EBOLA MAIN EBOLA DISCUSSION THREAD 11/16/14 to 11/30/14

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
MAIN EBOLA DISCUSSION THREAD 11/01/14 to 11/15/14
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...-EBOLA-DISCUSSION-THREAD-11-01-14-to-11-15-14

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/11/16/us-health-ebola-mali-idUSKCN0J00C120141116

U.N. scraps clinic contract as Ebola exposes Mali readiness gaps

By David Lewis
DAKAR Sun Nov 16, 2014 5:42am EST

(Reuters) - The United Nations mission in Mali has canceled plans to renew a contract with a private clinic providing care to its peacekeepers after a case of Ebola was missed and spread from there.

This second Ebola alarm in Mali, coming just as it seemed to have contained its first case last month, raised doubts about the country's ability to protect itself from the epidemic that is ravaging three other states in West Africa. More than 5,000 people have died, almost all in Liberia, Sierra Leone and in Guinea, which shares an 800 km (500 mile) border with Mali.

The U.N. mission in Mali, whose peacekeepers are helping to protect the nation against Islamist rebels, reversed on Saturday a decision taken earlier in the week to renew the contract with the Pasteur Clinic in Bamako to care for sick or injured troops.

A U.N spokesman said the decision was taken "due to prevailing circumstances" but gave no further details.

It followed the death in the clinic in late October of an elderly imam, or Muslim religious leader, from Guinea. The sick man was never tested, but his case directly led to a chain of confirmed deaths from Ebola, including a 25-year-old nurse who treated him and a woman who washed his dead body.

The clinic, one of Bamako's best known and used by expatriates and the country's elite, denies any wrongdoing. It says it followed all its procedures for treating Ebola and that the imam never showed any signs of the fever.

On Tuesday last week, Mali's health minister declared there were no more confirmed cases in the country after it appeared to have successfully contained its first Ebola case of an infant girl who died last month.

But by nightfall the same day, the 25-year-old nurse from the clinic had died of the disease and authorities are now trying to trace over 400 potential fresh contacts.

President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita has ordered an enquiry.

Ibrahima Fall, World Health Organisation representative in Mali, said the Pasteur Clinic - which has no connection to the Paris-based Institut Pasteur - made "a terrible mistake" by not alerting authorities to the case of the sick Guinean imam, who would have been showing Ebola-like symptoms.

He said it was WHO officials tracing reported deaths in Guinea who had discovered this case in Mali.

Mali's Ebola response leader, Samba Sow, said the clinic did not tell him of a second suspected Ebola case once he got there. "It is something we would like to have known," he said.

Aid workers and diplomats in Bamako cite delays and obstacles in setting up Sow's Ebola-response team and poor communication within government over the latest case.

(Additional reporting by Joe Penney, Colin Baker and Tiemoko Diallo Bamako; Editing by Pascal Fletcher and David Stamp)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/11/16/us-health-ebola-usa-surgeon-idUSKCN0IZ0DY20141116

U.S. hospital says Sierra Leone doctor with Ebola extremely critical

By Katie Knapp Schubert
OMAHA Neb. Sun Nov 16, 2014 9:56am EST

(Reuters) - A surgeon from Sierra Leone being treated for Ebola in a Nebraska hospital on Saturday was critically ill after being airlifted back from Africa, medical officials said.

Dr. Martin Salia, 44, a permanent U.S. resident, caught the disease while working as a surgeon in a Freetown hospital, according to his family.

Doctors at the Nebraska hospital said his condition was extremely critical. He had been stable enough to take a flight from West Africa to Omaha but was too sick to walk off the plane, medical officials said.

"We will do everything humanly possible to help him fight this disease," Dr. Phil Smith, medical director of the Biocontainment Unit at Nebraska Medical Center, said in a statement. "This is an hour-by-hour situation."

Upon arrival Salia was transferred to a waiting ambulance in an isolation unit called an ISOPOD, a device used in the transportation of a potentially infectious patient, a hospital official said.

Salia is the third patient to be treated for Ebola in the hospital's Biocontainment Unit since the virus broke out in West Africa earlier this year.

He was chief medical officer at the United Methodist Church's Kissy Hospital when he was confirmed on Tuesday to have contracted Ebola.

His evacuation was at the request of his wife, a U.S. citizen who lives in Maryland, the U.S. State Department said in a statement.

The current outbreak of Ebola is the worst on record. According to the latest figures from the World Health Organization, it has killed at least 5,177 people.

Most of the victims have been in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea, where already weak healthcare systems have been overrun. Some 570 local health workers have been infected, with 324 dying.

Salia would be the 10th known case of Ebola in the United States. All but one case was treated successfully.

The Nebraska clinic is one of four American hospitals approved by the federal government to treat Ebola.


(Reporting by Katie Knapp Schubert and Umaru Fofana; Additional reporting by Barbara Goldberg and Chris Michaud in New York; Writing by David Lewis and Victoria Cavaliere; Editing by Andre Grenon and John Stonestreet)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
PLA Medical Corps and Combat Engineers.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.9news.com.au/world/2014/11/17/03/32/160-chinese-health-workers-in-liberia-to-fight-ebola

3:33am November 17, 2014

Team of 160 Chinese health workers arrive in Liberia to fight Ebola

A contingent of 160 Chinese healthcare workers has arrived in Liberia to staff a $41 million Ebola treatment unit in the country the hardest-hit by the deadly virus, the Chinese embassy said today.

Many of the doctors, epidemiologists and nurses who will work in the unit previously helped tackle the SARS epidemic in Asia, it said in a statement.

"They experienced SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome). They are very knowledgeable in this area," ambassador Zhang Yue said.

Engineers hope to get the unit built and operational within 10 days.

Since the unit will be made of concrete, the embassy said it would leave a lasting legacy to the impoverished west African country, where at least 2,812 people have so far died of the deadly virus.

Zhang said the unit would be unique because most of the other treatment units are temporary structures.

"China is the only country which provides not only the construction of an Ebola treatment unit, but also the running, operation and the staffing of it."

"Further on we will provide additional material to Liberia worth around $5 million. So all together $46 million of our aid is exclusively to Liberia," Zhang added.

So far Beijing has promised Ebola-hit countries the equivalent of $122 million to help fight the epidemic.

China is Africa's largest trading partner, and its diplomatic footprint across the continent has expanded hugely in recent years as it seeks resources to power its economy.

Still it is a long way behind the European Union, whose leaders have boosted their Ebola aid to one billion euros ($1.26 billion).

The United States has earmarked more than $350 million in aid, while the World Bank and African Development Bank pledged $400 million and $225 million respectively.

© AFP 2014
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/...pplies-to-help-guinea-fight-ebola/511214.html

Russia Donates Field Hospital, Medical Supplies to Help Guinea Fight Ebola
The Moscow Times
Nov. 16 2014 20:04
Last edited 20:04

Russia's Defense Ministry has begun airlifting equipment to build a field hospital to Ebola-stricken Guinea in response to the country's plea for help with battling the deadly epidemic, Interfax reported Sunday.

"The first two military transportation aircraft [Russia's Antonov An-124] carrying equipment to build a field hospital and medical supplies have left Sochi for the Conakry Airport," Major General Igor Konashenkov said, Interfax reported. "This field hospital will allow for the placement and treatment of 200 people infected by highly dangerous viral diseases, but will also ensure that they can live autonomously during their time in quarantine."

The initiative — which involves the delivery of more than 150 tons of cargo by three Russian military aircrafts — follows President Vladimir Putin's order to Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu to assist Guinea in combatting the deadly disease.

Putin's press secretary, Dmitry Peskov, said Saturday that the field hospital would be donated to Guinea free of charge, TASS reported.

Last week, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev announced that Russia would contribute $20 million to the global fight against the disease. In October, the Russian Health Ministry announced that the country was hoping to produce three Ebola vaccines within six months' time.

The World Health Organization reported Friday that 1,166 people had died from the Ebola virus in the West African country of Guinea since the outbreak of the epidemic. Ebola has claimed more than 5,000 lives since the outbreak began, according to the same statistics.


See also:

Medvedev Urges Consolidated Fight Against Ebola
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/16/opinion/sunday/the-shifting-ebola-epidemic.html?_r=0

Sunday Review | Editorial

The Shifting Ebola Epidemic

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
NOV. 15, 2014

Recent gains in controlling the Ebola epidemic in West Africa have been encouraging, but they offer no reason for complacency. In Liberia, the hardest-hit country, the rate of new infections has declined in some areas, and several treatment units have been reporting empty beds for more than a month. But in adjacent Sierra Leone the number of new cases has shot upward, while in Guinea, where the epidemic started, the incidence of new cases appears to have stabilized over all, with growth in some districts and declines in others. All told, Ebola has infected more than 14,000 people in West Africa and killed more than 5,000 of them.

Related in Opinion

Op-Ed Contributor: Ebola and the Lost Children of Sierra Leone
NOV. 13, 2014

Liberia’s gains have been attributed to much safer burial practices, a vigorous campaign to educate the public on how to avoid infection, diagnostic tests that can quickly identify and isolate infected people, and teams that track down all of their contacts. As positive as these results are, there is no guarantee that they will hold. Liberia’s president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, may have acted prematurely last Thursday when she announced an end to a national state of emergency. The recent improvements were mostly in Monrovia, and new outbreaks have emerged in rural areas.

Alarmingly, the virus has twice been carried from Guinea into previously unaffected Mali. This is the kind of spread that experts have warned could lead to a widening epidemic throughout Africa unless it is tamped down quickly. An infected 2-year-old girl from Guinea died in Mali but does not seem to have spread the virus to others. An infected imam from Guinea died of Ebola in Mali, as have two others, including a nurse who treated him. Hundreds of others may have been infected at a ritual washing ceremony of the imam’s body or through other contact.

These developments suggest that donor nations need to increase their contributions of money, materials, and teams of doctors and nurses to fight the epidemic. Oxfam, an international aid organization, reported last Wednesday on the performance of members of the Group of 20 advanced and emerging economies. It said that four countries — Argentina, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia and Turkey — have yet to make any contribution and that four others — Brazil, India, Mexico and Russia — should be doing a lot more based on the size of their economies. It called on France to speed up its efforts in Guinea, a former French colony. It is hoping the issue of more aid will be discussed and acted on at the G-20 meeting in Brisbane, Australia, this weekend.

Given the changing shape of the epidemic, United Nations and American officials are considering a more nimble response that would deploy smaller, more geographically dispersed treatment centers, rather than complete all of the large treatment units that were planned. Some nonprofit groups recommend sending rapid-response teams by helicopter to remote villages. As the outbreak moves, international assistance must keep up with shifting needs.
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
Gaps in Mali readiness? A gap is a hole in the wall, but Mali doesn't even have a health wall!

I find it very interesting that the same 14,000 infected, with 5,000 dead number has been stuck for the last week or two, or three. Clearly, there are thousands of additional cases that aren't being counted at this time. We are dealing with the collapse of the ability to treat Ebola patients in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea, not a reduction in the number of infected or dead. If you don't count the actual number of infected and dead, well this is where the Liberian "decline" is coming from.

Ebola cases are still increasing in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea. They are just not in the system and therefore don't exist in the official numbers. The CDC et al can keep up this disinformation campaign for a while longer, at least until the numbers become too many too hide. Mali, well Mali is also starting the usual Ebola epidemic cycle. Mail has now had several hundred people, directly exposed to either of the two index cases, the little girl and the Muslim cleric, running around for at least a month. Again, there are likely dozens of people infected with Ebola in Mali right now. Again, the local authorities have no idea of who they are, where they are, or how many other people they exposed and infected. Further, this assumes all these people stayed in Mali and haven't scattered all over North Africa.

