So it Begins... (epidemic) (hemorrhagic fever) (Iguessthatsthat)[Offishall Thread]

tuNED318

New member
dcd8bbd0fa949f87bc504a4c38cfa598ea7383205fe73a71b28b1d308b694e94.jpg


Ebola epidemic confirmed in Guinea, death toll quickly rising
Virus kills 90 per cent of those infected

Guinea has received confirmation that a mysterious disease that has killed up to 59 people in the West African country, and may have spread to neighbouring Sierra Leone, is the hemorrhagic fever Ebola, the government said on Saturday.

Cases of the disease - among the most virulent pathogens known to infect humans, with a fatality rate of up to 90 per cent - have been registered in three southeastern towns and in the capital Conakry since Feb. 9. It has never before been recorded in Guinea.

"It is indeed Ebola fever. A laboratory in Lyon (France) confirmed the information," Damantang Albert Camara told Reuters.

Six of the 12 samples sent for analysis tested positive for Ebola, Dr. Sakoba Keita, who heads the epidemics prevention division at Guinea's health ministry, told Reuters.

He added that health officials had registered 80 suspected cases of the disease, including 59 deaths.

"But you have to understand that not all the cases are necessarily due to Ebola fever. Some will have other origins, including a form of severe dysentery," Keita said.

World Health Organization (WHO) officials said that cases showing similar symptoms, including fever, diarrhea, vomiting and bleeding, had also been reported in an area of Sierra Leone near the border with Guinea.

Sierra Leone's chief medical officer, Dr. Brima Kargbo, said authorities were investigating the case of a 14-year-old boy who died in the town of Buedu in the eastern Kailahun District.


ebola-uganda.jpg

Doctors collect samples of the Ebola virus at the Centre for Disease Control in Uganda during an outbreak there in 2012. (Edward Echwalu/Reuters)

The boy had travelled to Guinea to attend the funeral of one of the outbreak's earlier victims.

Kargbo said a medical team had been sent to Buedu to test those who came into contact with the boy before his death.

"Highly contagious"

The international medical charity Doctors Without Borders announced on Saturday it was reinforcing its medical and logistics teams in Guinea in response to the epidemic.

It is also flying in 33 tons of medicines and equipment and is setting up isolation units in the three affected towns in Guinea.

"These structures are essential to prevent the spread of the disease, which is highly contagious," Dr. Esther Sterk, Doctors Without Borders' tropical medicine adviser, said in a statement. "Specialized staff are providing care to patients showing signs of infection."

Ebola is introduced into the human population through close contact with infected animals including chimpanzees, gorillas, fruit bats, monkeys, forest antelope and porcupines, according to the WHO.

The disease, which is transmitted between humans through contact with organs, blood, secretions, or other bodily fluids, is most commonly found in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Uganda, South Sudan and Gabon.

Though no epidemics of the disease have been recorded among humans in West Africa, a variety of Ebola infected a colony of chimpanzees in Ivory Coast's Tai National Park, near the country's border with Liberia, in 1994.

A Swiss scientist, who performed an autopsy on one of the infected animals, contracted the disease but later recovered.
© Thomson Reuters, 2014

http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/ebola-epidemic-confirmed-in-guinea-death-toll-quickly-rising-1.2582861

ebola-poster-visual-science.jpg


Figure-2-Model-of-Ebola-virus-pathogenesis.jpg


ebola+1.jpg


20120829-011356.jpg


#WalkingDead #Koooorrrll #PepperyourAngus
 
Last edited:
In an ironic twsit, it's a good thing Ebola kills so many and so fast because it really doesn't have much of a chance to propagate.

If it ever mutates in a virus with a long incubation period, we are fucked-diddly-ucked.

I'm not doomsday prepper or anything, but if there is one thing that could fuck us over in no time flat, it's a disease like that.
 
Imagine Ebola in China or India, it would spread like wildfire and millions would die in no time.
 

No shit bruh, but they're talking about an epidemic spreading to neighboring countries here. It's mentioned in the article that there are always a couple cases in Africa, but not in that region.

Machete ready. Can of food ready.

Vomit on the sweater already?

Closes the borders plz...good luck.

Yes we don't want it to spread too far, like:

Imagine Ebola in China or India, it would spread like wildfire and millions would die in no time.
 
I work for Health Canada and we had an emergency meeting yesterday about this. Full panic mode will be engaged if they find more people infected.

srs
 
En faite au Canada, a cause de nos moeurs et nos habitudes d'hygienes on est relativement bien proteger contre ce virus qui ne se propagent pas vraiment dans les airs.

La transmission par contact direct avec les liquides organiques (sang, sperme, excrétions, salive) d’une personne infectée est la plus considérable de toutes. Les risques de propagation chez le personnel hospitalier sont très élevés, particulièrement si la stérilisation du matériel n’est pas assurée. Dans les zones endémiques, des manques en matière d'hygiène et de sécurité ont causé la mort de plusieurs médecins et infirmières lors d'épidémies et favorisent les contaminations nosocomiales.

La transmission du virus peut aussi s’effectuer par contacts étroits du malade avec ses proches. On entend par contacts étroits des contacts directs avec les liquides organiques d’une personne infectée, qu’elle soit vivante ou décédée. Les rituels funéraires de certaines populations d'Afrique centrale, consistant à laver le corps, puis à se rincer les mains dans une bassine commune, ont souvent favorisé la propagation du virus à travers la famille et les amis du défunt. Des cas de transmission par le sperme se sont déjà produits jusqu’à sept semaines après la guérison clinique du malade. La transmission peut se produire chez des personnes ayant manipulé des primates infectés par le virus, morts ou vivants. Sous des conditions expérimentales, le virus arrive également à se propager par des gouttelettes ou des particules aérosol.

Le virus est foudroyant mais si on est moindrement prudent le risque est grandement diminué.

Btw le voyageur de la Saskatchewan n'était pas contagieux lors de son voyage. La période d'incubation du virus n'étant pas débuté.
 
I work for Health Canada and we had an emergency meeting yesterday about this. Full panic mode will be engaged if they find more people infected.

srs

I hope so! The consequences of a lack of action are unfathomable (if it is indeed a disease that can spread efficiently).
 
Back
Top