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originally posted by: Phage
originally posted by: NoAngel2u
a reply to: Phage
Health care workers that would not have been exposed ,and subsequently exposed others, if Mr Duncan had not been allowed to travel.
How can we prevent people from leaving their own countries? We sure as hell aren't very good at preventing people from entering ours. Stopping air travel from the region will not "stop ebola."
Didn't say it would stop ebola, said it would decrease the chances of someone infected with EBOLA getting here.
He is a rigid minded person that only moves off the dogma in his mind by the public getting on his case.
He has little independent wisdom, original thinking capacity, or just mother wit and logic. Obama is like a flimsy piece of paper in the wind he only gets blown from one thought to the next without EVER intuiting any profound thought. One the other hand when the obvious comes about such as to ban people from the Ebola smitten countries he seems to lose common sense.
There may not be many, but there was enough flocking to cause an outbreak here.
A disease outbreak is the occurrence of cases of disease in excess of what would normally be expected in a defined community, geographical area or season. An outbreak may occur in a restricted geographical area, or may extend over several countries. It may last for a few days or weeks, or for several years.
A single case of a communicable disease long absent from a population, or caused by an agent (e.g. bacterium or virus) not previously recognized in that community or area, or the emergence of a previously unknown disease, may also constitute an outbreak and should be reported and investigated.
originally posted by: Phage
Interesting though, don't you think. No one else has any symptoms, even those who were living with him.
The standard is 42 days with no new cases. The clock (re)started with the nurses, four days ago.
The clock's not even ticking yet on the 42 days in America, since there are still positive cases.
Recent studies conducted in West Africa have demonstrated that 95% of confirmed cases have an incubation period in the range of 1 to 21 days; 98% have an incubation period that falls within the 1 to 42 day interval. WHO is therefore confident that detection of no new cases, with active surveillance in place, throughout this 42-day period means that an Ebola outbreak is indeed over.
originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: ikonoklast
The standard is 42 days with no new cases. The clock (re)started with the nurses, four days ago.
The clock's not even ticking yet on the 42 days in America, since there are still positive cases.
Recent studies conducted in West Africa have demonstrated that 95% of confirmed cases have an incubation period in the range of 1 to 21 days; 98% have an incubation period that falls within the 1 to 42 day interval. WHO is therefore confident that detection of no new cases, with active surveillance in place, throughout this 42-day period means that an Ebola outbreak is indeed over.
www.who.int...
The period of 42 days, with active case-finding in place, is twice the maximum incubation period for Ebola virus disease...
According to WHO recommendations, health care workers who have attended patients or cleaned their rooms should be considered as “close contacts” and monitored for 21 days after the last exposure, even if their contact with a patient occurred when they were fully protected by wearing personal protective equipment.
For health care workers, the date of the “last infectious contact” is the day when the last patient in a health facility tests negative using a real-time reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) test.
"Only" 95th percentile. That's not exactly what is normally considered "only". But then by 42 days you're "only" at the 98th percentile. Are you looking for 100%? Over what time span?
It's a bit interesting that they consider 42 days to be twice the maximum incubation period when you realize that 21 days is only the 95th percentile.
How would that be determined? Like this:
I hope they don't restart the clock until after the "last infectious contact."
According to WHO recommendations, health care workers who have attended patients or cleaned their rooms should be considered as “close contacts” and monitored for 21 days after the last exposure, even if their contact with a patient occurred when they were fully protected by wearing personal protective equipment.
You'll find it stated elsewhere with different words and it means the same thing.
Most people are not very good at writing clear requirements that can't be misinterpreted, and I suspect that's the case on that page.
"Only" 95th percentile. That's not exactly what is normally considered "only". But then by 42 days you're "only" at the 98th percentile. Are you looking for 100%? Over what time span?
You're good with numbers, how does that "only" 95% and only 98% influence the transmission of a disease? Seems to me it means it gets stopped in its tracks with those numbers.