Lets hope it is not Ebola but something else we don’t need it here as one of these times it will get loose — we have been lucky so far!
Tag Archives: closed borders
West Africa’s Ebola Death Toll Continues to Climb: WHO
Sarah Lazare
Common Dreams
December 23rd, 2014
Stephen (right) and Sambo (left) talk to a sick man in Freetown to determine if he should be tested for Ebola. (Photo: WHO/Stephan Saporito)
The Ebola death toll in the three West African countries most impacted by the virus has climbed to at least 7,373 of 19,031 known infections, the World Health Organization revealed in data released Saturday.
Western Sierra Leone is the “hotspot” of the ongoing outbreak, according to the WHO, which notes that this country has the highest infection rate, followed by Liberia and then Guinea.
However, Liberia accounts for far more Ebola deaths, leading some to question the accuracy of the WHO’s statistics on infection rates.
Nonetheless, the data shows an increase in overall cases, which are up by 500 since WHO data was last released on December 17.
The numbers were released following news Friday that Sierra Leone’s top-ranking doctor had succumbed to Ebola, making him the 11th of the country’s 120 doctors to die from the disease, according to the Guardian.
Meanwhile, humanitarian aid workers have criticized the global community for its failure to respond adequately as West African governments and grassroots initiatives such as the Citizens Alliance to Stop Ebola in Liberia struggle to stem the ongoing emergency.
“The international response to the Ebola crisis in West Africa has been slow and uneven leaving local people, national governments and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to do most of the practical, hands-on work,” the NGO Doctors Without Borders//Médecins Sans Frontières declared earlier this month.
The lackluster global response comes despite the fact that Western-driven economic policies played a key role in gutting West African public health systems.
“People are still dying horrible deaths in an outbreak that has already killed thousands,” said Dr. Joanne Liu, MSF international president. “We can’t let our guard down and allow this to become double failure, a response that was slow to begin with and is ill-adapted in the end.”
Delivered by The Daily Sheeple
– See more at: http://www.thedailysheeple.com/west-africas-ebola-death-toll-continues-to-climb-who_122014#sthash.kv29ddIS.dpuf
Two Mystery Illnesses Linked to 12 Child Deaths; 94 Paralysis Cases Since August
Re-Post from Sharyl Attkisson’s blog
Posted: 14 Dec 2014 08:26 PM PST
In the span of four months, at least 94 children in 33 U.S. states have developed a devastating form of paralysis with symptoms similar to polio. Some require a ventilator to breathe. And some of the greatest government health minds in the country say they have no idea what’s causing it.
At the same time, during the past four months, at least 12 children have died after falling ill with a respiratory virus called Enterovirus D-68 (EV-D68). Again, federal health officials are at a loss to explain the origin of the epidemic.
Are the mysterious outbreaks linked?
The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) has given the perplexing paralysis cases a new name: acute flaccid myelitis (AFM). And although it has been the subject of a series of national alerts, it’s not been widely covered in the national news media.
Both the AFM paralysis and the EV-D68 respiratory virus infections occur primarily in children. CDC seemed to try to dispel the idea of a link between the two illnesses when asked about it last month stating,
“Laboratory testing of [cerebral spinal fluid] specimens from these [paralyzed] children have all been negative for EV-D68 or any other specific agent.”—CDC
What the CDC failed to mention was that its own published literature, intended for medical professionals, openly discusses a likely link.
In a November 7 alert to practitioners, the CDC noted, “the unusual clustering of acute limb weakness occurred against a background of a nationwide outbreak of severe respiratory illness among children due to enterovirus-D68 (EV-D68). Several of the patients in California and nearly half of the 11 cases identified in Colorado had tested positive for EV-D68 from nasopharyngeal (NP) swabs at the time of admission for their neurologic illness. This raised a possible association between these neurologic illnesses and the ongoing outbreak of respiratory disease due to EV-D68.”
Enterovirus D-68 (EV-D68): a mysterious respiratory infection that reached epidemic proportions in the U.S. in recent months. Since mid-August, it has been linked to the deaths of 12 children and 1,149 serious illnesses in 49 states. It sometimes precedes AFM.
Specialists in California where many of the paralyzed children were diagnosed suspected EV-D68 almost immediately. Two of the first five paralyzed patients were said to have tested positive for EV-D68.