The thing the CDC etc still refuse to get is this. Ebola is continuing to spread unchecked and unmonitored out of West Africa. Further, it is now the peak travel season for migrant agricultural workers. The idea Ebola will not piggyback on these mobile farm workers into other areas is delusional.

The CDC will continue to say we are only dealing with 5,000 dead, and 14,000 infected well into December. The fact there are likely right now 100,000 to 300,000 cases in Africa nobody has any idea about is why things are not going to get any better for Africa anytime soon.

By the way, the second Ebola epidemic in the DNC is still simmering away with little media coverage.

Ebola is spreading unchecked in Africa. CDC lies will not be able to hide that for much longer in my opinion.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.kcci.com/news/iowa-unit-to-be-sent-to-west-africa-to-fight-ebola/29751686

Iowa soldiers expected to go to Africa to fight Ebola
UPDATED 10:37 PM CST Nov 16, 2014
By Laura Nichols

WASHINGTON, Iowa —The Iowa National Guard announced Sunday that it has been notified of a pending mobilization in support of Operation United Assistance, the U.S. response to the Ebola outbreak in West Africa.

Approximately 80 soldiers from the Iowa Army National Guard, based in Washington, Iowa, may be deployed next spring for approximately six months.

"Our job won't be to treat the local population, but rather treat forces from the U.S. and the coalition,” said Col. Greg Hapgood of the Iowa National Guard.

The deployment is in support of the U.S. government in a humanitarian mission designed to stop the spread of the virus and keep it from becoming a "pandemic" that could potentially impact American citizens.

Hapgod said there are taking every step necessary to ensure the safety and health of these Iowa soldiers by giving them extensive training before they leave.

“We feel very comfortable and confident that they will have every tool they need to be a success,” Hapgood said.

The Iowa soldiers would provide medial support to the humanitarian effort to help. The deadly Ebola virus has killed more than 5,000 people since the outbreak began.

“They have extensive experience in media triage, treated casualties, transporting casualties. Things like that in a theater of operation, so they will do the exact mission they are trained to do in West Africa,” Hapgood said.

Deployment is not expected to exceed one year.

The same group of Iowa soldiers hugged their loved ones, saying goodbye as they prepared to head overseas in 2009 for the 294th Area Support Medical Company in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Officials said the Secretary of Defense chose this medical unit from Iowa because of its highly qualified soldiers.

They're hoping for a successful mission and a safe return just like they experienced in 2010, when the 294th walked into their homecoming ceremony and saw their families for the first time in a year.

For questions and additional information, the public is asked to contact Col. Hapgood at 515-252-4582.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://sanangelolive.com/news/2014-11-17/texas-national-guard-mobilized-aid-ebola-stricken-africa

Texas National Guard Mobilized to Aid Ebola-Stricken Africa

by Joe Hyde
Nov 17, 2014

AUSTIN– A team of engineers with the Texas Army National Guard will mobilize in the spring of 2015 to West Africa in support of Operation United Assistance, according to Texas Military Forces Public Affairs Office at Fort Mabry in Austin.
Service Master

On Nov. 14, U.S. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel signed an order authorizing the involuntary mobilization of approximately 2,100 Army Reserve and Army National Guard soldiers to support Operation United Assistance from throughout the nation.

“The troops will replace forces in Senegal and Liberia who are supporting our whole-of-government response to the most devastating Ebola outbreak in history,” the Department of Defense said in a press release.

“All soldiers will conduct regionally-specific training on Ebola prevention, malaria prevention, other medical threats, and medical readiness requirements before deploying. Kirby said all prudent steps necessary to ensure the safety of the troops will be taken to reduce or eliminate the risk of transmission of the Ebola virus,” the DoD wrote.

The company identified to provide support is the 272nd Engineer Company, 386th Engineer Battalion, from Angleton. The unit is aligned under the 176th Engineer Brigade, Texas Army National Guard.

“As the Defense Department’s most cost-effective force, the National Guard provides our country great versatility across the full spectrum of operations. The citizen-Soldiers representing Texas are experienced professionals and will bring a wealth of knowledge to the mission,” said Maj. Gen. John F. Nichols, The Adjutant General of Texas. “We are proud to serve our state and nation during this time of need and be a part of this larger effort.”

The 272nd Engineer Company is a vertical engineer company comprised of carpenters, electricians and plumbers and is skilled in building facilities and construction project management. While deployed, the engineers will build support structures for operational and medical needs in the region in support of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID).

These Texas-based Guardsmen will be part of a multi-state National Guard effort and will remain mobilized for no more than one year.

"The mission of these brave Texans is essential to controlling and containing the international threat to public health we face with Ebola," said Gov. Rick Perry.

"Their efforts to help end this outbreak in West Africa will mean greater safety for all of us back at home, and we commend each of them for their courage and dedication to their fellow man."
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://blogs.mprnews.org/newscut/2014/11/mn-national-guard-to-deploy-to-liberia-in-ebola-fight/

MN National Guard to deploy to Liberia in Ebola fight
Paul Tosto
November 16, 2014, 10:11 PM 0

Some 700 Minnesota National Guard soldiers will deploy to Liberia in the spring to support U.S. efforts there to contain the deadly Ebola virus.

Guard members from the Rosemount-based 34th Red Bull Infantry Division will be in Liberia for roughly six months, starting in April, the Minnesota National Guard said in a statement Sunday.

Read more on Ebola from MPR News

Unit members will provide logistical support to U.S. military forces and will not be responsible for treating Ebola patients. They’ll also receive special training and equipment “to ensure they are protected from exposure,” the Guard said.

Liberia has been hardest hit by the 2014 Ebola outbreak with nearly 7,000 cases and more than 2,800 deaths. Minnesota is home to one of the largest Liberian populations in the United States.

Here’s the full statement from the Minnesota National Guard:

Nearly 700 Minnesota Army National Guard Soldiers from the Rosemount-based 34th Red Bull Infantry Division will be mobilized to support humanitarian relief in Liberia in Spring 2015.

The Soldiers will provide the command and control of U.S. military forces deployed as part of Operation United Assistance, the military effort supporting the United States Agency for International Development’s (USAID) response to the Ebola virus outbreak in Liberia.

“Our mission will be to coordinate all of the Department of Defense resources in Liberia to support USAID and the government of Liberia to contain the Ebola virus, and ultimately save lives,” said Army Maj. Gen. Rick Nash, the adjutant general of the Minnesota National Guard.

The specific duties of the Minnesota National Guard Soldiers will be to synchronize the operations, logistics, personnel and resources of the U.S. military forces assigned to the area. The Red Bulls will not be responsible for treating Ebola patients.

“And importantly for the Liberian people,” Nash continued, “the Minnesota National Guard presence will provide confidence that something can and will be done to stop the spread of disease.”

U.S. Army Division Headquarters have been tasked to provide command and control for Operation United Assistance. Since November 2014, the Ft. Campbell, Kentucky-based 101st Airborne Division has led the first rotation of this humanitarian mission. The Citizen-Soldiers of the 34th Red Bull Infantry Division are expected to depart Minnesota in March 2015 for pre-mobilization training before deploying to Monrovia, Liberia in April 2015 to assume command from the 101st Airborne Division.

All troops deploying to West Africa will receive specific medical training — developed in conjunction with U.S. Army Public Health Command — and utilize specialized personal protective equipment to ensure they are protected from exposure.

“Preserving the health of our Soldiers is the highest priority for this mission,” said Army Maj. Gen. Neal Loidolt, commanding general of the 34th Infantry Division. “Extra steps are being taken to protect the Soldiers’ health, including personnel protective equipment and educating the Soldiers about the diseases prevalent in the area.”

The “Red Bulls” are expected to be deployed in Liberia for approximately six months.
 

libtoken

Veteran Member
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-30077417

New Zealand to send Ebola medics to W Africa

New Zealand's government has approved the deployment of 24 medical workers to West Africa to help fight Ebola. The volunteers, backed by an investment of NZ$2m (£1m; $1.6m), will be based at the new 100-bed clinic being set up by Australia in Sierra Leone.
New Zealand also committed NZ$1m to a WHO fund to help Pacific nations prepare for a potential outbreak there.
(snip)
Health Minister Jonathan Coleman said all the New Zealand staff would be volunteers and would stay for between six and 12 weeks. He said the government was taking their safety "very seriously" and anyone in the delegation falling ill would be evacuated if necessary, the New Zealand Herald reports. "If the developed world fails to act, case numbers will exponentially increase, with devastating consequences for long term stability in Africa," he said.

New Zealand has committed a total of NZ$5m to the crisis.
(snip)
 

mzkitty

I give up.
23m
Dr. Martin Salia, 3rd Ebola patient to be treated at Nebraska Medical Center, has died - @NBCNews
End of alert


6m
Nebraska Medical Center says Dr. Martin Salia was suffering from kidney and respiratory failure when he arrived there Saturday after contracting Ebola in Sierra Leone; treatment included convalescent plasma and ZMapp therapy
- @NBCNews
End of alert
 
23m
Dr. Martin Salia, 3rd Ebola patient to be treated at Nebraska Medical Center, has died - @NBCNews
End of alert
6m
Nebraska Medical Center says Dr. Martin Salia was suffering from kidney and respiratory failure when he arrived there Saturday after contracting Ebola in Sierra Leone; treatment included convalescent plasma and ZMapp therapy
- @NBCNews
End of alert

Sad deal, was hoping he'd make it.

In cased you missed the background on the good doctor - posted last week on the main Ebola thread: http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...AD-11-01-14-to-11-15-14&p=5438951#post5438951

snip/

Salia's wife and two children live in the D.C. suburb of New Carrollton, Maryland, and Salia is a legal U.S. resident.

On Friday, Salia's son told NBC News that his dad knew the risks of working in West Africa but was committed to doing his part.
/end snip


Getting Acquainted with Dr. Martin Salia
Jeff Bleijerveld | Director of Global Ministries
April 11th, 2013 |

http://ubcentral.org/2013/04/11/getting-acquainted-with-dr-martin-salia/

salia_martin.jpg


In February, I visited Sierra Leone to participate in strategic planning regarding Mattru Hospital. Also participating in those meetings was Dr. Martin Salia, a very skilled surgeon who works at a hospital in Freetown.

Martin comes from a United Brethren background. In the 1990s, Sierra Leone Conference sent Martin to Burkina Faso to participate in extensive training designed for producing medical missionaries. Every student was set up with a mentor. Martin was mentored by a missionary doctor with years of experience. The idea was not just developing Martin into a good surgeon, but into a follower of Christ.

The Sierra Leone Conference helped support Martin with this training, with the understanding that he would return to work at Mattru Hospital. But then the civil war occurred, and the hospital fell into chaos and disrepair. While decisions were being processed about whether or not to take him on at Mattru Hospital, Martin landed a job at the Kissie Hospital in Freetown.

Working at the same hospital is Dr. Dennis Marke, who previously worked at Mattru Hospital. Both Dr. Marke and Dr. Salia made tremendous contributions to the strategic planning, since they understand what makes an effective missions hospital.

===

.
 

aliens7

Inactive
Who would have thought???? According to all the news reports and propaganda, I thought the outbreak was over!!

:rolleyes:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/11/17/ebola-africa_n_6172010.html?ncid=txtlnkusaolp00000592


Ebola Flaring Anew In Africa: Red Cross

Posted: 11/17/2014 11:50 am EST Updated: 2 hours ago

BRUSSELS (AP) -- Red Cross officials helping to lead the fight against Ebola in West Africa say the virus is spreading, and they're having trouble recruiting health care workers to combat it.

