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| | #106 |
| ♥ Maximo and Teddy Donating Member Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Northern Virginia
Posts: 25,047
| Is Doctors without Borders the only group sending medical personnel to Africa? I think a 21 day quarantine is a worthwhile sacrifice for something so important. Why send anyone if you are going to let potential carriers come back and drop directly into the public here? The nurse who complained about being quarantined upon her return, I don't have much sympathy for her. She complained about a "grueling" 2 days of travel back from Africa. After what she witnessed in Africa, I don't see how traveling would register as 'grueling.'
__________________ Kristin, Max and Teddy ![]() |
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| | #107 | |
| ♥ Maximo and Teddy Donating Member Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Northern Virginia
Posts: 25,047
| Quote:
The purpose of the quarantine is that a person can test negative initially, but later test positive as the illness progresses. As for wives (and husbands? ) and families needing them at home, once again I have to point to our military and people in other jobs that require them to be stationed away from home for long lengths of time. Jeanie, my brother is away from his young family 80% of the year for work. Sometimes you have to do what you have to do. Our military, the non-commissioned, are not compensated so handsomely for their long deployments. As for money, if someone can take a month off from their regular job, I'm sure they can swing 2 months. Sabbaticals in many professions are often longer than 2 months. I don't think quarantine is going to be a deal breaker for willingness to volunteer.
__________________ Kristin, Max and Teddy ![]() | |
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| | #108 | |
| Rosehill Yorkies Donating YT Member Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Houston Texas
Posts: 9,462
| Quote:
I bet she would feel completely different if the shoe was on the other foot. She may be much more understanding of why this is being done, one person's inconvenience to protect hundreds or thousands of people she could possibly expose....meanwhile, there are 3 labs here in the Houston area and many more all over the world, that are working on vaccines for ebola....this may very well be the last year people have to go down there and take care of these desperately ill/dying patients.....they can vaccinate them all and, like that precious little cancer patient in the St.Jude commercial says, "it will all be over". Last edited by Yorkiemom1; 10-26-2014 at 12:54 PM. | |
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| | #109 |
| ♥ Love My Tibbe! ♥ Donating Member Join Date: Feb 2011 Location: D/FW, Texas
Posts: 22,140
| But this nurse is totally symptom free and even if she is incubating the virus but it hasn't yet made her sick, she could not be contagious to anyone else. She's not contagious unless she's so sick that she is producing copious amounts of fluids and some of the fluid somehow gets into someone else's body and that's just not possible now. What about Nina Pham, Amber Vinson and Dr. Spender's doctors and nurses who are at high risk every moment they were/are around them for hours every day? Are they riding subways/buses, going out to eat, to movies, dancing, bowling or into isolation tents once they leave the isolation ward? I think they are going out into the public. If not, what the heck is the difference, Gov. Christie, Gov. Cuomo and Gov. Quinn? I don't understand their science. What about all the prior treating doctors/nurses for Brantly, Writebol, Duncan, Sacra, Mukpo, returning Doctors Without Borders, SIM, Samaritan's Purse and other NGO doctors, aids and nurses treating Ebola who are out walking among us now and have been since Ebola first flared up in West Africa earlier this year? They've been going and coming to/from West Africa since then. How is it we all stayed well from them all this time if they are so "risky" to us?
