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13-10-2014, 11:25 AM | #31 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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13-10-2014, 12:30 PM | #32 | |||
YE-US! Wait. I don't know
Join Date: May 2010
Location: in the turkey...
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Quote:
And don't think Ebola is all of Africa. It's three countries. And the amount of traffic coming from those three countries is miniscule. And mostly health workers who are equipped to prevent the spread of disease as best they can.
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13-10-2014, 12:48 PM | #33 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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A so called 'low risk' Texas hospital worker has tested positive for Ebola after treating the first victim the previous week. What's worrying is that they were classified as a low risk for getting Ebola, how many other low risk people are their who are yet to show symptoms?
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13-10-2014, 02:19 PM | #34 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Location: Melb north
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I`m all for maximum safety protocol, anyone going over seas to risky areas thats wants back in , qaurantine baby.
i had swine flu once, i think i mentioned this once before as bird flu, i always get those mixed up(dementia o0). Without any doubt the nastiest ailment i`ve ever had, i cant convey how bad it was, but all i can think of as a description is being body slammed by andre the giant 15 times, headaches, every single bone in the body aching, barely being able to breath, and non stop running nose for 5 or 6 weeks, and being drained of all energy, ever really thought about dying ??? I have no doubt ebola would be 3 times worse, its very easy to say oh its not so easy to catch ebola, , one person getting ailments like this is too much and thats my 2 bobs worth.. |
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16-10-2014, 08:42 PM | #35 | ||
Wirlankarra yanama
Join Date: May 2006
Location: God's Country
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All the previous knowledge seems to be contradicting events, incubation can be anywhere from 21 days to 42 days. Two deaths in Texas a third co-worker now has Ebola but not before she flew and potentially contaminated 131 people on a plane. Wonder where those other plan passengers are now and who they've be in contact with.
When Obama cancels his regular round of golf to get a briefing on Ebola then you know this is serious, nothing gets in the way of Obama and some green. |
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17-10-2014, 11:26 AM | #36 | ||
Call me 'Al'
Join Date: Feb 2013
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That's right. This could get out of hand quickly.
Did anyone see Tanya Plibersek get totally owned on TV this morning discussing the Ebola crisis? Very entertaining to watch. |
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17-10-2014, 01:43 PM | #37 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Melb north
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I think this is going to get much much worse before it gets better, people these days jump on a plane and travel around world like just going to the super market.
Professional people still manage to get the disease despite having proper protective gear because they break protocol or make a mistake. if person x doesn't know they have it and go about their business as usual and it takes as Cheap has posted 21 to 42 days to show its self, how many people could person X have made contact with in the meantime? and by bodily fluids transmission apart from the obvious, i guess that also means having a cough near someone or sneezing in the general vicinity of someone could be a big problem ? |
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17-10-2014, 03:47 PM | #38 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Aug 2007
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Ebola has been in existence since the 1970's.
Remember the AID's scare? People panicked believing the virus could survive on a dry plate and that the world was doomed. Fear sells newspapers and makes people watch the news. There have been numerous movies made about deadly viruses that sweep across the globe. Keeping things in perspective is important and I think that perspective was lost way back. Think of all the other diseases in modern times that have threatened humans but failed to even destroy ca single country. |
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17-10-2014, 08:54 PM | #39 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: May 2014
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People still arnt taking it seriously enough in America by the sounds of it. A man in a shirt and pants was in a video taken of the Ebola infected nurse, standing within a meter or 2 of her, in casual clothing, while everyone else around wore protective suits. He is commonly being referred too now as clipboard guy, but I wonder whether it could have spread to him, and if so, how many hundreds of people will he have come into contact with by the time they work it out?
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17-10-2014, 09:05 PM | #40 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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There's some good info here.....
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-10-1...-ebola/5803250 |
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17-10-2014, 10:05 PM | #41 | |||
YE-US! Wait. I don't know
Join Date: May 2010
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Quote:
If "clipboard" guy was just standing in the corner checkin' boxes, doubt he'd have been at much risk, not only that, but I also doubt they'd let him run free if he did have any contact with the patient or their fluids.
