US Scientists Predict Long Battle Against Ebola

DEAD7

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Despite recent advances in medicine to treat Ebola, epidemiologists are not hopeful that the outbreak in west Africa will be contained any time soon. Revised models for the disease's spread expect the outbreak to last 12 to 18 months longer, likely infecting hundreds of thousands of people. "While previous outbreaks have been largely confined to rural areas, the current epidemic, the largest ever, has reached densely populated, impoverished cities — including Monrovia, the capital of Liberia — gravely complicating efforts to control the spread of the disease. ... What worries public health officials most is that the epidemic has begun to grow exponentially in Liberia. In the most recent week reported, Liberia had nearly 400 new cases, almost double the number reported the week before. Another grave concern, the W.H.O. said, is 'evidence of substantial underreporting of cases and deaths.' The organization reported on Friday that the number of Ebola cases as of Sept. 7 was 4,366, including 2,218 deaths." Scientists are urging greater public health efforts to slow the exponential trajectory of the disease and bring it back under control.
 

Chris.B

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I'm usually not one for conspiracy theories..but those two white doctors were cured with the quickness.:sas2:
just like any virus...there are medications to slow it down or eradicate it.

The third world is different from countries like US
 

newworldafro

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In the Silver Lining
http://washingtonexaminer.com/cdc-issues-ebola-checklist-now-is-the-time-to-prepare/article/2553396

CDC issues Ebola checklist: 'Now is the time to prepare'

BY PAUL BEDARD | SEPTEMBER 15, 2014 | 11:34 AM

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, warning hospitals and doctors that “now is the time to prepare,” has issued a six-page Ebola “checklist” to help healthcare workers quickly determine if patients are infected.

While the CDC does not believe that there are new cases of Ebola in the United States, the assumption in the checklist is that it is only a matter of time before the virus hits home.

For example, one part reads: “Encourage healthcare personnel to use a ‘buddy system’ when caring for patients.” Another recommends a process to report cases to top officials:

Plan for regular situational briefs for decision-makers, including:

-- Suspected and confirmed EVD patients who have been identified and reported to public health authorities.

-- Isolation, quarantine and exposure reports.

-- Supplies and logistical challenges.

-- Personnel status, and policy decisions on contingency plans and staffing.

The checklist has been distributed to major hospitals and even little ones, including an urgent center in Leesburg, Va.

“Every hospital should ensure that it can detect a patient with Ebola, protect healthcare workers so they can safely care for the patient, and respond in a coordinated fashion,” warns the CDC.

“While we are not aware of any domestic Ebola Virus Disease cases (other than two American citizens who were medically evacuated to the United States), now is the time to prepare, as it is possible that individuals with EVD in West Africa may travel to the United States, exhibit signs and symptoms of EVD, and present to facilities,” it adds.

Several hospital and medical websites have just begun to post the checklist online.


 

newworldafro

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In the Silver Lining
http://www.prisonplanet.com/u-s-state-department-orders-160000-ebola-hazmat-suits.html

U.S. State Department Orders 160,000 Ebola Hazmat Suits

Bulk purchase prompts concerns about spread of deadly epidemic

Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet.com
September 15, 2014

The U.S. State Department has ordered 160,000 Hazmat suits for Ebola, prompting concerns that the federal government is anticipating the rapid spread of a virus that has already claimed an unprecedented number of lives.

In a press release posted by Market Watch, Lakeland Industries, a manufacturer of industrial protective clothing for first responders, announced that it had signaled its intention “to join the fight against the spread of Ebola” by encouraging other suppliers to meet the huge demand created by the U.S. State Department’s order of 160,000 hazmat suits.

“With the U.S. State Department alone putting out a bid for 160,000 suits, we encourage all protective apparel companies to increase their manufacturing capacity for sealed seam garments so that our industry can do its part in addressing this threat to global health,” states the press release.

The huge bulk order of hazmat suits for Ebola has stoked concerns that the U.S. government expects the virus to continue to ravage countries in west Africa and may also be concerned about an outbreak inside the United States.

Although the State Department has announced that it is planning a “surge” of emergency medical personnel into western Africa, only 1400 federal workers are currently in the region, suggesting that the 160,000 figure is far higher than what would be required merely for sending medical workers abroad.

In a related story, sources from within the Department of Defense have questioned why the Obama administration is implementing a military response to the Ebola epidemic when USAID and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are already involved in relief efforts.

“We don’t need to be taking planners away from the CT [counterterrorism] mission, and that is what is going on,” the Defense Department source told Fox News.

As we reported last week, top German virologist Jonas Schmidt-Chanasit caused consternation when he suggested that the battle against Ebola in Sierra Leone and Liberia was lost and that the virus would eventually kill 5 million people.

Evidence that the virus has mutated has led to fears that Ebola could have gone airborne to at least a limited extent.

In an op-ed for the New York Times, Michael T. Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, notes that, “there has been more human-to-human transmission in the past four months than most likely occurred in the last 500 to 1,000 years.”

Osterholm says the premise that Ebola could mutate to become transmissible through the air is a possibility “that virologists are loath to discuss openly but are definitely considering in private.”
 

