Author: joshuah

Unethical Ebola Quarantines May Encourage People to Lie about Travel to West Africa

“Who is going to want to go from the United States to help in West Africa knowing they are going to be in prison for three weeks when they get back?” asks Dr. Craig Klugman, professor and chair of Health Sciences, College of Science and Health. Klugman is a bioethicist and medical anthropologist who researches death and dying. “Probably very few people…” Klugman is also concerned that strict, unethical quarantine procedures...

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Antibiotic-resistant superbugs could be world’s top killers by 2050

Left unchecked, antibiotic resistance will kill 10 million per year by 2050, a new report finds. An economist crunched the numbers on the rise of antibiotic-resistant “superbugs,” and what he found foresees crisis in the very near future. If left unchecked, he warns, the cost, in loss of both global wealth and lives, would be truly astronomical. Antibiotic-resistant infections are already killing hundreds of thousands of people a year; in the very...

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Worst Ebola outbreak in history: What you need to know

More than 6,000 people have died as the virus spread from Guinea to other countries in West Africa. International flights took the disease as far as Spain and the United States, and international organizations have mobilized to contain it. Explore the outbreak and its effects through the graphics below. The Ebola outbreak began in Guinea at the end of 2013 with a 2-year-old boy who may have gotten the virus from eating the meat of infected monkeys,...

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1,000 New Cases in Ebola Ravaged Sierra Leone

The country has surpassed Liberia… In the last 21 days, Sierra Leone has reported 1,319 new cases of Ebola virus infections, the World Health Organization (WHO) reports.   The country has surpassed Liberia, which has experienced a decrease in cases over the last four weeks with 225 new cases in the last 21 days. Liberia has reported7,719 cases of the disease so far, and Sierra Leone has reported 7,897. Sierra Leone is hardest hit in...

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Bush meat trade is major Ebola risk to Scotland

SCOTLAND’S top microbiologist has warned that the secret trade in bush meat poses the biggest risk of the deadly Ebola virus coming into the country. Professor Hugh Pennington said people importing monkey and fruit bat meat was a more likely way for the disease to come here than via an infected airline passenger. The emeritus professor of bacteriology at the University of Aberdeen said much of the meat ended up being sold “under the counter” in...

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A Case Of Mistaken Identity Sends Healthy Boy To An Ebola Ward

As part of Sierra Leone’s broader effort to contain the deadly Ebola virus, the country opened a new ambulance dispatch center in September in the capital, Freetown. Along with a new Ebola hotline, the center is considered an important step forward in the war on Ebola. But on the center’s second day of operation, a series of errors put the life of an apparently healthy 14-year-old boy at risk. The dispatch center is situated in a meeting...

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Airport screenings haven’t turned up any Ebola patients

Airport screenings of travelers from West Africa haven’t turned up anyone with Ebola, health officials announced Tuesday. U.S. officials screened nearly 2,000 travelers for Ebola symptoms over 31 days in October and November, according to a report Tuesday from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Only seven travelers with symptoms were referred to the CDC for medical exams, and none had the disease, the report says. Although two...

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Ebola outbreak: Virus still ‘running ahead of us’

The Ebola virus that has killed thousands in West Africa is still “running ahead” of efforts to contain it, the head of the World Health Organization has said. Director general Margaret Chan said the situation had improved in some parts of the worst-affected countries, but she warned against complacency. The risk to the world “is always there” while the outbreak continues, she said. She said the WHO and the international...

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Debt and hunger at birthplace of Ebola in Guinea

By MICHELLE FAUL MELIANDOU, Guinea (AP) — When 2-year-old Emile Ouamouno caught a fever, started vomiting, passed blood in his stool and died two days later, nobody knew why. Nor did anyone really ask. Life is unforgiving in this part of the world, and people often lose their children to cholera, malaria, measles, typhoid, Lassa fever and a host of other illnesses that have no name. Now Emile is widely recognized by researchers as Patient Zero,...

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Time magazine announces its Person of the Year

When the Ebola outbreak first emerged in West Africa earlier this year, few imagined that it would have an impact on almost every country on the planet. The disease spread rapidly, and it affected more than just the war- and poverty-ravaged region that was its incubator. The epidemic grew rapidly due to its early arrival in crowded slums and due to the poor local health care systems that would have barely served as a speed bump had not a rush of...

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