Antoine Petitbon of the French Red Cross said Monday that it's easier for him to recruit people to go to Iraq, despite the security hazards there. He said the French Red Cross is facing a problem it's never had before: Sixty percent of people who sign up to work in the Ebola zone back out later due to pressure from families and friends.

Meanwhile, Birte Hald of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies told reporters in Brussels that the virus "is flaring up in new villages, in new locations."

She said: "It is absolutely premature to start being optimistic."
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
What you mean the CDC version of Bush junior famous "Mission "Accomplished" has turned out to be a LIE? Sheesh, Doomer Doug is truly stunned.

Yep, Ebola is now TOTALLY OUT OF CONTROL IN AFRICA NOW. It has spread SEVERAL THOUSAND MILES INTO MALI. The other government claim the Congo Ebola epidemic is still more LIES.

It is sad but true, it will take 300,000 corpses stacked from Liberia to Mali to Spain before the CDC et al will admit the truth.

Yep, ain't the sheeple going to be surprised when the CDC goes, aw shucks, and announces on December 31st, 2014 they really do have 500,000 cases with 250,000 PLUS DEAD.
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
Here is some more info on the case from flutracker forum.

Rhiza Labs FluTracker Forum

It is currently Mon Nov 17, 2014 8:08 pm



Martin Salia Ebola Treated With ZMapp


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niman
Post subject: Martin Salia Ebola Treated With ZMapp
PostPosted: Mon Nov 17, 2014 1:32 pm
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ZMapp was made available for Dr Martin Salia when he arrived but he died shortly after arrival.



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niman
Post subject: Re: Martin Salia Treated With ZMapp
PostPosted: Mon Nov 17, 2014 1:33 pm
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Nebraska Medicine ‏@NebraskaMed 15m15 minutes ago
Developers of ZMapp reached out to us. Had some available. It was shipped and made available by time patient arrived.

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niman
Post subject: Re: Martin Salia Ebola Treated With ZMap

Joined: Wed Aug 19, 2009 10:42 am
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Ebola-Stricken Surgeon Martin Salia Died Despite ZMapp, Plasma Transfusion
Nov 17, 2014, 1:03 PM ET


The latest Ebola patient flown the United States for treatment died today despite receiving two experimental treatments -- the drug ZMapp and a blood transfusion from an Ebola survivor, officials with Nebraska Medical Center said.

Dr. Martin Salia, who contracted Ebola in Africa, was the third patient treated for the virus at the medical center in Omaha, but the only one to have died.

"It is a reminder of how deadly a virus this is," Dr. Chris Kratochvil, the University of Nebraska associate vice chancellor for clinical research, said during a press conference this morning.

Salia, a surgeon, was treating patients in Sierra Leone when he contracted the virus. He was not treating Ebola patients and officials do not know how he contracted the deadly virus. He initially tested negative on Nov. 6, but tested positive for the virus on Nov. 10. He was flown from Sierra Leone and arrived in Nebraska on Saturday.

The biocontainment unit's director, Dr. Phil Smith, said Salia was in "very critical condition" when he arrived. Salia had no kidney function, had difficulty breathing, and was unresponsive at that time, said the hospital's chief of critical care, Dr. Dan Johnson. Doctors put him on dialysis, intubated him and put him on a mechanical ventilation device. They also gave him blood pressure medication, but he went into cardiac arrest. Mapp Pharmaceutical, the company that makes ZMapp, provided the drug. The supply of the experimental drug had been exhausted months earlier. An unnamed Ebola survivor provided plasma.

Salia died just 36 hours into his Nebraska Medical Center stay.

"It is with an extremely heavy heart that we share this news," Dr. Phil Smith, medical director of the Biocontainment Unit at Nebraska Medical Center and professor of infectious diseases at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, said in a statement.

Salia, 44, is a permanent resident in the U.S. and married to a U.S. citizen. Salia was a native of Sierra Leone.
Image
PHOTO: Health workers in protective suits transport Dr. Martin Salia, Nov. 15, 2014.Nati Harnik/AP Photo

Salia was suffering from advanced symptoms of Ebola when he arrived at the hospital Saturday, authorities said, including kidney and respiratory failure.

In a statement, the White House said, "We extend our heartfelt condolences to the family and loved ones of Dr. Martin Salia, who succumbed this morning to Ebola at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, despite the heroic efforts of that institution’s incredibly talented team. Dr. Salia leaves behind loved ones in the United States, his adopted homeland, and in Sierra Leone, where he was born.

"A general surgeon, Dr. Salia dedicated his life to saving others. He viewed this vocation as his calling, telling his fellow United Methodist Church members that he pursued medicine not because he wanted to, but because he firmly believed it was God’s will for him. Dr. Salia’s passing is another reminder of the human toll of this disease and of the continued imperative to tackle this epidemic on the frontlines, where Dr. Salia was engaged in his calling," the statement added.

Salia's wife, an American citizen, lives in Maryland. The couple had two children, ages 12 and 20.

Get real-time updates as this story unfolds. To start, just "star" this story in ABC News' phone app. Download ABC News for iPhone here or ABC News for Android here.

http://abcnews.go.com/Health/ebola-stri ... d=26964778

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niman
Post subject: Re: Martin Salia Ebola Treated With ZMapp
PostPosted: Mon Nov 17, 2014 6:57 pm
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Location: Pittsburgh, PA USA
Nov. 17 (Bloomberg) -- A physician infected with the Ebola virus died today at the Nebraska Medical Center after being evacuated from Sierra Leone.

Martin Salia was on dialysis, a ventilator and multiple medications after suffering from kidney and respiratory failure caused by the deadly virus, the hospital said today in a statement. He also got a dose of blood plasma from an Ebola survivor and Mapp Biopharmaceutical Inc.’s experimental Ebola drug ZMapp, which has been available only in limited supplies.

“We used every possible treatment available to give Dr. Salia every possible opportunity for survival,” Phil Smith, medical director of the hospital’s biocontainment unit, said in the statement. “As we have learned, early treatment with these patients is essential. In Dr. Salia’s case, his disease was already extremely advanced by the time he came here for treatment.”

“We are so appreciative of the opportunity for my husband to be treated here and believe he was in the best place possible."

Isatu Salia
Salia arrived in Nebraska on Nov. 15, having been ill for 13 days, hospital officials said today at a press conference. His body will be cremated.

Nebraska Medical doctors started Salia on ZMapp and plasma the day he arrived, Chris Kratochvil, associate vice chancellor for clinical research at the hospital, said during the press conference.

Experimental Drugs

Chimerix Inc., Tekmira Pharmaceuticals Corp. and FujiFilm Holdings Corp. are also developing drugs that target the infection. U.S. health officials have called for testing that will require some patients get a placebo instead of an experimental treatment. All patients in any trial will get supportive care, including replacing fluids.

While it’s controversial not to give some patients a potentially life-saving therapy, Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said doctors and scientists need definitive information on whether the drugs work.

“Many of these drugs, and I assure you of this, several will turn out to be toxic and not effective,” Fauci said today on Bloomberg Television.

Mapp, based in San Diego, previously said it had run out of ZMapp, which is made through a process involving tobacco plants. The hospital determined data on ZMapp’s use in animals showed that it could be beneficial for Salia, and his wife and son agreed, hospital officials said.

‘Extremely Critical Condition’

Salia was chief medical officer and surgeon at Kissy United Methodist Hospital in Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone. That facility was closed Nov. 11 after Salia tested positive for Ebola, the United Methodist Church said.

The hospital had said Salia arrived in “extremely critical” condition. He is the sixth doctor in Sierra Leone to be infected with the deadly virus; the other five also died.

The patient, a permanent U.S. resident from Sierra Leone, was evacuated at the request of his wife, who lives in Maryland, the State Department has said.

“We are so appreciative of the opportunity for my husband to be treated here and believe he was in the best place possible,” his wife, Isatu Salia, said in the hospital’s statement.

Salia was the third person treated for the deadly virus at Nebraska Medical Center, following a missionary worker, Rick Sacra, and a freelance journalist, Ashoka Mukpo. Both were evacuated from West Africa after becoming infected, and recovered. Neither arrived at the hospital in as grave condition as Salia.

Other Cases

Eight people treated in U.S. hospitals have been cured. The only other person to die of Ebola in the U.S., Thomas Eric Duncan, was initially released from a Dallas hospital in September before returning with worsening symptoms. Two nurses were infected after contact with Duncan; both recovered.

There is no currently approved drug to cure the disease. Severely ill patients require intensive supportive care. They are frequently dehydrated and need intravenous fluids or oral rehydration with solutions that contain electrolytes. The Omaha medical center has a sealed biocontainment unit separate from other areas used to care for patients. Treatment for the Ebola patients has included experimental drugs and blood serum from an Ebola survivor.

The virus has ravaged West Africa, killing more than 5,170, mostly in Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone.

To contact the reporters on this story: Crayton Harrison in New York at tharrison5@bloomberg.net; Anna Edney in Washington at aedney@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Crayton Harrison at tharrison5@bloomberg.net Drew Armstrong, Andrew Pollack

http://www.bloomberg.com/politics/artic ... erra-leone


http://fluboard.rhizalabs.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=12958
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
MALI GETS WORSE 442 people now being monitored

There are likely several hundred additional people who were exposed and not on this 442 list. :eek:



http://fluboard.rhizalabs.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=12957

Post subject: Mali Ebola Contacts Increase to 442
PostPosted: Mon Nov 17, 2014 1:04 pm
Online

Joined: Wed Aug 19, 2009 10:42 am
Posts: 47825
Location: Pittsburgh, PA USA
Media reports cite an increase of Ebola contacts in Mali to 442. However, those reports only cite 3 case which may include the earlier case (2F) in Keyes. WHO cited the index a nurse who treated the index, and a friend who visited the index. However, media reports have cited many more confirmed or probable cases including a child and an older women who attended the funeral preparations, as well as two additional cases who were also linked to preparing the imam for transport back to Guinea.

It is unclear how many of the contacts of these cases are included in the 442.


niman
Post subject: Re: Mali Ebola Contacts Increase to 442
PostPosted: Mon Nov 17, 2014 1:05 pm
Online

Joined: Wed Aug 19, 2009 10:42 am
Posts: 47825
Location: Pittsburgh, PA USA
BAMAKO: Mali says it has placed more than 440 people who may have been exposed to Ebola under surveillance as it battles to contain the spread of the deadly tropical virus. The west African nation has been scrambling to prevent a minor outbreak turning into a major crisis after the deaths of a Guinean imam and the Malian nurse who treated him in the capital Bamako.

A friend who had visited the imam in the Pasteur clinic also died of probable Ebola and a two-year-old child died in an unconnected case in the western town of Kayes in October. "The number of contacts followed by health services amounts to 442. They have all been placed under observation for health control," Samba Sow, of the Ebola emergency operations centre, said in a statement late Sunday.

"The death toll has not changed since November 15, and remains three related to (and including) the Guinean patient's death and one death in Kayes," Sow added. He said a doctor who contracted the virus at the Pasteur clinic was "being treated by specialised services".

A government official said on Friday two people who died after exposure to the body of the imam were also "highly suspected" of having contracted the virus. They are not confirmed cases, however, and have not been counted among the official statistics.

The WHO announced on Friday that the outbreak - almost entirely confined to west Africa - had left 5,177 people dead from around 14,500 cases since Ebola emerged in Guinea in December. Teams of investigators have been tracing health workers and scouring Bamako and the imam's village of Kouremale, which straddles the Mali-Guinea border, for people who could have been exposed.

