Ebola is an extremely fragile virus. I guess there is a reason why it lives in the jungle and mainly stays there. It is vulnerable to hot/dry climates with a lot of sunlight. It normally passes by direct transfer of blood. Even sneezing is not guaranteed and would probably only be a problem in the latter stages of the illness by which time the person would be in quarantine.
If you look at the
figures it is already beginning to burn itself out. Senegal remains at a total of 1 cases with 0 deaths. Nigeria has reduced from a total of 22 cases to 20 in the last month and deaths have increased from 7 to 8.
In Sierra Leone the average deaths for September are 20 per day. Yet the total deaths for the last 4 reported days, was 11. Despite the number of cases rising by 99 in that time. In fact, as I said at the outset of this, the death rates are beginning to fall rapidly. Sierra Leone will be down to 25% deaths to cases by now. Even Liberia is down to a 53% mortality rate.
If Liberia are sensible enough to keep on having curfews and keep removing the dead from homes and moving the infected into the hospitals, then this could burn itself out in 4 to 6 weeks. So long as everyone is free to continue wandering around and interacting, then it will continue. But the ratio of deaths to infections will continue to fall as the virus passes from iteration to iteration.