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Medicine Government United States

The CDC Is Carefully Controlling How Scared You Are About Ebola 478

HughPickens.com writes: Russell Berman reports in The Atlantic that the Obama administration is trying to navigate a tricky course: Can officials increase public vigilance about the deadly Ebola virus without inciting a panic? "Ebola is scary. It's a deadly disease. But we know how to stop it," says Dr. Thomas Frieden, the CDC director. speaking "calmly and clearly, sticking to an even pitch and avoiding the familiar political image of the whip-smart fast-talker." International groups wanted the U.S. to step in sooner to help fight the outbreak in west Africa, while more recently some Republicans have called on the administration to ban travel from the most affected countries.

Frieden and other officials say such a move would be counterproductive, citing lessons learned from the SARS outbreak a decade ago. "The SARS outbreak cost the world more than $40 billion, but it wasn't to control the outbreak," says Frieden. "Those were costs from unnecessary and ineffective travel restrictions and trade changes that could have been avoided." The government announced Wednesday that it was stepping up protective measures at five airports, where authorities will screen travelers from Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea with targeted questions and fever checks, an action, officials acknowledge, that was taken not only to stop the spread of the disease but simply to make people feel safer. According to Berman, the message is this: Be afraid of Ebola. Just not too afraid.
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The CDC Is Carefully Controlling How Scared You Are About Ebola

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  • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @01:49PM (#48113555) Journal
    WTF am I supposed to do? Look around for suspicious hemorrhaging people?
    • by i kan reed ( 749298 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @02:23PM (#48113925) Homepage Journal

      Be aware of travelers to west central Africa in your life. Make competent decisions about whether you, yourself should go there. Go to your doctor for any suspicious illness if you have any reason to believe you're exposed at all.

      You know, nothing major.

    • by MozeeToby ( 1163751 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @02:38PM (#48114099)

      If you work in an ER and someone comes in sweating and vomiting with a history of travel to Liberia... yes? Is that too much to ask? We just had medical professionals send someone home with classic Ebola symptoms and a history of travel in highly infected regions because of a total lack of vigilance.

      • Yep, especially when they deny all of the screening questions.. That's helpful.

        It's also helpful to understand that the Dallas case was the FIRST field infection in the US (as opposed to the patients with known Ebola that were transferred here for further care). It just wasn't on the radar. Nobody's perfect, least of all a busy ER doc with someone who could well have a ;typical; viral illness. I don't know why he was sent home on antibiotics - that seems a bit sloppy (although the doc might have seen so

        • by Ungrounded Lightning ( 62228 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @05:37PM (#48115747) Journal

          [Hospital sent home the ebola patient in Dallas, though he had classic ebola symptoms and had traveled to Liberia.]

          Yep, especially when they deny all of the screening questions.. That's helpful.

          He denied the screening questions at the airport. ('Let's see. If I answer yes you won't let me fly and will throw me in with everybody else who answered yes. Of COURSE I didn't have contact with Ebola!)

          He DIDN'T deny the questions at the hospital. They knew he'd been to Liberia recently. But their bureaucracy didn't get that info to the person who made the release decision.

    • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @04:24PM (#48115037) Homepage Journal

      Well, yes. Then if you see one call the public health authorities.

      Common sense? Sure, but you'd be surprised at the degree to which what you'd think was common sense flies out the window when people encounter the unexpected.

      In my experience what people do when confornted with the unexpected is take their cue from what other people around them are doing, and if that's nothing, they'll try to ignore whatever it is. I've even seen that happen with FIRE ALARMS. Instead of getting up and leaving, they look to see what other people are doing. And since those other people are doing the same thing, nobody is leaving. They're looking at each other, wondering whether that really IS a fire alarm. I once had to stick my head in the room on my way out and tell the people there that yes, it really is a fire alarm and they have to leave right away.

      If people have been recently primed then perhaps they're more likely to do something reasonable. Of course that sometimes means lots more false positives, but that's a tradeoff.

  • Ebola threat (Score:5, Interesting)

    by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @01:52PM (#48113589) Journal
    The reason Ebola is spreading in Africa is because of poverty and customs. In some places the doctors have run out of gloves. With a disease like Ebola, that is not something you want. Secondly, in some places they have customs like washing the body of the deceased, then having the wife drink the water to prove she didn't try to kill him. Once again, that is not the kind of tradition you want to have if you're going to stop the spread of Ebola.

