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originally posted by: soficrow
The prevailing wisdom on Ebola says it kills too efficiently to become a 'real' problem - but this new strain has a 60% fatality rate compared to 90% - symptoms might not appear for up to 3 weeks after exposure - and the virus stays active in survivors' semen (at least) for over 2 months after symptoms appear.
Text URGENT! Ebola crossing into USA!? It's In Atlanta…: youtu.be...
originally posted by: pl3bscheese
a reply to: soficrow
The same source as yours. We have the same figure.
From 12 April 2009 to 10 April 2010, we estimate that approximately 60.8 million cases (range: 43.3-89.3 million), 274,304 hospitalizations (195,086-402,719), and 12,469 deaths (8868-18,306) occurred in the United States due to pH1N1.
originally posted by: soficrow
No. You're saying the US figures are the worldwide ones.
As well, my other source clarified that "A disproportionate number of deaths occurred in Southeast Asia and Africa, where access to prevention and treatment resouhies are more likely to be limited." ...Agreed, the 2009 pandemic was not as horrific as others, but H1N1 was circulating in domestic US hogs since the 1918 pandemic - so many of us already had some immunity.
originally posted by: PurpleDog UK
originally posted by: soficrow
The prevailing wisdom on Ebola says it kills too efficiently to become a 'real' problem - but this new strain has a 60% fatality rate compared to 90% - symptoms might not appear for up to 3 weeks after exposure - and the virus stays active in survivors' semen (at least) for over 2 months after symptoms appear.
May seem like a 'strange' and weird question...... However does contaminated semen pose a risk in vaginal & anal sex or does it include oral sex too....?
Genuine question as there are implications in this if the gestation period is upto 2 months.....
originally posted by: pl3bscheese
originally posted by: soficrow
No. You're saying the US figures are the worldwide ones.
Incorrect. You assumed so.
originally posted by: pl3bscheese
a reply to: ATF1886
There is tens of millions who gained immunity to the "swine flu" over a ten month period, and only 12 thousand who perished.
I'm not sure how that's relevant to anything I said.
Ebola May Have Been Smoldering for Years, Study Says
….A new study of blood samples from people being treated for a serious, viral-like illness in years past in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia suggests some of them could have been infected with Ebola. Now researchers are digging deeper to see if the virus has always been lurking there, just undetected.
…..it would be unlikely for a virus such as Ebola to appear completely out of the blue in a region.
……..Schoepp’s team looked at blood samples taken from 253 people cleared of both Lassa and malaria between 2006 and 2008. …..Nearly 9 percent of the samples that were clear of everything else tested positive for antibodies to Ebola [16] and nearly 4 percent to Marburg [7]. ….[….we could only attribute a possible cause to 28 percent of these samples...]
…..There’s no specific treatment for Ebola, and it’s important to isolate patients and take strict precautions, including the use of gloves and masks, when treating them. [NOTE: Ebola killed 25 out of 28 nurses in a single hospital in Sierra Leone. But none of the 16 cases just identified affected staff?]
…Ebola had only been seen in central Africa and parts of eastern and southern Africa before. ….This (outbreak) is different because it’s crossed borders and it affecting both urban and rural areas.
originally posted by: soficrow
originally posted by: PurpleDog UK
originally posted by: soficrow
The prevailing wisdom on Ebola says it kills too efficiently to become a 'real' problem - but this new strain has a 60% fatality rate compared to 90% - symptoms might not appear for up to 3 weeks after exposure - and the virus stays active in survivors' semen (at least) for over 2 months after symptoms appear.
May seem like a 'strange' and weird question...... However does contaminated semen pose a risk in vaginal & anal sex or does it include oral sex too....?
Genuine question as there are implications in this if the gestation period is upto 2 months.....
I don't have any referenced info - but - if transmission occurs just with skin contact when the infection is active, I'd imagine any route would do for the little buggers.
....Good luck.
...I don't need 'good luck' UNLESS this illness becomes an airborne, bird or insect transmitted problem….then we ALL need good luck..
West Africa Ebola outbreak total tops 1,000
As 67 new Ebola virus disease (EVD) illnesses in Sierra Leone and Liberia pushed the outbreak total to 1,048 cases, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) warned about the risk of virus transmission from wildlife, especially fruit bats.
Along with new infections, 19 more deaths were reported in Sierra Leone and Liberia, raising the fatality count to 632….
….The agency said the communities risk future spillover from species that carry the virus, including fruit bats, some primates, and duikers—small antelopes native to sub-Saharan Africa.
…."… communities need clear advice on the need not to touch dead animals or to sell or eat the meat of any animal that they find already dead."
He added that people in rural communities should also avoid hunting animals that are sick or behaving strangely.
……Another step will be to assess the role of hunting, with an eye toward identifying healthier, more sustainable livestock production options that can provide more protein and income sources, the FAO said.
