Ebola fear factor
Posted: 07 Oct 2014, 13:59
Today we hear that a Spanish nurse contracted Ebola whilst attending one of the missionaries brought back to Spain after contracting the disease.
Point 1. With a deadly and contagious disease, transmitted by body fluid contact, the nurses were given environmental suits which were not totally impervious to fluids.
Not scared enough
Point2. The Nurse, who went on holiday the day after her patient died, contacted a hospital, explained her symptoms and also explained that she had been nursing an Ebola patient. She was not immediately pulled in for testing. It is only after she became badly infectious that she was admitted.
Not nearly scared enough by half.
We were discussing this at work today. Apparently the Belgian medical authorities have given Brussels a 50% chance of contracting the disease within the next 50 days, mainly because of the flights. For France that was 70%.
Only now are they scrambling to put restrictions on to those who are travelling. Only now are they really doing something to try and work out, physically, how they might determine if someone has Ebola or not before getting on a flight out of the infected zones.
We have finally reached the stage that we need our entire medical communities to be on the alert for anyone who might be showing symptoms. Not helped by the fact that the initial symptoms are pretty much identical to a bad cold. It all comes down to how it is perceived as a threat. Or the fear factor. The less scared we are, the more likely it is that the infection will spread.
Point 1. With a deadly and contagious disease, transmitted by body fluid contact, the nurses were given environmental suits which were not totally impervious to fluids.
Not scared enough
Point2. The Nurse, who went on holiday the day after her patient died, contacted a hospital, explained her symptoms and also explained that she had been nursing an Ebola patient. She was not immediately pulled in for testing. It is only after she became badly infectious that she was admitted.
Not nearly scared enough by half.
We were discussing this at work today. Apparently the Belgian medical authorities have given Brussels a 50% chance of contracting the disease within the next 50 days, mainly because of the flights. For France that was 70%.
Only now are they scrambling to put restrictions on to those who are travelling. Only now are they really doing something to try and work out, physically, how they might determine if someone has Ebola or not before getting on a flight out of the infected zones.
We have finally reached the stage that we need our entire medical communities to be on the alert for anyone who might be showing symptoms. Not helped by the fact that the initial symptoms are pretty much identical to a bad cold. It all comes down to how it is perceived as a threat. Or the fear factor. The less scared we are, the more likely it is that the infection will spread.