Again: HOW did the Spanish nurse contract Ebola?

Check here.  She says she followed all normal protocols, masks, gloves, gowning, etc.  She does not know how she contracted Ebola.  It’s a mystery.

Dare I mention the word: airborne?

BZ

 

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4 thoughts on “Again: HOW did the Spanish nurse contract Ebola?

  1. All these health care workers contracting Ebola and the common thread is “We don’t know how…” We are constantly fed reassurances about direct contact etc., is what is needed with contaminated fluids, implying that it is the only way to acquire E, and it’s not (yet) airborne. Yada yada. Yet WHO’s own Annex 18 Transmission risk reduction of filoviruses in home-care settings adds some others I have yet to see mentioned.

    Now experts are showing how E can and most likely will spread globally courtesy of air traffic.

    I can understand people wanting to return to their home countries if they get sick, but at some point someone needs to say ‘no’. That the risk of spreading it is too great. Esp. as they cannot say how, despite all precautions, these people GOT sick.

    Maybe just my perception but even with this global spread basically predicted, there seems a curious lack of urgency about trying to prevent it.

    To me, the smart thing would be to lock down those hotspot countries, no one in or out except for official, ie., medical, personnel.

  2. This is a new strain of Ebola. The DNA appears to be about 3% different from what was known as Ebola Zaire. It is not possible to know the scope of transmission.

    Notice the victims are being dispersed into U.S. hospitals as opposed to receiving treatment at one specialized location. Ben Carson has even questioned the need for them to be brought this far for treatment.

    From: http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-ebola-questions-20141007-story.html#page=2

    Peters, Russell and Bailey, who in 1989 was deputy commander for research of the Army’s Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, in Frederick, Md., said the primates in Reston had appeared to spread Ebola to other monkeys through their breath.

    “Those monkeys were dying in a pattern that was certainly suggestive of coughing and sneezing — some sort of aerosol movement,” Bailey said. “They were dying and spreading it so quickly from cage to cage. We finally came to the conclusion that the best action was to euthanize them all.”

    Perhaps the U.N. globalists feel the same way about US.
    I’m sure they do.

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