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Medicine

NY Doctor Recently Back From West Africa Tests Positive For Ebola 372

An anonymous reader writes An emergency room doctor who recently returned to the city after treating Ebola patients in West Africa has tested positive for the virus, Mayor Bill de Blasio said. It's the first case in the city and the fourth in the nation. From the article: "The doctor, identified as Craig Spencer, 33, came back from treating Ebola patients in Guinea about 10 days ago, and developed a fever, nausea, pain and fatigue Wednesday night. The physician, employed at New York's Columbia Presbyterian Hospital, has been in isolation at Bellevue Hospital in Manhattan since Thursday morning, the official said."
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NY Doctor Recently Back From West Africa Tests Positive For Ebola

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 24, 2014 @12:37AM (#48218299)

    I saw the news about the poor doctor in NYC. Yikes, before I draw any conclusions, do we have any pieces by Bennett Haselton on the Ebola outbreak or diseases in general? I'd like to see what his insight is first. He's a frequent contributor.

    • by vux984 ( 928602 ) on Friday October 24, 2014 @01:50AM (#48218627)

      do we have any pieces by Bennett Haselton on the Ebola outbreak or diseases in general?

      Indeed, perhaps he could present us with 'A Modest Proposal' that came to him whilst reading the messages in his alphabits.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      That "poor" doctor was an irresponsible ass. He was in an area know to have a huge ebola outbreak and flew back to the US in close proximity to others, rode around in cramped subways and dined at restaurants without getting checked out. And it's not like he's some clueless rube, he's a fucking doctor and he attempted to murder many people. I hope he dies.

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Let me quote the article for you:
        "He had been checking his temperature twice a day."
        "Doctors Without Borders confirmed that the physician recently returned from West Africa and was "engaged in regular health monitoring.""

        The dude, being a doctor and all, monitored his temperature and most likely checked himself in to the hospital once he developed symptoms.
        It has been stated time and time again, that it's virtually impossible to contract the disease from someone that exhibits no symptoms.

        • by butchersong ( 1222796 ) on Friday October 24, 2014 @09:45AM (#48220219)
          I wish people wouldn't keep saying this. It is not virtually impossible to catch before someone becomes symptomatic. From what I gather it is only that the virual load of the individual is much much higher in later stages. The virus is still very more often than not for example detectable in sweat before symptoms set it. It's like telling someone that is allergic to bees not to worry about a few flying around in the bus with them because it's so unlikely they will be stung.. it is a perfectly reasonable concern no matter now many statistics you could cite about how often a bee encounter results in a sting.
        • So we are now living in a Lewis Carroll world: "I have said it thrice: What I tell you three times is true."

          If indeed there was no risk to anyone until the good doctor decided he was beginning to show symptoms, then why is so much money (and other, more valuable than money, resources) being used to trace down all who might have had contact with him? It would seem that the authorities are not as confident about the risks of transmission during the silent incubation period as they would want the public to believe.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 24, 2014 @12:41AM (#48218317)

    Kent Brockman: Professor, without knowing precisely what the danger is, would you say it's time for our viewers to crack each other's heads open and feast on the goo inside?

    Professor: Yes I would, Kent.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 24, 2014 @12:53AM (#48218365)

    My friend works at Bellevue, my other friend took the 1 train (train the doctor took to go bowling last night while experiencing "sick symptoms") the same night he did and I take the 1 train every day to and friend work.

    There are people who live and are stuck in Africa who have a millions times more the reason to be concerned than I am, I understand this.
    What I don't agree with are the people who are using things like Malaria and HIV statistics to try and show how the media is playing up this issue.

    Both are less serious and more controllable diseases with much bigger sample sizes. As/if more Ebola cases arise, the contractions will increase exponentially and they'll stop comparing this to "more serious diseases".

    What I don't understand is why they are letting doctors who work on Ebola patients back into teh country without being screened?

    There are people arguing to shut down all travel from West Africa, even if that's too much in your opinion, at least screen these doctors.

    Customs: What was your reason for leaving the country?
    Doctor: I was treating patients with Ebola.
    Customs: Due to national security, we can not let you into the country until you've been tested and cleared.
    Doctor: But I have plans to go bowling in Brooklyn in about week!
    Customs: You're retarded.

    Chances are, the conversation wouldn't happen like that and the doctor would be understanding of the situation.
    So why aren't we just doing that to begin with?

    • by jklovanc ( 1603149 ) on Friday October 24, 2014 @01:55AM (#48218645)

      They are screening and putting every returning health care professional on a health watch. The issue is that the incubation period for ebola can be up to 21 days. The doctor in question arrived at John F. Kennedy Airport on October 17 with no symptoms. Symptoms did not show up until this morning when the doctor followed protocol and was hospitalized. The virus may not even have shown up in his blood on October 17. Remember that infection tests look for antibodies not the virus itself. If the virus had not attacked yet there would be no anybodies.

      • One thing that seems very relevant, but never discussed: Why comes first, symptoms, or contagiousness?

        If a person isn't contagious until well after showing symptoms, I can kind of see the current lax screening as being reasonable.

        But otherwise, it seems inexcusable.

