TriniTuner.com  |  Latest Event:  

Forums

EBOLA- resurgence 2018

this is how we do it.......

Moderator: 3ne2nr Mods

User avatar
DVSTT
Trying to catch PATCH AND VEGA
Posts: 6759
Joined: November 28th, 2011, 9:11 pm

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby DVSTT » August 18th, 2014, 7:34 pm

shogun wrote:^Ent.

"This is one of the stupidest things I have ever seen in my life," he said. "All between the houses you could see people fleeing with items looted from the patients."

Wow... just wow.


Did you watch vice news documentary on the Ebola outbreak? People there believed it was a hoax by the government.. :sad:

User avatar
RASC
TriniTuner 24-7
Posts: 8338
Joined: February 6th, 2004, 11:00 am

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby RASC » August 20th, 2014, 9:00 am

DVSTT wrote:
shogun wrote:^Ent.

"This is one of the stupidest things I have ever seen in my life," he said. "All between the houses you could see people fleeing with items looted from the patients."

Wow... just wow.


Did you watch vice news documentary on the Ebola outbreak? People there believed it was a hoax by the government.. :sad:


Yes this was in the earliest.
One can only hope the ignorant masses have awakened...

User avatar
Allergic2BunnyEars
TriniTuner 24-7
Posts: 7784
Joined: September 15th, 2011, 12:32 am

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby Allergic2BunnyEars » August 20th, 2014, 10:28 am

Ebola crisis: A doctor's view from Sierra Leone

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-28852352

West Africa's Ebola epidemic, the deadliest on record, presents particular challenges for medical staff. Here, Irish doctor Gabriel Fitzpatrick describes working for Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) at the centre of the outbreak in Sierra Leone:

MSF constructed a special Ebola treatment centre here in Kailahun that opened at the end of June and is now almost full. Across Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia, this is where MSF has been seeing the biggest number of cases to date. There are villages that have lost the majority of their adults to the disease.

The people in this area are scared of the Ebola virus, but there are no signs of uncontrolled panic. Confidence is not in short supply. People speak of their belief that they can control this outbreak with the help of international organisations.

The scenes, however, can be heartbreaking.

In the suspected cases ward I saw a small child getting his nappy changed by a nurse who was wearing a full body plastic protective suit.

The child was clinging on to the nurse, searching and hoping for comfort in a place which does not allow direct skin-to-skin contact. As a father myself, this image stuck in my mind.

On the same evening, a mother and her two children were admitted to the hospital with confirmed Ebola. Within days the mother and eldest child had passed away.

It is startling how quickly this virus can kill patients. The remaining child is still receiving supportive care but his chances are not good.

There are a few rules in the Ebola treatment centre that are sometimes difficult to remember and go against our natural instincts.

Firstly, shaking hands with anybody is forbidden, and you must keep a certain distance away from people at all times. This can feel isolating.

It is also immediately noticeable that staff do not touch their faces with their hands. This is because the virus is spread through contaminated fluids. If you have the virus on your hands and then touch your face or mouth you could develop Ebola.


[*] In Sierra Leone, health spending stood at $96 (£58) per person in 2012. This compares favourably to Liberia ($66) and Guinea ($32). By comparison the UK spends $3,648 and US $8,895
[*] Sierra Leone has 2.2 doctors for every 100,000 people (2012 figures). Guinea has 10 (2005) and Liberia just 1.4 (2008), both far behind the UK (279) and Switzerland (394).
[*] Resources in Sierra Leone and Liberia are drained by malaria treatment. Both had some 1.5 million confirmed and probable cases in 2012, from overall populations of about 6 million and 4 million respectively.
[*] Sierra Leone and Liberia have suffered economically due to civil war. Sierra Leone emerged from a decade of conflict in 2002, while long-running hostilities in Liberia ended the following year.

One day an ambulance arrived at the Ebola triage tent. I peered in to make an initial assessment, being careful not to get too close. A young man was lying dead in the back. He was curled up in the corner. I could guess his final moments had not been peaceful.

