this is really scary ...

Gads, it is scarey as all get out. It's amazing how vunerable we really are. Right now, there is testing going on and our area is thinking of doing a massive bird kill, because the West Nile virus is in our area. Not to mention the fact the we also had an Eastern Equine Encephalitis outbreak this summer as well. (Which is transmitted by mosquitos). Sometimes, it just makes you want to crawl in a cave and hide!
 
And it makes me want to scream when I hear of people who aren't feeling well, so they think they're going to take a few of the antibiotics they had leftover from the last time they were sick.

WHAT?? LEFTOVER?? HELLO??? You're supposed to take them ALL even if you feel better....How do you think drug resistant bacteria are created?

Here we go - human extinction caused by reverse Darwinism--the stupid ones will kill us all off.

*sigh*
 
that's exactly what'll happen, hermanm.

viruses like this are scary!

----------------------------
"No man can be condemed for owning a dog.
As long as he has a dog, he has a friend;
and the poorer he gets, the better friend he has."

- Will Rogers
 
Wasn't the moive Outbreak based on Ebola? And the book Contagion, too, I believe.

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::looks around for her seal and hums the circus song::
 
Mth> Yes...it detailed that in the article.

This thing is frightening...*JH plans to stay out of Africa*

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Does driving a car from Saturn make me an alien?
 
Too true.
I read about the Ebola outbreak on stratfor.com, which is where I get all my foreign news from.

That site predicts that, unlike past epidemics, as Ebola has hit refugee camps in a warzone, it's likely to spread to as many as five countries in that region, and become the biggest Ebola outbreak in history.

This has to be contained somehow. But how? It would probably wise to shut all Uganda's borders, and limit refugee movements, but it's still not going to be easy to stop this killing huge amounts of people.
 
Sigh...I have enough things to be scared about...I don't need any more...

And of course nobody will bother trying to find a cure for it until it gets out of Africa, because there's no money in curing 3rd world diseases...sigh sigh sigh
 
Ebola is a virus. There is no such thing as a cure for a virus. You can enhance a person's immunity against a virus, but a virus is a living organism, and cannot be "cured".


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spidergoolash: "heh, a cup of diesel dan - mwahhha"
me: "heh, a cup of me is like a cup of heaven!"
 
that gave me the willies!
another thing that is scaring the crap out of me, is the west nile virus. They said on the news that mosquitoes, right here in Philadelphia, are carrying the disease.
It scares me to death!
I won't even allow my children outside after dinner!

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Outta this world!
 
Space K> That's been going on since last summer in NYC.
They're migrating.


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spidergoolash: "heh, a cup of diesel dan - mwahhha"
me: "heh, a cup of me is like a cup of heaven!"
 
Source of Ugandan Ebola Found

By CHRIS TOMLINSON, Associated Press Writer

KABEDE OPONG, Uganda (AP) - Esther Awete was found dead six weeks ago in her round, gray mud hut by her mother and sisters five days after she fell ill with a fever.

In keeping with custom, her body was kept in her hut for two days to allow friends and family to take part in the funeral. Awete's family and closest friends ritually bathed her body, buried her less than 30 feet from where she died and then washed their hands in a communal basin as a sign of unity.

What they did not know was that Awete's body had become a time bomb carrying the deadly Ebola virus. That was on Sept. 27. Now, her mother, three sisters and three other relatives are dead and the virus has spread across a 15-mile radius, killing 39 people and infecting as many as 63 others.

Ebola is transmitted through contact with bodily fluids, such as mucus, saliva and blood, and can be passed through a simple handshake. Four days after exposure, flu-like symptoms set in, followed by bloody diarrhea and vomiting. Ten to 15 days later, the victims ``bleed out'' through the nose, mouth and eyes. Blood and other bodily fluids also begin seeping through the skin, producing painful blisters.

How Awete - so far the first person known to have contracted Ebola in Uganda - became infected is a mystery. In fact, researchers have no idea where the virus lives in between outbreaks, which are often years and hundreds of miles apart. While they know it resides in a host animal or insect that it does not kill, they have not identified the host.