Furthermore, Dr. Teri Schreiner of Children’s Hospital in Colorado recently referred to EV-D68 as “the suspected pathogen” in paralysis cases. And Dr. Benjamin Greenberg of University of Texas Southwestern said the theory of a link was “substantiated by significant evidence”—something CDC seemed reluctant to publicly acknowledge.
If the two are linked, it’s unclear why some children infected with EV-D68 respiratory virus go on to develop crippling paralysis. Since mid-August, the CDC has reported 1,149 serious cases of EV-D68 in 48 states. The actual count is likely higher since CDC doesn’t require states to report EV-D68 illnesses.
There are also more total AFM paralysis cases than the number CDC provided for this article. California alone reported an additional 23 cases through June of 2014, prior to the CDC count of 94 that began in August. That would mean a minimum of 117 AFM paralysis cases.
Link to Illegal Immigrant Children? Unknown.
CDC is unable to answer the widely-asked question as to whether the EV-D68 epidemic is connected to the tens of thousands of illegal immigrant children allowed to enter the U.S. from Central and South America in the last couple of years. EV-D68 is known to have circulated in El Salvador and Nicaragua.
But CDC appears to indicate a link is unlikely. When asked about it, CDC appeared to steer focus away by stating that EV-D68 strains prevalent in the U.S. are genetically related to “strains detected in previous years in the United States, Europe, and Asia”–not south of the U.S. border.
Yet, when asked again whether a possible link to Central and South America has been ruled out, CDC replied:
“It’s not possible to answer your question because we do not have data about enteroviruses in South and Central America to make a comparison.—CDC
Another important question is whether the cause of the AFM paralysis is contagious. When asked, CDC did not answer the question. However, outside experts indicate it is a virus spread in the same way as the flu.
In an October question and answer session, Dr. Schreiner was asked how AFM paralysis can be prevented. She answered, “simple measures like washing your hands, coughing into your sleeve, and staying away from sick persons will help to prevent the spread of the virus.”
Good News
If there’s good news to be found among the mysteries, it’s that CDC believes the EV-D68 virus Peaked in September.
“CDC continues to receive and test specimens for EV-D68 from states…Over the past few weeks, there have been very few specimens testing positive for EV-D68,” said a spokesman.
Likewise, the trend of AFM paralysis cases seems to have slowed.
“Over the past few weeks, the number of new confirmed AFM reports has decreased significantly as reflected in our website updates,” says the CDC.
More Q-and-A with CDC
Below are CDC’s answers to a series of related questions for this article:
Question:
How concerned is CDC about the acute flaccid myelitis [AFM] outbreak?
CDC:
“Any unexplained severe illness is always a concern to us, especially when infants and children are affected. We continue to investigate the cases.”
Question:
Please provide the number of CDC verified reports of acute flaccid myelitis [AFM] that meets CDC’s case definition from Dec. 1, 2013 to date, broken down by month and state.
CDC:
“We do not have these data because AFM or other paralysis is not a nationally notifiable disease and our current investigation only covers the period from August 2014. [Reporter’s note: CDC does have specific information it is unaware of or chose not to provide here, including its own published information on case reports and totals from California.]”
Question:
Please provide the number of reports of unexplained paralysis (that may not meet CDC’s case definition) in children that CDC has received from Dec. 1, 2013 to date, broken down by month and state.
CDC:
CDC says it does not have and is not collecting this information.
Question:
If you have information on outcomes to date of the above cases, please send that.
CDC:
CDC says it does not have and is not collecting this information.
Question:
Has CDC determined the method of transmission of acute flaccid myelitis (i.e. airborne)? If so, what is it? If not, are you trying to figure that out and are there any clues?
CDC:
CDC did not answer this question.
Question:
Please provide lab test result numbers on EV-D68 specimens received from states from Aug. 1, 2014-today.
CDC:
“We do not have additional information about the test results from the state public health laboratories.”
Question:
But it’s my understanding that this information has been reported to CDC. Are you saying you haven’t received it? If you haven’t received it:
Are state numbers included in the total numbers you have provided?
Why haven’t you sought the information?
Please provide the list of states who you mentioned have the capability to conduct this testing.
CDC:
CDC would not answer this question.
Question:
CDC stated that EV-D68 was present in the U.S. in 2012 and 2013. Was 2012 the first date ever, or recently, that the virus was detected in the U.S.? What were the number of cases detected in 2012 and 2013?
CDC:
CDC did not provide this information.
Question:
CDC stated that there are “ongoing investigations” into possible linkage between EV-D68 and paralysis cases. Please detail what the investigations are (i.e. federal study? poll?)