No more than a few metres away, within the confirmed cases ward, a child was playing on the ground with a doll. The division between the worlds of life and death are sometimes difficult to distinguish in this place.

There are happier stories - some of those who catch Ebola survive. For some unknown reason their bodies beat the virus.

More than 300 patients have been admitted to MSF isolation centres in Sierra Leone. To date about 50 have recovered and returned home.

Every few days, patients who have survived are discharged from the hospital. This is a big occasion and is celebrated both by those who have recovered and by hospital staff.

Certificates are presented to these patients during a ceremony with somebody invariably performing a dance. West African music is supplied via a mobile phone.

Working at the heart of the largest Ebola outbreak ever recorded is tense for all healthcare staff. The ever-present danger of making a mistake and infecting yourself or others is very real.

Doctors and nurses from Sierra Leone have died on the front line of this expanding battle.

People working here deal with this stress in different ways. I personally deal with it by hearing my wife's voice over a crackling mobile phone when I get a chance to call her. I have a picture of her and my son on me at all times.

As part of my role here I also work as a medical epidemiologist. This essentially involves investigating cases to try and find out where and how the patient initially contracted Ebola.

Earlier this week I travelled to a small village about one hour's drive from Kailahun where a number of cases have been reported.

The village consists of about 10 houses around a central square. The village chief told me that two families had been almost wiped out by the virus during the last week of July and this had caused great fear among the inhabitants.

The first person to develop the illness in the village hunted "bushmeat" in the surrounding jungle and used to sell it to his neighbours, including those families affected by the virus.

Since then, health promotion teams from both MSF and the World Health Organization (WHO) have visited the village providing education and advice about Ebola.

This has somewhat alleviated the villagers' concern, but not fully. When a small village suddenly loses two families to an unknown virus it can take a long time to recover.

The current Ebola outbreak can be stopped if the infected patients are found and isolated, and if comprehensive contact tracing and health promotion are carried out in the community.

All this takes resources - more doctors, nurses, epidemiologists, water and sanitation specialists - which are in short supply at the moment.

In the meantime the fight against Ebola continues and I feel the people of Sierra Leone are more than up to the challenge - if they get sufficient support.

User avatar
streetbeastINC.
punchin NOS
Posts: 3602
Joined: April 17th, 2003, 11:48 pm
Contact:

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby streetbeastINC. » August 21st, 2014, 11:19 pm

American Doctor and health worker released from hospital Emory

User avatar
DVSTT
Trying to catch PATCH AND VEGA
Posts: 6759
Joined: November 28th, 2011, 9:11 pm

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby DVSTT » August 21st, 2014, 11:21 pm

http://www.buzzfeed.com/jinamoore/ebola ... n?s=mobile

This is really a perspective I had not considered ...

User avatar
cherrypopper
Riding on 18's
Posts: 1880
Joined: October 8th, 2008, 3:32 pm

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby cherrypopper » September 3rd, 2014, 8:00 pm

Saw on crime watch today that there is a confirmed ebola case in caura hospital. .. a native of an African nation.

It is alleged that the nurses are resigning in the hospital etc..

User avatar
Ted_v2
TriniTuner 24-7
Posts: 11406
Joined: March 30th, 2010, 8:58 pm

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby Ted_v2 » September 3rd, 2014, 8:18 pm

Killing the host can stop the spread?

User avatar
Cantmis
punchin NOS
Posts: 2947
Joined: June 16th, 2010, 11:03 am
Location: 10° 10' N, 61° 40' W

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby Cantmis » September 3rd, 2014, 9:38 pm

That's for werewolves.

toyolink
3NE 2NR Power Seller
Posts: 2781
Joined: May 22nd, 2010, 11:24 am

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby toyolink » September 3rd, 2014, 10:14 pm

Really hope this aint real, since for sure we going to be in deep trouble.