Sow said Kayes had not reported any new cases in the last three weeks and was now considered Ebola-free. The virus is estimated to have killed around 70 per cent of its victims across west Africa, often shutting down their organs and causing unstoppable bleeding.

Mali's President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita was due to visit Kouremale on Monday afternoon to look at increased security at the border. "The government calls for calm and serenity, and for the general mobilisation of the entire population to convey prevention messages and enforce hygiene and sanitation guidelines, which remain essential to prevent this disease," Sow said.
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://raconteurreport.blogspot.com/...ola-cases.html

Sunday, November 16, 2014
Mali Hits It Outta The Park: 42 Ebola Cases Overnight!
Remain calm! ALL IS WELL!!!
h/t to commenter mike 18xx

So much for 4 cases: Mali is sitting on 42 Ebola cases, all essentially the downstream result of washing the Ebola-laden corpse of a dead grand imam in capitol Bamako (Pop. 2M). And actually, more "While they were whistling past the graveyard" rather than "overnight" strictly speaking. You can now cancel Christmas there, as the contacts of 42 people, versus 4, and now at one to three weeks downstream, means any hope for getting ahead of this in that country is weeks away, if they ever even can get ahead of it.

If they fail, Mali has 16M people, in essentially the same situation as the first three affected nations, except they have no outside aid, no outside reserves available to deploy, and oh, BTW, they're still engaged with an active rebel insurgency.

If you get in a balloon, and take binoculars, you might be able to still see how far beyond "F***ED" Mali is.

And lest we forget, no one is screening passengers from Mali, and there are no flight restrictions or international quarantines on travelers from there as of yet, here or in any other country in the world (except for Mauritania, to the west, and Uzbekistan).

Mali government report pdf en Francais

Mali SitRep en Englais:

"If you pointy-headed idjits wasn't fondling Ebola-infected dead people, ya wouldn't all be crapping your guts out, now wouldja?"


UPDATE: Hey, look, someone at the CDC was working on the weekend:

Nov 16 (Reuters) - The United States will begin enhanced screening for travelers whose trips started in the African nation of Mali, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Department of Homeland Security said on Sunday.

The CDC recommended adding Mali to the list of countries whose travelers undergo heightened screening because there had been a number of confirmed cases of Ebola there in recent days, the agencies said in a statement. Travelers from Mali will face the same screening as those from Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea.

Posted by Aesop at 2:50 AM
Labels: Ebola
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://raconteurreport.blogspot.com/...break-try.html

Sunday, November 16, 2014
Mali 3 Weeks Behind Ebola Outbreak; Try To Look Shocked


From AP News, via Yahoo! and ABC:

BAMAKO, Mali (AP) — It all started with a sick nurse, whose positive test for Ebola came only after her death. In a busy clinic that treats Mali's elite as well as wounded U.N. peacekeepers, what patient transmitted the virus?
Soon hospital officials were taking a second look at the case of a 70-year-old man who died after being brought to the capital late at night from Guinea suffering from kidney failure. A friend who visited him later died under suspicious circumstances, too.
It wasn't renal disease, they then realized. The 70-year-old man had Ebola and all three of the relatives who brought him to the clinic that night had all since been admitted to an Ebola treatment center back home in Guinea.
On Friday, Malian health authorities went to disinfect the mosque where the 70-year-old's body was prepared for burial — nearly three weeks ago. Already some are criticizing the Malian government for being too slow to react when health authorities had announced his death as a suspected Ebola case earlier in the week.
"It's been 18 days since the Guinean man sick with Ebola died here. It's just too late," said Koumou Keita, his face full of worry.
For nearly a year, Mali had been spared the virus now blamed for killing more than 5,000 people across West Africa despite the fact the country shared a porous land border with Guinea, the country where the epidemic first erupted.
Now there are least three confirmed Ebola deaths, and two others suspected deaths in Mali's capital, Bamako. Residents here who have seen the horrific death tolls from Ebola in neighboring Guinea now fear the worst.
"I feel uneasy because I have the impression that our authorities are not giving us the whole truth," said Ibrahim Traore, who works at a supermarket in the capital. "There are a lot of things not being said about how the Ebola virus came to Bamako."
Health officials now must try to track down not only family and friends who visited the 70-year-old man at his hospital bed, but also the scores of people who prepared his body for burial and attended his funeral. Teams of investigators are also headed to the border community where authorities believe the Patient Zero in the Bamako cluster — the 70-year-old man — first fell ill.
"The future of Ebola in Mali will depend on the quality of the surveillance of these contacts. If they are rigorously followed, and any subsequent cases are quickly identified and isolated, the battle will be won. But if there are failures in the process, it will lead to further contamination and further problems," said Ibrahima-Soce Fall, Mali's WHO representative.
Among those placed under quarantine are about 20 members of the U.N. peacekeeping force who were treated for battlefield wounds at the Bamako hospital where the dead nurse had worked. The peacekeepers are based in the north of the country, where they are trying to stabilize a vast region where jihadists ruled until a French-led war in 2013.
In recent years Mali already has suffered a separatist rebel insurgency, a coup that overthrew its longtime leader and a war against jihadists. Now Ebola threatens to be another source of misery if it is not contained.
"Ebola could cause many deaths here in Mali, said Aminata Samake, who works at a bank in the capital. "We have a tradition of living closely together that could contribute to a huge contamination. Take the example of public transport — you find people crammed into a bus, one on top of the other. Large families share the same plates, even the same glasses for tea."


No worries, right? We'll just go disinfect the site where the infected imam was washed three weeks ago , and try and find the 96 357 over 400 and climbing contacts, who've now potentially spread Ebola to 4000 other people in a capitol teeming with 2,000,000 people living in each others' laps, along with the 20 UN peacekeepers from other countries' military forces, and that should be just fine.

I mean, it's not like someone infected took the subway across town, got a sub sandwich, and went bowling, right?

And now, the Reuters version:

(Reuters) - The United Nations mission in Mali has canceled plans to renew a contract with a private clinic providing care to its peacekeepers after a case of Ebola was missed and spread from there.This second Ebola alarm in Mali, coming just as it seemed to have contained its first case last month, raised doubts about the country's ability to protect itself from the epidemic that is ravaging three other states in West Africa. More than 5,000 people have died, almost all in Liberia, Sierra Leone and in Guinea, which shares an 800 km (500 mile) border with Mali.
The U.N. mission in Mali, whose peacekeepers are helping to protect the nation against Islamist rebels, reversed on Saturday a decision taken earlier in the week to renew the contract with the Pasteur Clinic in Bamako to care for sick or injured troops.
A U.N spokesman said the decision was taken "due to prevailing circumstances" but gave no further details.
It followed the death in the clinic in late October of an elderly imam, or Muslim religious leader, from Guinea. The sick man was never tested, but his case directly led to a chain of confirmed deaths from Ebola, including a 25-year-old nurse who treated him and a woman who washed his dead body.
The clinic, one of Bamako's best known and used by expatriates and the country's elite, denies any wrongdoing. It says it followed all its procedures for treating Ebola and that the imam never showed any signs of the fever.
On Tuesday last week, Mali's health minister declared there were no more confirmed cases in the country after it appeared to have successfully contained its first Ebola case of an infant girl who died last month.
But by nightfall the same day, the 25-year-old nurse from the clinic had died of the disease and authorities are now trying to trace over 400 potential fresh contacts.
President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita has ordered an enquiry.
Ibrahima Fall, World Health Organisation representative in Mali, said the Pasteur Clinic - which has no connection to the Paris-based Institut Pasteur - made "a terrible mistake" by not alerting authorities to the case of the sick Guinean imam, who would have been showing Ebola-like symptoms.
He said it was WHO officials tracing reported deaths in Guinea who had discovered this case in Mali.
Mali's Ebola response leader, Samba Sow, said the clinic did not tell him of a second suspected Ebola case once he got there. "It is something we would like to have known," he said.
Aid workers and diplomats in Bamako cite delays and obstacles in setting up Sow's Ebola-response team and poor communication within government over the latest case.


Government cluelessness?
Medical stupidity?
Delays and obstacles in response?
Poor communication?

This would be understandable, if we hadn't seen the exact same chain of official stupidity in Monrovia, Freetown, Conkary, Geneva, Madrid, and Washington D.C., as well as in NYC and Dallas.

It's clinically significant that Ebola manifestly causes profound dementia, verbal psychosis, and severe retardation in those responsible for dealing with outbreaks.
Posted by Aesop at 1:39 PM
Labels: Ebola
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://raconteurreport.blogspot.com/...ill-clown.html

Sunday, November 16, 2014
Still An @$$Clown
CNN screenshot of interview with CDC Director Frieden, who apparently just won't go away.

Some people don't get that the best thing they could do is shut up, and quietly hide in their offices for 5 to 10 years, if not quietly retire to BFEgypt.

Usually, if you weren't clear on the concept, the president appointing a political hack to get the spotlight off of you, then keeping that guy in more seclusion than US nuclear weapons information, is normally a pretty good clue to STFU and slither away.

But hubris is a tough disease to beat, and CDC Director Tom Frieden still has a raging case, as noted in this CNN exclusive interview with him:

(CNN) -- In an exclusive interview with CNN, Dr. Thomas Frieden, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, reflected on the lowest moments -- and the surprises -- that occurred when Thomas Eric Duncan became the first person to unexpectedly arrive in the United States with Ebola.
Duncan has been the only person in the United States to die of the disease, and two nurses who cared for him became infected with the virus. The CDC was roundly criticized for its handling of the crisis, and some Republican lawmakers called for Frieden's resignation.
Frieden's lowest moment: when the first nurse, Nina Pham, was diagnosed with Ebola.
"We learned that the situation wasn't going to be as simple or as controlled as we thought it would be, and we immediately intensified our response to address the situation in Dallas," he said.
He said his biggest surprise was the difficulty of Duncan's care.

"I think we didn't recognize how hard it would be to care for someone with Ebola who was desperately ill in the U.S., and how much hands-on nursing care there would be, and we didn't expect two nurses to get infected," Frieden said.

Gotcha Tommy. You only misunderstood the disease itself, how to treat it, and how to prevent its spread. Say, by the by, what's the NAME of your agency again...?

During Duncan's hospitalization, Frieden repeatedly said in press conferences that any hospital in the United States should be able to treat Ebola.
CNN asked Frieden if he regretted those statements, considering that at Texas Presbyterian Hospital, Duncan died and two nurses became infected, but the other nine U.S. Ebola patients, who were treated at hospitals that were specially designated to treat the disease, all lived. In those cases no workers became infected.

"Clearly there are things that we wish we'd done differently," he said. "The bottom line is that Ebola is hard to treat, and when the first patient ever with Ebola came to the United States, we thought the guidelines would protect the health care workers. When two health care workers became infected, we recognized the guidelines didn't work. So we changed them."

Riiiiiiiiiiight. The only thing you do, as an agency with no coercive power, is to promote standards and guidelines for all 5000 hospitals in the US on anything that could be a public health concern. Particularly a virus with no known cure and an 80% mortality rate. So the only thing you had to contribute on Ebola, you totally ****ed up nine ways from Sunday, and had to completely backtrack on and revamp, because you'd never noticed the work done for decades by groups like Doctors Without Borders in dealing with this very disease much better under far more primitive conditions. Great job, Tommy!

He added that one thing his agency would have done differently would have been to tell nurse Amber Vinson not to board an airplane from Cleveland to Dallas. Vinson had taken care of Duncan and had reported a temperature of 99.5 degrees, but was told she could fly, because the CDC's threshold at that time for Ebola was 100.4 degrees. Vinson later was diagnosed with Ebola.

