the first person diagnosed with Ebola in the United States, is on a ventilator and on dialysis for his failing kidneys, health officials say.

Duncan received an experimental medicine nearly a week after being admitted into a hospital -- a far longer wait than experienced by four other Ebola patients treated in the U.S. The others are Americans; Duncan is Liberian. "They don't consider him as important as the other three," his nephew says. The hospital treating him denies the claim.
Punishment for knowingly coming here with the Ebola.....Guy hasn't seen his wife/baby momma and kids for 12 years and now he decides to take a vacation to the U.S.

 
El Floppo said:
FlapJacks said:
Haha jokes on ISIS. Ebola is a virus not bacteria!
This us actually a pretty good point as the only hosts known are humans and fruit bats. I suppose you could collect up a bunch of blood and put it into some drinking fountains or food, but it probably wouldn't with in the water supply as the viruses can't multiply outside the hosts.
To be fair, it's likely that less than 1% of ISIS are aware that the world isn't flat soooooo....
That's a pretty racist statement
First off, what's wrong with being racey [/tap]

Part B- I was unaware ISIS was a race.
You are generalizing a group of people whose membership overwhelming falls into a specific ethnic/religious demographic as stupid....

 
The Ebola outbreak may dominate the headlines, but few Americans are opening up their wallets. Four major U.S. aid organizations surveyed by CNNMoney have received a combined total of $19.5 million so far. Much of that came from nonprofit foundations, not individual donors. Last month, the United Nations said it would need nearly $1 billion to fight the virus.
From FC's link.

Sounds like they need some awesomely fun ice-bucket something challenge to kick-start donations...
Or the US gov't could print a billion dollars or fund the research themselves

 
Dallas patient has died.

http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/08/health/ebola-up-to-speed/index.html?hpt=hp_t1

Quote from article:

Duncan's family claims bias in treatment:

Thomas Eric Duncan, the first person diagnosed with Ebola in the United States, is on a ventilator and on dialysis for his failing kidneys, health officials say.

Duncan received an experimental medicine nearly a week after being admitted into a hospital -- a far longer wait than experienced by four other Ebola patients treated in the U.S. The others are Americans; Duncan is Liberian. "They don't consider him as important as the other three," his nephew says. The hospital treating him denies the claim.
Punishment for knowingly coming here with the Ebola.....Guy hasn't seen his wife/baby momma and kids for 12 years and now he decides to take a vacation to the U.S.
death panels

 
El Floppo said:
FlapJacks said:
Haha jokes on ISIS. Ebola is a virus not bacteria!
This us actually a pretty good point as the only hosts known are humans and fruit bats. I suppose you could collect up a bunch of blood and put it into some drinking fountains or food, but it probably wouldn't with in the water supply as the viruses can't multiply outside the hosts.
To be fair, it's likely that less than 1% of ISIS are aware that the world isn't flat soooooo....
That's a pretty racist statement
First off, what's wrong with being racey [/tap]

Part B- I was unaware ISIS was a race.
You are generalizing a group of people whose membership overwhelming falls into a specific ethnic/religious demographic as stupid....
I'm doing what now?

 
Dallas patient has died.

http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/08/health/ebola-up-to-speed/index.html?hpt=hp_t1

Quote from article:

Duncan's family claims bias in treatment:

Thomas Eric Duncan, the first person diagnosed with Ebola in the United States, is on a ventilator and on dialysis for his failing kidneys, health officials say.

Duncan received an experimental medicine nearly a week after being admitted into a hospital -- a far longer wait than experienced by four other Ebola patients treated in the U.S. The others are Americans; Duncan is Liberian. "They don't consider him as important as the other three," his nephew says. The hospital treating him denies the claim.
Punishment for knowingly coming here with the Ebola.....Guy hasn't seen his wife/baby momma and kids for 12 years and now he decides to take a vacation to the U.S.
Wasn't this trip planned weeks before contracting it?

