Business & Finance1 min ago
Ebola: This Is Why Westerners Who Have Contracted It
11 Answers
Really ought to be treated as best they can in situ:
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/wo rld-eur ope-295 14920
Why import it? Doubtless it's on it's way soon enough via air travel etc but please let's try and keep a lid on it as far as feasibly possible.
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Why import it? Doubtless it's on it's way soon enough via air travel etc but please let's try and keep a lid on it as far as feasibly possible.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.While I'd agree with that sentiment it also should be true that if better treatment is available in someone's native country then they should be brought back -- again, the risks if the disease spreading too far as so low that it seems unnecessary to keep people in less-than-ideal conditions if an alternative is available.
What I would agree with is that we shouldn't be shipping sick native Africans here; the difference is that any native British citizens who have gone abroad to help have a right to treatment in the UK and that right should be respected ahead of the minimal risk; for those with no right to such treatment, while I'd certainly like to see it extended if possible (in an ideal situation, who wouldn't?) it's realistically wholly unfeasible. Too many people are sick, and then the risk grows anyway.
What I would agree with is that we shouldn't be shipping sick native Africans here; the difference is that any native British citizens who have gone abroad to help have a right to treatment in the UK and that right should be respected ahead of the minimal risk; for those with no right to such treatment, while I'd certainly like to see it extended if possible (in an ideal situation, who wouldn't?) it's realistically wholly unfeasible. Too many people are sick, and then the risk grows anyway.
Well yes, there is a difference stuey, in that one is entitled to treatment in the UK as a UK citizen, and the others aren't entitled to such treatment. So while we might like to treat both here if that were feasible, it's not -- but those who have the right to such treatment should get it.
The risk of a large outbreak is just not large enough to justify "abandoning" UK citizens (or, in a wider sense, European/ US citizens).
The risk of a large outbreak is just not large enough to justify "abandoning" UK citizens (or, in a wider sense, European/ US citizens).
But while they're carrying, they're not contagious. You're contagious when you actually start bleeding/vomiting/sweating, and (if you survive) it can be sexually transmitted after you're caught.
The likelihood of surviving, however, is extremely low. And once your symptomatic (and actually contagious) it normally kills you too quickly to spread far.
http:// www.nbc news.co m/story line/eb ola-vir us-outb reak/eb ola-out break-n ot-card s-u-s-c dc-dire ctor-sa ys-n169 836
The likelihood of surviving, however, is extremely low. And once your symptomatic (and actually contagious) it normally kills you too quickly to spread far.
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