Because when your main goal is the public's inviolable health and safety, what better bureaucratic approach than to throw all caution to the winds, and stick lockstep with inappropriate and clueless guidelines, right?

CNN also asked if he considered leaving his post when several Republican lawmakers called for his resignation.
"I'm really just focused on stopping Ebola. I'm working around the clock to do that, and I will continue to do that, as long as Ebola is spreading, as long as I have the opportunity to do that," he said.

Based on your performance in this crisis so far, you "working around the clock" on it is pretty much every American's worst nightmare. Consider other opportunities, and update your resume. There's got to be a town somewhere in North Dakota or the Yukon that needs a good dog and cat vet where the locals may not associate you with the CDC gig right off the bat. Think hard on this, will ya?

"I wish I had know then what we know now," he added. "But that's not how the world works. We live life forwards and we understand it backwards. Looking back with 20/20 hindsight, there are always things we would do differently."

Like wishing the president had hired someone who wasn't a flaming head-up-the-ass hemorrhoid to supervise the CDC, no doubt. Or, simply playing calliope music as the background music whenever you make an interview appearance. Like this time.

And now, some appropriate exit music for you...

Posted by Aesop at 2:45 PM
Labels: Ebola, jackass
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
Brewer, are you saying the incompetent local African governments, or the idiot CDC can't handle Ebola in Mali? Why, Brewer. he he he
 

summerthyme

Administrator
_______________
Frieden might be more convincing in his insistence that "there was no way we could have envisioned the reality before it happened", if a whole bunch of self-educated yahoos on the 'net hadn't predicted EXACTLY WHAT HAPPENED when the CDC started spewing their "level 2 PPE is *perfectly adequate*" for what has *always* been a Level4 pathogen!!

Hard to see what's in front of you when you've got your eyes covered and the only thing you're hearing is political ads from NPR

Summerthyme
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://raconteurreport.blogspot.com/...ola-cases.html

Sunday, November 16, 2014
Mali Hits It Outta The Park: 42 Ebola Cases Overnight!
Remain calm! ALL IS WELL!!!
h/t to commenter mike 18xx

So much for 4 cases: Mali is sitting on 42 Ebola cases, all essentially the downstream result of washing the Ebola-laden corpse of a dead grand imam in capitol Bamako (Pop. 2M). And actually, more "While they were whistling past the graveyard" rather than "overnight" strictly speaking. You can now cancel Christmas there, as the contacts of 42 people, versus 4, and now at one to three weeks downstream, means any hope for getting ahead of this in that country is weeks away, if they ever even can get ahead of it.

If they fail, Mali has 16M people, in essentially the same situation as the first three affected nations, except they have no outside aid, no outside reserves available to deploy, and oh, BTW, they're still engaged with an active rebel insurgency.

If you get in a balloon, and take binoculars, you might be able to still see how far beyond "F***ED" Mali is.

And lest we forget, no one is screening passengers from Mali, and there are no flight restrictions or international quarantines on travelers from there as of yet, here or in any other country in the world (except for Mauritania, to the west, and Uzbekistan).

Mali government report pdf en Francais

Mali SitRep en Englais:

"If you pointy-headed idjits wasn't fondling Ebola-infected dead people, ya wouldn't all be crapping your guts out, now wouldja?"


UPDATE: Hey, look, someone at the CDC was working on the weekend:

Nov 16 (Reuters) - The United States will begin enhanced screening for travelers whose trips started in the African nation of Mali, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Department of Homeland Security said on Sunday.

The CDC recommended adding Mali to the list of countries whose travelers undergo heightened screening because there had been a number of confirmed cases of Ebola there in recent days, the agencies said in a statement. Travelers from Mali will face the same screening as those from Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea.

Posted by Aesop at 2:50 AM
Labels: Ebola

Anyone else see a possible scenario where IS/AQAM affiliates raid one of these hospitals for "samples"?
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://www.theorganicprepper.ca/we-...responsible-people-like-kacie-hickox-10302014

We Prep for Ebola Because of Irresponsible People Like Kacie Hickox
Posted by: Daisy Luther | on October 30, 2014 | Reader Views: 2,336

That nurse in Maine sure does love the spotlight.

After Kacie Hickox returned from Sierra Leone, where she was treating Ebola patients, she was outraged when she was put in isolation by the state of New Jersey. After railing about her civil rights, she was then transferred to her home in Maine, where she was asked to remain home for the remainder of the 21 day incubation period.

Well, you can’t tell Kacie Hickox what to do. No sir. She knows her rights.

Although she tried to portray herself as a saintly caregiver who was being victimized, today she showed herself to be anything but selfless.

She defied the quarantine and went out for a bike ride with her boyfriend, which was the equivalent of giving a great big middle finger salute to those who asked her to remain home.

And this, my friends, is why quarantine for those returning from Ebola-plagued regions may become mandatory. Because “rebels” like Kacie Hickox can’t be trusted to stay home and do the responsible thing. Because they “demand their rights” and to heck with anyone else. People like Kacie Hickox make it crystal clear that the rest of us must be prepared to isolate ourselves, because you sure can’t rely on others to be responsible.

Think about it: after the case of Thomas Duncan, who has been diagnosed with Ebola here in the US? Healthcare workers. People who deal with the bodily fluids of the ill. People who are immersed in mucus, vomit, urine, and feces as part of their jobs. Even though the two nurses who were covered from head to toe in protective clothing, and so too was Dr. Craig Spencer, they all became ill.

Is Kacie Hickox possessed of some kind of superpower immunity? How is she so certain she isn’t ill? Does she love being in the spotlight so much that she has no problem potentially exposing her neighbors in a small town and Main to Ebola?

As a medical professional, she knows the potential for her to have contracted the disease. Hopefully, she’ll remain the picture of glowing health, but her irresponsible rebellion borders on the criminally negligent. She wasn’t asked to sit in a prison cell for 21 days – she was asked to stay in the comfort of her home. Her blatant defiance against, well, common sense, is the kind of thing that fuels governmental overreach. This is so ridiculous that one has to wonder if she’s complicit in setting the rest of us up for martial law and FEMA camps, or if she really IS that selfish.
Self-Quarantine is the answer to other peoples’ irresponsibility.

Because of people like Kacie Hickox, should the situation in the United States take on pandemic proportions, you absolutely can’t trust other people to do the right thing. Therefore, you need to have plans in place to quarantine yourself and your family if the virus surfaces in your area. (You can find the details on going into preventative lockdown HERE.)

This nurse in Maine is our cautionary tale. It’s a clear warning that selfish people can’t be trusted to do the right thing. If the virus begins to spread, your only option to protect yourself and your family is to take steps to stay away from being exposed by their carelessness. People like Kacie Hickox are the reason that we prepare.

Here’s a quick checklist along with some links to resources. Base amounts on the number of family members you’ll be sheltering.

Particularly if you are on a budget, focus on the first segment of this list. These are the supplies you need to weather a possible pandemic in the comfort and safety of your home.

Drinking water (1 gallon per person per day)
Food supply (Learn how to build a one-month supply quickly HERE)
Include food items that don’t require fuel for preparation)
Heavy duty garbage bags
Sanitation supplies such as toilet paper, paper towels, baby wipes, and feminine hygiene supplies)
Entertainment – you’ll want to be able to keep children and restless family members busy so get craft supplies, books, games, and puzzles
Basic medical supplies (here’s a list)
Heavy duty cleaners such as disposable bleach wipes and bottles of bleach
Antibacterial hand sanitizer (Purell Pump Bottle, Original, 8 Ounce (Pack of 12))

*Note – we do not commonly use anti-bacterial products but in a situation like this, it’s important to have this type of thing on hand, particularly in the event that there are issues with sanitation

Once you have your basics stashed away, consider medical supplies and protective clothing. These items are becoming difficult to acquire, in part due to a massive government solicitation. If this is not in your budget, remember that these items are for desperate circumstances. You’d only need them if you were forced to go out in the midst of a pandemic, or if someone in your home became ill and you were caring for them. This is NOT where your primary focus should be, however, the items are good to have on hand.

Pandemic kits that contain protective clothing (we have a QuakeKare Deluxe Pandemic Flu Kit for each family member) Our kit is sold out, but this one is similar: Pandemic Virus Kit Module by AXP
Extra N95 masks (3M 1860 Health Care N95 Particulate Respirator and Surgical Mask, Small Adult, 20/Bx, 3M 8511 Particulate N95 Respirator with Valve, 10-Pack, and 3M 8000 Particle Respirator N95, 30-Pack )
N100 masks (3M Particulate Respirator 8233, N100, Moldex 2730 N100 Respirator Mask with Handy Strap Bx/5 Each, 3M 8233 N100 Particulate Respirator – Case of 20
Nitrile gloves (Dynarex Black Nitrile Exam Gloves, Heavy-Duty, Powder Free, Large, Box/100, Liberty T2010W Nitrile Industrial Glove, Powder Free, Disposable, 4 mil Thickness, Large, Blue (Box of 100)
SafeTouch Nitrile Exam Gloves, Non Latex, Powder Free, Large, Box/100
Safety goggles with an elastic band to ensure a snug fit (Pyramex V2G Safety Eyewear, Clear Anti-Fog Lens With Black Strap/Temples), DEWALT DPG82-11C Concealer Clear Anti-Fog Dual Mold Safety Goggle, DEWALT DPG82-11C Concealer Clear Anti-Fog Dual Mold Safety Goggle, Neiko 53875B ANSI Z87.1 Anti-Fog Approved Wide-Vision Extra-Soft Lab Safety Goggle
Protective clothing: DuPont TY122S Disposable Elastic Wrist, Bootie & Hood White Tyvek Coverall Suit 1414, Size Large, Sold by the Each, Dupont TY120S L Large Tyvek Coveralls Suit, Sold By Each, DuPont Tyvek TY122S Disposable Coverall with Hood and Boots, Elastic Cuff, White, X-Large (Pack of 25)

Books and Reference Materials:

Ebola Survival Handbook: A Collection of Tips, Strategies, and Supply Lists From Some of the World’s Best Preparedness Professionals

The Prepper’s Blueprint: The Step-By-Step Guide To Help You Through Any Disaster

The Pantry Primer: How to Build a One Year Food Supply in Three Months

Sealing Yourself In: Prepping for Bioterrorism, Chemical Disasters, and Pandemics (The NEW Survival Prepper Guides Book 3)

“Like” Pandemic Watch on Facebook

When Should I Go Into a Full Pandemic Lockdown Mode And Self Quarantine?

How to Build a 30-Day Emergency Food Supply… Fast

Pandemic Preparedness: What To Do Before The Panic Starts

How to Be a Prepper… But Not One of Those Crazy Ones

Ready Nutrition

SHTFplan

Graywolf Survival

Underground Medic


About the author:

Please feel free to share any information from this site in part or in full, giving credit to the author and including a link to this website and the following bio.

Daisy Luther is a freelance writer and editor. Her website, The Organic Prepper, offers information on healthy prepping, including premium nutritional choices, general wellness and non-tech solutions.

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Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://hotair.com/archives/2014/11/1...ling-her-that/

Ebola nurse Kaci Hickox would appreciate it if you stopped calling her that
posted at 5:01 pm on November 17, 2014 by Noah Rothman

I feel a slight pang of sympathy for nurse Kaci Hickox. An accomplished medical professional who selflessly devoted her time and expertise to helping stem the outbreak of viral hemorrhagic fever in West Africa, Hickox earned the unflattering moniker “Ebola nurse” after she returned home from her travels and embarked a crusade to fight what she considered unwarranted mandatory isolation.

