TheOstrich wrote:What should be absolutely understood and absolutely mandatory is that at the first sign we have a plague, anywhere in the world, that area or country should be subject to a complete travel ban.
What we have going on now is a wake-up call .....
We should no longer learn by our mistakes. Remember suspected plague ships? How many times were populations decimated before this was brought in as a control?
Liberia should have shut down travel much earlier. Modern travel permits much easier passage of the disease. However, if you see the stats that I was linking to, there is an extremely low rate of spread outside of the traditional travel areas locally. These diseases, before modern travel came to Africa for the masses, used to destroy the local village or community but did not spread. Eventually the deaths became so scary that everyone ran away and it burned out.
Today Liberia is doing exactly what the US would do if they had an index case spreading the disease. Could you imagine how difficult it would be to get a full all state travel ban on the US??
We won't see the same level of spread in the US as we did in West Africa simply because this case is so far from the index. The strain he carries is already far less virulent and is already mutating out of it's original form. Only time will tell.
It will only become a wakeup call if we start to see a spread of the disease in the US. Then, I'd guess, there will be panic out of all proportion to the actual incident, fanned by the flames of press revenues. Funnily enough, this is actually what it takes to kill off Ebola. Scare everyone to death, stop them moving or interacting and then get every case to the Hospital where they can be treated by professionals. Only After, of course, an outbreak is detected.