No. Not even close.Ralph-Wiggum wrote:I know it's probably hard to pinpoint, but any idea of the transmission rate of Ebola? Does coming into contact with fluids (let's say for example kissing) guarantee transmittance?
People are freaking out about this and its not really near a big a deal as its being made out to be. First some facts.
1. The current Ebola outbreak in West Africa has been going on for nearly a year. In that time, it has killed around 4,000 people. This is in countries that have a lack of doctors (Liberia, for instance, has 3.5 million people but only 122 doctors), a lack of basic medical necessities, horrible sanitation systems and outdated burial practices (many of the infected have been caregivers and those who dispose of the bodies).
Contrast that to the flu, which killed 36,000 people last year in the United States alone. With our superior health care system, no lack of doctors, all the medical necessities we need and all our practice fighting the flu, there were six times as many deaths due to the flu last year in the US than there were deaths in the last year of the Ebola Outbreak in West Africa.
2. Ebola is relatively difficult to spread. The reasons are many. First, it is not contagious until symptoms show up but the symptoms are so debilitating that once they do show up, the infected person is bedridden. He is not walking around exposing people. Secondly, Ebola is present in the bodily fluid of those infected but not all at once. It starts out in the blood, then moves on to urine, feces, sweat, saliva and vomit. However, by the time it shows up in the other bodily fluids the symptoms are so advanced that the infected person is almost certainly bedridden. This puts the threat of infection high for careless caregivers and people disposing of bodies but very low for everyone else.
The virus is deadly, there is no doubt about that, but it isn't something that is likely to become a pandemic. It spreads slowly and can be contained fairly easily. An infected person arrived in Lagos, Nigeria earlier this year. He was showing symptoms when he arrived and was not quarantined for four days after arrival. Lagos has eight million people, with a population density similar to New York City. It also has much poorer health care. Even then, an outbreak was contained. Nigeria has not had a new Ebola infection in over a month. Despite the high population and poor health care, there were only 20 cases total in Nigeria. In a highly populated urban center, it did not spread like wild fire. People just need to relax.