 
Parrothead said:
Gary Coal Man said:
I'm shocked.. SHOCKED that they would turn Ebola into a race issue.. :lol:
I am kinda honestly. You would think people lying about coming into contact with Ebola and bringing it to the US would bring people in this country together to keep it the hell out. I didn't even think MSNBC was that stupid.
PC and the ebola virus:

Similarly, a popular writer stated “It’s not out of the realm of possibility that we’ll see other cases here in the US, but, seriously: relax. We got this.” And further, “do not lose sleep about the potential for Ebola to spread across the US. It’s not going to.”

What is the message here? You are “stupid” to speak out about it (Ebola); there is no reason to know anything about it -- because “they got it”, they “know about it”, it is “under control”. Finally, those who speak about it, question or worry about getting it and question why it is that we have no travel restrictions are not only stupid… such actions might be “racist”. The Washington Post even criticized the Newsweek magazine cover which features an image of a chimpanzee behind the words, “A Back Door for Ebola: Smuggled Bushmeat Could Spark a U.S. Epidemic.”
Here is what we do know: "Ebola is worsening in West Africa," said Thomas Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in announcing the advisory against "non-essential" travel to Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone. And facts are “stubborn things” -- the World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that 1,552 people have died from Ebola and they admit that this might be an “underestimation”.

South Africa has banned travelers from the three Ebola-hit West African nations, a government spokesman said on Thursday, after other countries adopted similar measures to prevent the deadly virus from breaching their borders. And other African countries have restrictions on their borders as well.
 
The Ebola outbreak may dominate the headlines, but few Americans are opening up their wallets. Four major U.S. aid organizations surveyed by CNNMoney have received a combined total of $19.5 million so far. Much of that came from nonprofit foundations, not individual donors. Last month, the United Nations said it would need nearly $1 billion to fight the virus.
From FC's link.

Sounds like they need some awesomely fun ice-bucket something challenge to kick-start donations...
Chug a gallon of milk and puke challenge?

 
Fortunately they are going to cremate him. Of course, after all the smoke goes up into the sky and then it starts raining, we'll have a scene like in The Return Of The Living Dead.

 
?? Do you think ebola won't spread here? Like the US is somehow immune just because it's the U.S.? He's spraying droplets of ebola into the air for crying out loud (assuming that the video is legit of course)
These droplets kill anyone yet?
If people came down with Ebola and died within a week, that would actually be good for the outbreak.

 
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Dallas patient has died.

http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/08/health/ebola-up-to-speed/index.html?hpt=hp_t1

Quote from article:

Duncan's family claims bias in treatment:

Thomas Eric Duncan, the first person diagnosed with Ebola in the United States, is on a ventilator and on dialysis for his failing kidneys, health officials say.

Duncan received an experimental medicine nearly a week after being admitted into a hospital -- a far longer wait than experienced by four other Ebola patients treated in the U.S. The others are Americans; Duncan is Liberian. "They don't consider him as important as the other three," his nephew says. The hospital treating him denies the claim.
Punishment for knowingly coming here with the Ebola.....Guy hasn't seen his wife/baby momma and kids for 12 years and now he decides to take a vacation to the U.S.
Wasn't this trip planned weeks before contracting it?
Yes, but let's not muddle this thread up with facts.

 
Just so we're clear, what's the number of people that need to contract this in the U.S. before you can worry a little without it meaning you are a small-minded moron?

Asking for a friend.

 
Ebola scare in Frisco: Patient identified as deputy

FRISCO — Crews transported a patient exhibiting "signs and symptoms of Ebola" from a Frisco CareNow to Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas.

"Right now, there are more questions than answers about this case," said Wendell Watson, a spokesman with the hospital.

The patient was identified as Sgt. Michael Monning, a deputy who accompanied county health officials Zachary Thompson and Christopher Perkins into the apartment where Thomas Eric Duncan stayed in Dallas.

The deputy was ordered to go inside the unit with officials to get a quarantine order signed. No one who went inside the unit that day wore protective gear.

