Grummer
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- Jun 30, 2006
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well, two patients are being flown to Atlanta and they arrive tmw.
Should I start hunkering down in abandoned bomb shelters now, or should I wait a couple days?
What if it mutates and goes airborne, what should we do? What if a mosquito gets it and passes it on?
Dr Gary Kobinger from the National Microbiology Laboratory at the Public Health Agency of Canada took part in the study. He told BBC News that they suspect that large droplets of moisture containing the virus were being exhaled with the piglets' breath.
'They can stay in the air, but not long, they don't go far,' he told the broadcaster. 'But they can be absorbed in the airway and this is how the infection starts, and this is what we think, because we saw a lot of evidence in the lungs of the non-human primates that the virus got in that way.'
Further work is needed but the findings are worrying as macaques are close genetic relatives to humans, said the researchers.
About a three-hour drive from here.
One of the missionaries to the deaf that we support was recently in Liberia, meeting with many groups of people. I'm glad that he didn't catch Ebola. It was a concern while he was there.
Yes.If I read the article right one was from Charlotte, NC and the other from Texas?
Yes.
This Doctor knew the risks before going to Africa. If virus went inside him, he is supposed to stay in where virus is exposed at. It is selfish of him to go America and spread the virus to others in America.
Has he spread the virus to anyone in America? No.This Doctor knew the risks before going to Africa. If virus went inside him, he is supposed to stay in where virus is exposed at. It is selfish of him to go America and spread the virus to others in America.
Airport staff tonight told of their fears of an Ebola outbreak after a passenger from Sierra Leone collapsed and died as she got off a plane at Gatwick.
Has he spread the virus to anyone in America? No.
Besides, he didn't go to America; he came back to America, his home nation.
The average time between contracting the infection and the start of symptoms is 8 to 10 days, but can occur between 2 and 21 days.
Ebola Virus is not an airborne virus. It's a blood/fluid borne virus.No? How did you know? Ebola goes Airborne. Maybe the Ebola virus is still flying inside the hospital ventilation system.
First and foremost, Ebola is not suddenly an airborne disease. As expert commentators at ProMED stated, the experiments “demonstrate the susceptibility of pigs to Zaire Ebolavirus and that the virus from infected pigs can be transmitted to macaques under experimental conditions… they fall short of establishing that this is a normal route of transmission in the natural environment.” Furthermore, because human Ebola outbreaks have historically been locally contained, it is unlikely that Ebola can spread between humans via airborne transmission.
full recovery? in Africa? it's 90% fatality rate.He exposed with Ebola which is very dangerous, he should stay in Africa until full recovery then he can always return to his home.
it never went away....guess Jiro answered some of my question above. but again, how did it 'came back'?, but never mind, im not gonna get hung up on it, I'd let it go , like i don't really care....99% of bad things you're afraid of happening , never happens...