And, as perhaps anyone would in her circumstances, Hickox is bristling at being dubbed the “Ebola nurse” in the press.

“I never had Ebola. I never had symptoms of Ebola,” Hickox wrote in an op-ed published in The Guardian. “I am now past the incubation period – meaning that I will not develop symptoms of Ebola.”

“I never had Ebola, so please stop calling me ‘the Ebola Nurse’ – now!” she demanded with a heavy dose of what has become her familiar sense of entitlement.

Here is where my sympathy for Hickox runs thin.

It was Hickox who allowed herself to become a media sensation when she began giving the press interviews from her isolation tent in New Jersey, where Gov. Chris Christie’s administration refused to allow her to travel to Maine via public transportation without first submitting to monitoring. It was Hickox who, when she was released from quarantine in New Jersey, refused to abide by even requests to voluntarily self-isolate by the state of Maine. It was Hickox who courted media attention by ostentatiously going for a bike ride in a theatrical display of contempt for the will of her home state’s representative government.

Possessed of a sense of martyrdom, Hickox embraced the notion that she was being victimized by small-minded potentates who refused to acknowledge the science which indicated that she was no danger to others. When a Maine judge reversed a court order that had made Hickox’s self-isolation involuntary, he essentially suggested that Hickox had been mistreated. “[T]he court is fully aware that people are acting out of fear and that this fear is not entirely rational,” that judge ruled.

Perhaps this is true, but Hickox’s demand that her vindication be delivered to her today – “now!” in her words – is indicative of an incomplete understanding of the nature of self-governance. Despite his vilification in nearly all the media outlets which chronicled Christie’s decision to quarantine Hickox, a full two-thirds of New Jersey’s voters approved of his decision.

Neither he, nor Maine Gov. Paul LePage, nor New Hampshire Gov. Maggie Hassan, nor California Gov. Jerry Brown, nor any of the other state governors who elected to impose limited quarantines on potentially Ebola-infected individuals were doing so out of a narrow disregard for science. They were acknowledging the volatile political conditions the Ebola outbreak had created in the United States, and the fact that the scientific community was not of the uniform opinion that Ebola’s transmission pathways were universally understood and immutable.

Hickox, for all her worldliness, obstinately refuses to acknowledge the legitimacy of those conditions which led to her confinement. Now, she thinks she is owed an apology because the press turned on her – a figure they set out to aggrandize, but who speedily squandered the public’s pity. Hickox’s apology will not be forthcoming, and that is only likely to further confuse this supposedly learned figure.
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://raconteurreport.blogspot.com/2014/11/custer-lives.html

Monday, November 17, 2014
Custer Lives


The Minnesota National Guard's 34th Infantry Division headquarters and soldiers from 11 other states will deploy this spring to support U.S. Ebola response operations in West Africa, officials announced Sunday.
In all, about 2,100 soldiers from the National Guard and Army Reserve are expected to deploy to Liberia and Senegal to relieve troops who deployed to the region in September and October as part of Operation Bring Ebola Home.

If you live in Minnesota, or any of the 11 other states whose troops are being tapped for this clown show, be sure and write Sen. Al Franken, and tell him how much you can't wait for Johnny to come marching home - with Ebola.

And here's Johnny's C-in-C. Now you know why we're doing this.

"Happy Belated Veteran's Day, troops! I'll be on the golf course."

Posted by Aesop at 4:50 PM
Labels: Ebola

1 comment:

Able said...

I've spent 30 years active service (deployed to every active 'situation' UK forces were involved in from 1982-2012), now reserve, and at the recent Remembrance Day parade I basically straight out told my CO (Lt. Gen.) that if I was recalled for this I'd both resign my commission and cause such a stink he'd have to court martial me. I have (demonstrably) no issue with fighting for my country but I'm not being sent on a suicide mission as a political stunt (with no possible beneficial effect whatsoever).

I recommend that the troops slated for deployment do exactly the same but from some of the comments there they are being mushroomed as per normal (kept in the dark and fed sh*t – told they'll be fine and all is OK) and so some seem not only not concerned but gung-ho about it. I am, however, disgusted with the senior officers who are simply going along with this (I suspect if I did that I’d probably fragged before I stepped off the plane – assuming such senior officers will even come close to being deployed there themselves – naïve of me I know).

This is so much a 'really bad idea' that even I, after decades in the forces, am flabbergasted by the sheer suicidal stupidity of this.

Food drops, material, equipment help maybe, but sending in troops to be exposed is as callous and treasonous a behaviour as I ever thought to witness.

If I or mine were deliberately exposed like this forget about remonstrations, I'd slot the entire chain.
November 17, 2014 at 7:14 PM
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://frontpageafricaonline.com/in...x-mas-complacency-compounds-liberia-s-reality

Zero Ebola Cases by X-Mas? Complacency Compounds Reality

Written by FPA Report
Published: 18 November 2014

Amid the optimism many fear that the political atmosphere and people's perception that the worst has passed Liberia is giving rise to complacency in some quarters, even as infections in Bong County remained stagnant for the past three weeks and Cape Mount and Montserrado report new cases.

Monrovia – Addressing the nation last week, Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf targeted December 25th, 2014, Christmas Day as a national goal for the possible elimination of the deadly Ebola virus from Liberia’s soil as she announced an extension of a curfew imposed as a result of the outbreak and the lifting of the State of Emergency.


Said Sirleaf: “This is why, in keeping with the public health law, and determined to enable the maintenance of the required vigilance, community mobilization and awareness, as well as sustain the gains; until we can start the progressive countdown of 21 days, until the national goal of zero-new-cases by Christmas is achieved all across the country, we will keep many of the previous measures in place with appropriate adjustments, consistent with the progress in our fight.”

In the past few weeks, declining numbers across the country, with the exception of a few spots in River Cess, Montserrado and Grand Cape Mount counties, have given hope to many that Liberia could actually beat the outbreak in time for Christmas. But despite the optimism, the nagging reality, coupled with pockets of cases in some areas, have many exercising caution and the international community is taking notice.

Dr. Bruce Aylward, the World Health Organization (WHO) Assistant Director General for Polio and Emergencies who was in Liberia last week, urged Liberians not to begin relaxing the measures aimed at stopping the transmission of the Ebola virus disease that has ravaged Liberia and its two neighbors, Guinea and Sierra Leone. The reality, is according to Dr. Bruce Aylward, there are still traces of the virus popping up in a number of areas across the country and any change in attitude in relation to the Ebola fight could be devastating to the population.

According to the latest Ministry of Health and Social Welfare case tracker, new Ebola cases are springing up in Bong, Grand Cape Mount, and Rivercess Counties. Montserrado has seen at least 24 new cases, Rivercess 14, Grand Bassa 3, Bong 5 and 1 new cases in Cape Mount. In contrast, the rest of the country is seeing zero number of cases in the past weeks with Lofa, Sinoe, Grand Gedeh, Bomi, Sinoe, River Gee, Grand Kru, Maryland, Nimba, and Gbparpolu have all reported zero case of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) for the past four weeks, a positive signal that the Christmas goal is within reach.

Dr. Aylward agrees that Liberia stands a good chance to record zero new case in the coming months, but this will only become a reality if Liberians maintain those measures put into place by health authorities to fight the Ebola virus disease. More importantly, person to person transmission has dropped from 45% to 18%.

But even if Liberia achieves the feat, the situation in neighboring Guinea and Sierra Leone holds the key to how soon Liberia would be declared Ebola free, a point Sirleaf alluded to last week when she said: “We also know that Liberia cannot be declared Ebola free until our neighbors are also Ebola free. This means that we cannot let down our guard nor can we afford to reduce our vigilance.

Amid the optimism many fear that the political atmosphere and people's perception that the worst has passed Liberia is giving rise to complacency in some quarters, even as infections in the populous Bong County remained stagnant for the past three weeks. More than 2,800 of West Africa's 5,165 Ebola deaths have been recorded in Liberia. In recent weeks, however, both the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and the World Health Organization have reported that Liberia, once the fastest growing segment of the Ebola epidemic, is now holding steady at 6,878 cases of Ebola and 2,812 deaths. But caution they say is crucial to eradicating the disease from Africa’s oldest republic.

The lax of the State of Emergency and count down to the major Tubman Birthday celebration on November 29, observers say could prove pivotal for Liberia’s Ebola recovery and could serve as a major test of how well Liberians can cope with massive gathering and persistent instructions to avoid touching, hugging and crowded gathering during what is the biggest holiday in Liberia. Only 300 Liberians had been infected with the virus when the State of Emergency was put in place on August 7. Those numbers soon rocketed to an estimated 500 cases a day as the virus wreaks havoc across the country.

Today, report of zero cases in most counties is springing hope that light is at the end of the tunnel, a testament, Sirleaf, whose administration has been criticized for its initial handling of the outbreak, now says points a united effort from Liberians and the world which came to its aid. “We took on a fight, we appealed to the world, we appealed to our citizens, our citizens listened, and the world responded. Today we can all be proud of the progress.”
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.
http://frontpageafricaonline.com/in...autions-liberians-not-to-let-ebola-guard-down

WHO Official Cautions Liberians Not To Let Ebola Guard Down

Written by FPA Report
Published: 17 November 2014

Monrovia – The World Health Organization (WHO) Assistant Director General for Polio and Emergencies has joined calls to all Liberians not to begin relaxing the measures aimed at stopping the transmission of the Ebola virus disease that has ravaged Liberia and its two neighbors, Guinea and Sierra Leone.


Dr. Bruce Aylward said there were still traces of the virus popping up in a number of areas across the country and any change in attitude in relation to the Ebola fight could be devastating on the population.

According to an Executive Mansion release, the WHO Assistant Director General made the comments during a courtesy call on President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf at her Foreign Ministry office on Thursday, November 13, 2014. The Canadian physician and epidemiologist caution comes in the wake of reports of new Ebola cases springing up in Bong, Grand Cape Mount, and Rivercess Counties.

Dr. Aylward said Liberia now stands the chance to record zero new case in the coming months, but this will only become a reality if Liberians maintain those measures put into place by health authorities to fight the Ebola virus disease.

The WHO Assistant Director General, however, said he was happy that Liberia now knows the enemy, they are fighting unlike few months back when they knew little or nothing about the disease which he said greatly contributed to the huge devastation it has had on the country. “This knowledge of the virus and sticking to measures put in place has scored progress for Liberia,” Dr. Aylward said.

On behalf of WHO Director General Margaret Chan, he thanked President Sirleaf for the leadership demonstrated that has seen a drastic reduction in the number of new cases over the past three weeks.

Dr Aylward believes that now is the time now for Liberians to hunt the virus instead of the other way around when thousands died in a short period of time not knowing what they were confronting. He said Ebola as a virus disease does not hide itself. Rather, people hide it; unlike a disease like polio indicating that only a united front can perform the task of defeating the disease.

Responding, President Sirleaf said Liberians were still committed to the fight until the last virus is eradicated and equally expressed the fear that any change in behavior would be counterproductive to the Ebola fight. The Liberian leader re-echoed her statement as contained in her national wide address earlier in the day that Liberians intend to score a zero new case by Christmas as part of a national goal on the Ebola fight.

President Sirleaf said this goal will attempt to include communities to take ownership through sensitization and social mobilization. She said though this has been working in some communities, government and its partners intend to make it more robust and inclusive as there is no turning back in the eradication fight.

The Liberian President expressed the hope that the new cases being reported in Bong, Grand Cape Mount and Rivercess Counties would be put under control as government and its partners were not taking it lightly.

