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Medicine The Military United States

Obama Presses Leaders To Speed Ebola Response 221

mdsolar writes with the latest plan from the U.S. government to fight the Ebola epidemic in West Africa, and a call for more help from other nations by the President. President Obama on Tuesday challenged world powers to accelerate the global response to the Ebola outbreak that is ravaging West Africa, warning that unless health care workers, medical equipment and treatment centers were swiftly deployed, the disease could take hundreds of thousands of lives. "This epidemic is going to get worse before it gets better," Mr. Obama said here at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, where he met with doctors who had just returned from West Africa. The world, he said, "has the responsibility to act, to step up and to do more. The United States intends to do more." Even as the president announced a major American deployment to Liberia and Senegal of medicine, equipment and 3,000 military personnel, global health officials said that time was running out and that they had weeks, not months, to act. They said that although the American contribution was on a scale large enough to make a difference, a coordinated assault in Africa from other Western powers was essential to bringing the virus under control.
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Obama Presses Leaders To Speed Ebola Response

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  • by BringsApples ( 3418089 ) on Wednesday September 17, 2014 @03:17PM (#47930385)
    FTFA:

    U.S. lawmakers called for a government-funded "war" to contain West Africa's deadly Ebola epidemic...
    "We need to declare a war on Ebola," Senator Jerry Moran, a Kansas Republican, said...

    It's good to see that word in a context that we can all agree on.

  • by kruach aum ( 1934852 ) on Wednesday September 17, 2014 @03:19PM (#47930407)

    When the populace actively attack medical workers, violently disrupt quarantines, and engage in ebola spreading funerary customs? 3000 soldiers seems hardly enough to combat that level of ignorance of how disease transmission works.

    • by Charliemopps ( 1157495 ) on Wednesday September 17, 2014 @03:49PM (#47930763)

      When the populace actively attack medical workers, violently disrupt quarantines, and engage in ebola spreading funerary customs? 3000 soldiers seems hardly enough to combat that level of ignorance of how disease transmission works.

      When medical workers take your relatives away, lock them into camps where the litteraly die from either the disease or starvation, then refuse to let you burrie your relatives... you might react rather violently when they came for you as well.

      Logically we in the west can think about this and say that all of those things were required to control the outbreak. But now think of it from the perspective of a villager that has never set foot in a school and the only news they get is via word of mouth and text message.

      • by kruach aum ( 1934852 ) on Wednesday September 17, 2014 @03:54PM (#47930821)

        I'm not sure what you're trying to say here. Considering the situation from the perspective of someone who is ignorant doesn't remove the ignorance from their point of view. In fact, it makes it more obvious. Their ignorance explains their behavior, and it also explains why this effort to stem the tide will probably be ineffective.

        • Because you're clearly using it in a disparagingly. They're as learned as can be expected given their situation. Medical staff need to take that into account and deal with them appropriately. If my dentist told me to fix tooth he was going to drill a hole in my head, then tried to strap me to a chair forcibly, punching him in the face would not be an over reaction. If I had a medical degree, you could argue, I'd have know that what he said was an appropriate remedy, but that doesn't negate his responsibly a

          • The disparagement is all in your mind. Ignorance is usually used disparagingly, but I didn't do so here. I simply used the word that was most appropriate to the situation: these people are ignorant of certain information about the world, and that informs their behavior. To stop that behavior, they should be educated, not invaded by soldiers.

            Here is something that is meant disparagingly: stop projecting your insecurities and personal biases onto the world and try to--actually--consider the idea that not ever

          • if you had a medical degree then you would be in the same boat as me because dentists are not medical doctors.
        • Worse is that it makes the rational move from the perspective of the non-ignorant to either quarantine the entire country and let the disease run its course or to take other measures to cauterize it if the risk of it spilling outside of a quarantined area seems highly probable.

          It might come down to putting the entire region on lock-down and shooting anyone who tries to leave.
          • considering that a military quarantine zone has never proven effective, that would seem to be the ideal strategy of the ignorant such as yourself.
    • Actually, 300,000 soldiers seems hardly enough to eliminate ebola-spreading funeral customs. It would allow protection of medical workers and enforce some quarantines.