    Airborne Ebola would be a serious problem. What we have with the current epidemic is an education/sanitation problem, not a disease problem.
    • Re:Ebola threat (Score:5, Insightful)

      by umafuckit ( 2980809 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @02:08PM (#48113749)
      DId you hear about the nurse in Spain who got infected? An infected glove brushed her face. It doesn't take outlandish behavior (like corpse water drinking) for this disease to spread.
      • It doesn't take outlandish behavior (like corpse water drinking) for this disease to spread.

        Yes, but proper behavior will easily stop it. To quote the CDC director (did you read the summary?), "we know how to stop it."

        • Re:Ebola threat (Score:5, Insightful)

          by MozeeToby ( 1163751 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @02:35PM (#48114057)

          We do know how to put a stop to it, it's quite easy, all it takes is bio-containment level 4 procedures, that should be easy to slap together in every international airport, seaport, and border crossing to the US. Look, I'm not going to fear monger here, but the fact is that if significant numbers of infected individuals start traveling around the globe we will not be able to maintain containment for long, even with all the resources that ultra-rich 1st world countries have at their disposal. How many beds do you think there are in the entire US that can safely treat Ebola ? I'd be shocked if it's over 1,000 and if the situation in western Africa doesn't change we will very soon see Ebola victims numbering in the millions (by the CDC's own estimates, 1.4 million by the end of January).

          We need to stop pretending that Ebola is no easier to catch than HIV or other pathogens that are carried by the same bodily fluids, those diseases don't typically cause you to leak and eject the infected material all over yourself and the room you are in. A nurse in Spain got sick after possibly touching her face while removing her hazmat suit, when was the last time you heard about someone catching HIV the same way? This whole idea that Ebola is so hard to spread you'd have to be stupid to catch it needs to stop; it's wrong and it's dangerous and it leads to wonderful things like people not bothering to put on gloves and mask to go into a confirmed Ebola patient's apartment (thankfully that deputies tests have come back negative).

        • So I should no longer drink corpse-water, or just west-African corpse-water?
      • Re:Ebola threat (Score:5, Insightful)

        by ColdWetDog ( 752185 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @02:17PM (#48113847) Homepage

        And, if she was wearing any sort of face mask and eye protection (like you are supposed to do), nothing untoward would have happened.

        Contact precautions aren't particularly hard, but they do require a significant degree of vigilance which is not a human being's strong point.

        • by Teun ( 17872 )
          Uhh, she was in the process of undressing...
          • Re:Ebola threat (Score:4, Insightful)

            by nabsltd ( 1313397 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @03:16PM (#48114455)

            Uhh, she was in the process of undressing...

            Then, correct procedures weren't followed.

            For any truly infectious disease, proper procedure would have health care workers walk into a disinfectant shower (and possibly UV light) before removing protective clothes. Any disease that can survive that sort of thing is going to kill us all anyway.

            Then, order of removal is important. In general, headgear is removed first (preferably by another person), then outer gloves, then fasteners released and gear removed, then inner gloves. All this is followed by hand washing (at a minimum). This makes sure that easier paths to infection get as little possible contact from anything that might have had contact with the pathogen.

            The nurse screwed up by touching her face with her outer glove, and I suspect that disinfectant showers/UV were not done first.

      • by 0123456 ( 636235 )

        Treating someone known to have the disease and then touching your face with a glove that touched them is actually pretty outlandish behaviour.

        • C'mon people. I have frequently gotten a cold, even though they say the only way to catch one is to touch your eyes and nose, and I consciously try not to touch my eyes and nose, especially when I need to be around people with a cold. I suffer from colds.

          This is sort of like the Nicholas Cage film where our hero (Cage, of course), suits up to face the Plague or the Deadly Nerve Gas, and his boss coaches him, "You'll do OK, pal, the suit will protect you. That is unless your nose starts to itch, you brus

          • by itzly ( 3699663 )
            Protection doesn't have to be perfect. If it can prevent most of the spread, the virus will die out.
        • It might seem so, but it happens. People will automatically try to rub an itchy nose or eye; the "OMG better not do that!" realization doesn't always kick in fast enough.
      • by jandrese ( 485 )
        She got sloppy and didn't follow the procedure properly. When you're dealing with late stage Ebola there is no room for error. Which sucks because you're wearing a sweaty biohazard suit in Africa and dealing with extremely stressed people and chaotic environments where you might be running out of supplies and can do little to help the people regardless. Maintaining strict quarantine procedures is doubly challenging in an environment like that.
    • by mysidia ( 191772 )

      The reason Ebola is spreading in Africa is because of poverty and customs. In some places the doctors have run out of gloves.