User avatar
Trini Hookah
TriniTuner 24-7
Posts: 15627
Joined: August 4th, 2009, 5:13 am
Location: Look at my post count, my post count is amazing.
Contact:

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby Trini Hookah » September 3rd, 2014, 10:54 pm

And to Tobago we goooo

User avatar
shake d livin wake d dead
TunerGod
Posts: 31712
Joined: July 20th, 2009, 1:25 pm
Location: all over

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby shake d livin wake d dead » September 4th, 2014, 12:00 pm

there is a confirmed case of ebola in St.Clair hospital

User avatar
KM_2NR
3NE2NR is my LIFE
Posts: 887
Joined: September 20th, 2009, 4:43 pm
Location: Headbanging in traffic

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby KM_2NR » September 4th, 2014, 12:05 pm

shake d livin wake d dead wrote:there is a confirmed case of ebola in St.Clair hospital

TROLL OF THE YEAR EVERYONE!!! I really hope your joking, Trinidad not prepared to handle a pandemic of that scale. Source?

User avatar
TRAE
punchin NOS
Posts: 4391
Joined: December 15th, 2008, 2:47 pm
Location: South!
Contact:

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby TRAE » September 4th, 2014, 12:07 pm

it reach? wtf

User avatar
shake d livin wake d dead
TunerGod
Posts: 31712
Joined: July 20th, 2009, 1:25 pm
Location: all over

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby shake d livin wake d dead » September 4th, 2014, 12:14 pm

hospital nurses are spreading this news...so I'm selling it as they sold me
Last edited by shake d livin wake d dead on September 4th, 2014, 12:25 pm, edited 1 time in total.

User avatar
teems1
punchin NOS
Posts: 3445
Joined: March 15th, 2007, 4:44 pm

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby teems1 » September 4th, 2014, 12:14 pm

shake d livin wake d dead wrote:there is a confirmed case of ebola in St.Clair hospital


bbm/whatsapp hoax or real?

User avatar
maj. tom
TriniTuner 24-7
Posts: 10951
Joined: March 16th, 2012, 10:47 am
Location: ᑐᑌᑎᕮ

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby maj. tom » September 4th, 2014, 12:24 pm

Please stay calm.

These reports must from the Ministry of Health and not bbm.
If there is a case there would be very strict, possibly military quarantine of the patient(s).

User avatar
shake d livin wake d dead
TunerGod
Posts: 31712
Joined: July 20th, 2009, 1:25 pm
Location: all over

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby shake d livin wake d dead » September 4th, 2014, 12:26 pm

shake d livin wake d dead wrote:hospital nurses are spreading this news...so I'm selling it as they sold me

User avatar
KM_2NR
3NE2NR is my LIFE
Posts: 887
Joined: September 20th, 2009, 4:43 pm
Location: Headbanging in traffic

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby KM_2NR » September 4th, 2014, 12:27 pm

teems1 wrote:
shake d livin wake d dead wrote:there is a confirmed case of ebola in St.Clair hospital


bbm/whatsapp hoax or real?


Might just be some epic trolling but guess we have to wait to get a Official Statement from Ministry of Health. Pretty sure PAHO and WHO will get involved aswell. Or they might try to cover it up and isolate the case to avoid PANIC!!! Anyone know where i can get a Hazmat Suit locally?!?!

S_2NR
TriniTuner 24-7
Posts: 13305
Joined: May 22nd, 2010, 8:11 pm

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby S_2NR » September 4th, 2014, 12:53 pm

maj. tom wrote:Please stay calm.

These reports must from the Ministry of Health and not bbm.
If there is a case there would be very strict, possibly military quarantine of the patient(s).

Lol. This is Trinidad. They would cover it up until its too obvious to ignore.

User avatar
neoise
Sweet on this forum
Posts: 373
Joined: March 31st, 2008, 5:12 am
Location: AIUR

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby neoise » September 5th, 2014, 12:37 pm

shake d livin wake d dead wrote:
shake d livin wake d dead wrote:hospital nurses are spreading this news...so I'm selling it as they sold me



:shock: In for info

User avatar
Allergic2BunnyEars
TriniTuner 24-7
Posts: 7784
Joined: September 15th, 2011, 12:32 am

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby Allergic2BunnyEars » September 5th, 2014, 2:54 pm

http://www.bbc.com/news/health-29084254

Use Ebola survivors' blood - WHO


The blood of patients who recover from Ebola should be used to treat others, the World Health Organization has announced.

