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Thursday, 10/09/2014 12:21:13 AM

Thursday, October 09, 2014 12:21:13 AM

Post# of 52323
Ebola virus: answering the 10 questions you were afraid to askWhat is it? How is it transmitted? What are the symptoms? Is there a cure?
http://www.theguardian.com/us
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/oct/03/ebola-answering-10-basic-questions


[-chart]static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2014/10/3/1412349725368/14089440-f8b6-4258-8491-28fa35ac1c47-460x276.jpeg[/chart]

Medical staff who had been in contact with suspected Ebola sufferers are disinfected at Island hospital in Monrovia, Liberia. Photograph: Pascal Guyot/AFP/Getty Images

What is Ebola?
Ebola is a serious, often fatal, disease. The virus is transmitted to people from animals and then spreads among humans through direct contact with an infected person.

The Ebola virus was first discovered in the Democratic Republic of Congo (then known as Zaire) in 1976 and can be found in various African countries. Periodic outbreaks have occurred since Ebola’s discovery, but the current west Africa outbreak that began in Guinea in March 2014 is the largest and deadliest in history.

What is direct contact?
Direct contact means that blood or body fluids from an infected person or body have touched another person’s eyes, nose or mouth or an open wound or abrasion. People can also become infected from contaminated surfaces and materials, including bedsheets and clothing.

What are body fluids?
Body fluids include blood, saliva, mucus, vomit, faeces, sweat, tears, breast milk, urine and semen.


Can you get Ebola from sneezing?
It is possible to spread through coughing or sneezing, but health officials say it’s unlikely. Saliva or mucus from an infected person would have to get into a healthy person’s eyes, nose, mouth or open wound for the disease to spread.

What are the symptoms?
The most common symptom is a high fever, typically greater than 101.5F (38.6C). Other symptoms can include severe headaches, diarrhoea, vomiting, abdominal pain and, in serious cases, internal or external bleeding.

Symptoms of the virus appear between two and 21 days after exposure, but typically after eight to 10 days.

Can it spread through mosquitoes?
There is no evidence to support this. Humans, bats, monkeys and apes have the ability to spread the Ebola virus, but evidence so far indicates that mosquitoes and other insects can’t transmit it.

Is it airborne?
Not currently.

Can it mutate to become airborne?
While mutations do occur, experts say it is very unlikely that the virus would mutate to become an airborne disease.

The Ebola virus has not previously mutated in this manner, and experts say there is no other virus that has transformed from non-airborne to airborne in human beings.

Testifying before Congress in September, Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said this is not something the American people should “lose sleep over”.


Is there a cure? What about a vaccine?
No, but the race is on to find both. An experimental Ebola drug, Zmapp, has been used to treat a handful of patients, including two American missionaries. It’s unclear without proper testing what role, if any, the drug played in the patients’ recovery.

A number of experimental drugs, including Zmapp, are being rushed into trials, but even so, experts say it could take months, even years, to produce enough of the drugs to make a difference in the current outbreak.

Human testing recently began on an Ebola vaccine, but it would only help protect people who haven’t yet contracted the virus, not those already infected.

At this time, the difference between life and death in an Ebola-stricken patient can come down to very basic interventions: keeping the person hydrated, maintaining their oxygen and blood pressure, and mitigating the effects of other infections that might further weaken the body’s immune system.

People who recover from Ebola can no longer spread the virus.


Why are people allowed to travel from infected areas to the US?

The White House is not entertaining the idea of a travel ban on flights coming from west Africa. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director, Tom Frieden, said isolating affected countries would only make the epidemic worse.
He said it would constrict the flow of necessary aid to these counties, which would in turn make the outbreak that much more difficult to stop.

Affected countries have put some checks in place to try to prevent infected people from travelling outside of the affected countries. In Liberia, for example, travellers answer a questionnaire that asks about their Ebola exposure history. Before departure at many African airports, passengers are screened for fever before boarding a flight. Many international airports around the world have quarantine areas in case a person becomes ill while travelling.

That being said, the approach isn’t foolproof as people don’t begin to show symptoms until days – even weeks – after being exposed. There is also a lot of misinformation circulating through west Africa about the disease, so people may not know if they were exposed, or may fear disclosing exposure because of the stigma attached to the disease.

Based on information from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention the World Health Organisation

• This article was amended on 8 October 2014 to correct the spelling of foolproof.


http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/oct/03/ebola-answering-10-basic-questions
http://www.theguardian.com/us

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