CDC:
“CDC is pursuing a multi-pronged approach to further explore the potential association of acute flaccid myelitis (AFM) with EV-D68 and other etiologies as well as risk factors for AFM. We’re planning a case control study, and we’re also continuing to test specimens from AFM cases for a wide range of viruses that may be associated with this clinical presentation as well as testing to possibly detect previously unrecognized pathogens. The protocols have not been finalized for most of these activities. While we’re not able to share additional information at this time, we plan to submit a scientific paper for publication with more detailed findings in the near future. We continue to update information on the website each Thursday, specifically the number of confirmed reports.” For general information about EV-D68 and the 2014 outbreak, see http://www.cdc.gov/non-polio-enterovirus/about/EV-D68.html and http://www.cdc.gov/non-polio-enterovirus/outbreaks/EV-D68-outbreaks.html.
Question:
CDC stated that none of the CSF [cerebral spinal fluid] in the paralysis cases tested positive for EV-D68. Did any of the patients test positive for EV-D68 in any way—not through CSF, but other testing? If so, how many?
CDC:
CDC did not answer this question. [Reporter’s note: CDC chose not to include the published and known information about positive EV-D68 testing in paralysis cases as reported by a number of medical professionals investigating the cases.]
Question:
Why aren’t you encouraging states to send EV-D68 specimens to CDC for testing to get a complete picture of the mysterious epidemic?
CDC:
“Continued testing does not help with public health assessment of the current situation because of the significant decrease in activity of EV-D68 illness, and there is no systematic collection of specimens to use this testing to follow virus activity.”
Question:
Why haven’t you made EV-D68 a “nationally notifiable disease” so that you can more accurately measure prevalence and trends, as well as estimate total real cases?
CDC:
“This was considered and might have progressed in that direction if the outbreak had gotten worse. However, EV-D68 is not a disease, but merely one of many viruses that can cause severe respiratory disease. Therefore, it was not possible to increase the amount of information available to public health officials, since so few laboratories can identify EV-D68. Since the virus activity did decrease, there was no longer a public health reason for this action.”
Question:
Are there any clues as to why EV-D68 was so prevalent this year?
CDC:
“It’s not possible to discern any pattern as to why specific enteroviruses are common in some years and not others. Over the last several decades, there have been numerous U.S. outbreaks of other enterovirus types, similar in scope to this year’s EV-D68 outbreak. We do not have specific explanations for when large outbreaks occur for enteroviruses.”
Question:
Is it accurate to say EV-D68 is pretty much gone from the U.S. for the season?
CDC:
“Not exactly. Currently, there is significantly less activity of EV-D68 illness compared with activity during peak in September. The degree of reduced activity may be different from states to state. Since at least one of the strains of this virus has been in the United States for the last three years, it is safe to say that the virus is never really gone.”
Question:
Aren’t medical experts, including neurologists, assuming a linkage between the paralysis cases and EV-D68…please clarify whether you are claiming “no link” or have disproven all potential links.
CDC:
“We can’t comment on other experts’ conclusions since we do not know how they made their conclusions.” [Reporter’s note: CDC has chosen not to refer to published reports, including their own, that refer to a potential link and the reasons why one is suspected] “At this point, there’s no evidence for any conclusion and some of the evidence is conflicting, such as the absence of EV-D68 detected in cerebral spinal fluid, as you mention. As indicated above, we’re not claiming ‘no link,’ and we’re not saying we have ‘disproven all potential links,’ which is not possible.”
Sharyl Attkisson: “CDC: More Than 1,400 People in U.S. Being Actively Monitored for Ebola” plus 1 more
| Re-Post from Sharyl Akttkinson |
CDC: More Than 1,400 People in U.S. Being Actively Monitored for Ebola Posted: 01 Dec 2014 01:16 PM PST
The killer virus Ebola may not be front and center in the news, but it’s still in the forefront of efforts by health officials nationwide. As of today, more than 1,400 people in 44 states in the U.S. are being actively monitored by state and local health departments after returning from West Africa. The good news is that no new cases have been reported in the U.S. since Oct. 23.
According to the Centers for Disease Control, which provided the figure,
“They are being monitored because they came from one of the four countries with ongoing Ebola outbreaks.”
Responding to a public outcry, the Department of Homeland Security began, on Oct. 22, requiring all U.S. bound passengers from the primary Ebola-infected West African nations to arrive at one of five U.S. airports with enhanced screening.