According to Christopher Dyer, with the Dallas County Sheriff's Association, Monning said he was feeling sick to his stomach before his visit to the clinic. Dyer expressed concern for Monning and his family.

The CareNow is located in the 300 block of Main Street. Patients are currently being held inside the clinic as crews at the scene examine staff and others inside the building.

"The patient claims to have had contact with the Dallas 'patient zero,'" according to a statement from Dana Baird-Hanks, a spokeswoman with the city of Frisco.

Health officials said the transportation of the patient was done with an abundance of caution.

"We are being very cautious and are in contact with the health department to ensure we follow proper protocol," said Vicki Johns, with CareNow. "Our concern is for the safety and well being of everyone in our clinic."

News 8's Jason Whitely spoke to Chuck Moreno, who had gone into the CareNow facility with his 15-year-old son to get a flu shot Wednesday. Moreno said he saw a patient, whose skin was flushed and who was hunched over but walking, enter the clinic with his wife.

Within minutes, police and fire units surrounded the facility, taped off a gray SUV, and isolated other patients at the facility.

Moreno asked a CareNow employee if it was related to Ebola, and he said the employee nodded her head "yes."

Moreno said he and his son quarantined themselves into an examination room, put on surgical masks they found in the room and sprayed disinfectant on themselves. Moreno said staff told them he and his son couldn't leave the clinic and would be transferred to a major medical center, but he was unsure which one at the time.

Outside the building, people in hazardous material suits readied an ambulance for transport of the patient.

Officials say a conference will be held at 3:30 p.m
 
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Dallas patient has died.

http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/08/health/ebola-up-to-speed/index.html?hpt=hp_t1

Quote from article:

Duncan's family claims bias in treatment:

Thomas Eric Duncan, the first person diagnosed with Ebola in the United States, is on a ventilator and on dialysis for his failing kidneys, health officials say.

Duncan received an experimental medicine nearly a week after being admitted into a hospital -- a far longer wait than experienced by four other Ebola patients treated in the U.S. The others are Americans; Duncan is Liberian. "They don't consider him as important as the other three," his nephew says. The hospital treating him denies the claim.
i dont either
 
Just so we're clear, what's the number of people that need to contract this in the U.S. before you can worry a little without it meaning you are a small-minded moron?

Asking for a friend.
For me, it's not the number of infected people, but rather how quickly new cases are identified. If there are 1,000 people, and no new reports, then I'm fine with it. I'm not worried about the "identified's." It's the "unidentified" and contagious that worry me. I worry about the folks Duncan came into contact with after entering the US and before diagnosis. If every person managed to infect 2 people, the number of cases would grow really really quickly.

Outside of this, my biggest fear is that as this number grows, we basically overwhelm the healthcare workers who are so vital in containment and treatment. Look at how many folks were involved in Duncan's care. What if there were 500 Duncan's in the US? Ebola "experts" get spread thin...it starts spreading, etc. To me, that's the biggest worry. I think if it gets to the point that it overwhelms healthcare I'll be really panicked.

 
JΞSTΞR ✪ ACTUAL™ @th3j35t3r · 1h1 hour ago
DEVELOPING: Texas woman claims she had contact w/ Thomas Duncan who died today of Ebola, now showing Ebola symptoms http://tinyurl.com/pdrlxlf
#EBOLA UPDATE Texas Sherrif Deputy who went to have quaratine order signed & had contact w/ 'patient zero' who died today, is showing signs.
But, that's OK, the government's "got this".
The panic in this country will far exceed the actual virus in terms of damage it will cause.

This is not the Bird flu. This is a killer virus that causes your organs to liquefy and causes you to bleed out of all your orifices.

The average person seems to be on high alert. But the problem I see is that people have really interesting views on this thing. You have a subset of people who are convinced that this thing is gonna wipe out the world. You have people who are absolutely convinced that it poses no threat to a "first-world" country. The truth is somewhere in the middle.