  • by Scottingham ( 2036128 ) on Wednesday September 17, 2014 @03:31PM (#47930563)
    This pandemic is almost certainly worse than it seems. For every reported case there are now likely a dozen unreported.

    I have a feeling that all this effort from the US and others is to make the folks back home feel safer in that we are 'doing something'. In all likelihood the only thing that'll stop the spread at this point is stricter quarantine around the infected countries(!). Refugees would need to go into quarantine to make sure they are not carrying the disease.

    This disease, and the corresponding collapse of infrastructure, will likely kill hundreds of thousands of people before its over.

    I hope I'm wrong.
    • will likely kill hundreds of thousands of people before its over.

      What thought process did you use to gauge your order of magnitude there? I'm generally distrustful of largish numbers thrown out in an armchair analysis.

      Because you can just as easily say "millions" or "thousands" as you can "hundreds of thousands". What makes that number more right?

      • That's the World Health Organization's current estimate of fatalities if more containment is not done immediately.

        They're not exactly "armchair".

        • Okay, and that'd be perfectly reasonable, if there was any way I was supposed to understand that source for the figures.

          To put it another way, how was I supposed to know it wasn't armchair in the context of information available in this thread?

          • Fair enough. Obama made that claim, with a citation, in his speech.

          • by david_bonn ( 259998 ) <(moc.cam) (ta) (nnobdivad)> on Wednesday September 17, 2014 @06:24PM (#47932229) Homepage Journal

            Best article I've found on this topic (they are estimating between 77000 and 278000 cases by the end of the year):

            http://www.eurosurveillance.or... [eurosurveillance.org]

            And the wikipedia page on the outbreak is also quite good:

            http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E... [wikipedia.org]

            This is an extremely scary situation. We have a 77% fatal virus with the caseload doubling roughly every three weeks. We might get lucky and this might burn itself out before it goes airborne or global some other way. Then again we might not.

            My concern is what we are sending to Africa is probably not going to be nearly enough. And by the time it all gets there we might be looking at 10000 or 30000 cases, not the few thousand we have today. I also agree that it is very likely that the official figures substantially understate the number of infected.

            • Generally speaking, the chance of it going airborne is about as likely as you getting hit by lightning tomorrow. Changing how it spreads is generally really, really, hard for any virus - it would have to morph into a completely different family of viruses, at which point it would no longer be Ebola.

              The bigger issues is that this is going to set those countries back a few decades or more in their development. Which means lots of instability in the region, which tends to result in bad things happening (wa
              • I would agree with you except that in the past Ebola has became airborne amongst monkeys and amongst pigs, of all things. That makes me suspect that it could happen in people, too.

                Having ebola become airborne is probably a lot less likely than any one person being struck by lightning tomorrow. Probably those odds (ballpark) are around one in a billion for any one person to be struck by lightning. But each time ebola is transmitted to another host there are literally trillions of reproductive events that

      • The fact that these cities contain millions of people in deplorable conditions before Ebola even touched it.

        The symptoms include severe diarrhea and vomiting. There is little to no sewage system in these cities. Where do you think it's all going?
      • I also didn't say "millions" because I desperately hope it not to be true, but based on where this is happening it isn't impossible.
    • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

      I am not sure where some of your numbers are coming from but you are correct about one thing. There are likely *many* unreported cases out there.

      I hope we are not putting our service people into harms way against an enemy that they are not trained or equipped to fight; just to look like we are 'doing something'.

    • by Charliemopps ( 1157495 ) on Wednesday September 17, 2014 @04:00PM (#47930905)

      Don't fall for the media frenzy. Keep in mind they are making a lot of money off of all your panicked clicks.

      This is certainly a tragedy for Africa. Just like the last 5 Ebola outbreaks were. This one's bigger but that mostly appears to be due to changes in culture and population than any change in the disease. But, by and large, Ebola is hard to transmit. It's prevalent in Africa because of poor sanitation. I've been to Africa (not this region, but others) The sanitation there is awful and even I, being careful, pretty much caught everything under the sun. There is no clean water to wash with. I bought bottled water and washed with that... didn't matter. The food is handled by dozens of people before you get it and there's no way to wash that either. The people that handled it clearly couldn't wash up properly either.

