Ebola and other Epidemics, Inadequate Healthcare Threatens Millions

Started by mongers, March 23, 2014, 04:48:59 PM

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celedhring

The Spanish nurse that got infected is in remission and the virus levels in her blood are now "negligible".

She was given a few of those experimental treatments, fwiw.

KRonn

Quote from: CountDeMoney on October 17, 2014, 01:24:25 PM
I have always hated the "czar" bullshit.  How fucking infantile.

How come female appointees aren't called Czarinas?  I dislike the term too. How about Director or something less symbolic?

MadImmortalMan

Because the whole point of the position is symbolic, silly.
"Stability is destabilizing." --Hyman Minsky

"Complacency can be a self-denying prophecy."
"We have nothing to fear but lack of fear itself." --Larry Summers

KRonn

Quote from: celedhring on October 17, 2014, 05:23:45 PM
The Spanish nurse that got infected is in remission and the virus levels in her blood are now "negligible".

She was given a few of those experimental treatments, fwiw.

Good to hear. Now if only there can be a lot more success in the African nations...

KRonn

Quote from: MadImmortalMan on October 17, 2014, 08:47:16 PM
Because the whole point of the position is symbolic, silly.

Lol, I guess so. Too bad though since Czars are appointed to head up important issues!

Tonitrus

If only Lincoln had a slavery czar, might have avoided the ACW!

CountDeMoney

Quote from: Richard Hakluyt on October 17, 2014, 05:16:04 PM
Quote from: CountDeMoney on October 17, 2014, 01:24:25 PM
I have always hated the "czar" bullshit.  How fucking infantile.

:lol:

Yeah, I absolutely agree with you; news of a new "Czar" always raises my blood pressure and gets me fulminating.

Perhaps more importantly I've never noticed these "Czars" ever achieving much  :hmm:

Perhaps they are just an update on a Royal Commission.

Only marginally more effective than, say, "Special Prosecutor."

jimmy olsen

Quote from: Valmy on October 17, 2014, 11:26:26 AM
Quote from: jimmy olsen on October 17, 2014, 02:14:31 AM
Famine is starting to set in. :(

That, at least, should be a straightforward problem to fix.  Plenty of government subsidized over farming in the West.
Not really. You have to ship the found there, and as fear increases and insurance premium goes up shipping to the affected countries has declined just as air travel has. That trend will only continue.

Even if you get the food there, how will you get it effectively transported outside the capital rather than horded there or stolen along the way? You're going to lots of trucks, drivers, armed guards, etc. I don't see evidence that the Liberian government is capable of organizing a massive relief effort at this time.
It is far better for the truth to tear my flesh to pieces, then for my soul to wander through darkness in eternal damnation.

Jet: So what kind of woman is she? What's Julia like?
Faye: Ordinary. The kind of beautiful, dangerous ordinary that you just can't leave alone.
Jet: I see.
Faye: Like an angel from the underworld. Or a devil from Paradise.
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jimmy olsen

It is far better for the truth to tear my flesh to pieces, then for my soul to wander through darkness in eternal damnation.

Jet: So what kind of woman is she? What's Julia like?
Faye: Ordinary. The kind of beautiful, dangerous ordinary that you just can't leave alone.
Jet: I see.
Faye: Like an angel from the underworld. Or a devil from Paradise.
--------------------------------------------
1 Karma Chameleon point

The Larch

Quote from: CountDeMoney on October 17, 2014, 04:11:10 PM
Quote from: Jacob on October 17, 2014, 01:26:57 PM
Quote from: CountDeMoney on October 17, 2014, 01:24:25 PM
I have always hated the "czar" bullshit.  How fucking infantile.

Do you mean the media's use of the title, or the tendency to appoint a point person to deal with specific issues?

The media's--and the government's--use of the title.  It's stupid.  Drug czar.  Cybersecurity czar.  Biz czar, you ask me. Why not a Drug Duke?  Drug Dauphin?  It's sztupid.