To date, ten people have been treated for Ebola in the U.S. since late September.
More than 1,400 people in 44 states in the U.S. are being actively monitored for Ebola–CDCPatients with Ebola Brought to U.S.
A total of six people have been brought to the U.S. after contracting Ebola in West Africa: five healthcare workers and one photojournalist. The photojournalist is 33-year old Ashoka Mukpo. All but one survived. Dr. Martin Salia, a legal permanent resident of the U.S., was already critically ill when he arrived from Sierra Leone for treatment at Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha. He died just a few days later on Nov. 17. Officials say they don’t know exactly how he contracted the virus.
Ebola Cases Diagnosed in the U.S.
A total of four people have been diagnosed with Ebola in the U.S. since Sept. 30. All of them recovered except one.
September 30, 2014 – CDC confirmed the first laboratory-confirmed case of Ebola to be diagnosed in the United States in Thomas Eric Duncan who had traveled to Dallas, Texas from Liberia. Local public health officials identified all of Duncan’s close contacts for daily monitoring for 21 days after exposure. Duncan died on Oct. 8. By Nov. 7, all of his close contacts had completed the 21-day monitoring period.
October 10, 2014 – Nina Pham, a 26-year old nurse who cared for Duncan at Texas Presbyterian Hospital tested positive for Ebola and was taken to the National Institutes for Health (NIH) Clinical Center. She recovered and was discharged on Oct. 24.
October 15, 2014 – Amber Vinson, a 29-year old nurse, became the second of Duncan’s health care workers to test positive for Ebola and was taken to Emory Hospital in Atlanta, Georgia. She had flown from Dallas to Cleveland on Oct. 10, and from Cleveland to Dallas on Oct. 13. CDC officials say they “worked to ensure that all passengers and crew on the two flights were contacted by public health professionals to answer their questions and arrange follow up as necessary.” The patient recovered and was discharged Oct. 28 and all monitored passengers completed monitoring by Nov. 3.
October 23, 2014 – The New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene reported Ebola in Dr. Craig Spencer, a medical aid worker who had returned to New York City from Guinea, where he served with Doctors Without Borders. He recovered and was discharged from Bellevue Hospital Center Nov. 11. No cases developed from outings he’d made in New York prior to being admitted to the hospital with a fever.
U.S. Ebola Timeline Posted: 01 Dec 2014 05:11 AM PST
2014
July: Two Americans, Samaritan’s Purse relief workers Dr. Kent Brantly, 33, and Nancy Writebol, 59, are infected while working in Liberia. They are brought to Emory University Hospital in Atlanta for treatment. It’s not known exactly how they contracted Ebola.
August: Massachusetts doctor Rick Sacra, 51, is diagnosed with Ebola after providing aid at a Liberia hospital. He had not been treating Ebola patients and it’s not known exactly how he contracted Ebola. He is brought to the U.S. to Nebraska Medical Center on Sept. 5 for treatment, including a blood transfusion from Brantly. He later recovers.
Tues. Aug. 19: Writebol is released from Emory University Hospital in Atlanta.
Thurs. Aug. 21: Dr. Brantly is discharged from Emory University Hospital.
Tues. Sept. 9: An unnamed American Ebola patient who had been working for the World Health Organization in Sierra Leone arrives at Emory University Hospital for treatment.
Wed. Sept. 17: National experts on respiratory protection and infectious disease transmission, Dr. Lisa Brosseau and Dr. Rachel Jones, write a commentary stating that Ebola has “unclear modes of transmission” and “has the potential to be transmitted via infectious aerosol particles both near and at a distance from infected patients, which means that healthcare workers should be wearing respirators, not facemasks.”
Sat. Sept. 20: A Liberian man, Thomas Eric Duncan, 45, arrives in Dallas from Liberia. On screening paperwork, he fails to admit his contact with Ebola patients.
Thurs. Sept. 25: President Obama speaks at a U.N. conference on Ebola and urges attendees “to make sure that they are making this a top priority.”
Fri. Sept. 26: Duncan goes to E.R. Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas with 103-degree fever but is sent home with antibiotics.
Dr. Sacra is released from Nebraska Medical Center.
Sun. Sept. 28: Duncan becomes so ill that paramedics pick him up in an ambulance and take him back to Texas Health Presbyterian where he infects at least two nurses.