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17-10-2014, 10:29 PM | #42 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Quote:
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17-10-2014, 10:31 PM | #43 | |||
YE-US! Wait. I don't know
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Quote:
I think this is a very important thing for people to realise.
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17-10-2014, 10:32 PM | #44 | ||
Guest
Join Date: Sep 2014
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I don't want to come across as cold or uncaring, but here's the thing.
People (including women and children) die every day from preventable diseases in 3rd world countries. Australia could and SHOULD do more by way of targeted foreign aid and direct intervention. By caring for and treating such people you could easily save their lives. By contrast the number of people dying from Ebola is minuscule, and unfortunately the only way to save lives there is to STOP it from spreading. Sadly, people zipping allover the place to "treat" Ebola victims are KILLING more people by spreading it. Now days if there is an outbreak of many diseases we can step in with effective treatments. However in the past quarantine was developed not because people were heartless but because it was the only thing that worked. Sadly, with Ebola, it is the only thing that will save lives. |
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17-10-2014, 10:35 PM | #45 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Yep you beat me to it while I was editing . A lot of voodoo and myths around this disease.
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17-10-2014, 10:38 PM | #46 | ||
YE-US! Wait. I don't know
Join Date: May 2010
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I am a post ninja.
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"Well. Apparently you're looking for a lion-snake named Harriet." Daily: '06 BF XL Ute,Shockwave Blue, Column Shift, eGas BEAST.
Gone: 77 HZ panel van, 253, column. The Weekender: '06 BF Pursuit, Toxic, lumpy af |
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17-10-2014, 11:01 PM | #47 | ||
Banned
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 3,290
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Its never been the disease thats the problem its the ability for it to spread from patient to patient its a fact that if aids was an airborne virus it would of lead to an extinction event. The fact that it wasnt was a blessing these arnt viruses to be trifled with like oh well its just some African people. They will mutate and they will adapt its a naive stupid person who believes this ebola virus is a big beat up. 9000 people have been infected 4500 are dead thats a 50 percent death rate but has recently risen to 70 percent and there forecasting an infection rate of 10,000 a week in 2 months. Its simple maths really the more the virus spreads the more chance of mutation it cant mutate as fast if it doesnt spread you speed up one you speed up the other.
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18-10-2014, 12:39 AM | #48 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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18-10-2014, 12:42 AM | #49 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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18-10-2014, 08:16 AM | #50 | ||
YE-US! Wait. I don't know
Join Date: May 2010
Location: in the turkey...
Posts: 940
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"Well. Apparently you're looking for a lion-snake named Harriet." Daily: '06 BF XL Ute,Shockwave Blue, Column Shift, eGas BEAST.
Gone: 77 HZ panel van, 253, column. The Weekender: '06 BF Pursuit, Toxic, lumpy af |
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18-10-2014, 04:42 PM | #51 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2011
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If you want a disease to spread efficiently and effectively, giving it the best chance to evolve and develop new interesting abilities (like becoming airborn), the best way to do it is to keep exporting it to areas that have a human population that has never really had exposure to it before, and which has its own set of diseases and general maladies that the disease would most likely have not come into contact with before.
For once, Abbott was completely correct...we'd be foolish to ship off as many medical and military personnel as possible as Labor seems to want us to do. Abbot is right...send monetary aid, but keep our medical people here at home, safe. There is no plan in place to ship out any infected Australian staff if we did send people. Labor seems to think everyone over there is happily holding hands and it's all well organised. It isn't. Other countries are, quite rightly, concentrating on their own peoples safety if worse comes to worse. If we send plane loads of medical staff, all we are doing is increasing the chances of the disease being exposed to our immune systems, it gives it a better chance of mutating, it then also gives it a chance to return to our country where there is no history of the disease in our population. Yes, not many people have died, and probably not a huge amount will die before it burns itself out again, as Ebola has done for decades. However, nowadays with easy and fast international travel, and this misguided bullcrap about feeling the need to stick our noses in everywhere without worrying about the danger to our own population (because we all have to be friends first and not worry about that sort of thing), we're giving it every opportunity to spread to new populations and evolve into something much more serious. Send monetary aid and supplies, ban travel to and from the area, institute lengthy offshore quarantine for those foolish enough to manage to get there before we even think about letting them back home. |
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18-10-2014, 08:28 PM | #53 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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My late father lost two brothers in the global flu pandemic of 1918...figures vary, estimates are hard to come by, but they estimate maybe a minimum of twenty million dead and as high as fifty million plus, given the poor international communication at the time and exact details being fuzzy.