West Africa is facing the largest Ebola outbreak in history and more than 2,000 people have died.

A global group of experts have been meeting to assess the experimental therapies that could contain Ebola.

The WHO also announced that Ebola vaccines could be used on the frontline by November.
Blood medicine

People produce antibodies in the blood in an attempt to fight off an Ebola infection.

In theory, those antibodies can be transferred from a survivor into a sick patient to give their immune system a boost.

However, large scale data on the effectiveness of the therapy is lacking.

Studies on the 1995 outbreak of Ebola in Democratic Republic of Congo showed seven out of eight people survived after being given the therapy.

Dr Marie Paule Kieny, an assistant director general at WHO said: "We agreed that whole blood therapies may be used to treat Ebola virus and all efforts must be invested to help infected countries to use them.

"There is a real opportunity that a blood-derived product can be used now and this can be very effective in terms of treating patients."

She said that it was the one positive aspect of so many people being infected.

"There are also many people now who have survived and are doing well. They can provide blood to treat the other people who are sick."
Vaccines

There is no clinically proven drug or vaccine to treat Ebola, but many are in the experimental stage.

Around 150 experts have spent the last two days investigating how to fast-track promising experimental drugs to make them available in West Africa as soon as possible.

Ebola vaccine trials started in the US this week and will be extended to centres in the UK, Mali and Gambia in the coming weeks.

The WHO said safety data would be ready by November 2014 and, if it proved safe, would be used in West Africa immediately.

Healthcare workers and other frontline staff would be prioritised for vaccination, the WHO said.

Experimental drugs - such as ZMapp, which has been used in seven patients including a British volunteer nurse - were also assessed.

However, the supplies of all the experimental drugs are very limited, if not exhausted.

The WHO said efforts were underway to increase production, but it would take several months.

Dr Jesse Goodman, from Georgetown University Medical Center in the US, took part in the meeting.

He said: "This is a unique opportunity to identify what new treatments and vaccines can really help people and then potentially accelerate their use.

"We don't want to end up after this outbreak not knowing how best to prevent or treat the next one."

Yet the WHO warned that all the talk of experimental therapies must not detract from the proven methods of infection control which have defeated all previous outbreaks.

Meanwhile, officials in Nigeria have decided to reopen schools in the country from 22 September.

They were closed as a precaution to prevent the spread of the virus.

User avatar
Allergic2BunnyEars
TriniTuner 24-7
Posts: 7784
Joined: September 15th, 2011, 12:32 am

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby Allergic2BunnyEars » September 8th, 2014, 2:28 pm

Dizzy28 wrote:I guess we can expect a spike in Ebola cases now in Liberia!!


http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-29115298
Ebola crisis: Liberia 'faces huge surge' says WHO

Ebola is spreading exponentially in Liberia, with thousands of new cases expected in the next three weeks, the World Health Organization (WHO) says.

Conventional methods to control the outbreak were "not having an adequate impact", the UN's health agency added.

At least 2,100 people infected with Ebola have died so far in the West African states of Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone and Nigeria this year.

The WHO says 79 health workers have been killed by the virus.

Organisations combating the outbreak needed to scale-up efforts "three-to-four fold", the WHO said.

It highlighted Liberia's Montserrado county, where 1,000 beds were needed for infected Ebola patients but only 240 were available, leading to people being turned away from treatment centres.

Transmission of the virus in Liberia was "already intense", and taxis being used to transport infected patients appeared to be "a hot source of potential virus transmission", the WHO said.



Ebola casualties
Up to 5 September

2,105

Ebola deaths - probable, confirmed and suspected

1,089 Liberia

517 Guinea

491 Sierra Leone

8 Nigeria

Source: WHO





"As soon as a new Ebola treatment facility is opened, it immediately fills to overflowing with patients, pointing to a large but previously invisible caseload," it added.

"When patients are turned away... they have no choice but to return to their communities and homes, where they inevitably infect others."

