Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

General Discussion

Showing Original Post only (View all)
 

Logical

(22,457 posts)
Sun Oct 5, 2014, 07:52 PM Oct 2014

5 reasons to not panic over Ebola virus [View all]

By Bill Briggs and Maggie Fox, NBC News

(NBC News) - Ebola has dominated headlines and nightmares in America since the arrival of missionaries infected with the virus. But the first case diagnosed in the U.S. threatened to turn that whiff of fear into full-blown Ebola hysteria.

Virus-driven worries sent airline stocks downward — causing the market to plunge 200-plus points. And in Texas, where the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed the first case of Ebola diagnosed in this country, some Dallas parents on Wednesday pulled their kids out of a school attended by one child who was potentially exposed to the sick man.

Overreactions? According to infectious disease doctors and CDC experts: Yes, those behaviors are not at all in line with scientific knowledge of how Ebola spreads — gleaned from numerous past outbreaks of the virus in distant lands.

Ebola may be here, living inside the body of a patient now being treated in isolation at a Dallas hospital. But here are five reasons why Americans need to calm down, take a breath, take a flight, if need be — and, if it makes them feel any better, by all means, they can also wash their hands.

1 - Could his flight put travelers at risk and trigger a U.S. outbreak?
No. That firm answer is rooted in the timing of both his illness and his travel itinerary.

The patient left Monrovia, Liberia on Sept. 19 and arrived in the U.S. on Sept. 20. He first developed symptoms on Sept. 24. On Sept. 26, he went to a Dallas hospital but was sent home. He got sicker and called an ambulance on Sept. 28 and, on that day, he was admitted to the hospital and placed in isolation.

If a person with Ebola does not yet show symptoms — which may include fever, fatigue, achiness, vomiting, bleeding and diarrhea — he cannot transmit the virus. In someone who contracts Ebola, the virus can incubate inside the body for as long 21 days before making him feel ill.

“The people on the plane are not a problem because he was not symptomatic while he was on the plane,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases told MSNBC. CDC does not recommend that people who were on the same flights with the patient undergo monitoring.

2 - Could people who came in contact with him after he got sick cause an outbreak?
That is very, very unlikely, Fauci said.

“We feel confident that there won't be an outbreak,” Fauci said.

The people who were around the patient are now being identified and traced by the CDC and by the state health authorities.

“When you say contact tracing, you mean you get people, you identify them, and you observe and monitor them daily to determine if they develop symptoms,” Fauci said. “If they do, then you put them under isolation to determine if, in fact, they are infected.

“And if you do that properly, you can shut down any outbreak,” he added. “And that's the reason why … we feel that this is able to be done because the professionals, the CDC people who are very good at this and have done it very well and successfully, are going to be able to do that contact tracing and get that, in essence, put the lid on this.”

3 - If you are simply near a person with Ebola, can you get the virus?
No. Ebola virus doesn't drift through the air like germs that cause measles or tuberculosis. That's how doctors and nurses are able to safely treat people with the virus.

To become infected with Ebola, you would need to get some of the ill person's bodily fluids — blood, semen, vomit, or sputum — into your mouth, nose, or eyes, or into your body via a cut or a needle stick. Doctors say that, as yet, there is no evidence anyone has ever been infected via sweat.

“Avoid contact with blood and body fluids of any person, particularly someone who is sick,” the CDC instructs.

4 - Can a cleanser kill the virus on surfaces?
Yes. Killing the virus outside the body is easy. Unlike anthrax, Ebola also doesn't form spores that can survive a good, alcohol-based cleaning, experts say.

Even if you get the virus on your hands, you won't necessarily get sick. (As always, don't put hands in your mouth, nose or eyes — and don't eat with your hands — unless you've washed them first.)

“If you must travel to an area affected by the 2014 Ebola outbreak, protect yourself by doing the following: Wash hands frequently or use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer,” the CDC says.