Kritic

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I'm usually not one for conspiracy theories..but those two white doctors were cured with the quickness.:sas2:
the african summit didn't go too well. how many are going to die before they give in to these windows 95 computers and bono concerts:shaq:



it's just international business :manny:
 

newworldafro

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In the Silver Lining
http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2014/9/17/ebola-economic-impact.html

Ebola to slash growth, knock billions off fragile W. African economies
Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone will pay a high price unless virus is contained, says World Bank

September 17, 2014 5:00PM ET
by Michael Pizzi @michaelwpizzi
The outbreak of Ebola that is ravaging parts of West Africa could cost affected nations billions of dollars and slash economic growth rates by double digits if the virus’ surge continues across Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, the World Bank estimated Wednesday in a new report.

In addition to the human toll — over 2,400 deaths have been reported in the past five months — economists have warned that the outbreak is draining public finances. It’s also encouraging aversive behavior, such as avoidance of travel and trade for fear of contagion, which could incur lasting economic damage in fragile postconflict economies.

“The primary cost of this tragic outbreak is in human lives and suffering, which has already been terribly difficult to bear,” World Bank president Jim Yong Kim said in a statement that accompanied the report. “But our findings make it clear that the sooner we get an adequate containment response and decrease the level of fear and uncertainty, the faster we can blunt Ebola’s economic impact.”

According to the analysis, the worst-case scenario could see economic growth in these three countries slashed by 2.3 to 11.7 percentage points in 2015, potentially plunging countries into a deep contraction. Should the international community mount a more concerted campaign to help contain the virus, however, those estimates would shrink closer to 1 to 4.2 percentage points.

The report comes a day after the U.N. announced that it needed to raise $1 billion to effectively contain the virus, treat its victims and prevent much-feared spillover into other countries. On Tuesday, President Barack Obama announced he would send 3,000 troops to the region to help stem the spread of the contagious disease and build health facilities to treat victims.

But the international community has taken heat from public health advocates in West Africa who say the response has been paltry thus far and that newly announced aid, while welcome, has come too late. According to the World Bank, the short-term cost of Ebola for 2014 will likely surpass $350 million in the three worst-hit countries, regardless of how effectively the virus is contained.

These countries recently emerged from years of war, and the damage to their economies is already considerable. The smallest of the three, Liberia, had a GDP in 2013 of just under $2 billion. The estimated short-term loss caused by the Ebola outbreak of $66 million will sting, but should that figure climb to the worst-case estimate of $228 million in 2015, the effect could be destabilizing.


The short-term costs these countries have incurred are in part a result of an inability to contain the diseases spread by health care systems that are massively underfunded and understaffed. Cash is tight in Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone, but the startlingly low doctor-to-population ratio — Liberia has about 50 doctors for 4.4 million people — and dire shortages in medical supplies made these countries highly vulnerable to such an outbreak.

“The sad thing is these countries were rebounding economically, but we can see here that not having invested in health infrastructure is costing them so much,” said Amadou Sy, a senior fellow with the Brookings Institution’s Africa Growth Initiative and a former economist with the International Monetary Fund.

The farthest-reaching economic harm from contagious diseases like Ebola usually comes from fear, or more specifically, aversive economic behavior that stems from concerns of contagion. According to the World Bank, fear of contact with others in the affected countries means fewer people are showing up to work, many offices and businesses are closed and transportation is disrupted. Tourism is likely to plummet, in part because major seaports and airports have been shuttered in order to prevent the virus from jumping across international borders. Food security can also be affected — a phenomenon that will become apparent as planting season approaches and quarantines hamper transportation of food supplies.

In recent infectious disease outbreaks, such as the SARS epidemic of 2002–04 or the H1N1 flu of 2009, behavioral effects caused about 80 to 90 percent of the total economic impact, the World Bank report noted.

The private sector is also vulnerable, said Sy. In small countries like those primarily affected, attracting foreign investment is tricky enough without the outbreak of terrifying illnesses like Ebola. He noted that during the recent African leaders summit at the White House in August, news of the first American doctor to contract Ebola blew coverage of the summit out of the headlines, turning what might have been a moment for optimistic coverage of African growth into a horrifying reminder of West Africa’s public health woes.

That damage is done, however, and economists warn that unwarranted hysteria over the virus can only fuel fear-driven reclusion and exacerbate economic downturn.

The international community must play a part in smoothing things over, economists say. The World Bank has recommended a four-pronged response that begins with humanitarian support to contain the virus and about $290 million of fiscal support to stave off the collapse of government services in these countries. Other measures, like providing screening facilities at air- and seaports, would assuage merchants’ fears of contagion and allow for some level of trade to continue even while the virus persists.

In the long term, however, the most important initiative might be to address the dire incapacity of West African health care systems to detect and treat contagious viruses like Ebola in their early stages.

“The lesson for Africa is that investing in the health sector, having an almost military preparedness to deal with such crises, is very important,” said Sy. “We talk a lot about the infrastructure gap in Africa, but public health should really be part of that.”

“Sometimes people say this shows that Africa-is-rising stories are overblown, but I see the glass half full,” he added. “This shows the growth is fragile, but I’m confident it can rebound.”
 

ChrisDorner

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We all knew theyd end up exterminating us

ebola just happens to be their weapon of choice
 

88m3

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waited to long this going to go on for a long time it looks like
 
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