How is
Ebola spread? Two ways; one, by letting anyone exposed to it in West Africa
into America when they fly here and, two, by assuming that medical
professionals and others who have been exposed to it would quarantine
themselves from contact with others once they are here.
The latest
case is Dr. Craig Spencer, an American to whom the travel ban would not apply,
identified as potentially having Ebola after treating victims in Africa and who
totally ignored the potential of spreading it to others as he made his way
around New York on subways, went bowling, and likely had dinner at a
restaurant.
Earlier a
NBC news crew that had been exposed to Ebola was issued a mandatory quarantine
by the New Jersey Health Department, but its chief medical editor and
correspondent, Dr. Nancy Snyderman, while symptom-free, decided to break the quarantine.
One of the crew, Ashoko Mokpo, did fall ill and is being treated at the
Nebraska Medical Center.
What does
it tell you when two medical professional behave in this manner? It tells you
that even those who know they can infect others were indifferent to the risk.
It tells you that airport staff armed with thermometers are no defense against
anyone coming in from the Ebola hot zone in Africa.
It tells
you that the failure to impose a ban on all flights from West Africa should
have been imposed weeks ago.
It tells
you that sending three thousand active duty soldiers and another thousand
reservists into the Ebola hot zone is a senseless act that exposes them to the
disease and countless others on their return unless they are all held in
quarantine until no signs of the disease are detected. The risk still remains even
after the twenty-one days that the Center for Disease Control cites as the time
in which victims would show signs of the disease.
The two
Dallas nurses who acquired the disease have been treated and one has been
released. As of October 23, there were eighteen cases of Ebola in Europe and
the U.S. Unlike Africa, Western nations have responded quite well to the
threat.
In New
York, the Mayor, Bill de Blasio, was joined by the Governor Andrew Cuomo to
hold a
press
conference that seemed to this observer intended to exonerate them of any charge
they were not taking Dr. Spencer’s foolishness lightly and to avoid public
panic among a public that is clearly not panicking.
Given the
continued news coverage of Ebola, it is amazing that Americans have absorbed
the fundamental message that the disease has not affected those outside the
healthcare community with the exception of the NBC crew and that steps have
been put in place to identify and isolate those who had it. Moreover, while a
deadly virus in Africa, it has been treated and cured here in America.
So far, so
good.
The real
challenge will be the flu season when lots of people will show up at hospitals
with flu symptoms that resemble Ebola symptoms. If you haven’t been vaccinated,
get one! How hospitals deal with this is going to be a real test of their
judgment and skills.
I am
hopeful we may be spared more press conferences that don’t tell us anything
more than what we already know. I surely don’t want to hear President Obama
tell me that everything is fine and there is nothing to worry about.
© Alan
Caruba, 2014
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