    • My friend works at Bellevue, my other friend took the 1 train (train the doctor took to go bowling last night while experiencing "sick symptoms") the same night he did and I take the 1 train every day to and friend work.

      It's bad in Africa because they have terrible heathcare. Instead of seeking medical care people get care from friends and family who don't know what they're doing, thus they become infected themselves and the disease spreads.

      This guy having spread the disease on the train is possible, but very unlikely.

      There are people arguing to shut down all travel from West Africa, even if that's too much in your opinion, at least screen these doctors.

      They are screened but the virus has an incubation period.

      There are people arguing to shut down all travel from West Africa, even if that's too much in your opinion, at least screen these doctors.

      Customs: What was your reason for leaving the country?
      Doctor: I was treating patients with Ebola.
      Customs: Due to national security, we can not let you into the country until you've been tested and cleared.
      Doctor: But I have plans to go bowling in Brooklyn in about week!
      Customs: You're retarded.

      A travel ban is a terrible idea, people will still travel from West Africa but they'll do it from other countries so we won't know to track them. A 3 w

    • by AK Marc ( 707885 )

      Chances are, the conversation wouldn't happen like that

      Mainly because the USA has signed treaties that make it illegal to refuse entry to a citizen.

      That, and when you make a self-report of risk be a metric for spreading the risk, you increase the risk and the amount of lying. But you don't help anyone. So your plan fails for many reasons.

      • by RoLi ( 141856 ) on Friday October 24, 2014 @07:04AM (#48219509)

        Chances are, the conversation wouldn't happen like that

        Mainly because the USA has signed treaties that make it illegal to refuse entry to a citizen.

        That, and when you make a self-report of risk be a metric for spreading the risk, you increase the risk and the amount of lying. But you don't help anyone. So your plan fails for many reasons.

        Wait a minute. The USA ignores treaties left and right and constantly bombs and invades countries because they want to leave the US-dollar as reserve currency. They torture and hold people without trial. They pay millions to destabilize Syria, Ukraine and dozens of other countries.

        But they can't refuse entry because of some treaty with Libera?

        Since when did the USA care about any treaty?

  • by guanxi ( 216397 ) on Friday October 24, 2014 @01:03AM (#48218417)

    1) What is the likelihood of harm?
    2) If harm occurs, what is the cost?
    3) What is the cost of preventing harm, including the opportunity cost?

    And allocate resources accordingly. In this case:

    1) Extremely low. Approx. 3 people in the US have Ebola; all were in West Africa or treated someone already very ill. Nobody else in the US has been infected by these people (again, except someone providing health care to one of them). You are at much greater risk of heart disease, cancer, traffic accidents, hospital error, crime, and probably even lightening strikes and bee stings.

    2) The cost is very high, including a substantial risk of death.

    3) The cost is easily affordable for the US, but the opportunity cost is higher: The United States and the world have limited health care resources. For example, there's a good chance that many of the resources (doctors and money) would save many more lives and better protect US citizens by addressing heart disease (via prevention, treatment, or research) or controlling the outbreak in W. Africa than by responding to public panic.

    I think you'll find that many experts in these fields will say that the panic is the greatest risk, greater than the disease.

    • by RoLi ( 141856 )

      How is suspending flights to Liberia a "high opportunity cost"?

      Is the economy going to turn down because somebody cannot get to Monrovia?

      Gosh, you people are surely crazy.

  • by jklovanc ( 1603149 ) on Friday October 24, 2014 @02:38AM (#48218837)

    The ebola outbreak started on March. In 5 months there have been 10,000 cases in countries known for their low health care and sanitation standards. Considering that in many places the population is very crowded and many cases of infection do not get reported until the symptoms get very bad I bet that every person in infected areas would have been in close proximity with at least one ebola infected person. If ebola was as contagious as some people think don't you think a lot more than 0.045% of the population of those countries would be infected by now?

    What may be a source of the concern is all the pictures of people in suits carrying body bags. This skews perception as those people are in contact with a corpse that has ebola laden excretions all over it. When an ebola victim has just died that is when they are the most contagious.

  • CNN Reports: "A Vectors Without Borders physician back from West Africa tests positive for Ebola at a New York hospital."

  • ...after all, he was just an ignorant shlub that brought Ebola here.

    This dipshit however was a MEDICAL PROFESSIONAL, coming back from TREATING PEOPLE WITH EBOLA who 'felt like crap' for several days (enough so that he was taking his temp regularly) and couldn't apparently be trusted to quarantine himself out of basic precautionary concern. Nope, he had to maintain his urbanite/hipster lifestyle - jogging, taxis, bowling, etc.

    Doc: "DO NO HARM" applies just as much to the millions of people around you, as to

  • by Ronin Developer ( 67677 ) on Friday October 24, 2014 @08:31AM (#48219807)

    Why it's wrong that we don't require a mandatory 21 day quarantine for anyone travelling from these countries if we truly want to stop the virus from ever getting a hold?

    Top it off - this guy went bowling while starting to show symptoms (thus, contagious). Who is going to replace and pay for EVERY bowling ball? What about decontamination of the facility? If I were the owner, I'd be pretty pissed off.

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