The pseudonym "Philo Vaihinger" has been abandoned. All posts have been and are written by me, Joseph Auclair.

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Will they end up enforcing quarantines for areas in which the sick will constantly run far ahead of means to help them?

U.S., Britain to send troops to help fight Ebola in West Africa

Won't that look great on the evening news, white soldiers from the US and Britain keeping helpless black people penned in without significant medical care?

How long will it take for the media to christen those areas "death camps"?

Thousands more could become infected before the worst outbreak on record is brought under control, the WHO has warned. 

They still really haven't grappled with how bad it is and is going to be.

Those who care for patients are among those hardest-hit by Ebola, which is spread through contact with the bodily fluids of its victims. 

In Liberia alone, about 152 healthcare workers have contracted the virus and 79 have died, according to the WHO.

The country, which is still recovering from years of war, had only about one doctor for every 100,000 people when the outbreak began. 

“Every infection or death of a doctor or nurse depletes response capacity significantly,” the WHO said.

Humanitarian workers have expressed concern that fear of contracting the hemorrhagic fever is keeping local and international medical professionals from responding in the numbers needed to contain the outbreak. 

There is no vaccine or cure.

The story finishes,

In an interview broadcast Sunday, President Obama said that the U.S. military will help set up isolation units and equipment for the public health workers arriving in West Africa from around the world.

The troops will establish a 25-bed field hospital in the Liberian capital, Monrovia, to care for health workers, Army Col. Steve Warren, a Pentagon spokesman, said Monday.

The military does not plan to have a permanent presence at the facility, which will be turned over to the Liberian government once it has been set up, the Pentagon said in a statement. 

But it will ensure that supplies are maintained at the hospital and will provide the periodic support needed to keep it functioning for up to 180 days.

O is not talking altruism, and sounds the alarm.

“If we don't make that effort now, and this spreads not just through Africa, but other parts of the world, there's the prospect then that the virus mutates, it becomes more easily transmittable, and then it could be a serious danger to the United States,” Obama told NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

British military engineers and medical experts will build and operate a 62-bed care facility near the Sierra Leone capital, Freetown, the British Department for International Development said Monday.

Staffed by local and international personnel, it will include a 12-bed center providing specialist care for health workers to “ensure they can continue to respond to the disease as safely and efficiently as possible,” it said in a statement.

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