2014 Ebola Epidemic in Guinea and the United States Amy Riddell Kaplan University HS311 Unit:1 Assignment Professor Daniel Gilmore November 16, 2015 Ebola, previously known as Ebola hemorrhagic fever, is an exceptional and fatal disease caused by an infection with one of the Ebola virus strands that claimed an estimated 2,482 lives in Guinea, Africa alone in 2014 (Johnston, 2015). It made its first recorded appearance in 1976 near the Ebola River, which is now known as the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The symptoms, similar to the well-known flu, consists of fever, severe headache, body aches, loss of physical strength, lethargy, diarrhea, vomiting, stomach pain, and unexplained hemorrhaging. These symptoms can appear anywhere from…
10 days later he miraculously recovers. Later on, a group of researchers go to Mount Elgon, to search Kitum Cave for any sign of the virus, but strangely none of the test animals had any trace of the virus. One difference I found about the recent outbreaks and the outbreaks in the 70’s was that the contamination rate. In the 70’s the virus had a relatively infected a well amount of people but in 2014, the World Health Organization reported what they called a “rapidly evolving outbreak” of Ebola in West Africa, where 49…
A quick peak on the CDC website in the ‘about’ section showed me that the first documented case of ebola occurred in 1976. While Ebola can result in death, it is also extremely rare, therefore, you frequent West Africa and its neighboring countries often the risk of contracting Ebola is highly unlikely (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), after the first case was reported in the United States anyone with a cough or high fever believed they contracted the…
Obstacles in Stopping the Spread of Ebola Many illnesses that we know of can be easily treated, but what do we do if an untreatable disease is spreading? The first human Ebola outbreak occurred in 1976 and mostly subsided until an outbreak in 2014. Ebola has killed 5,000 people since it's outbreak earlier in 2014, and it has not been easy to contain. The biggest obstacles that compromise the containment of Ebola are as follows: fear, the ease of contraction, and the difficulty of treatment.…
Because of this, reaction to Ebola was very slow and people died before the CDC (Center of Disease Control) and the Doctors without Borders got involved. When they got here they noticed that Ebola is transmittable by bodily fluids, for example, blood, saliva, or even just simple touching someone that is effected can transfer Ebola. Which made is infect many since in their tradition when someone dies they wash, touch and kiss the body of the deceased. After contamination of Ebola, victims’ acquire a fever, then muscle or joint pain, then a skin rash and finally vomiting blood and bloody diarrhea. In the documentary, Frontline: Ebola Outbreak, a camera group travels to Sierra Leone, the country at the heart of the Ebola outbreak.…
At the top of the list is Liberia having 4,665 cases, and 2705 deaths; U.S. had 3 cases along with 1 death. From this data the World Health Organization can examine the different factors in which these outbreaks of Ebola can be controlled. The CDC will help coordinate technical assistance and control activities with other organizations. They will also have thorough case finding, isolation of the infected, contacting people who were exposed to the ill person, and further isolation if they develop symptoms. The CDC will then notify the public and promote protocols in order to prevent other people from getting the diseases.…
Unfortunately, secondary complications that arise from the virus are untreatable. More importantly, people who are infected with the virus are only contagious when showing symptoms and aren’t long-term carriers. Once an individual actually recovers from Ebola, there is a slight immunity established, usually preventing against a second infection. Consequently there is not a complete vaccination for Ebola, so there is no way to protect a community of people from the virus unless the person infected is isolated from the…
Should America Ban Traveling to Ebola Infected Countries? The Ebola virus was first discovered in 1976 and originated from West African countries. Ebola is a very deadly and contagious disease to come in contact with. This disease has always been able to stay contained in the small villages it is located in.…
Ebola is a virus that was first found in Africa during the 1970’s. It was named after the Ebola RIver in Zaire, which is now the Democratic Republic of Congo. This virus causes serious illness and can lead to death. In the first case found in Sudan, Ebola infected two hundred and forty people and had a mortality rate of fifty three percent. The second outbreak was in Zaire.…
The symptoms of Ebola appear from two to twenty two days after he, she and it obtain it. The article perfectly cleared that “There is no accepted Ebola vaccine”(second paragraph). There is no cure but the treatment is difficult and surviving is zero present. The virus can be spread through saliva, blood and skin but it can’t be spread through water or air. The article goes on to say that the person who gets Ebola dies due to organ failure.…
In March of 2014 the world was notified that there were numerous cases of ebola arising in West Africa. For millions of people this was the first that time that they had heard of this disease. However, in 2014, what had once been a problem only seen in African was now spreading into European countries and the United States. As a result numerous countries and nongovernmental organizations worked together to treat the thousands of people suffering from ebola. Now, nearly two years later, the world is beginning to recover from one of its most severe epidemics.…
Researchers believe that the virus is animal-borne and the most likely animal to start the virus was bats, though it is still not known for sure. In the 1967 outbreak it affected 318 people, but it resulted in 280 deaths in just one village. There is a 90 percent chance of death from this virus so that is why you must know symptoms and how not to get it. Symptoms of Ebola are Fever, Severe headache, Muscle pain, Weakness, Fatigue, Diarrhea, Vomiting, Abdominal pain and Unexplained hemorrhage (CDC).…
The Ebola Virus Disease is an extremely brutal, and fast working virus that is most commonly found in Sub Saharan Africa.(WHO, 2016) Humans mainly contract ebola through infected fluids (such as blood, urine, and fecal matter) that come in contact with ruptured skin, or mucous membranes. Ebola has the ability to stay alive on most material that it comes in contact with, and can be contracted very easily if someone inadvertently touches an infected object.(WHO, 2016)2 Ebola was first officially documented in 1976, when two outbreaks in the Sub Saharan region of Africa occurred. The cases were in Yambuku, part of the Democratic Republic of the Congo,…
A major effect of the Ebola outbreak was anxiety and depression in survivors. A significant source of this distress was the poor, dehumanizing care Ebola patients received in hospitals (H, N). Survivors faced isolation from their relatives, constantly witnessed the deaths of other patients, and sometimes disrespectful care from hospital staff (N). Though infected patients were allowed to be visited in designated family visit areas, many weren’t visited at all.…
Introduction The movie ‘Outbreak’ came out in cinemas in 1995 shortly after the discovery of the Ebola HF virus in the late 1970s. This movie dramatizes the Ebola HF virus and portrays it as the fictional Motaba virus, it shows in a dramatic Hollywood way how the US would react to a deadly disease outbreak. Of course, being a Hollywood movie there are some facts and many fallacies in the finer, more scientific aspects of the disease. The biosecurity facilities used to control the spread of the disease are not accurately portrayed and the evolution of the disease is ridiculous and very inaccurate. Scientific Information Viruses In and Out of the Movie…