Ebola is living proof of the harm that conspiracy theorists have caused. You can't express serious concern over something like this without being considered a tin-foil hat wearing conspiracy theorist. Epidemics happen and lots of people die. One Ebola outbreak in Texas should get stopped in it's tracks with proper intervention. But if it gets to 4-5 people, and if outbreaks start popping up in other big cities, people are going to freak out.

 
JΞSTΞR ✪ ACTUAL™ @th3j35t3r · 1h1 hour ago
DEVELOPING: Texas woman claims she had contact w/ Thomas Duncan who died today of Ebola, now showing Ebola symptoms http://tinyurl.com/pdrlxlf
#EBOLAhttps://twitter.com/hashtag/EBOLA?src=hash UPDATE Texas Sherrif Deputy who went to have quaratine order signed & had contact w/ 'patient zero' who died today, is showing signs.
But, that's OK, the government's "got this".
twitter has it wrong. HTH

 
seems to me- if people officials recognize as having contact with patient zero are being dealt with when they start getting sick... that kinda defines "got this".

if/when people who are outside of that circle start showing up... ok- "don't got this".

 
should be interesting to see if he contracted Ebola or if he is just freaking out.

Hopefully, the latter.
Thankfully, early indications are he was just freaking out

http://www.kotatv.com/life/health-source/ebola-outbreak-latest-developments/29005044

Dallas County Sheriff's Deputy Michael Monnig was hospitalized after showing possible Ebola symptoms, Dallas-area media reported Wednesday.

"The deputy expressed concern and we directed that deputy to the Dallas County Health & Human Services for care," the Dallas County Sheriff's Department said in a statement. "We now wait for further information as medical staff attends to the deputy."

The patient -- who was transported from Frisco, Texas -- had reported being in the Dallas apartment where Thomas Eric Duncan had been staying and having "some contact" with Duncan's family members, Frisco Fire Chief Mark Piland told reporters.

But he never had any contact with Duncan, and he doesn't have a fever, Texas Department of State Health Services spokesman Chris Van Deusen said.

"In a situation with no fever and no contact, there is no risk," Van Deusen said in a written statement.

"We understand that anyone near the Dallas response will be very concerned about any health issues they experience, and we want them to report those issues so we can check them out quickly," Van Deusen said. "We're closely tracking those whose contact put them at risk of potential infection, and none of those people have reported any symptoms of Ebola."

Monnig was a first responder and had spent about 30 minutes in the apartment, his son told CNN affiliate KTVT. He woke up Wednesday, feeling sore and fatigued and with a stomachache.

"With the situation, what's happened, he just decided it would be better to be safe than sorry," Logan Monnig told KTVT.

The family does not expect that Monnig has Ebola, but still, his son said, "we're kind of scared and just want to make sure he's OK."

The patient exhibited several possible symptoms of Ebola, Piland said.

"He had several, but not all five or six. He exhibited enough to trigger the preliminary screening," Piland said. Health officials, he said, are "treating this as a low-risk event."

The patient was admitted to the emergency room at Texas Health Presbyterian Dallas "after reporting possible exposure to the Ebola virus," the hospital said.

"Right now, there are more questions than answers about this case," the hospital said. "Our professional staff of nurses and doctors is prepared to examine the patient, discuss any findings with appropriate agencies and officials."

Asked about the case by reporters, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Tom Frieden said the patient "does not have either definite contact with Ebola or definite symptoms of Ebola."

A spokeswoman for CareNow, which made the call to emergency dispatchers, said the medical center "was being very cautious" after the patient checked yes in response to a screening question regarding travel to West Africa.

"We've had a patient that checked yes to one of the screening questions regarding travel to West Africa," CareNow spokeswoman Vickie Johnson told CNN. "We are being very cautious and are in contact with the health department to ensure we follow proper protocol. Our concern is for the safety and well-being of everyone in our clinic."

The new patient's case was the latest development as fears and concerns over Ebola spread worldwide.
 
