The fame that accompanies “The Hot Zone,” into it’s 23rd anniversary is not unjustified. Preston presents an eloquent history of the Ebola virus in a manner that is easy to follow and keeps the reader interested. Preston takes it upon himself, through thoughtful descriptions, to thrust the reader into the setting of his characters. From the silvery gray-green olive trees in the forests of Mount Elgon to the insufferable heat and stench of monkeys at the Reston monkey house, the reader has to imagine very little. As Reston unravels his expressive history of Ebola, the organization of his content is easy to follow and each chapter teases with just enough information to make the book difficult to put down.…
Analyzing Frontline: Ebola Outbreak In the 2014 Frontline documentary of the Ebola outbreak, awareness of the devastation and severity of the Ebola virus are brought to the surface. The disease has ravaged the country of Sierra Leone and surrounding territories like Guinea. Community helpers, volunteers, and organizations such as Doctors without Borders have come together to help those in need of aid.…
Ebola virus ailment is a one frightening infectious disorder syndromes . The sickness is one of it type. The nonfiction e book the hot region with the aid of Richard Preston and the film in 1995 Outbreak, was patterned after Ebola virus , are similarly terrifying. simply imagine victims bleeding thru their ears, eyes, nostril and, via autopsy, a few pathologist findings organs necrotic. Ebola always reason intense contamination .…
Could Poe be talking about Ebola in the “Mask of the Red Death,” possibly because they were both very deadly diseases. Based on what it said in the story they had similar symptoms such as bleeding, headaches, etc. How it’s delivered is very similar to Ebola; they’re both blood born diseases. Some other reasons why is because they are both very deadly. They are both not treatable for a cure as we know of.…
Was Poe talking about the ebola disease in the “Masque Of The Red Death”? Based on what I read I don’t think Poe was talking about ebola. The reason I think this is because the story was wrote 200 years ago. When Poe was talking about the disease he explained what happened when people got it. When people got it he said “when they caught this disease they bled out of their poors”.…
The book begins in the East African country, Kenya. The author illustrates the death of a French man due to a virus called Marburg. Preston explains the man’s symptoms in great detail, in order to show the reader how one single virus can be a predator with the potential to kill off a large population. Later, the author takes the reader on a journey through more terrifying breakouts over time and ultimately highlights on an outbreak of the Sudan strain of the Ebola virus and the Ebola Zaire, which struck dozens of villages as the result of the use of dirty needles at a medical clinic. Preston later focusses on many scientists and military personnel who dedicate their lives researching hot agents while wearing space suits These people are desperate and hopeful in eventually…
1. The greatest ethical dilemma identified by the Commissioned Corps nurses, was the fact that taking care of an Ebola patient put the caregivers own health, and ultimately life, in direct danger. Should nurses be expected and/or required to respond to an epidemic and provide care, even if doing so puts the nurses health and possibly life at risk? Please apply an ethical principle or theory to support your response.…
There are all kinds of diseases that can cause death but in the U.S. obesity, tobacco, and alcohol put together have roughly nine hundred thousand deaths per year and we get scared of a disease that barely caused four thousand deaths. This cartoon can be seen anywhere on the internet, and had a bunch of controversy towards it, it shows a man in a shirt that says “USA” and he is holding three things: a beer or a form of alcohol, a greasy hamburger meal, and a cigarette. For some of us, seeing alcohol, greasy foods and even cigarettes being smoked, is just a way we see life today as a normal standard of living in America because we see this everyday whether we care that it kills us more than diseases actually do. Even though we don’t seem to care about the health of the people in America, we are scared to be killed by such things like the Ebola outbreak. The cartoon uses the rhetorical strategy of…
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.…
History has a tendency of repeating itself from the forms of leadership to tactics of war to the plagues that kill many. Ebola originated in West Africa in the 21st century more than five hundred years after the Black Plague. The Black Plague occurred in Europe during the middle ages and left a great impact on society. Although Ebola never reached the mass scale of the Black Plague it still had a traumatic impact on societies. Ebola and the Black Plague differ in the environment of the societies prior to contact, the symptoms, and impacts on societies; yet, are similar in the initial spread of infection, public reactions, and the rate at which they spread.…
Is anyone ever truly safe? Some may believe they are safe inside their home, when they’re at school, or even at the movies. However, safety is an illusion because there have been many cases where people have been hurt at their home or school where they assume they are safe. In “The Masque of the Red Death,” the nobles believed they were safe from the Red Death because they were protected by the abbey. In “Ebola Hysteria: An Epic, Epidemic Overreaction,” the American people were losing faith in their government’s ability to keep them safe within the U.S. from the Ebola epidemic.…
The process of developing new drugs typically involves clinical trials. When a new medication, vaccine, or similar product has been developed, researchers must ensure that they are effective and safe for people to use. To experimentally test that a drug produces the intended effect, most clinical trials use a randomized controlled trial (RCT) design. In this type of experiment, some people are assigned by chance to the active intervention and others are assigned by chance to a controlled comparison group. RCTs usually measure the efficacy of the intervention, or its ability to produce the desired effect.…
The issue of an Ebola epidemic gives rise to obligations for infected individuals in regards to the health of others. It requires the consideration of ethical theories such as utilitarianism and the right for autonomy, where there is a need for individuals infected with the Ebola virus to give up their liberty in order to prevent harm to others. This will be supported with the harm principle and the need for the government to contribute to the public good of preventing the spread of communicable diseases. The Ebola virus is a fatal and contagious disease that can be passed through human contact with an infected person in the form of blood, secretions and bodily fluid (The World Health Organisation, 2015a).…
Polio epidemics are a notable example, starting regularly in 1910 and peaking in the 1950s. It killed around 3,000 people in the largest US epidemic, but in total killed around 500,000 people worldwide. Vaccinations have completely eradicated this…
In history, there have been multiple devastating epidemics of diseases such as smallpox or the plague. These generally occurred before the invention of vaccines. One of the most devastating outbreaks of disease in history has been the great plague of Europe which nearly wiped out an entire population. The plague was so devastating that even simply saying “the plague” will immediately pull it to the front of your mind.…