The Ebola disease spreads between humans by direct contact with infected blood, bodily fluids or organs, or indirectly through contact with contaminated environments.

Conventional means of controlling the outbreak, which include avoiding close physical contact with those infected and wearing personal protective equipment, were not working well in Liberia, the WHO said.


However, they appeared to be more effective in "areas of limited transmission" such as Nigeria and Senegal, it added.

Local communities, especially those in rural areas, had been able to slow the transmission when they put in place their own protective measures, the WHO statement said.
'Economic impact'

Also on Monday, the African Union urged its member states to lift travel bans imposed to contain the virus, saying that the bans could hurt the region's economy.

"We must be careful not to introduce measures that may have more... social and economic impact than the disease itself," commission chief Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma said in quotes carried by AFP news agency.

The current outbreak has mortality rate of about 55%.

Liberia has the highest number of reported cases and deaths, with more than 1,000 casualties so far.

Hundreds have also died of the virus in Guinea and Sierra Leone.

There have been at least eight deaths in Nigeria. One case has also been confirmed in Senegal but there have been no deaths so far

User avatar
Dizzy28
TriniTuner 24-7
Posts: 16747
Joined: February 8th, 2010, 8:54 am
Location: People's Republic of Bananas

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby Dizzy28 » September 8th, 2014, 2:57 pm

This Ebola outbreak reminds me of this man

The power of population is so superior to the power of the earth to produce subsistence for man, that premature death must in some shape or other visit the human race. The vices of mankind are active and able ministers of depopulation. They are the precursors in the great army of destruction, and often finish the dreadful work themselves. But should they fail in this war of extermination, sickly seasons, epidemics, pestilence, and plague advance in terrific array, and sweep off their thousands and tens of thousands. Should success be still incomplete, gigantic inevitable famine stalks in the rear, and with one mighty blow levels the population with the food of the world.
—Malthus T.R. 1798. An essay on the principle of population. Chapter VII, p61

User avatar
Allergic2BunnyEars
TriniTuner 24-7
Posts: 7784
Joined: September 15th, 2011, 12:32 am

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby Allergic2BunnyEars » September 11th, 2014, 9:18 am

Ebola virus: 'Biological war' in Liberia

Image
Ebola robs death of its dignity as victims' bodies are quickly burnt with the plastic suits they are wrapped in.

With warnings from officials that the Ebola virus is "spreading like wildfire" in Liberia, Sarah Crowe, who works for the UN children's agency (Unicef), describes her week on the Ebola front line:

Flights into disaster zones are usually full of aid workers and journalists. Not this time.

The plane was one of the first in after some 10 airlines stopped flying to Liberia because of Ebola, and still it was empty.

When I was last in Liberia in 2006, it was to work on reintegration of child soldiers in a time of peace. Now the country is fighting a "biological war" from an unseen enemy without foot soldiers.

As we enter the airport, an unnerving sight - a team of health workers kitted out with masks and gloves asks us to wash our hands with a chlorine solution and takes our temperatures.

Image

It was to be the start of a new routine - the hours and days since, I have had my temperature taken about 15 times and have had to wash my hands with chlorine at the entrance to every building, every office, every store, and every hotel.
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote

It was a normal pregnancy, but she was turned away by every hospital as staff were too afraid to take her in case she had Ebola”

Even in small villages. And yet ironically, despite all this, few health facilities are properly functioning.

The next morning, the breakfast room at the hotel is buzzing - a large group of scientists from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) huddle around computers animatedly talking, checking charts and data.

The world's Ebola experts are here - writing the first draft of Ebola history in real time.

The capital, Monrovia, reveals itself as a city branded by Ebola posters shouting out what people know all too well by now - Ebola is deadly, protect yourself, wash your hands.