      No. These are contributing factors. There is no proof that poverty and customers are the only reason for Ebola spread.

  • by ShaunC ( 203807 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @01:54PM (#48113601)

    "Ebola is scary. It's a deadly disease. But we know how to stop it."

    Full stop, that's it. Quit worrying. For better or for worse, the United States is not eastern Africa. We cannot and will not have a massive epidemic here. A coworker of mine died from H1N1 "swine flu" a few years back. RIP Dusty. Swine flu was a valid health concern, it was something to be alarmed about and take extraordinary precautions against. Ebola is not.

    Media's doing what media does, hyping and scaring to rake in eyeballs and sell their advertisements.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Talderas ( 1212466 )

      The virus hasn't gained any sort of foothold or presence in the US but that doesn't mean vigilance isn't warranted to prevent it from entering the country. The problem is that ebola shares many of the traits of influenza that we can see how problematic ebola could be if it got into the US. They have similar transmission vectors and a similar hardiness when it comes to survival outside of a host. We see an infection rate of 12.5% annually with influenza and that's with vaccines. Without modifying behaviors w

    • Probably the single most useful thing the government could do is to shut down CNN. Yes, it would be terribly illegal but hell, never let a crisis go to waste.

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by jandrese ( 485 )
        And send everyone over to the calm and collected voices of Fox News or AM Talk Radio?
    • by Wycliffe ( 116160 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @02:23PM (#48113923) Homepage

      I'm sorry about your friend but ebola scares me ALOT more than the swine flu, h1n1, or sars.
      Shutting down airports for sars was probably a bit of an overkill. Yes, sars is contagious but
      it's also highly survivable. My guess is that your friend was already compromised in some
      way whether it was extremely old, extremely young, weak immune system, etc...
      Until we have an effective cure for ebola (80% survival rate or better), then it's much better
      to be overly cautious with ebola. Can you imagine what would happen if this made it to
      an elementary school where hundreds of kids are in close contact? Give me sars any day.

    • There are rational arguments to advance in regard to "don't worry", and we geeks here can "handle the truth."

      When someone is trying to tell me they don't want to discuss this any further and this is the end of the conversation, that is when I really start to worry.

  • by sasparillascott ( 1267058 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @01:56PM (#48113623)
    Heard an expert on infectious diseases interviewed the other day and they said the temperature taking of passengers was a joke as Ebola victims don't show a temperature until many, many days after they've been infected (i.e. it would not have caught the guy who recently died in Dallas from Ebola because he didn't have a fever when he came in). It just gives the appearance the govt is in control somehow, when they really aren't.

    Definitely can't trust the government is saying regarding the disease if/once it gets established in the U.S., as preventing panic is the highest priority. The disease expert did say the industry and Feds were working night and day to get a blood test created and available and said they were probably a month or so away from that (if things continued moving along).
    • by Ralph Wiggam ( 22354 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @02:11PM (#48113779) Homepage

      Ebola victims don't show a temperature until many, many days after they've been infected

      But people aren't contagious until after they show symptoms, e.g. fever. Taking people's temperature is a perfectly valid measure.

      Maybe you should get some facts to go along with your strong opinions.

      • by 0123456 ( 636235 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @02:15PM (#48113819)

        If they're contagious when they get off the plane, you're in a buttload of hurt. Now you have to find everyone else who was on the plane and monitor them for symptoms, because some are now infected too.

        The only way this can possibly work is to prevent them from boarding the plane.

      • Further, no screening protocol short of a full on two week quarantine will catch everybody. Given the less than terrible procreative habits of Ebola, cutting down on the disease burden is a useful epidemiological tool.

    • "The SARS outbreak cost the world more than $40 billion, but it wasn't to control the outbreak," says Frieden. "Those were costs from unnecessary and ineffective travel restrictions and trade changes that could have been avoided."

      This isn't SARS. The death toll is already 5x that of SARS.

    • Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)

      by Greyfox ( 87712 )
      They should be doing that anyway! If you're riddled with flu and oozing mucus out of every orifice, I don't want to get on a plane with you! Apparently we can't expect our fellow passengers to be considerate. Hell, I've read of two or three incidences in the last year where some fucker got on a plane with tuberculosis! Everyone has to get a full body scan at the airport anyway, so they may as well take your temperature. If you're sick, they could pull you out of the line, wrap you in cellophane and chuck yo
      • It used to be that not only has it been hard to cancel or reschedule a trip without eating the cost, it is hard to get a medical excuse. Heck, at a doctor visit for another matter, I was given a handful of prescription anti-histamine so I could go on a trip with a serious cold. Doctors "tough it out" and go all kinds of places with colds (or worse -- there are all kinds of upper respiratory stuff with all profiles of sore throats, phlegm, and fevers).

        Or at least that used to be the system until SARS/H1N

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 10, 2014 @01:59PM (#48113653)

    Ebola is worse than the government says and this Ebola epidemic is all Obama's fault. If we only elected Romney and stuck with libertarian principles of government this Ebola outbreak would have never started to begin with.

  • Ebola has already gone from outbreaks in communities to outbreaks that threaten whole countries.

    It's on the verge of repeating the process, but now at a global, not country or community level. So the question is, will it develop enough of a reservoir internationally to repeat its' performance, this time around? We simply don't know - and we won't know until we either beat it or lose to it.

    To compound the problem, the right solution to this outbreak may not be the right solution to the next one, but w

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by ktappe ( 747125 )
      • No matter how you look at it, we're all in trouble.

      More fear mongering. I'm looking at it from a perspective where we're not in trouble at all. Are you planning on drinking fluids from a sick person? No? Neither am I. So please lose the "we're all gonna die" attitude.

      • The aid workers who picked it up despite taking precautions will sure be comforted by your sentiment.

        Even in modern hospitals, disease outbreaks happen despite precautions.

    • by Alomex ( 148003 )

      Ebola has already gone from outbreaks in communities to outbreaks that threaten whole countries.

      No it hasn't. Liberia which is one of the worst affected areas has reported 4,000 cases. Population is 4.3 million.

      No matter how you look at it, we're all in trouble.

      The sky is falling, the sky is falling.

      • by jandrese ( 485 )
        The glut of cases in Liberia are mostly thanks to poor education and unfortunate burial traditions too. In the western developed world there's basically no chance of catching Ebola at the moment. If you know someone who just came back from East Africa then you have a small reason to be concerned, at least for a couple of weeks, but beyond that you can't catch Ebola because there is no Ebola to catch.
  • They're doing everything they can to scare you shitless!
  • by Jim Sadler ( 3430529 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @02:14PM (#48113815)
    Imagine a suicide bomber type of person deliberately exposing themselves to Ebola and traveling to a place that he wishes to attack. Then making it a point to shake hands with a lot of people in multiple areas. But even more likely is the idea that suggesting such a plan could be placed into action would shut down economies in cities all over the world. After all, how many people will eat at a fast food joint or attend a ball game if Ebola is known to be in an area. We suufer throm the very large system vulnerability in that our society is so large and so complex that there are just so many ways we can come to harm.
    • Then making it a point to shake hands with a lot of people in multiple areas.

      That's fine. You won't catch ebola just by shaking their hand. You have to come into contact with their bodily fluids.

      • If someone wanted to deliberately spread the disease they should be pissing, coughing, and spitting on just about everything. Do this to people's car door handles, door knobs, trash cans, doors in restaurants, the floor in public places, railings on escalators, the conveyor belt in a grocery store, etc. and watch it spread like wild fire.

        I mean if terrorists can recruit people to become suicide bombers why not get someone to infect themselves with Ebola, board a plane when showing no signs and fly to some
        • Terrorists actually tried this in 1984 with salmonella. [wikipedia.org]

          What essentially consisted of a cult moved to this rural town in Oregon and tried to get the cult leader voted in. The math didn't pan out, so they tried to give the voters food poisoning right before the election.

          1) Casual contact doesn't work. They did the whole thing with doorknobs and toilets. Didn't work. Your skin in a fantastic shield against this stuff and it dies before infecting you. Or you simply wash your hands.