__________________ Jeanie and Tibbe ![]() One must do the best one can. You may get some marks for a very imperfect answer: you will certainly get none for leaving the question alone. C. S. Lewis |
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| | #110 | |
| ♥ Love My Tibbe! ♥ Donating Member Join Date: Feb 2011 Location: D/FW, Texas
Posts: 22,140
| Quote:
__________________ Jeanie and Tibbe ![]() One must do the best one can. You may get some marks for a very imperfect answer: you will certainly get none for leaving the question alone. C. S. Lewis | |
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| | #111 | |
| Rosehill Yorkies Donating YT Member Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Houston Texas
Posts: 9,462
| Quote:
I do not believe an entire city should have to be subjected to isolation and self monitoring, praying they do not spike a fever, just to accomodate ONE person coming back into the country. If people could be trusted to self isolate and self monitor themselves, and be truthful about their monitoring results....(I read that nurse that flew off to do wedding plans, was taking Tylenol to get her temp down so she COULD fly, and that she was feeling sick before she ever left Dallas, was feeling under the weather while in Ohio, took her Tylenol so she could get back to Dallas, then turned herself in!!) but they cant be trusted. All of these people "broke the rules" and exposed many, many people. I do not think they should be able to determine MY future....they should not be given the opportunity to even POSSIBLY make me or my family or my business suffer the consequences if there is even a remote chance they ARE contageous. She is not sick....wonderful! Hope she stays that way. She says taking her temp like they did (the same way they are doing all temps at the airport and calling it "screening") is inaccurate...."skin temps are higher than core temps" ???? Dont know about that....if that was true, why do we add a degree to armpit temps we take with a thermometer? Seems to me her temp may actually have been higher than what they originally came up with....then it dropped for whatever reason.....we have always gone with the theory core temps are more accurate than skin temps, so we are back to the quandry about her skin temp being higher than core temp....that weird ebola virus maybe??? who really knows ???.... Err on the side of safety. I would MUCH rather hear, "Well she never got sick after 21 days, so she is free to go home", than, "OMG! she is in the ER, vomiting and spewing bloody diarrhea, and her temp is 103. She took care of ebola patients in Africa and has been State side for 6 days....lets start trying to find out the hundreds and hundreds of people, plus every business she has been in, everyplace she has strolled, etc, so these people can be watching out for themselves to see if THEY start getting sick, and all those business can close and decontaminate....". No, quarantine the single person until the incubation parameters are met. Which, oh by the way, are now beginning to perhaps change and move around...."maybe it is actually 28 days, or maybe 35 days, or it could possibly be 46 days....."????!!! "Dr. Anthony Fauci or Amber Vinson, Nina Pham's nurses - yet none of them are in an isolation tent.[" Perhaps this should be the next step? Last edited by Yorkiemom1; 10-26-2014 at 02:57 PM. | |
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| | #112 |
| ♥ Maximo and Teddy Donating Member Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Northern Virginia
Posts: 25,047
| I'm with Judy. Look at the timeline of the doctor who tested positive in NYC. Timeline for New York Doctor Who Has Ebola - ABC News I don't understand the nurse who is complaining about quarantine (or anyone else) pinning everything on one temperature check at the airport upon returning to the US. One temperature check is not enough for clearance. As for why medical personnel here are not being quarantined after treating cases here in the US -- probably should. However, Duncan's case aside, conditions in hospitals here are far better than in the countries afflicted in Africa. Personnel here are dealing with one case and not surrounded by hundreds.
__________________ Kristin, Max and Teddy ![]() Last edited by Maximo; 10-26-2014 at 03:13 PM. |
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| | #113 | |
| Donating YT 10K Club Member Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: S. W. Suburbs of Chicago, IL
Posts: 12,235
| Quote:
__________________ “Never argue with a fool, onlookers may not be able to tell the difference.” Mark Twain | |
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| | #114 | |
| Donating YT 10K Club Member Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: S. W. Suburbs of Chicago, IL
Posts: 12,235
| Quote:
(Reuters) - As health officials were trying to manage a patient infected with Ebola in New York, U.S. military personnel in Texas were in the first stages of training a new rapid-response team that could head to hospitals the next time an outbreak occurs. The 30-member U.S. Military Ebola Rapid Response Team assembled at the Army's San Antonio Military Medical Center on Wednesday and consists of five physicians, 20 nurses and five certified trainers. The group will supervise treatment and help hospitals deal with the intricacies of treating Ebola. "There is always a fear factor when you are dealing with this disease," Major Joseph Narvaez, a physician on the team, said on Friday when training was open to the media. "The more we train the more confident we are." Team members said they have not been requested to go to New York City, where the latest case of Ebola in the United States was confirmed on Thursday night. It will deploy on the request of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. In the training, members practiced with military precision putting on and taking off the bulky personal protective equipment that is to be worn as part of the protocol for medical personnel treating an Ebola-infected patient. In the next room, nurses dressed in the protective suits practiced taking vital signs on a dummy used for medical training. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced new protocols for the protective suits after two hospital nurses in Dallas who had treated a man infected with Ebola became infected with the deadly virus this month. Navy Commander James Lawler, a physician who has experience treating Ebola in West Africa, said a major effort will be made to make sure the team does not spread Ebola, or contract it themselves. "Protecting our healthcare workers is our primary concern," he said. Physician Narvaez said the team sees its mission as a deployment to face an enemy. "We try to know our enemy and know its weaknesses," he said. "We absolutely know that we will defeat it." U.S. military starts training its Ebola rapid-response team | Reuters