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should be interesting to see if he contracted Ebola or if he is just freaking out.

Hopefully, the latter.
Thankfully, early indications are he was just freaking out

http://www.kotatv.com/life/health-source/ebola-outbreak-latest-developments/29005044

Dallas County Sheriff's Deputy Michael Monnig was hospitalized after showing possible Ebola symptoms, Dallas-area media reported Wednesday.

"The deputy expressed concern and we directed that deputy to the Dallas County Health & Human Services for care," the Dallas County Sheriff's Department said in a statement. "We now wait for further information as medical staff attends to the deputy."

The patient -- who was transported from Frisco, Texas -- had reported being in the Dallas apartment where Thomas Eric Duncan had been staying and having "some contact" with Duncan's family members, Frisco Fire Chief Mark Piland told reporters.

But he never had any contact with Duncan, and he doesn't have a fever, Texas Department of State Health Services spokesman Chris Van Deusen said.

"In a situation with no fever and no contact, there is no risk," Van Deusen said in a written statement.

"We understand that anyone near the Dallas response will be very concerned about any health issues they experience, and we want them to report those issues so we can check them out quickly," Van Deusen said. "We're closely tracking those whose contact put them at risk of potential infection, and none of those people have reported any symptoms of Ebola."

Monnig was a first responder and had spent about 30 minutes in the apartment, his son told CNN affiliate KTVT. He woke up Wednesday, feeling sore and fatigued and with a stomachache.

"With the situation, what's happened, he just decided it would be better to be safe than sorry," Logan Monnig told KTVT.

The family does not expect that Monnig has Ebola, but still, his son said, "we're kind of scared and just want to make sure he's OK."

The patient exhibited several possible symptoms of Ebola, Piland said.

"He had several, but not all five or six. He exhibited enough to trigger the preliminary screening," Piland said. Health officials, he said, are "treating this as a low-risk event."

The patient was admitted to the emergency room at Texas Health Presbyterian Dallas "after reporting possible exposure to the Ebola virus," the hospital said.

"Right now, there are more questions than answers about this case," the hospital said. "Our professional staff of nurses and doctors is prepared to examine the patient, discuss any findings with appropriate agencies and officials."

Asked about the case by reporters, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Tom Frieden said the patient "does not have either definite contact with Ebola or definite symptoms of Ebola."

A spokeswoman for CareNow, which made the call to emergency dispatchers, said the medical center "was being very cautious" after the patient checked yes in response to a screening question regarding travel to West Africa.

"We've had a patient that checked yes to one of the screening questions regarding travel to West Africa," CareNow spokeswoman Vickie Johnson told CNN. "We are being very cautious and are in contact with the health department to ensure we follow proper protocol. Our concern is for the safety and well-being of everyone in our clinic."

The new patient's case was the latest development as fears and concerns over Ebola spread worldwide.
Probably ate at McDonalds. I know I feel like crap the few times I eat there.

 
Now onto the big question. They have previously stopped it in Africa yet it comes back It appears fruit bats can carry it along with other animals. Now that we have brought it over here to US soil, what makes people so sure it won't rear it's ugly head down the road and let me tell you, with the way people travel in this country, if someone has it, it can spread a lot faster than it can in Africa.

 
Now onto the big question. They have previously stopped it in Africa yet it comes back It appears fruit bats can carry it along with other animals. Now that we have brought it over here to US soil, what makes people so sure it won't rear it's ugly head down the road and let me tell you, with the way people travel in this country, if someone has it, it can spread a lot faster than it can in Africa.
No it can't and won't spread faster here than in Africa.

 
Now onto the big question. They have previously stopped it in Africa yet it comes back It appears fruit bats can carry it along with other animals. Now that we have brought it over here to US soil, what makes people so sure it won't rear it's ugly head down the road and let me tell you, with the way people travel in this country, if someone has it, it can spread a lot faster than it can in Africa.
How big of a question can it be if you don't use a question mark?

 

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