Rest of article can be read here: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-29147797

User avatar
MG Man
2NRholic
Posts: 23796
Joined: May 1st, 2003, 1:31 pm
Location: between cinco leg

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby MG Man » September 11th, 2014, 9:20 am

if this is how humans handle something like ebola, I dread the reaction to the inevitable zombie apocalypse :-/

User avatar
DVSTT
Trying to catch PATCH AND VEGA
Posts: 6759
Joined: November 28th, 2011, 9:11 pm

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby DVSTT » September 11th, 2014, 10:14 am

Obesity killing more than Ebola though. Common cold too.

User avatar
streetbeastINC.
punchin NOS
Posts: 3602
Joined: April 17th, 2003, 11:48 pm
Contact:

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby streetbeastINC. » September 12th, 2014, 6:45 pm

Doctor 'improving' after Ebola diagnosis Why isn't Ebola containment working? Gates Fdn. to donate $50M to Ebola fight Writebol: I don't know how I got Ebola
As of Friday, there have been 4,784 cases of Ebola, with 2,400 deaths, according to the World Health Organization, which says the virus is spreading at a much faster rate now than it was earlier in the outbreak.
Ebola is an RNA virus, which means every time it copies itself, it makes one or two mutations. Many of those mutations mean nothing, but some of them might be able to change the way the virus behaves inside the human body.
"Imagine every time you copy an essay, you change a word or two. Eventually, it's going to change the meaning of the essay," said Dr. C.J. Peters, one of the heroes featured in "The Hot Zone."
That book chronicles the 1989 outbreak of Ebola Reston, which was transmitted among monkeys by breathing. In 2012, Canadian researchers found that Ebola Zaire, which is involved in the current outbreak, was passed from pigs to monkeys in the air.
Dr. James Le Duc, the director of the Galveston National Laboratory at the University of Texas, said the problem is that no one is keeping track of the mutations happening across West Africa, so no one really knows what the virus has become.
One group of researchers looked at how Ebola changed over a short period of time in just one area in Sierra Leone early on in the outbreak, before it was spreading as fast as it is now. They found more than 300 genetic changes in the virus.
"It's frightening to look at how much this virus mutated within just three weeks," said Dr. Pardis Sabeti, an associate professor at Harvard and senior associate member of the Broad Institute, where the research was done.
Even without mutating, the virus has overwhelmed efforts to stop it.
The group Doctors Without Borders says Monrovia, Liberia, needs 1,000 beds for Ebola patients but has only 240, and it has had to turn patients away, sending them back to neighborhoods where they will probably infect more people.
This week, a Pentagon spokesman said the United States is sending a 25-bed field hospital to Monrovia.
"A 25-bed hospital with nobody to staff it? That's not the scale we need to be thinking about," Le Duc said. "It's an absolute embarrassment. When there was a typhoon in the Philippines, the Navy was there in 48 hours and had billions of dollars in resources."
Osterholm commended groups like Doctors Without Borders but said uncoordinated efforts by individual organizations are no match for Ebola spreading swiftly through urban areas.
"This is largely dysfunctional. Nobody's in command, and nobody's in charge," he said. "It's like not having air traffic control at an airport. The planes would just crash into each other."

User avatar
streetbeastINC.
punchin NOS
Posts: 3602
Joined: April 17th, 2003, 11:48 pm
Contact:

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby streetbeastINC. » September 12th, 2014, 6:49 pm

If this thin mutates thats it.......it said to have remaines geneticaly stable since the last wave many years ago,...but now this.....

toyolink
3NE 2NR Power Seller
Posts: 2781
Joined: May 22nd, 2010, 11:24 am

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby toyolink » September 12th, 2014, 7:52 pm

Locally less and less attention seems to be paid to what is going on.
The reality seems to be that this out-break is truly getting out of hand.
The death of Africans has historically been given low priority by many .

User avatar
streetbeastINC.
punchin NOS
Posts: 3602
Joined: April 17th, 2003, 11:48 pm
Contact:

Re: ebola outbreak in Africa

Postby streetbeastINC. » September 12th, 2014, 8:06 pm

This is not about africans my brother...this not about race....and locally moh and pur team is working towards this...this has been given priority

Advertisement

Return to “Ole talk and more Ole talk”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: death365, pugboy, The_Honourable and 124 guests