Official: Ebola Kills Senior Doctor In Liberia

toubab

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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/07/27/ebola_n_5625051.html

"MONROVIA, Liberia (AP) — One of Liberia's most high-profile doctors has died of Ebola, officials said Sunday, and an American physician was being treated for the deadly virus, highlighting the risks facing health workers trying to combat an outbreak that has killed more than 670 people in West Africa — the largest ever recorded.

A second American, a missionary working in the Liberian capital, was also taken ill and was being treated in isolation there, said the pastor of a North Carolina church that sponsored her work.

Dr. Samuel Brisbane, a top Liberian health official, was treating Ebola patients at the country's largest hospital, the John F. Kennedy Memorial Medical Center in Monrovia, when he fell ill. He died Saturday, said Tolbert Nyenswah, an assistant health minister. A Ugandan doctor died earlier this month.

The American physician, 33-year-old Dr. Kent Brantly, was in Liberia helping to respond to the outbreak that has killed 129 people nationwide when he fell ill, according to the North Carolina-based medical charity, Samaritan's Purse.

He was receiving intensive medical care in a Monrovia hospital and was in stable condition, according to a spokeswoman for the aid group, Melissa Strickland.

"We are hopeful, but he is certainly not out of the woods yet," she said.Early treatment improves a patient's chances of survival, and Brantly recognized his own symptoms and began receiving care immediately, Strickland said.

The American missionary, Nancy Writebol, was gravely ill and in isolation in Monrovia, her husband, David, told a church elder via Skype, according to the Rev. John Munro, pastor of Calvary Church in Charlotte, N.C."

If this thing really takes off, it will kill millions.
 
Physician, heal thyself.

Seriously, we should all be grateful these doctors, nurses, and others are risking their lives to keep this thing from spreading. It has the potential to make HIV look like nothing by comparison. Over 60% who become infected die quickly.
 
I heard that just recently there was a second confirmed case of Ebola in the U.S. It's the swine flu panic all over again, this time with something legitimately life threatening.
 
Seriously, we should all be grateful these doctors, nurses, and others are risking their lives to keep this thing from spreading. It has the potential to make HIV look like nothing by comparison. Over 60% who become infected die quickly.

It is frightening. I read it's 90% that die.
 
I heard that just recently there was a second confirmed case of Ebola in the U.S. It's the swine flu panic all over again, this time with something legitimately life threatening.

We can probably catch it early enough here, and confine those infected and treat them, to limit the chance of it spreading widely. For now.
 
We can probably catch it early enough here, and confine those infected and treat them, to limit the chance of it spreading widely. For now.

Isn't the only way it's transmitted is through blood and body fluids of one who has Ebola?
 
It is terrible . . . but note that millions still die of malaria. Around 1 million in 2012, the last year for which I found reliable statistics (although that is sort of an oxymoron -- "reliable statistics").
 
It is terrible . . . but note that millions still die of malaria. Around 1 million in 2012, the last year for which I found reliable statistics (although that is sort of an oxymoron -- "reliable statistics").

Is malaria passed from person to person? The thing that is so frightening about Ebola is how easily it is passed from person to person.
 
Isn't the only way it's transmitted is through blood and body fluids of one who has Ebola?

It's thought so, but that is easily possible because those infected do a lot of vomiting, bleeding, have severe diarrhea, etc. Men who survive can transmit it sexually in their semen for months, at least.
 
Is malaria passed from person to person? The thing that is so frightening about Ebola is how easily it is passed from person to person.

Malaria is almost always caused by a mosquito bite. I suppose it's possible to get it from an infected human, but unlikely.
 
Is malaria passed from person to person? The thing that is so frightening about Ebola is how easily it is passed from person to person.
Nope. It could pass with direct blood to blood contact , but normally, you get it from mother nature directly.
 
Malaria is almost always caused by a mosquito bite. I suppose it's possible to get it from an infected human, but unlikely.

Yes, I know it is caused by a mosquito, but I wondered if it could then pass between people.
 
oh boy, here we go again with another Black Plague of The Year


ebola will kill over 70% of the people it infects if they dont receive very early treatment.,..it's that virulent.....

but it also can be treated in nearly half the cases if caught early

it also has a very brief " half life" as it were, and generally dies outside of its host pretty quickly without infecting anohter... also due to how fast it can kill..many Ebola outbreaks..simply self destruct, they wipe out a small group.. and then poof.. gone

also.. in the nearly 40 years since Ebola was first diagnosed there have been less then 10 thousand... hell, barely over 5 thousand fatalities from it


lets put that in perspective

the common flu... probably killed more people in whatever state or province you live in last year alone then Ebola has killed in it's decades of existence


this is not to diminish the terrifying power of this virus... this year is the biggest world wide outbreak of it yet... and in areas without medical access or quarantine could cause hundreds, or thousands of deaths

but millions?...no... once clusters of infected folks were found.. it would be quarantined treated as well it could, and then run it's course
 
oh boy, here we go again with another Black Plague of The Year


ebola will kill over 70% of the people it infects if they dont receive very early treatment.,..it's that virulent.....

but it also can be treated in nearly half the cases if caught early

it also has a very brief " half life" as it were, and generally dies outside of its host pretty quickly without infecting anohter... also due to how fast it can kill..many Ebola outbreaks..simply self destruct, they wipe out a small group.. and then poof.. gone

also.. in the nearly 40 years since Ebola was first diagnosed there have been less then 10 thousand... hell, barely over 5 thousand fatalities from it


lets put that in perspective

the common flu... probably killed more people in whatever state or province you live in last year alone then Ebola has killed in it's decades of existence


this is not to diminish the terrifying power of this virus... this year is the biggest world wide outbreak of it yet... and in areas without medical access or quarantine could cause hundreds, or thousands of deaths

but millions?...no... once clusters of infected folks were found.. it would be quarantined treated as well it could, and then run it's course

This may not be the one, but I'm almost certain one of these viruses is going to cause a pandemic and kill millions of people at some point in the near future.
 
oh boy, here we go again with another Black Plague of The Year


ebola will kill over 70% of the people it infects if they dont receive very early treatment.,..it's that virulent.....

but it also can be treated in nearly half the cases if caught early

it also has a very brief " half life" as it were, and generally dies outside of its host pretty quickly without infecting anohter... also due to how fast it can kill..many Ebola outbreaks..simply self destruct, they wipe out a small group.. and then poof.. gone

also.. in the nearly 40 years since Ebola was first diagnosed there have been less then 10 thousand... hell, barely over 5 thousand fatalities from it


lets put that in perspective

the common flu... probably killed more people in whatever state or province you live in last year alone then Ebola has killed in it's decades of existence


this is not to diminish the terrifying power of this virus... this year is the biggest world wide outbreak of it yet... and in areas without medical access or quarantine could cause hundreds, or thousands of deaths

but millions?...no... once clusters of infected folks were found.. it would be quarantined treated as well it could, and then run it's course

I think there are a few differences though. If I get the flu, I will almost certainly survive as I am a relatively young and healthy person. Ebola will kill you whether you are healthy or not. Also, every article I have read says it's difficult to detect early because the symptoms are so nondescript. How many sore throats and fevers have your kids had this year?
 
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