One of Awete's two children, a 9-month-old boy, died of Ebola within days of her funeral, although her 8-year-old son - who did not take part in the funeral - has so far survived.

Awete, 36, lived with her mother and sisters in a small compound of six thatched huts and a dilapidated house surrounded by banana trees and rows of corn. She made her living selling home-brewed cassava beer and corn she ground by hand inside her 15-foot wide, windowless hut.

Kabede Opong is three miles from Gulu, a town of 150,000 about 225 miles north of the capital Kampala. People here do not eat wild animals, suspected as the source of some past Ebola outbreaks, and she did nothing unusual before she died, except for a trip to another village to get cassava leaves for brewing.

At first, neighbors thought Awete died of dysentery, cholera or any of a number of illnesses common to the area.

``People had fears after the second victim,'' said Justin Okot, a police officer who lived in the compound next to Awete. ``It was after the eighth victim, that's when we suspected this is a new disease.''

Okot and his wife, lifelong friends of Awete, took part in her funeral. Okot's boss has told him not to come to work for at least 12 days, and then get a doctor to certify that he is healthy. While he has no symptoms, his wife has not been so lucky.

``My wife was admitted yesterday to the hospital,'' Okot said, his voice trembling as he tried to hold back tears. He feels certain it is Ebola.

More help arrived Wednesday when a team from the World Health Organization (news - web sites) brought in boxes of protective garments, gloves and a washing machine, as well as the expertise needed to fight Ebola.

``Containment of the outbreak should not be a problem,'' said Dr. Guenael Rodier, a senior WHO official and veteran of a half-dozen Ebola outbreaks in West Africa. ``Simple measures will avoid the spread of the disease from person to person and that is what we are going to work on.''

He said investigators from the U.S.-based Centers for Disease Control were bringing sophisticated equipment not available in Uganda that is required to confirm infection with Ebola.

In recent days, anyone with early symptoms of the disease has been quarantined and counted as a potential victim. Rumors abound of cases in other districts of Uganda, which could either signify a dramatic spread of the disease or just panic.

``There are many rumors that need to be checked,'' said Rodier. ``But it is clear that if you have no contact with Gulu, then you are unlikely to have Ebola.''

Professor Francis Omaswa, director general of Uganda's medical services, said reports that two people died of Ebola in neighboring Kitgum were false and that the virus was being contained in Gulu district.

However, a medical team was sent to investigate a suspected outbreak in Lira district, southeast of Gulu, said Paul Kaggwa, a Health Ministry spokesman.

On Wednesday, Tanzania joined Kenya in introducing medical screening at its border points with Uganda.


Yup (about the west nile)...luckily the skeeters don't like me the way they did when I was younger...guess I'm not so sweet anymore...
supergrin.gif


----------------------------
"No man can be condemed for owning a dog.
As long as he has a dog, he has a friend;
and the poorer he gets, the better friend he has."

- Will Rogers
 
things like that just dont' scare me. i dont' scare easily. about west nile virus...just recently ( a couple months ago) some dead birds in the city right next to me (i can't remember what it was) tested postive for it, and a couple people had it (but didn't die). so, it's still here.
and ebola just doesn't scare me. it's in africa, and i figure that by the time it gets over here, i'll be dead already, or old and senile. the only way to stop it from coming is to really kill everyone in that are, and basically sterilize the whole place, or bomb it, or whatever. and everyone knows that won't happen. but i dont' care, the way i see it, if you get it, you get it, if you don't, you don't. sure, you can avoid it.
 
I suppose you're right Scarier One.....I mean, if we tried to avoid everything we are afraid of in life, we prolly would never go outside or do anything at all.
it would be a pretty boring and scary place.

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Outta this world!
 
I wouldn't be scared that it's going to come over to the Western world. It just wouldn't spread. Ebola kills so quickly that it limits contact with large amounts of people, and although it is incredibly contagious, if it made an appearance in Australia, it would probably kill 20 people, rather than 500 people, because of the hygiene we have.
 
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