      In regards to the medical facilities... they are woefully understaffed, under trained and short on equipment. The biggest difference the United States could make is to send over more of all of these. If the troops were sending are of this nature, it will certainly do a lot of good.

      As far as a threat to us in the west though? No... short of it going airborne which, despite the soulless talking heads on TV are saying, is extremely unlikely. And if it were already airborne, we'd all already have it. Luckily, ultra deadly diseases like this burn out very quickly. It's hard to be virulent and deadly at the same time. The dead aren't that great at walking around and infecting people.

      • Nope. Go read this [vanityfair.com] fine article.

        It is quite a bit more complex.

      • short of it going airborne which ... is extremely unlikely. And if it were already airborne, we'd all already have it.

        To start, let's ignore the first part of your statement and focus on the second part. If the disease is airborne, we're looking at an immediate 60-75% reduction in the world's population within 3-6 months. It'd be very, very bad. This is where all the fearmongering is coming from.

        Now, let's look at the first part. As far as we know, the virus has not evolved significantly since its first discovery in the 70's. The virus has also been observed to mutate fairly slowly. This is good news. In addition, there ar

      • Ebola has nothing to do with sanitation.
        The virus is killed pretty quickly outside of the human body.
        Outbreaks nearly always start by eating infected animals (often immune or at least resistant animals, like flying fox/fruit bats)

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday September 17, 2014 @03:55PM (#47930827)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 17, 2014 @05:43PM (#47931883)

      ...

      Dubya: What do you mean western union kicks ass their commercials are funny.

      ...

      Get over your "blame BOOOSH!!!!" childishness, you ignorant twerp.

      Eugene Robinson: George W. Bush’s greatest legacy — his battle against AIDS [washingtonpost.com]

      This is a moment for all Americans to be proud of the best thing George W. Bush did as president: launching an initiative to combat AIDS in Africa that has saved millions of lives.

      All week, more than 20,000 delegates from around the world have been attending the 19th International AIDS Conference here in Washington. They look like any other group of conventioneers, laden with satchels and garlanded with name tags. But some of these men and women would be dead if not for Bush’s foresight and compassion.

      Those are not words I frequently use to describe Bush or his presidency. But credit and praise must be given where they are due, and Bush’s accomplishment — the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, or PEPFAR — deserves accolades. It is a reminder that the United States can still be both great and good.

      When the Bush administration inaugurated the program in 2003, fewer than 50,000 HIV-infected people on the African continent were receiving the antiretroviral drugs that keep the virus in check and halt the progression toward full-blown AIDS. By the time Bush left office, the number had increased to nearly 2 million. Today, the United States is directly supporting antiretroviral treatment for more than 4 million men, women and children worldwide, primarily in Africa.

      ...

      Eugene Robinson and the Washington Post are hardly Bush's greatest supporters. Yet I bet you never even heard of what Bush did for Africa and AIDS, have you? Yet you felt qualified to make fun of what Bush knew about Africa. So that makes "childishness" and "ignorant twerp" quite accurate, aren't they? How about "arrogant", too, to go along with "ignorant"? It fits.

      Meanwhile, Obama's poll numbers are worse 6 years into his Presidency than Bush's numbers 6 years in. Yeah, we know, all Obama's problems are because of "BOOOOSH!!!!".

      Fucking baby.

    • Re:so the story goes (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Tailhook ( 98486 ) on Wednesday September 17, 2014 @05:51PM (#47931951)

      From UT Austin: On the Cusp of an Ebola Vaccine [utexas.edu]

      Bush built that lab [nytimes.com] (Galveston National Laboratory) as part of the $5 billion Project Bioshield Act of 2004, one of two, the other being at Boston University Medical Center. These are the places where actual research [utmb.edu] on ebola, dengue, hemorrhagic fever, SARS and others has been happening for years while you perfected your Bush derangement syndrome narrative.

      Ass monkey.

  • Granted, it won't be that fast unless it mutates in such a way that it can be spread through the air. If it does that, then growth quite a bit faster than exponential is possible.

  • Tea Party would have a field day with a title like that. :)

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