The WHO Assistant Director General joined the WHO in 1992 as a Medical Officer with the Expanded Programme on Immunization. Since 1998, Dr Aylward has been responsible for the oversight and coordination of all polio eradication activities across WHO's Regional Offices and the Global Polio Eradication Initiative partnership. He oversaw and managed the scale-up of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative, which since 1997 has expanded to operate in every polio-affected country of the world and reduced the number of polio-endemic countries to three. Since 2011, Dr Aylward has led WHO’s work in preparedness, readiness and response to humanitarian emergencies as the lead agency of the Global Health Cluster.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
Part of the thing with quarantine is that if a person does manifest, it is much easier to identify those with whom they came in contact for monitoring. Contact monitoring is a major strategy in controlling the disease and getting resources to them early on if they manifest. Dr. Spencer and his irresponsible behavior made it impossible to track down those with whom he came in contact. That is how epidemics spread - Look at Mali.
 
India quarantines man recovering from Ebola
8:23pm IST

http://in.reuters.com/article/2014/11/18/ebola-india-idINKCN0J21MY20141118

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India has quarantined a man who was cured of Ebola in Liberia but continued to show traces of the virus in samples of his semen after arriving in the country, the Health Ministry said on Tuesday.

The ministry said in a statement that the Indian national tested negative for Ebola in tests conforming to World Heath Organisation guidelines but was quarantined when he arrived at New Delhi airport as a precautionary measure. Later, tests of his semen detected traces of the virus.

"It is a known fact that during convalescence from Ebola Virus Disease, persons continue to shed virus in bodily fluids for variable periods. However, presence of (the) virus in his semen samples may have the possibility of transmitting the disease through sexual route up to 90 days from time of clinical cure."

===

There's one we've yet to see.

===

.
 
Via Dr. Niman

Nearly 600 under watch in Mali in bid to stem Ebola
POSTED: 18 Nov 2014 04:44
UPDATED: 18 Nov 2014 05:45

http://linkis.com/bit.ly/uDus8

KOUREMALE: Mali said on Monday (Nov 17) it had placed nearly 600 people who may have been exposed to Ebola under surveillance as the country battles to contain the spread of the deadly tropical virus.

The west African nation has been scrambling to prevent a minor outbreak turning into a major crisis after the deaths of a Guinean imam and the Malian nurse who treated him in the capital Bamako.

A friend who had visited the imam in the Pasteur clinic also died of probable Ebola, while a doctor at the clinic who contracted the disease was undergoing treatment. A two-year-old child died of Ebola in an unconnected case in the western town of Kayes in October.

President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita, on a visit to the imam's home village of Kouremale on the Mali-Guinea border, urged locals to take all precautions in "the war" against Ebola.

"I ask you to redouble your vigilance. We will not close the border, but don't let anyone enter Mali without having washed their hands or taken their temperature," the president told frontier medical workers. By way of example, the president then soaped his own hands and had his temperature taken.

Health Minister Ousmane Kone, who accompanied the president on the trip, said "577 people were under daily observation", up from Sunday's figure of 442 people who were being monitored for Ebola symptoms.

A government official said on Friday that two people who died after exposure to the imam's body were "highly suspected" of having contracted the virus. They are not confirmed cases, however, and have not been counted among the official statistics.

The World Health Organisation announced on Friday that the outbreak - almost entirely confined to west Africa - had left 5,177 people dead from around 14,500 cases since Ebola emerged in Guinea in December.

Samba Sow, of the Ebola emergency operations centre, said on Sunday that the western town of Kayes had not reported any new cases in the last three weeks and was now considered Ebola-free.

The virus is estimated to have killed up to 70 per cent of its victims across west Africa, often shutting down their organs and causing unstoppable bleeding.

- AFP/de

===

.
 
US to screen travelers from Mali for Ebola

https://news.yahoo.com/us-screen-travelers-mali-ebola-220329290.html

Associated Press
By MIKE STOBBE November 16, 2014 6:27 PM

NEW YORK (AP) — Travelers from Mali will be subject to the same screening and monitoring that was ordered for people arriving from three other Ebola-affected countries, U.S. health officials said Sunday.

Mali is not suffering widespread Ebola illnesses. But federal officials are growing increasingly worried about a new cluster of seven illnesses in Mali that have left health public health workers scrambling to track and monitor at least 450 other people who may have had contact with the seven people and may be at risk.

"At this point we can't be confident that every exposed person has been identified, or that every identified person is being monitored daily," said Dr. Tom Frieden, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Starting Monday, anyone arriving in the United States from Mali will undergo the same screening procedures that were ordered last month for travelers from Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea. That includes taking arriving travelers' temperatures, and questioning them about their health and possible exposure to the Ebola virus. They also will be asked to provide contact information and to agree to — for 21 days — have daily communications with local health officials who will be asking them to take their temperatures twice each day and monitoring them to see if they develop symptoms.

West Africa is currently suffering the worst Ebola epidemic in world history, with at least 14,000 illnesses and more than 5,100 deaths so far. Nearly all of the cases have been in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone. About 75 people arrive from those three countries each day, on average. They are funneled through five airports — two in New York and one each in Washington, Chicago and Atlanta.

In contrast, only about 15 to 20 passengers arrive from Mali to the United States on an average day. The majority end up arriving through the same five airports. But in the next few days, steps will be taken to make sure all funnel through those airports, Frieden said.

The CDC is quickly expanding its staffing in Mali, with at least four people there as of Sunday and about a dozen expected to be in place within the next couple of days, agency officials said.

The most common symptoms of the epidemic strain of Ebola include fever, headache and vomiting and diarrhea. People are only considered to be infectious while they are suffering symptoms, which can begin anywhere from two to 21 days after a person is infected.

The CDC has not advised against travel to Mali, and noted the latest cases are in Bamako and a rural village. The CDC is warning travelers to Mali to avoid contact with blood or body fluids from anyone who might be sick with Ebola or who recently died from the disease.

===

.
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
Brewer, zero Ebola cases by Christmas: DOOMER DOUG WANTS WHATEVER DRUG YOU ARE NOW USING!!!!<g> Seriously, Brewer how can anybody make that kind of statement who is not a resident of a psych ward?

Here is still more bad news from Mali, Brewer. This is yet another fine post by Dr. Niman over at flutracker.com

Media reports cite another confirmed Ebola cases in Mali, but the identification of confirmed, probable, and suspect cases remains unclear.


niman
Post subject: Re: Mali Confirmed Ebola Cases Increase To Five
PostPosted: Tue Nov 18, 2014 10:42 am
Online

Joined: Wed Aug 19, 2009 10:42 am
Posts: 47858
Location: Pittsburgh, PA USA
Mali on high alert as new Ebola cases confirmed Email thisShare This
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Ebola Scare



Mali is on high alert after authorities in Bamako confirmed the fifth case of Ebola in the country. Malian President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita visited a treatment center Monday where the humanitarian medical group Doctors Without Borders is receiving patients.

It didn’t look good. Three people, all showing symptoms that should have led medical staff to suspect Ebola, all died at the Pasteur Clinic, one of Bamako’s best and busiest hospitals.

It wasn’t until health officials in neighboring Guinea alerted Bamako authorities that one of the deceased was an Guinean imam that the Ebola rapid response team was sent to Clinic Pasteur. The Muslim leader had traveled to the Malian capital in late October.

Active precautions

When Dr. Samba Sow, who heads the Ebola response in Mali, arrived at the clinic, he found that two of the hospitals’ staff members, a 25-year old nurse and a doctor, already were isolated after showing symptoms. Authorities immediately put the entire clinic, its staff and several patients under quarantine.

Over the weekend volunteers and medical staff searched for more than 500 people, thought to have had contact with the Imam or the nurse. The number of contacts is likely to rise in the coming days, according to Sow.

“The first day we had less than 100 contacts," he said. "Then there were 180. It rose to 442 up to now when we have identified 552 contacts. I told my team this morning to not rest until they find all of them. By the end of this week I expect we’ll have identified over 1,000 people."

The rising number of possible contacts is good news, said the doctor. “The key to contain and fight Ebola is to find as many contacts as possible and then make sure they’re isolated and monitored,” said Sow.

From Bamako, efforts to step up Mali’s Ebola response and contain the country’s second Ebola cluster are underway.

On Monday, President Keita visited a treatment center where Doctors Without Borders is receiving and treating suspected and confirmed cases. One patient already is there, the doctor from the Pasteur Clinic.

“All measures are being put in place. We’re doing everything we can to step up efforts. I’m confident we will erase Ebola in Mali,” said the president.

Ebola warnings

The male nurse was admitted to the hospital and later died. Doctors say new cases should begin to present themselves two weeks after the male nurse was admitted. One hundred health workers and volunteers are currently looking for people thought to have had contact with the nurse in one Bamako neighborhood. Mali’s Red Cross are busy training more staff.

Many Malians are questioning the government’s response. The president is warning all Malians to take Ebola seriously.

“We know that Ebola exists. We also know that’s it’s an extremely deadly disease. It’s transmitted mainly through body fluids, such as blood, sweat and vomit. But we also know how to avoid transmission and the most important thing you can do is to wash your hands,” said Keita.

“I wash my hands several times a day, even if I’m wearing rubber gloves,” the president continued.

For nearly a year, Mali was spared the virus now blamed for killing more than 5,000 people in the region, despite the fact that the country shares a porous border with Guinea where the epidemic started in December last year.

Now there are at least five confirmed cases of Ebola and four deaths linked to the hemorrhagic fever. Hundreds of people have been placed under quarantine, including at least 20 members of the U.N. peacekeeping force who were treated at the Bamako hospital where the deceased nurse worked.
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
More detail on the Indian Ebola case

Well, how many people did this person expose to Ebola?


Suspect Ebola Case At Delhi Airport In India

PostPosted: Tue Nov 18, 2014 10:46 am

Tweets suggest suspect Ebola cases with "traces of Ebola" cited at Delhi airport in India
Sky News Newsdesk ‏@SkyNewsBreak 2m2 minutes ago
Reuters: Indian man quarantined at Delhi airport after testst show traces of Ebola virus
Reuters India ‏@ReutersIndia 11m11 minutes ago
Indian man quarantined at new Delhi airport, health ministry says was cured of #Ebola in Liberia but tests show traces of virus
INDIAN QUARANTINED AT NEW DELHI AIRPORT FOR EBOLA
November 18, 2014 Written by Rohit Jamwal Published in INDIA

Indian man quarantined at new Delhi airport, health ministry says was cured of Ebola in Liberia but tests show traces of virus



India quarantines man recovering from Ebola
NEW DELHI Tue Nov 18, 2014 8:23pm IST

(Reuters) - India has quarantined a man who was cured of Ebola in Liberia but continued to show traces of the virus in samples of his semen after arriving in the country, the Health Ministry said on Tuesday.

The ministry said in a statement that the Indian national tested negative for Ebola in tests conforming to World Heath Organisation guidelines but was quarantined when he arrived at New Delhi airport as a precautionary measure. Later, tests of his semen detected traces of the virus.

"It is a known fact that during convalescence from Ebola Virus Disease, persons continue to shed virus in bodily fluids for variable periods. However, presence of (the) virus in his semen samples may have the possibility of transmitting the disease through sexual route up to 90 days from time of clinical cure."