          2) Infecting the food does wo

        • Someone becoming symptomatic with Ebola isn't going to be feeling physically well enough after 1 day to do anything.

          They're not going to look well enough to get near anybody. This isn't a disease where you have a cough and runny nose for a long time. This is a disease where after a couple of hours you're bleeding internally and will barely be able to move. The time frame of the Texas patient was he went to the hospital, got sent home and then started vomiting blood before he got in the door.

          Which is bad, bu

      • by jandrese ( 485 )
        I'm thinking they would be wiping their nose on their hand first or something. The flaw with this plan is that you have to have someone willing to infect themselves with a horrible disease like Ebola. This is harder than finding regular suicide bombers because Ebola takes a long time to kill you in comparison and the death is so horrible. Also, most people with Ebola are under quarantine, you can can't just walk up and lick them. Then you have to get your Ebola sufferer back to the west before they star
  • Distraction (Score:2, Interesting)

    by HeckRuler ( 1369601 )

    Maybe I'm just jaded, but it feels like the Ebola scare is being hyped because it would be convenient if everyone forgot about ISIS, Ukraine, and how James Clapper should be charged for perjury. [wikipedia.org]

    Don't get me wrong. It's a terrible thing, and a risk to the USA. But it's not that big of a risk. And there are more important things that should be vieing for prime-time on the news reels.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 10, 2014 @02:16PM (#48113841)

    Finally, my strategy of spending all my time alone at my computer, having no close contact with other people is starting to pay off.

    Once everyone else has died off from ebola, the geeks, nerds, and dorks shall inherit the earth.

  • Am I the only one? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by JohnFen ( 1641097 )

    Am I the only one who isn't even slightly scared about ebola? It isn't transmitted through the air or casual contact, so its' pretty easy to avoid. What is there to be scared of?

  • The CDC isn't controlling how scared you are. They are actually being honest about how dangerous this disease is, and what we can do to stop it. The worst you can say (and the worst the article actually says) is that they're trying to control the tone of their own messaging.

    If the CDC were actually controlling how scared people are, then I wouldn't keep having friends freaking out like it's the end of the Mayan calendar.
  • Magic Doesn't Help (Score:5, Insightful)

    by hedgemage ( 934558 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @02:20PM (#48113881)
    People are the same the world over.
    In many communities where Ebola is running rampant, superstition, and a belief in shamanistic or animistic magic are helping spread the disease and prevent proper care.
    And here in the US, I've seen a well-shared Facebook link to a 'natural health' site that tells you how you can get Ebola from ATM keypads and doorknobs, but you can protect yourself via essential oils and the immune system boosting properties of silver! No need for autism creating vaccines!
    I'm so glad I don't live in a place where people think magic potions and mystic talismans will ward off disease!
    • I was listening to someone on the radio saying that some cultures have developed superstitions that may have a positive effect though. I can't remember the word he used, but there is a superstition that puts family disputes on hold, puts someone who has survived infection in the past in charge of caring for the sick, limits sex, there were some special eating practices etc. Many of these things sound helpful even if they are not backed by clinical trials.

      This can't be the first time Africa has seen outbreak

  • by Lucas123 ( 935744 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @02:22PM (#48113907) Homepage
    It seems to me the best way (every time) to alleviate fear is by spreading truth. The CDC should set itself the task of disseminating as much information about Ebola and how it's spread as possible.
    • I'm in favor of the CDC disseminating as much information as possible. I'm against the media spreading "OMG we're all going to diiie" type stories, as they often do with diseases.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    A plane from Liberia arrives at JFK. When entering the country, agents are asking questions about whether the traveller has been in areas where Ebola has been present, have they been exposed, do they know anyone that was exposed, how are they feeling, etc. Finally they non-invasively check the traveller for fever. Ok.....so let's say a plane holds 200 people. The first 121 people off the plane all answer the questions properly, and test negative for fever. Out they go into the US. Traveller 122 has a

  • Frieden and other officials say such a move would be counterproductive, citing lessons learned from the SARS outbreak a decade ago. "The SARS outbreak cost the world more than $40 billion, but it wasn't to control the outbreak," says Frieden. "Those were costs from unnecessary and ineffective travel restrictions and trade changes that could have been avoided."

    Unnecessary and ineffective travel restrictions? Have these guys been to an airport recently?