Wed. Oct. 1: NBC Cameraman Ashoka Mukpo, 33, falls ill after being exposed to Ebola patients in West Africa while on a shoot with NBC TV doctor Nancy Snyderman.
Wed. Oct. 2: Mukpo tests positive for Ebola and is brought back to the U.S. for treatment at Nebraska Medical Center. Dr. Snyderman and the rest of the crew are put under a 21-day voluntary quarantine.
Wed. Oct. 8: Duncan passes away at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas.
Thurs. Oct. 9: TV doctor Nancy Snyderman is spotted violating her voluntary quarantine to get takeout food.
Fri. Oct. 10: A nurse who treated Duncan, Amber Joy Vinson, 29, flies from Dallas to Cleveland, Ohio despite being in a quarantine period after exposure to Duncan. While in Ohio, she visits a bridal shop with five friends.
Mon. Oct. 13: Nurse Vinson flies back from Ohio on a Frontier Airlines flight, despite having a fever.
Sun. Oct. 12: CDC confirms first Ebola case transmitted on U.S. soil: that of Nina Pham, a nurse who cared for Duncan. She later recovers.
Tues. Oct. 14: CDC Director Dr. Thomas Frieden announces special CDC teams will respond “within hours” to hospitals with confirmed Ebola cases. Admits he “wishes” he had done this earlier and says it might have prevented the Dallas nurse who cared for Duncan from being infected.
Dr. Snyderman apologizes for violating quarantine.
Wed. Oct. 15: Vinson is diagnosed with Ebola: the second nurse to have been infected through Duncan. She later recovers.
President Obama cancels fundraising appearances in Connecticut and New Jersey and convenes a cabinet meeting at the White House regarding the Ebola response.
Thurs. Oct. 16: For a second day, President Obama cancels fundraisers and holds a cabinet meeting. He announces CDC personnel have been deployed to Ohio where Vinson flew while ill. He defends lack of a travel ban saying that screening for fever on both ends and tracking them is “more effective.” The President says risk remains “relatively low, extremely low.”
Nurse Pham is flown to the National Institutes of Health (NIH) for treatment in Bethesda, Maryland. Vinson had already been transferred to Emory University Hospital in Atlanta.
CDC’s Dr. Frieden defends Ebola response at Congressional hearing.
Fri. Oct. 17: President Obama names Ron Klain as “Ebola Czar.”
Sun. Oct. 19: The unnamed Ebola patient in treatment at Emory since Sept. 9 is discharged.
Mon. Oct. 20: CDC strengthens guidelines for healthcare workers treating Ebola.
Tues. Oct. 21: The Dept. of Homeland Security announces plans to require all U.S. bound passengers from primary Ebola nations to arrive at one of the 5 U.S. airports with enhanced screening.
Thurs. Oct. 23: A fourth U.S. patient tests positive for Ebola in New York City: Dr. Craig Allen Spencer, 33, of Doctors Without Borders who, on Oct. 17, returned from Guinea, West Africa. Dr. Spencer reportedly had gone bowling but officials say “did not have contact very many people.”
Fri. Oct. 24: Nurse Nina Pham is released from the hospital and declared Ebola-free.
Sat. Nov. 15: Dr. Martin Salia, who contracted Ebola while treating patients in Sierra Leona, arrives in theU.S. for treatment at Nebraska Medical Center. He is already critically ill.
Mon. Nov. 17: Dr. Salia dies at Nebraska Medical Center.
Mon. Dec. 1: According to CDC, more than 1,400 people in 44 states in the U.S. are being monitored for Ebola after having arrived from West Africa.
OBAMA RESPONSIBLE FOR FOOD STAMP CUT-GAVE FUND’S TO MICHELLE’S ‘LET’S MOVE!’
Money is diverted here, from the CDC, and other agencies to non-profits, and you can guess what party benefits!
Bombshell: scientist finds no reliable evidence Ebola virus ever isolated from a human being
Very Interesting … Its beyond my ability to comment on but if true there are serious ramifications!
Duke University: Suspected Ebola patient in isolation
Lets hope this is a false alarm!
AESOP ON THE EBOLA GROWTH RATE
I do think that things are much worse then is being let on by the WHO, the CDC and the Obama administration!
‘Entire villages disappeared’: Ebola deaths in Sierra Leone ‘underreported’
So does no one really know what the real numbers are, or are they hiding them?
Workers in HAZMAT suits at Cleveland address as NE Ohio residents removed from Ebola monitoring
I sure hope this is not true i live near Cleveland!