5 - OK, if it's so easy to control, why is there an outbreak in West Africa?
Tragically simple: because most people in those countries are not able to follow these simple precautions. Some may not have access to soap and water. Some may be touching the bodies of the Ebola dead in preparation for burial.

But another Ebola hot zone, Nigeria, provides a hopeful roadmap to overall containment.

In Nigeria, doctors have limited infections caused by a Liberian-American man who traveled to Nigeria from Liberia after he got sick. There were 19 cases confirmed, but there have been no new cases since Aug. 31.

“That experience shows us that even in the case in Nigeria, when we found out later in the timeline that this patient had Ebola, that Nigeria was able to identify contacts, institute strict infection control procedures and basically bring their outbreak to a close,” said Dr. Tom Inglesby, Chief Executive Officer and Director of the UPMC Center for Health Security in Pittsburgh.

“They did a good job in and of themselves. They worked closely with the U.S. CDC. If we can succeed in Nigeria… I do believe we will stop it here.”

More at: http://www.wrcbtv.com/story/26687313/5-reasons-to-not-panic-over-ebola-virus
34 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
This is an excellent article, and the points well stated. CaliforniaPeggy Oct 2014 #1
+ 1000 nt Logical Oct 2014 #4
Agreed. Here's a kick. (nt) scarletwoman Oct 2014 #6
Thanks for the post Logical. Texasgal Oct 2014 #2
Thanks!! nt Logical Oct 2014 #5
Good stuff! MineralMan Oct 2014 #3
One reason to flee in fear is the TV told me to, and I am too ill informed and lazy to look it up Fred Sanders Oct 2014 #7
LOL! nt Logical Oct 2014 #8
k&r for a good article, easy to understand information. uppityperson Oct 2014 #9
Excellent article. However..... dhol82 Oct 2014 #10
Lack of proper sanitation plays a HUGE role in its spread. So we would do well to remember that kestrel91316 Oct 2014 #11
Good point. I myself are guilty of that at times. Shaking hands is bad also I hear. nt Logical Oct 2014 #12
Shaking hands where Ebola is common is not bad, it turns out, because of virus in sweat kestrel91316 Oct 2014 #14
Shaking hands with someone who just cleaned up vomit without gloves and didn't wash their hands uppityperson Oct 2014 #16
4 more reasons to not freak out. SARS, Bird Flu, Swine Flu, Anthrax NightWatcher Oct 2014 #13
Seriously, do you know anything about Viruses? LynneSin Oct 2014 #20
K&R nt Live and Learn Oct 2014 #15
http://www.democraticunderground.com/1014911239 Mister Nightowl Oct 2014 #17
One reason TO panic... Kablooie Oct 2014 #18
They need panic to blame Obama. nt Logical Oct 2014 #19
Thankfully, we've only got about another two weeks until Erich Bloodaxe BSN Oct 2014 #21
Good Point! nt Logical Oct 2014 #22
And really we'll know early this week. morningfog Oct 2014 #23
Except the family continued to be exposed to his secretions during the time they were in pnwmom Oct 2014 #29
The virus doesn't survive forever without a host. morningfog Oct 2014 #30
It can survive in certain conditions for days. Why do you think the Clean Up Guys pnwmom Oct 2014 #31
Link to the virus surviving for days without a host? morningfog Oct 2014 #33
Dr. Brantley got infected while fully outfitted. "Much more likely" pnwmom Oct 2014 #34
Item 2 is predicated on the ability to identify and monitor people wercal Oct 2014 #24
Good point nt Logical Oct 2014 #25
And we got the best health care system in the world!!!! Yuk, yuk, yuk!!! grahamhgreen Oct 2014 #26
I'm getting a little sick of hearing so much talk No Vested Interest Oct 2014 #27
Good point, 24/7 news causes a lot of this crap! nt Logical Oct 2014 #32
It would be nice if we could count on hospitals to not send Ebola patients back home pnwmom Oct 2014 #28
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»5 reasons to not panic ov...