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Should This Ebola Patient Be Treated In London?
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Answers
No, leave them in situ and provide the best care possible in that location/ continent. If you want to minimise the risk, don't import it.
10:18 Sun 24th Aug 2014
AOG
"How long will it be before we are treating those from other countries, because they haven't the resources to deal with the problem?"
I think that you might be worrying unnecessarily.
Did we fly those who were suffering from SARS or Swine Flu to the UK, or did the WHO instead organise experts to fly out to affected regions and assist locally?
Don't you think that this is more the more likely solution, in the case of Ebola?
"How long will it be before we are treating those from other countries, because they haven't the resources to deal with the problem?"
I think that you might be worrying unnecessarily.
Did we fly those who were suffering from SARS or Swine Flu to the UK, or did the WHO instead organise experts to fly out to affected regions and assist locally?
Don't you think that this is more the more likely solution, in the case of Ebola?
In the olden days the time it took to complete a journey acted as a sort of quarantine. An Ebola carrier setting sail from some port on the west African coast would be dead and buried at sea long before the boat docked in the UK. Now a victim could board a plane in the morning and be here at Heathrow infecting innocent indigenous people by the afternoon.
We should ban all air travel until this clears up.
We should ban all air travel until this clears up.
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