Million-Dollar Fruit Bat Trade Could Be Spreading Ebola, UN Warns
…Though its hard to know the size of the bushmeat economy, since most consumption and trade is done in the home or outside ordinary markets, researchers estimate it to be worth hundreds of millions of dollars annually.
…“Livelihood and consumer preferences are the main drivers of bushmeat consumption,” wrote researchers at the African Center for Economic Transformation in a recent newsletter, adding that it’s also served as a delicacy in upscale areas, and can be even more expensive than domesticated meat.
….The term “bushmeat” applies to any non-domesticated animal killed in the wild sand sold as food. This can include gorillas, chimpanzee, rats and even fruit bats -- which are especially popular and especially worrisome for health workers.
Since bats can carry the virus without showing signs of the disease, the FAO advised that they should be avoided altogether.
Human rights abuses in treating Ebola virus patients.
….there are reports of malnutrition and discrimination in treating the patients, not giving them the medical care they should be receiving.
A member of Liberia's Human Rights Protection Forum said there are not enough human rights protections for Ebola patients, "Do you expect a suspected Ebola patient, said to be passing wastes, to live without food, medicine, and even company that could give that person hope and a sense of belonging?"
originally posted by: soficrow
March, MSF insisted the epidemic was out of control and they couldn't handle the situation. After which the WHO started helping out - but by that time, it was too late. Now, West Africa's Ebola epidemic is the biggest on record with almost 1000 cases and 613 deaths in 3 countries
Even so, authorities still insist Ebola is unlikely to spread out of Africa.
Liberian man in Nigeria's Lagos being tested for Ebola
A Liberian man in his 40s is being tested for the deadly Ebola virus in Nigeria's commercial capital of Lagos, a megacity of 21 million people, the Lagos State Health Ministry said on Thursday.
Ebola has killed 632 people across Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone since an outbreak began in February, straining a string of weak health systems despite international help.
This would be the first recorded case of one of the world's deadliest diseases in Nigeria, Africa's biggest economy and most populous nation with 170 million people.
Liberian man in Nigeria's Lagos being tested for Ebola
LAGOS (Reuters) - A Liberian man in his 40s is being tested for the deadly Ebola virus in Nigeria's commercial capital of Lagos, a megacity of 21 million people, the Lagos State Health Ministry said on Thursday.
Ebola has killed 632 people across Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone since an outbreak began in February, straining a string of weak health systems despite international help.
This would be the first recorded case of one of the world's deadliest diseases in Nigeria, Africa's biggest economy and most populous nation, with 170 million people and some of Africa's least adequate health infrastructure.
Doctor leading Ebola treatment in Sierra Leone comes down with deadly disease
Patrick Sawyer, Lagos' First Suspected Ebola Victim, is Dead
FrontPageAfrica has been informed that Mr. Patrick Sawyer, a WASH consultant at the Ministry of Finance, who had been quarantined since falling ill after arriving in the Nigerian state of Lagos for a conference last Sunday, has died.
A consultant at the Ministry of Finance has become the first suspected case of Ebola reported in the Nigerian state of Lagos since the outbreak surfaced in Liberia this year. The Liberian was a member of a Liberian delegation attending a conference in Lagos when he reportedly began exhibiting symptoms of the deadly virus.
The man suspected of the deadly virus reportedly came in contact with the disease when caring for his sister who died as a result of the deadly virus at the St. Joseph Catholic Hospital in Monrovia about three weeks ago. He is said to have also gone after his dead sister's husband who is said to have run away after the woman's death.
The search is on for the passengers and crew who may have been on the same flights as Patrick Sawyer, a man who died in Nigeria after contracting the deadly Ebola virus.
….there is now grave concern that Sawyer may have exposed multiple sets of plane passengers and crew to the disease (Ebola), who then flew on to other places.
Ebola: Why The World Should Fear Its Spread To Lagos
Before, Ebola was limited to the rural western African countries Liberia, Guinea, and Sierra Leone. What makes Sawyer's case scary is that he entered Lagos, one of the most densely populated cities in the world, with a confirmed Ebola infection.
Even scarier is the fact that Lagos is a major portal for international travel. Thus, if the virus is not immediately contained, it could spread globally.
As of now, Nigeria's efforts to contain the Ebola virus seem futile. ….
Ebola outbreak: More than doctors needed to contain West Africa's unprecedented crisis
Quebec doctor Marc Forget, who has been on the front lines of the epidemic in Guinea for seven weeks, told CBC News that past Ebola outbreaks were contained quite quickly with the intervention of international groups such as Doctors Without Borders working in conjunction with a country's ministry of health.
This time, he says, "the magnitude of the disease is unprecedented," and a stronger response is required, both in resources and personnel — including water, sanitation and logistics specialists, as well as medical staff.