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Medicine

WHO Declares Ebola Outbreak An International Emergency 183

mdsolar (1045926) writes with news that, with the Ebola outbreak growing out of control, the WHO has declared an international health emergency. From the article: With cases rapidly mounting in four West African countries, the World Health Organization (WHO) today declared the Ebola outbreak a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC), a designation that allows the agency to issue recommendations for travel restrictions but also sends a strong message that more resources need to be mobilized to bring the viral disease under control. ... This is only the third time the health agency has issued a PHEIC declaration since the new International Health Regulations (IHR), a global agreement on the control of diseases, were adopted in 2005. The previous two instances were in 2009, for the H1N1 influenza pandemic, and in May for the resurgence of polio.
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WHO Declares Ebola Outbreak An International Emergency

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 08, 2014 @12:40PM (#47631053)

    They haven't ingrained with germ theory since they were toddlers. Their funeral rites often include hand-washing and kissing the deceased.

  • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Friday August 08, 2014 @12:45PM (#47631091)

    Unless you are literally playing in a sick persons bodily fluids, the risk is almost 0

    As I said last time this topic came up, the fear is not that Ebola will spread by people playing in each others' bodily fluids. The fear is that it'll spread beyond a containment zone in Africa, then mutate into a form which can be spread through the air. That's what happens to the various strains of flu. It usually starts off in a form which jumps from animals to man via direct contact. That limits it to farmers and people who work directly with animals (e.g. butchers, cooks in restaurants). But then mutates into a form which spreads easily via the air, which is when it becomes a pandemic.

    Of course Ebola is very different from the flu. It may be very difficult or impossible for Ebola to mutate into a form which can survive long enough in water droplets that sick people cough/sneeze into the air. But we don't know that. Given how deadly the disease is (50%-90% fatality rate, vs about 15% for the Spanish Flu that killed more people than WWI), it's a stupid assumption to make. That's why the international health agencies are assuming the worst-case and handling it as if it was going to mutate into something communicable via the air.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 08, 2014 @12:46PM (#47631113)

    Terrible sanitation, including drinking from the same water supply in which people bathe and defecate? There are few places in the affected region where one can turn on the tap and get municipal water, you know. That's why simply installing hand-washing stations with soap and relatively clean water has routinely made such a huge impact on the spread of Ebola and other gut-wrenching illnesses over there.

    If you're going to be a pedantic ass, you really should make an attempt to have a passing familiarity with the subject.

  • by angel'o'sphere ( 80593 ) <angelo,schneider&oomentor,de> on Friday August 08, 2014 @01:17PM (#47631413) Journal

    Why do you invent bullshit, like this: The fear is that it'll spread beyond a containment zone in Africa, then mutate into a form which can be spread through the air.
    That is your fear because you have no clue.
    Why don't you ... for fuck sake ... if it concerns you so much that you even fear it, read a few articles about Flu and another few articles about Ebola?

    It is completely impossible. Ebola is a Filovirus, Flu is a Orthomyxoviridae. The most important difference is, Flu has a 'hull' around its genome. Ebola is a blank RNA strand without any protection.

    Regardless how it mutates it will always die in seconds or minutes outside of s human body.

    I really don't get why people like you spread such a nonsense fear. You are payed by some pharma lobby planning to sell the upcoming vaccines/treatments?

    WTF, the knowledge how this stuff works is not rocket science (and even rocket science is a rather simple topic) ... can't be so hard to simply read about it.

  • by linebackn ( 131821 ) on Friday August 08, 2014 @01:35PM (#47631563)

    Ebola, while a horrible deadly disease is not the doom and gloom its being made out to be

    You wouldn't know that listening to the idiotic TV news. They seriously have been playing it as if everyone in the US is at grave risk of dropping dead from this.

    The threats made against that second infected doctor being brought back to the US were almost certainly a direct result of the media's irresponsible reporting.

    Despite all their condescending scaremongering, there is simply zero realistic risk to the US general public.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 08, 2014 @01:43PM (#47631633)

    Ebola has an incubation time of about two to three weeks, after which the symptoms appear. Death follows in two weeks after this, unless the patient survives. The virus can be contagious up to seven weeks after the patient has been cured, depending of the type of contagion.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 08, 2014 @02:14PM (#47631903)

    You're wrong. Like, really wrong. Ebola isn't a blank RNA strand (ignoring the fact that "blank RNA" doesn't make any sense - in order for it to be RNA, it has to have bases in it, which means it encodes information; you meant bare, probably, but even that is wrong). It has a protein-based envelope around it, as well as a small lipid bilayer. Seriously, that took less than a minute to look up. If it was just RNA, the normal RNAses in your body would make it a non-issue.

    I also really enjoy how you make fun of someone for not reading about it when you clearly didn't do any research.

  • by moke ( 574418 ) on Friday August 08, 2014 @03:11PM (#47632423)
    Ebola Reston is a Filovirus and it is airborne (deadly to monkeys but harmless to humans), so it's not that far fetched.
  • Actual Data (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 08, 2014 @03:43PM (#47632693)

    For people who want to base opinions/conclusions on actual data, here's one chart of the progression trend as of Aug 8, tracked since beginning of July (data taken directly from WHO):

    http://bl.ocks.org/santanubasu/aa75ada045560ec4f4c8

    Time to move to Prepperville, USA? Not really.
    Global epidemic? Not at this point.
    Getting worse? Yup.
    Tapering off? Maybe, but the most recent data tends to get revised.

    So maybe this will get much worse, maybe it will peter out. Either way, whoever looks at the data will have the best take on what's really happening.

An authority is a person who can tell you more about something than you really care to know.

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