__________________ “Never argue with a fool, onlookers may not be able to tell the difference.” Mark Twain | |
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| | #115 | |
| Rosehill Yorkies Donating YT Member Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Houston Texas
Posts: 9,462
| Quote:
60 Minutes is on and they are talking to nurses from Dallas hospital....it is really very interesting..... | |
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| | #116 | ||
| Donating YT 10K Club Member Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: S. W. Suburbs of Chicago, IL
Posts: 12,235
| Quote:
Quote:
__________________ “Never argue with a fool, onlookers may not be able to tell the difference.” Mark Twain | ||
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| | #117 | |
| ♥ Love My Tibbe! ♥ Donating Member Join Date: Feb 2011 Location: D/FW, Texas
Posts: 22,140
| Quote:
And unless you have a heavy enough viral load to cause you to be very sick and producing fluids that get into someone else's body, you cannot spread the disease. And even then it's not 100% infectious if your viral load is low enough for another's immune system to overcome, aka Thomas Duncan's family, who all remain well, despite being around him for two days after he was sick, vomiting and having diarrhea, sweating on his partner in bed. Otherwise, all of those medical doctors and workers who've been coming and going from West Africa and those 10,000 cases they've cared for there would have long ago infected many of us as they have all gone about America on their return. Common sense monitoring for temperature and symptoms of those close contacts, including their nurses and doctors, of Ebola patients has worked perfectly so far, so what's changed? Oh, I forgot - NYC got a case - that's what! And panic ensued!
__________________ Jeanie and Tibbe ![]() One must do the best one can. You may get some marks for a very imperfect answer: you will certainly get none for leaving the question alone. C. S. Lewis | |
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| | #118 | |
| ♥ Maximo and Teddy Donating Member Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Northern Virginia
Posts: 25,047
| Quote:
Read this article on the WHO website. They are referring to local medical personnel who have been infected and died (120 dead/240 infected), but some of what they are saying must apply to foreigners who are there to help treat ebola patients: WHO | Unprecedented number of medical staff infected with Ebola From the article: "The loss of so many doctors and nurses has made it difficult for WHO to secure support from sufficient numbers of foreign medical staff."The larger than ever outbreak in Africa is over a year in the making. Look how long it took for a case like Duncan to arrive in the US. Epidemics and pandemics start somewhere. I would rather error on the side of caution.
__________________ Kristin, Max and Teddy ![]() | |
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| | #119 | |
| ♥ Love My Tibbe! ♥ Donating Member Join Date: Feb 2011 Location: D/FW, Texas
Posts: 22,140
| Quote:
How is a well woman, not sick OR leaking any bodily fluids with a high viral load in them, staying alone in a tent in NJ, keeping a single soul in New Jersey safe from Ebola? If she begins to spike a fever or vomit, that's a totally different thing but for goodness sake, Gov. Christie, allow her to go home and have her local health department follow up on her q 6 hours.
__________________ Jeanie and Tibbe ![]() One must do the best one can. You may get some marks for a very imperfect answer: you will certainly get none for leaving the question alone. C. S. Lewis | |
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| | #120 | |
| ♥ Love My Tibbe! ♥ Donating Member Join Date: Feb 2011 Location: D/FW, Texas
Posts: 22,140
| Quote:
But how in the world Gov. Cuomo, Christie and Quinn suddenly decided that American Ebola healthcare workers returning home to NY, NJ and Illinois to be more likely to infect Americans than Ebola workers here in America working at Emory, NIH or Bellevue, I can't fathom. Nothing about that WHO article even addresses that issue. If these returning American workers were so extra-infectious to require his sudden quarantine, why haven't many, many Americans gotten Ebola from them during this past 6 months, when all the NGO's were at maximum work level, coming and going on airline flights at will, while still monitoring the workers on their return? Thankfully, Gov. Cuomo has now realized he went too far and has eased his quarantine to allow returning heroic Ebola workers flying into New York to be quarantined at home now. Will is he requiring Bellevue doctors and workers to home quarantine while they care for Dr. Spencer or continue to allow hem to eat at restaurants, go bowling and subways? If not, why not? That's what I don't understand.
__________________ Jeanie and Tibbe ![]() One must do the best one can. You may get some marks for a very imperfect answer: you will certainly get none for leaving the question alone. C. S. Lewis | |
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