Ohhh ok...It's that simple? Ok then that's that problem solvedDon't touch the corpses of Ebola victims and don't drink their excretions. You won't get Ebola. Stop worrying and wishing for a biblical plague!
Ohhh ok...It's that simple? Ok then that's that problem solved![]()
Don't say that, I'm about to start selling full body protection suits on Ebay, I think they'll become quite fashionable.Don't touch the corpses of Ebola victims and don't drink their excretions. You won't get Ebola. Stop worrying and wishing for a biblical plague!
Don't say that, I'm about to start selling full body protection suits on Ebay, I think they'll become quite fashionable.
so....did you actually read my source? Let me quote part of it for you...
A low risk exposure includes any of the following
being within approximately 3 feet (1 meter) of an EVD patient or within the patient’s room or care area for a prolonged period of time (e.g., health care personnel, household members) while not wearing recommended personal protective equipment (i.e., standard, droplet, and contact precautions
from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention who are one of the major operating components of the Department of Health and Human Services (American)
so you see what it says - being within 3 feet of an EVD patient without protective clothing - ie not touching them or their clothing/bedding/bodily fluids
so, airborne
would you be happy to sit on an aeroplane with someone who has Ebola?
While Frieden admitted that it is theoretically possible to be infected with Ebola after touching something an infected person has sneezed or sweated on (and then touching your eyes, mouth or nose), he bluntly said that public transportation via a bus or plane is not a conduit for Ebola.
Pretty much actually, yes.
http://www.geek.com/science/so-just-how-contagious-is-ebola-really-1606117/
The people who are going to Sierra Leone will basically be there to dispose of bodies. They are there in a humanitarian effort to stop people there dying, not to stop it spreading "here" because that's really really unlikely and any cases in developed nations are surrounded and choked out pretty quickly.
Imagine what would happen if an Ebola patient used the tube at rush hour...
Yes but norters' post was ridiculously simplistic.
or shagging monkeys.It missed out not eating bats![]()
It missed out not eating bats![]()

Don't touch the corpses of Ebola victims and don't drink their excretions. You won't get Ebola. Stop worrying and wishing for a biblical plague!
Is that the course that traditionally follows the guzzling of excreta?![]()
Quick Q then, say you are on a packed tube train and in the carriage is a person incubating the virus. They sneeze near you and a drop or two lands on exposed skin surface, lip or eye of yours and a few other people. Are you saying they would not be at risk from them catching it?
The only way Ebola gets into the air is in large droplets of vomit or saliva. These droplets are heavy and wouldn’t be able to travel very far.
In theory, people might be able to catch it if someone coughed or sneezed directly onto them, but people who get Ebola generally don’t cough or sneeze.
What’s more, the WHO says it’s not aware of any studies that have ever shown the virus spreading this way.
Catching Ebola from someone else requires “close and direct” contact with infected body fluids, the WHO says. The most infectious body fluids are blood, stool, and vomit.
The virus has also been found in breast milk and urine -- and in semen for up to 70 days, though those fluids are considered to be less infectious.
Finally, the WHO says saliva and tears may also carry some risk, but it says more research is needed.
In studies of saliva, the virus was only found in people who were in advanced stages of the disease. The live Ebola virus has never been found in sweat, the WHO says.
The CDC says that in a single study, done under ideal conditions, the virus has been found to remain active on solid surfaces for up to 6 days.
In theory, then, a person might be able to touch a contaminated surface, rub their nose or eyes, and become infected.
cheers gramps.
I still find it hard to believe how fast its spreading if you have to come in contact with infected blood, stool or vomit though.
cheers gramps.
I still find it hard to believe how fast its spreading if you have to come in contact with infected blood, stool or vomit though.
Well, just in case it takes a grip in the UK I've got my emergency kit ready to protect me. Face mask, gloves and a barge pole.

I may opr for the 3 mtr cattle prod myself![]()
Electric of course, I like your style![]()
Even a pair of marigolds would easily stop transmission.
I refer to the Spanish nursing assistant m'lud!
The suggested checking at UK airports seems a bit pathetic - asking the passenger where they have come from. If you were from one of the African countries with Ebola and thought you could be refused entry, what would you say?
'k a pair of marigolds and remembering not to lick them....
Without wanting to sound too harsh on the unfortunate nurse, there are some proper procedures to follow and sadly it doesn't look from the news reports like she followed them. I remember doing a first aid course years ago and they were very particular about teaching us how to take gloves off so that you didn't touch the contaminated bits of them.
To be fair, there is now a small but significant number of healthcare workers who have become contaminated with the virus ... the point being, it can happen and has happened to even those trained to deal with it.
True that. But I do wonder how many of them have been properly trained in the handling of patients with contagious diseases and how many were general nursing staff. It should be covered at all basic training but I know that the medical teams working in isolation hospitals get a _lot_ more training in this than somebody working on a general ward.
Remember that most of these were straight from working with ebola in West Africa and hence, one would assume, they had more than 'basic training'.