Monger's quote is a close 2nd.  Why not an Ebola Commissar?  DONT TURN AROUND

Greak Khan. That puts the fear into your enemies' hearts. Or Voivod.

grumbler

Meh.  The evolution of the English language to include "czar" to mean a cross-departmental high-level coordinator doesn't bother me in the slightest.  The creation of them for symbolic political gain is irritating, but that's not the fault of the word.
The future is all around us, waiting, in moments of transition, to be born in moments of revelation. No one knows the shape of that future or where it will take us. We know only that it is always born in pain.   -G'Kar

Bayraktar!

Eddie Teach

To sleep, perchance to dream. But in that sleep of death, what dreams may come?

CountDeMoney

No shit.  "Czars" in a federal republic.  Smacks of something from Civilization

jimmy olsen

That's a 77.7% fatality rate for those with the best care available, even worse then we've heard.

http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/our-work/medical-issues/ebola?utm_source=google&utm_medium=ppc&utm_term=brand_sitelink&gclid=CjwKEAjw2MOhBRCq-Nr87_j-lDASJAAl4FNhYUkyqogBAGMtzUq1aubp2CHrohBMbVgVgIgo6w8PLBoCGePw_wcB
QuoteMSF has admitted more than 4,500 patients, among whom more than 2,700 were confirmed as having Ebola. Around 1,000 have survived.
It is far better for the truth to tear my flesh to pieces, then for my soul to wander through darkness in eternal damnation.

Jet: So what kind of woman is she? What's Julia like?
Faye: Ordinary. The kind of beautiful, dangerous ordinary that you just can't leave alone.
Jet: I see.
Faye: Like an angel from the underworld. Or a devil from Paradise.
--------------------------------------------
1 Karma Chameleon point

jimmy olsen

 Seems hopeless :(

http://mobile.bloomberg.com/news/2014-10-19/ebola-front-line-doctors-at-breaking-point.html
QuoteEbola Front-Line Doctors at Breaking Point
By Makiko Kitamura and Naomi Kresge
October 19, 2014 6:42 PM EDT 35 Comments

At 3:30 a.m. in the world's biggest Ebola treatment center, Daniel Lucey found the outbreak reduced to its essentials: patients lying on mattresses on the floor and vomiting in the dark, visible only by the wavering flashlight beam of a single volunteer doctor.

"I don't see a light at the end of the tunnel," said Lucey, a physician and professor from Georgetown University who is halfway through a five-week tour in Liberia with Medecins Sans Frontieres, the medical charity known in English as Doctors Without Borders. "The epidemic is still getting worse,"
he said by phone between shifts.

That's an increasingly urgent challenge for MSF and the global health community. As fear spreads in the U.S. over transmission of the virus to two nurses in a modern Dallas hospital, the main fight against the outbreak is still being waged by volunteers like Lucey half a world away.

MSF has been the first -- and often only -- line of defense against Ebola in West Africa. The group raised the alarm on March 31, months ahead of the World Health Organization. Now, after treating almost a third of the roughly 9,000 confirmed Ebola cases in Africa -- and faced with a WHO warning of perhaps 10,000 new infections a week by December -- MSF is reaching its limits.

"They are at the breaking point," said Vinh-Kim Nguyen, a professor at the School of Public Health at the University of Montreal who has volunteered for a West African tour with MSF in a few weeks. MSF has already seen 21 workers infected and 12 people die, and "there's a sense that there's a major wave of infections that's about to wash everything away," Nguyen said.


Biafra War

The story of how a relatively small, decentralized group like MSF came to lead the response to the world's biggest outbreak of Ebola began 43 years ago in Paris. Alarmed by war and famine in the Nigerian secessionist state of Biafra, 13 doctors and journalists created an emergency medical response organization that could work around the world.

