cralkhi wrote:Northstar wrote:Speaking of E. Reston, they keep saying E Zaire is
very unlikely to mutate to airborne ... and I really
really hope they are correct on that point
... but E. Reston is thought to have come from Africa to the Philippines - via people or critters to a game park or who knows how - and hence to Reston, VA and somewhere along the way it figured out how to go airborne.
From what I've read, I don't think Ebola Reston is airborne - at least, no evidence of it. There was some non-contact between monkeys, but that was probably flung poop or aerosolized by pressure-washing the cages or something.
And, as is eerily pointed out in The Hot Zone,
That book is way over-dramatized and not at all reliable.
I agree with you The Hot Zone is prone to dramatic effect and have so stated elsewhere in this thread. There are other books out there, I think I named a few in other posts on this thread, that have more sanguine or contrasting perspectives. Some of which
are related in The Hot Zone itself, to be fair to Mr Preston. Namely some of the CDC people are stated as having
very different views on Ebola infectiousness. That is stated clearly in THZ. And then he goes for the drama again, true. But just perhaps those are the genuine opinions of the persons he was interviewing.
Scientists and doctors, of course, never ever disagree with each other about anything. Nor accuse one another of melodrama or being stubborn dorks or blind twits or anything like that. No, never... uhhuh
IIRC, I've read elsewhere that E Reston can go airborne is not in dispute. It did a bit more than get passed among a few monkeys. It was in several rooms. It killed in at least a couple well separated rooms in the initial outbreak. After the initial outbreak and cleaning they imported more monkeys, who got it and this time they let the infection burn through the population. It killed them all throughout the building. Did you read the book? Not just it, of course, but have you read it? Opinions may vary among assorted sincere and even expert persons also. eh. It did go all through that building. That said, nowhere have I claimed to be a med expert, not remotely. I've said I am
not. But I do try to repeat what I've read as accurately as my memory allows. For what that is worth. People here are smart and know how to go look things up for themselves or reason them out for themselves. Something I heartily encourage.
In other items.
The rumor about the cases of folks' calling in sick at Bellevue is repeated in The New York Post among other places when I googled it. I had heard it on tv news this morning. CNN, IIRC. Could have been MSNBC or Fox. I channel surfed them all then. The NY POST also states authorities deny the story. eh. I'm not taking attendance at Bellevue so I have no way of knowing.
But what I said remains.
If it is happening I do not blame them. A couple hundred healthcare workers in Africa are dead and a couple Spanish priests. Various Western health people, and others like a cameraman, have been infected there and cannot say when or how so there was no obvious breech of protocol to which they can say, 'yep, I got a cut through my gloves' or whatever. This is a cause for concern among health workers.
And should be. Concern, not panic or hysteria or witch hunts. Those help nothing. Likewise, government poopooing, condescension and ever changing stories, proclamations, assertions and guidelines are not helping.
I have stated I'm not worried about Ebola here. I
am kinda fretty about it getting loose in Rio, or Karachi, or other huge teeming overcrowded cities with large slums and not good health care for the residents of those slums. That could be a difficult problem.
And... Biochem, thanks.
And I agree with you completely about these people being compensated fully and fairly... and while they're at that, they should be treated with courtesy, dignity and respect. To do otherwise is just vile.