(Reporting by John Chalmers; Editing by Frank Jack Daniel)

http://in.reuters.com/article/2014/11/1 ... MY20141118


Post subject: Re: Suspect Ebola Case At Delhi Airport In India
PostPosted: Tue Nov 18, 2014 12:16 pm
Online

Joined: Wed Aug 19, 2009 10:42 am
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Ebola Treated and Cured Person from Liberia Quarantined at Airport Health Organisation Quarantine Centre, Delhi

A 26 year old male, Indian, had travelled from Liberia to India and reached Delhi on 10th November, 2014. He underwent the mandatory screening at the Delhi Airport. On interview, he gave history of febrile illness for which he was admitted to a health facility in Liberia on 11th September, 2014 and got discharged on 30th September, 2014. He carried a certificate of medical clearance from the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare, Government of Liberia mentioning that ‘he has successfully undergone care and treatment related to Ebola Virus Disease and after post treatment assessment he has been declared free of any clinical signs and symptoms and confirmed negative by laboratory analysis’.

As a matter of abundant caution, he was isolated at the Airport Health Organization’s Quarantine Centre at Delhi Airport. His three blood samples tested at National Centre for Disease Control, Delhi on 10-13 November, 2014, respectively, were found negative for Ebola Virus Disease by Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT–PCR) tests. Therefore, as per WHO and CDC specifications, he is deemed to be cured. However, as has been reported in the past, the virus may continue to be positive in secretions like urine and semen for a longer time. Before releasing him from quarantine, a decision was taken to test his other body fluids. His semen sample tested at National Centre for Disease Control on 17th November, 2014 was found positive for Ebola Virus by RT-PCR. The tests for semen samples repeated at National Institute of Virology, Pune, on 17th November, 2014 also tested positive. This was confirmed by DG, ICMR on 18th November, 2014.

It is a known fact that during convalescence from Ebola Virus Disease, persons continue to shed virus in body fluids for variable periods. However, presence of virus in his semen samples may have the possibility of transmitting the disease through sexual route upto 90 days from time of clinical cure.

Currently, this person is not having any symptoms of the disease. However, he would be kept under isolation in the special health facility of Delhi Airport Health Organization, till such time his body fluids test negative and he is found medically fit to be discharged.

It is reiterated that the person concerned is a treated and cured case of Ebola Virus Disease. No cases of relapse of Ebola have been documented. All necessary precautions are being taken at the isolation facility. This would rule out even the remote possibility of spread of this disease by the sexual route. The situation is under control and there is no need for any alarm. However, all precautions are being taken in this regard.

http://pib.nic.in/newsite/erelease.aspx?relid=111541


niman
Post subject: Re: Suspect Ebola Case At Delhi Airport In India
PostPosted: Tue Nov 18, 2014 12:47 pm
Online

Joined: Wed Aug 19, 2009 10:42 am
Posts: 47858
Location: Pittsburgh, PA USA
Man tests positive for Ebola in Delhi, kept under isolation
PTI | Nov 18, 2014, 08.58 PM IST

This is the first confirmed case of Ebola, though the victim contracted the virus abroad and has already been treated.
NEW DELHI: In the first case of Ebola in the country, an Indian national returning from Liberia has tested positive for the deadly virus and has been quarantined at a special facility at Delhi airport.

The health ministry said the 26-year-old man, who reached here on November 10, was already treated for the deadly disease in the African country and carried no symptoms but tests of his semen samples were positive, prompting authorities to put him under isolation.

This is the first confirmed case of Ebola, though the victim contracted the virus abroad and has already been treated.

"The situation is under control and there is no need for any alarm. However, all precautions are being taken in this regard," the ministry said in a statement.

It is a known fact, the ministry said, that during convalescence from Ebola, people continue to shed virus in body fluids for variable periods.

However, presence of virus in his semen samples may have the possibility of transmitting the disease through sexual route up to 90 days from time of clinical cure, it said.

He will remain under isolation in the special health facility of Delhi Airport Health Organization till his body fluids test negative and is found medically fit to be discharged, it said, insisting that the man is a treated and cured case of Ebola.

He had carried a certificate of medical clearance from the Liberian government, mentioning that "he has successfully undergone care and treatment related to Ebola and after post treatment assessment has been declared free of any clinical signs and symptoms and confirmed negative by laboratory analysis", the official statement said quoting the Liberian document.

His three blood samples tested here were also found negative for and, therefore, according to WHO and CDC specifications, he is deemed to be cured, it said.

However, the ministry added that the virus may continue to be positive in secretions like urine and semen for a longer time.

Liberia is one of the countries which have seen a number of Ebola cases.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/indi ... 194610.cms



niman
Post subject: Re: Suspect Ebola Case At Delhi Airport In India
PostPosted: Tue Nov 18, 2014 3:01 pm
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Joined: Wed Aug 19, 2009 10:42 am
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Location: Pittsburgh, PA USA
Indian Ebola Survivor Is Under Quarantine at Delhi Airport
By ELLEN BARRYNOV. 18, 2014

NEW DELHI — A 26-year-old Indian man who recovered from Ebola is being held at a quarantine facility at Delhi airport as a cautionary measure after his semen tested positive for the virus, health officials announced on Tuesday.

When he arrived at the airport on Nov. 10, the man volunteered that he had been successfully treated for Ebola in a Liberian hospital and had been released on Sept. 30.

Though tests of three blood samples came up negative, Indian officials opted to hold him because the virus can linger in other bodily fluids, like semen or urine, for as long as three months, according to a government statement carried by the Press Trust of India. Two samples of the man’s semen tested positive for the virus on Monday.

The statement urged calm, reiterating that “the person concerned is a treated and cured case of Ebola virus disease.” Nevertheless, it said, the patient will remain in quarantine until all of his bodily fluids test negative for the virus.

“All necessary precautions are being taken at the isolation facility,” the statement said. “This would rule out even the remote possibility of spread of this disease by the sexual route.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in the United States have said that the virus has been detected in semen “for up to three months,” and recommends that men abstain from sex for that period.

For months, Indian officials have been preparing for cases here, mainly by installing screening systems at international airports and preparing quarantine sites in major cities in case people with the virus enter the country.

An estimated 45,000 Indians work as health care professionals in West Africa, where the Ebola outbreak is concentrated. Passengers arriving from countries affected by Ebola are directed to an airport health center, where they are given medical examinations that include a review of travel history and a test of body temperature. By mid-October, around 22,000 people had been screened and 485 people had been quarantined in Delhi, health ministry officials told The Hindustan Times, a daily newspaper.

Experts have expressed alarm at the prospect of the virus spreading in India, which has a population of 1.2 billion, crowded cities that lack sanitation infrastructure and many health facilities that are underequipped and unhygienic.

Dr. Peter Piot, the microbiologist who helped discover Ebola in 1976, has said that if infected people were to enter the population in India, it would be “especially challenging” to isolate them and trace their contacts.

“It is particularly important to be vigilant and monitor people closely, and make sure the public are aware of the risks,” Dr. Piot said, according to The Hindu, a daily newspaper here.

Health officials in India were careful to draw the distinction between a confirmed case of Ebola and the man under quarantine, whom the Liberian government certified as cured. “No cases of relapse of Ebola have been documented,” the health ministry said in its statement.

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/19/world ... times&_r=0
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
In case anybody missed it, Mali was "only" monitored 442 LESS THAN TWENTY FOUR HOURS AGO. They increased that number to 577 in less than ONE DAY. The number of actual cases increased to 5 in less than 24 hours.

Yep, Mali is now in the early stages of an uncontrolled Ebola epidemic.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane
I have been suspicious of Mali since summer. It seemed so implausible that there were no cases there when they are right over the border from two countries with horrific outbreaks. Look for Ivory Coast to be next.
 

fi103r

Veteran Member
I was wondering if any of our hams on the board had or have contacts in Nigeria that can inform us as to the stare of affairs there?

thx

r
 

bev

Has No Life - Lives on TB
A story I found just last night - re Houston patient with EBOLA-like symptoms:

**Notice the disconnect between the title of the article and the text in the article.

Patient Taken to Ben Taub Hospital Does Not Have EBOLA

http://www.khou.com/story/news/loca...o-ben-taub-with-ebola-like-symptoms/19196787/

HOUSTON - The patient taken to Ben Taub with Ebola-like symptoms will not be tested. Kathy Barton with the City of Houston Health Department says the person does not meet the criteria for that to be necessary.

As a precaution, hospital staff decked out in full Hazmat gear Monday evening to bring the patient in from the Quentin Mease Community Hospital on North Macgregor.

Authorities used all precautions because they learned this person had traveled to West Africa.

The person has symptoms similar to the flu, which can mimic Ebola. City health officials say the patient will now be tested for other diseases common in West Africa.
 

JohnGaltfla

#NeverTrump
G.Alexander(BRKNEWS) ‏@MajorNews911 6m6 minutes ago

NEW: NYC Health Dept. investigating death of woman on Ebola monitoring list. At last check, woman did not have symptoms - @ABCNewsHealth
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
From California Dept. of Public Health

CDPH has released Ebola Guidelines for Outpatient and Ambulatory Care Settings.

Please note: as of the date of publication of this document, Mali has been added to the list of Ebola-affected countries, in addition to Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. Triage and travel histories should include Mali.

The California Department of Public Health (CDPH ) recognizes the importance of outpatient and ambulatory care settings (clinics, physician offices) in the healthcare system. Most travelers from Ebola-affected countries (currently at the date of this document - Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Mali) are being identified and monitored and will be instructed by local health departments (LHDs) what to do if symptoms develop; while very unlikely, it is still possible that suspect Ebola patients could present to ambulatory care settings. Therefore, it is important that all outpatient and ambulatory care facilities are prepared to identify and manage such patients until they can be transferred to an appropriate identified hospital.

The outpatient and ambulatory care guidelines, posted to the CDPH Ebola webpage, found at: http://cdph.ca.gov/programs/cder/Pages/Ebola.aspx are targeted for the outpatient and ambulatory care setting, including but not limited to primary care clinics, Federally Qualified Health Centers, physician offices, and urgent care settings. These guidelines do not apply to Emergency Departments and areas that deliver non-acute outpatient services (e.g., mental health centers.)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20141118/as--india-ebola-61b83b8602.html

Recovered Ebola patient isolated at India airport

Nov 18, 2:06 PM (ET)

NEW DELHI (AP) — A 26-year-old Indian man who recovered from Ebola in Liberia has been placed in isolation at the New Delhi airport after traces of the virus were found in his semen, India's Health Ministry said Tuesday.

The ministry said three blood samples from the man tested negative for the disease, which means he is considered recovered according to standards set by the World Health Organization and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The CDC advises Ebola survivors to avoid sex for three months or use condoms because the virus can continue to be found in semen for seven weeks after recovery from the disease. Sexual transmission of Ebola has not been definitively established, though multiple studies have shown that the virus can persist in semen for longer than in blood or other body fluids.

The ministry said the move to isolate the man was taken "as a matter of abundant caution" and he would continue to be held under isolation at a special health facility at the airport until his body fluids test negative.

"The person concerned is a treated and cured case of Ebola virus disease," it said in a statement. "All necessary precautions are being taken at the isolation facility. This would rule out even the remote possibility of spread of this disease by the sexual route."

When the man arrived at the New Delhi airport on Nov. 10, he carried documents from Liberia confirming he had successfully undergone Ebola treatment and had been declared free of any symptoms, the Health Ministry said. He was placed in quarantine as a precautionary measure as authorities tested his blood over the next several days.

Although his blood tests were clear, authorities decided to test his semen before releasing him from quarantine. Those tests showed traces of the virus.

There have been no Ebola cases reported in India or throughout Asia, but there are fears that an outbreak could spread quickly in a region where billions live in poverty and public health systems are often very weak.

Early symptoms of Ebola include fever, headache, body aches, cough, stomach pain, vomiting and diarrhea, and patients aren't contagious until those begin. The virus requires close contact with body fluids to spread so health care workers and family members caring for loved ones are most at risk.

Ebola has killed more than 5,000 people in the west African countries of Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea.
 
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