Comparing obesity, smoking, and alcohol is totally on the wrong tangent. They're nothing to do with disease and epidemics. How long is too long before people actually take things like ebola seriously? Do we wait until it gets a chance to evolve into an air born form and then say "Hmm...maybe letting people freely travel into and out of the areas wasn't such a good idea"...? Or do we do what used to be done with disease outbreaks...and do our best to contain it where it is now, and use everything at our disposal to keep it in those areas, instead of sending off happy campers around the globe to help for a while and then fly back to their home countries, very likely taking a little gift home with them? What will it take for people to realize that in a world of fast and widespread air travel and westerners who feel the need to throw themselves into diseased areas for no good reason, we need to look back to how things used to be done. |
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18-10-2014, 09:18 PM | #54 | ||
Banned
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Put simply those threes problems are peoples own stupid faults if you want to be fat drunk smoking idiot good on you go for your life if you die ill weep for you actually no i wont as i dont give two *****. As for ebola its all good to say well lock them up stop air travel thats not realistic if your baby or child had ebola would you just lock them in a room to die because thats what happening people are ******* dieing in there thousands and all people can do is post how much they dont care on the internet the western world has gotta be the most selfish there is perhaps a good dose of ebola and a few thousands westerns killed might be a wake up call that what happens in other parts of the world actually matter.
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18-10-2014, 09:27 PM | #55 | ||
I miss my wheelbarrow
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Nobody has a choice in this. Western countries will not be able to stop the movement of this virus without closing borders 100% which just wont happen.
Once it hits huge, densely populated regions in Asia it will go mad... people that cannot or will not seek containment/confinement will ensure it spreads. Forget if its airborne enabled, if the virus becomes (or actually already was) transmissable prior to or concurrently with detectable symptoms it will be unstoppable. Even if thats not the case, once the cases start to flourish then sheer volume will overwhelm the resources at hand... Vaccine becomes the hope but the timeframe being what it is, is the vaccine potentially a poor first option? I dont know if the WHO warnings of 10,000 cases per week from December onwards has been the motivator for the sudden rush from Western Countries to get into West Africa, but if it was it was done a bit too lae to alter the current course. I know it sounds like a gloomy outlook, but its hard to see it any other way from here. I am typically a pretty competitive person but for the first time in my life I hope I am wrong. Daniel |
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18-10-2014, 09:38 PM | #56 | |||
Big Member
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No one wakes up and thinks, "I think I'll take up Ebola today". Health experts have been warning since the late 90's of a major Global epidemic that would spread like wildfire. And this is the beginning of one.
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18-10-2014, 11:15 PM | #57 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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19-10-2014, 05:59 AM | #58 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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It's a worldwide problem. The greatest fear with ebola is panic due to misinformation. Would you ask a doctor to diagnose car problems or a mechanic for medical advise? |
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19-10-2014, 08:16 AM | #59 | |||
YE-US! Wait. I don't know
Join Date: May 2010
Location: in the turkey...
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I rebutted the notion that it could easily be taken anywhere, with new (emphasis on that) protocols at the airports receiving flights from west Africa, not to mention transmission functions of the disease etc etc. It can't easily be taken anywhere and spread around when correct protocol is followed. What a surprise.
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"Well. Apparently you're looking for a lion-snake named Harriet." Daily: '06 BF XL Ute,Shockwave Blue, Column Shift, eGas BEAST.
Gone: 77 HZ panel van, 253, column. The Weekender: '06 BF Pursuit, Toxic, lumpy af |
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20-10-2014, 10:33 AM | #60 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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The boss of the Texas hospital that should have picked up the Texas ebola patient has already apologised... for what? Not following protocol. The only way to ensure protocols are rigorously followed is to create an appropriate atmosphere of fear, not 'she'll be right mate'. Like I already said, complacency will be our biggest enemy. |
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