    The government doesn't give squat about unnecessary and ineffective policies. It will be decades before we can get back to reasonable airport security. A waste and burden on all Americans, helping to keep the economy down (viz. international tourism) with no end in sight.

    If the government believes that people will feel safer with more restrictions, then that's what will happen. Hell, even if that weren't the case the government will still do it because they can say that it's to keep people safer.

    This will just be another excuse for draconian policies. Trading more freedoms for more safety, because "safety at any cost" lets them reform the nation.

  • The CDC cares about controlling the disease. They couldn't care less about people being scared except when panicky people starting interfering with controlling the disease.

    The Department of Homeland Security is in charge of fear.

  • by Cro Magnon ( 467622 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @02:39PM (#48114111) Homepage Journal

    I suspect the TSA won't be as quick to do anal probes now the Ebola is a factor.

  • A few homeless people who hang out in the NYC subways all day catch it and see how controlled it is. Total nightmare scenario, and far from unrealistic. Why bother with suicide bombers when all you have to do is get a half dozen people infected and send them on the next airplanes to who knows where with instructions to maximize exposure. They don't even need to be successful and you'll see travel restrictions that dwarf after 9/11. Just what the world economy doesn't need right now.
  • by Eravnrekaree ( 467752 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @02:49PM (#48114215)

    The fact is a travel ban would not affect the ability for aid to reach the countries where you have an epidemic, quite the opposite. The travel ban that would be implemented would be designed to stop people from leaving the hotzone countries who are not involved with any sort of medical or aid activities relating to control of the epidemic. It would not affect medical experts or aid officials from reaching the hotzone countries. The law would be designed to stop exactly the kind of people as Duncan who was coming to the US for personal reasons. All other travel except those experts and workers involved with control of the epidemic would be banned. By putting in such a ban, we are making the effort to contain the virus and the job of the CDC and WHO much easier by increasing the chance that the virus will not spread beyond the areas where it is currently found, thus allowing resources to be more focused on those particular regions, so that the CDC and WHO is not dealing with an ever increasing list of territory that is affected and so that it does not turn into a whack a mole game.

    Restricting travel to just the experts and authorities would bring the level of travel to a relative trickle. This would make it much easier to carefully vet and examine the relatively few experts who might leave the hotzone countries, if necessary, through a isolation period and an intensive medical examination which is much more involved than what is done at an airport gate. So it makes the relative trickle of travel much easier to control and regulate and to assure that anyone crossing is not infected.

    The problem with trying to detect the disease at a higher levels of travel where travel is not being limited to just experts and authorities, is the volume is higher and its not as easy to do the more intensive examination. Many everyday would-be travellers will lie on any questionaire, if they are experiencing any symptoms. The temperature symptoms can be covered up and suppressed with tylenol as well. There is a clear incentive for Ebola infected individuals to come to the USA, now that a Liberian has already done so and recieved free medical treatment, and many will lie, fake and cover up to do it.

    The CDC knows all of this. That is why the CDC is lying through their teeth. The CDC is knowingly exposing Americans to increased danger from Ebola and when it is not necessary to do so. This is criminal negligence. The american people are being lied to.

    Another fact is we have numerous experts who admit that we cannot take it for granted the virus is not easy to pass. There is a concern the virus may be airborne, and the more widely the virus would become geographically dispersed, the possibility of an airborne mutation increases. The fact that the USA has an advanced medical system is not an excuse or a reason to allow people to come to the country from areas which have an active outbreak, in fact such statements are the height of arrogance, especially since even our own resources would be taxed to deal with these situations, and as well the long incubation period and the tendancy for some people not to seek medical treatment and instead transmit the virus. The fact is despite all of the medical facility in the US the virus could be transmitted in the public nonetheless. We are dealing with human nature here.

    To say that somehow that its okay to not be worried or to take lightly a very dangerous virus such as this because the US has running water and soap is such an arrogant and simplistic way of thinking, and it almost seems like they are exploiting the ignorance of the public to suggest such a thing. People obviously do not wash their hands every 20 seconds, even in the US, and all it would take is for someone to say come into contact with a bodily fluid say on a subway seat and then transfer that to their mouths via their hand within a period of just a few seconds. This may not be an unlikely scenario, especially with a virus that causes profuse secretions, but even if just one person were to die from such a

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