10-10-2014 12:03 PM - edited 10-10-2014 12:05 PM
If ever there was a time to make our Ports, and Airports secure, it has to be now, surely!
But I bet our Politicians will only act when it becomes too late, and the problem becomes rife, as it eventually reaches our Shores.
We, by that I mean, our elected representatives, seem incapable of prevention, and then scurry around like headless chickens when the inevitable, (which could easily have been prevented) happens.
12-10-2014 6:17 PM
I woke up this morning covered in spaghetti....
I think I've got Bola-gnaise.
12-10-2014 6:29 PM
12-10-2014 6:34 PM
Ebola is actually incredably difficult to catch, to ingest another persons body fluids takes some real work, defo no reason to panic
14-10-2014 7:22 PM
In an effort to outflank Farage, the Cameron government announced in July that all non-EU visitors to the UK will be charged 150% of the normal fees to use the NHS:
“Patients from outside the EU to be charged 150% of the cost of treatment in the NHS.“
But yesterday the government announced they were advising non-EU visitors to voluntarily contact the NHS if they develop symptoms of Ebola while in the UK:
“Passengers to be told to make contact with the NHS should they develop Ebola symptoms.“
The Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt said he hoped travellers from those countries would “self-present” to the authorities if they developed any symptoms of illness.
In other words, the Cameron government is hoping possible Ebola patients will voluntarily contact the NHS if they have symptoms, while at the same time threatening them with having to pay 150% of the fees for their treatment if they do.
Anybody else see the serious – and possibly extremely dangerous – flaw in the government’s plans?
14-10-2014 7:43 PM
14-10-2014 8:55 PM
The spread of Ebola has been very mainly from the sufferer to one other person, normally the one who has been looking after them.
It also is only transferable once the disease has manifested itself not while it is incubating.
14-10-2014 10:26 PM
Not enough is known about this disease.
Although they keep saying it can only be transmitted between humans from "body fluids", some research has shown it has been transmitted from pigs to monkeys and that due to the virus being found in the lungs of the monkeys, it showed the virus was inhaled.
Have a read here and also look at the date of the news item:-
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-20341423
It's life Jim, but not as WE know it.
Live long and prosper.
14-10-2014 10:33 PM - edited 14-10-2014 10:34 PM
14-10-2014 10:42 PM
Well now, Pigs come in to the disease equation again as do Monkeys?
We are humans but have many characteristics of Apes sooooooo, if Ebola can be transmitted to them by inhaling "droplets" there's every chance that we too can be infected the same way?
It's life Jim, but not as WE know it.
Live long and prosper.
14-10-2014 11:05 PM
14-10-2014 11:24 PM
Did you read all of that link?
It's life Jim, but not as WE know it.
Live long and prosper.
14-10-2014 11:34 PM
14-10-2014 11:44 PM - edited 14-10-2014 11:45 PM
Needs caeful reading, it seems a lot more was known about Ebola in 2012 than has emerged or been commented upon with the latest outbreak?
It's life Jim, but not as WE know it.
Live long and prosper.
15-10-2014 12:36 AM
@cee-dee wrote:Not enough is known about this disease.
Although they keep saying it can only be transmitted between humans from "body fluids", some research has shown it has been transmitted from pigs to monkeys and that due to the virus being found in the lungs of the monkeys, it showed the virus was inhaled.
Have a read here and also look at the date of the news item:-
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-20341423
I guess you didn't read the link (written on 29 Sept 2014) about the pig-monkey experiment that I posted on page 1 which explains the difference between the way (and the location) that the disease manifests itself in monkeys and pigs.
Pigs recover from Ebola, and the researchers did not show conclusively how the disease was transmitted. They couldn't conclude that the virus was inhaled by the monkeys
"The design and size of the animal cubicle did not allow (us) to distinguish whether the transmission was by aerosol, small or large droplets in the air, or droplets created during floor cleaning which landed inside NHP cages (fomites)".
"They did the experiment again, this time with only monkeys and found that without direct contact, infectious monkeys did not transmit virus to other monkeys that were in the same room. The virus was not airborne. "
http://globalbiodefense.com/2014/09/29/airborne-ebola-flight-fancy/
15-10-2014 7:26 AM
Whatever happenned to bird flu/swine flu?
This was reportedly far more infectious than ebola though the mortality rate was lower.
15-10-2014 8:52 AM
15-10-2014 10:04 AM
@saasher2012 wrote:
Have now read the link & also the link that creaky has posted, my only thought about them all are these, they are not conclusive if they were surely the procedures being carried out would be foolproof, they are far from that!.
What procedures do you mean?
15-10-2014 10:16 AM
15-10-2014 3:51 PM
@suzieseaside wrote:
@saasher2012 wrote:
Have now read the link & also the link that creaky has posted, my only thought about them all are these, they are not conclusive if they were surely the procedures being carried out would be foolproof, they are far from that!.What procedures do you mean?
I misunderstood your post about procedures. I read it that you meant if knowledge of transmission was conclusive, then the 'procedures being carried out would be foolproof'.
[I assume you meant the link posted by creeky was the one I posted just before him because I don't think he posted a link just up there^^]
The point is, I think, is that necessary procedures are NOT being carried out because local people and medical staff have not had the means to follow them. I think you meant that in your last reply, so I agree.
Families are in contact with sick and dying relatives, people don't have protective suits when burying them, and even medical staff don't have (or haven't had) protective suits when treating them. I believe that the protective suits worn by medics flying in now to help have to be incinerated after a fairly short period of use.
So IMO it's not that insufficent is known by experts about how to slow the spread of the virus e.g. by having no physical contact with the sick and by not eating bush meat and fruit bats. I think most of the problem comes from lack of education about the virus in Africa (presumably there are a lot of remote villages in the regions of infection) and even if people are informed they don't have the protective gear to help prevent them becoming infected.
Of course there may be factors about Ebola that aren't known but even if advice on the current knowledge could be followed by everyone in the areas of infection I think that would go a long way to stop the escalation. Unfortunately in countries so poor and lacking in facilities it is a very difficult task to stop the spread.
15-10-2014 4:18 PM