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.
17-10-2014 5:24 PM - edited 17-10-2014 5:25 PM
http://www.itv.com/news/2014-10-17/a-timeline-of-the-spread-of-ebola/
1976 - The first documented person with the Ebola virus, a schoolteacher in Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of Congo) dies 1976-2013 Numerous small outbreaks are recorded in West Africa, with the highest death toll for any one outbreak reaching 250 December 2013 - An unidentified fever claims the lives of a handful of people in Guinea, it is later confirmed they died of Ebola March 2014 - A major Ebola outbreak in Guinea is reported by the World Health Organisation and Liberia identifies its first case. In teh following months the virus spreads to neighbouring Sierra Leone17-10-2014 6:49 PM
I heard a report on the TV today, saying that the World Health Organization says that if they don't get this under control by Christmas; it will be deemed to be out of control..............are we looking into the precipice ??
18-10-2014 11:12 AM
18-10-2014 3:58 PM
18-10-2014 4:28 PM
I came on here to escape for 5 mins from listing and awful news on the radio - the first thing I see is
EBOLA EBOLA
Back to listing...
18-10-2014 4:51 PM
18-10-2014 11:20 PM
Here are a few facts and figures from the WHO website.
There are five species of Ebola and the three biggest killers of the five are the Bundibugyo, Zaire and Sudan strains. The current outbreak is the Zaire strain.
In the 36 years since it's discovery in 1976 until 2012 there have been 2323 confirmed cases of Ebola resulting in 1589 deaths (68% fatality rate). Most of these outbreaks were confined within the borders of one country which is why the infection rate didn't spiral out of control.
In the seven months since March 2014 there have been 8997 confirmed cases (four times as many as in the previous 36 years). So far resulting in 4493 deaths (50% fatality).
I don't think anyone is scaremongering, this is serious.
Ebola, Marburg and Lassa are among the most fatal diseases on the planet and we don't have a readily available cure for any of them. All travel should be stopped from any country that first reports an incidence of any of these viruses, if this had been done back in March it wouldn't have spread to two neighbouring countries and hence to the wider world.
19-10-2014 12:04 AM
Ebola has been known about since the 1970's,but all of a sudden the western world becomes threatened and money now will be no object,instead of spending billions bombing the middle east,spend it instead on iradicating the causes
19-10-2014 10:06 AM
UK has sent £125million to help people..
20-10-2014 2:28 PM
While these diseases are confined to Africa very little is done to fight them, drug companies can't make money from the world's poorest people. As you say joebloggs, now Ebola has arrived in the West they are all running around like headless chickens trying to develop a vaccine. Hasn't it always been so? Wasn't the situation exactly the same with HIV/AIDS back in the 80s.
36million have died from AIDS in the past 30 odd years, let's hope we are more successful with Ebola.
20-10-2014 2:49 PM
22-10-2014 11:01 AM
Things are starting to look a bit more hopeful...fingers crossed.
22-10-2014 1:34 PM
22-10-2014 2:16 PM - edited 22-10-2014 2:17 PM
29-10-2014 11:17 AM - edited 29-10-2014 11:18 AM