The founders imagined a global version of France's emergency medicine system, according to Peter Redfield, a professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill who published a 2013 book about MSF. The group has since opened offices in 28 countries, and in 1999 it won a Nobel Peace Prize. The money was used to study neglected diseases.

"They have 40 years of experience dealing with the kind of situation they're in now," said Renee Fox, an emeritus professor of sociology at the University of Pennsylvania who published her own book about MSF this year.

MSF views part of its job as "temoignage," or bearing witness to injustice, Fox said. The organization has clashed with global pharmaceutical companies over the price of medication in developing countries, and this year it spoke out about chemical weapons attacks in Syria. In West Africa, it called for a broader global response before the WHO was willing to acknowledge an emergency existed.

"People did not listen," Fox said.

WHO Director-General Margaret Chan said in an Oct. 17 interview that the agency's response may not have matched the scale and complexity of the outbreak.

Lassa Fever

MSF was already in Guinea when the Ebola outbreak began. A Swiss team doing malaria control in the town of Gueckedou, near the borders with Liberia and Sierra Leone, got a letter from Guinea's Ministry of Health on March 12 detailing an illness that had struck eight people, including a doctor who died after caring for a patient from Gueckedou. MSF dispatched researchers to take blood samples, case histories and symptoms, according to Hugues Robert-Nicoud, an MSF emergency program manager.

They initially suspected Lassa fever, a disease common in the region. It took a week to organize safe transportation of the blood samples, first to the Guinean capital in Conakry and then to European labs. On March 21, the Pasteur Institute in Lyon, France, said the mystery disease might be either Ebola or Marburg, a similar virus.

Sinking Boat

"I dropped my pen and thought, 'This is trouble,'" Robert-Nicoud said. The lab confirmed the worst: Ebola.

On March 23, the WHO posted the confirmation on its website. A week later, MSF issued a statement citing eight cases in Conakry and calling the outbreak unprecedented. The WHO didn't declare Ebola an international public health emergency until Aug. 8, more than four months after MSF's warning.

In March and April, MSF was able to follow patients and everyone they had come in contact with, what's known as contact tracing. While MSF has sent almost 300 foreigners to west Africa to fight the epidemic, and has hired about 3,000 locals, it can no longer do effective contact tracing due to the exponential rise in cases, Robert-Nicoud said.

"There's a change of scale in this epidemic every two weeks," he said.


When he was in Monrovia at the end of September, Robert-Nicoud said the ministry of health told him there were only 12 ambulances to serve a city of 1 million people, where traffic jams can delay delivery of patients to treatment centers by two hours.


Changing Diapers

"It's this constant feeling that the boat's sinking," Robert-Nicoud said. "You try to plug the water that's coming in, but the holes are everywhere."

In Monrovia, Georgetown volunteer Lucey's hospital wards are 10 tents, stifling in the tropical heat, with corridors of orange netting separating the definitely sick from suspected cases, the dangerous from the safe.

Some 600 Liberian citizens work with a rotating team of international doctors, nurses and logistics experts. Still, the enveloping suits required to protect caregivers from infection are so hot that doctors must limit their shifts to just 45 minutes.

Lucey said MSF doctors rely instead on recovering patients for help. Infected adults care for other people's children; one 20-year-old man took over diaper changes for a sick three-month-old.

"Every day we have deaths," Lucey said. "Every morning you get up at 6 a.m., go to sleep at 11 p.m. Meetings in the morning and meetings at night, and you work, work, work until you can't work anymore. Then you get up in the morning and do it again."
It is far better for the truth to tear my flesh to pieces, then for my soul to wander through darkness in eternal damnation.

Jet: So what kind of woman is she? What's Julia like?
Faye: Ordinary. The kind of beautiful, dangerous ordinary that you just can't leave alone.
Jet: I see.
Faye: Like an angel from the underworld. Or a devil from Paradise.
--------------------------------------------
1 Karma Chameleon point