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1. There is a shortage of health care workers in West Africa.
2. Health care workers are at risk to contract Ebola when caring for contagious patients.
3. Imported health care workers are at risk. Importing health care workers to West Africa is fine in the short term but does not improve things
there in the long term.
4. There must be many thousands of Ebola survivors who are now immune.
I propose that a corps of Ebola survivors be formed, and these survivors be trained to deliver the type of supportive health care that people need when ill with Ebola. This kind of care in not brain surgery. It does not require years of schooling.
These survivors would not need swanky suits etc. This group of Ebolaproof medics would be useful in the short and long term, and improves the skillsets of people who live in the affected areas. They could be deployed as a group to foreign areas with new outbreaks.
Also it would offer the possibility of a wage for Ebola survivors who 1: live in an economically depressed area and 2: might be unwelcome in prior employment because of their Ebola history.
Nigerian Times: Cured Ebola Victims Can be Reinfected
http://nigeriantime...nfected-who-expert/ [rcarty, Oct 20 2014]
[link]
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Only issue is... you gotta be careful that they are not still
infected as healthy carriers of the virus. |
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I did not think Ebola worked that way. How could there be a standard quarantine if it did? |
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Train Ebola sufferers as candy packers for a much more satisfying Halloween |
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Reading about Ebola it says it is a RNA virus that mutates once every replication, which is considered fairly mutagenic as far as my reading can tell, so it should be able to stay ahead of the immune system pretty well. In fact providing legions of cured Ebola survivors will give it the opportunity to mutate better abilities to beat immune systems. |
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Huh? Too many long words me no understand, Mongrol smash. Laaaraaa |
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Hmm, my first impressions was a big plus, but that
info about the possibility of reinfection sounds
not too favorable. |
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But I'm having trouble finding anything other than
that one article and [rcarty]'s explanation about
RNA viruses to confirm that a survivor doesn't have
immunity. Google found many articles saying that
survivors are immune. One article went as far as
to indicate that immunity lasts for at least 10
years, but I don't see how we could have enough
data actually put a time frame on it. |
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Based on other things I've heard, is it possible
that a survivor generally has immunity for the one
outbreak, but by the time the next outbreak
occurs, it is likely that the virus will have mutated
enough to bypass a survivor's immunity? Of course
in the past the outbreaks have been pretty small,
whereas with this large outbreak there may have
been more opportunity for more strains to
develop. |
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(b) They would need considerable medical training,
not only to tend the sick but also to do so without
infecting others. |
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(c) Cheaper and far more effective to send in teams
of trained doctors and appropriate containment
facilities. |
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// There must be many thousands of Ebola survivors who are now immune. |
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I'd heard that the jury is still out on the issue of survivor immunity. A google glance shows there is a lot of debate. Several articles mention that there are other chronic conditions that survivors can develop as a result of a weakened immune system. |
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So I'd say, on the whole, this is a bad idea given current knowledge. Also, second third and fourthing [MaxwellBuchanan]'s observations. |
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//Huh? Too many long words me no understand, Mongrol smash. Laaaraaa// |
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Agreed, that read slightly worse than word salad, or at least jargon salad. Thing is, it's just as easy to write a sentence that is easy to understand. Some people don't consider that necessary. |
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That's fine, I think I, and probably others, are used to it. Just don't expect people to spend a lot of time with their cereal-packet decoders trying to discern what it is you are on about. |
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The way I look at it, whenever I communicate, I take it upon myself to ensure what I say will be understood. Some contexts lead me to use slightly different language, such as a technical engineering discussion, might be rife with jargon not easily understood by the layperson. (I'm also aware of my flagrant misuse of comma's, but, I write, like, I talk) However when I'm in a session with mixed company, I feel it's my responsibility to ensure the audience has a reasonable chance of understanding. |
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Not trying to get too personal here (but probably failing) but you don't seem to make the same efforts. Furthermore and additionally, the language you commonly use is I think, somewhat unnecessarily complex, even to the point of not making sense, in the seeming attempt to sound more informed, or smarter or whatever. I liken it to putting on airs you seem to use the language with the intention of alienating your audience, rather than the pure necessity of using those terms and over-complex sentence structure. |
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Maybe there just is no other way to communicate the thoughts you have, or maybe as you say, its not worth the trouble to ensure youre being understood. Thats of course your decision to make. |
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tl;dr - eschew obfuscation. |
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//what kind of government engineered youth welfare program could possibly have the radical appeal of ISIS? |
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A government sponsored intern scheme in a bank? You can create infinitely more global misery that way. |
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// I write what I like to read, and don't care what you think. |
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That's fine, possibly a dummies guide is out there somewhere. |
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Hey man, that's just, like, my opinion. |
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And if I do anything indiscriminately, it's share my opinion with people who haven't asked for it, often from atop some crudely improvised soap box or podium of some sort. |
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Well according to one of the pithy rags from around here that's sometimes referred to as a newspaper, the cure for ebola is sufficient hydration and no anti-inflammatory medication. Not sure if a doctor has been anywhere near that little tidbit of info, but the Nigerians are claiming a much higher survival rate than other areas on this basis. |
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As horrible as it is, I do think maybe it's getting a disproportionate volume of media attention, and is subsequently causing a disproportionate level of concern to the public in general. |
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The halfbakery help file specifically mentions ideas for inventions, not ideas about philosophy. And if I never see the word 'semiotic' again, it'll be frankly too soon. |
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//This is word salad in your opinion, but also simultaneously rejects your fascism. I write what I like to read, and don't care what you think.// |
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Some people might read that as 'I'm self-absorbed and don't really care about the audience with whom I'm communicating. In that case, you could do the same thing in a diary. |
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No, [RS], he's saying he comes here to the 'bakery because it
makes it less enjoyable for others. His diary wouldn't serve
that purpose nearly so well. |
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// you could do the same thing in a diary // |
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Could he do the same thing in a dairy and be as effective ? |
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Okay fellas, I mean I had a bit of a go, and I think I made my point - no need to tag team him. |
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(psstt...rc...that was easily readable. Quick,edit it before anyone else notices...) |
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// I'm glad they started calling IS, 'so-called Islamic
state' though // -- //Ok I guess they are not
Islamic. [sarcasm lost in abbreviated quote. See
original] // |
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Actually I thought the "so called" part of the "The
Islamic State" was "the" and "state". While some
Islamic people say that SCIS (So Called IS) is not
truly Islamic, the reports that it is attracting
fighters to join from elsewhere in the world
(assuming those are true) suggest that whatever
beliefs they have are somewhat widely held by
people who call themselves Islamic. |
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It seems to me that the people are really using
labels incorrectly lately. Whenever there is a label
that classifies a group of people, everyone else
then jumps to the conclusion that everyone inside
that classification is in complete agreement on
everything. It's like people think that there are
only two points of view. Liberal/conservative is
not a binary difference. And because of that,
whenever someone does something bad or stupid,
everyone in any group of which that person may
be classified suddenly has to denounce that
person as not being part of the group. For
example, it is obviously true that the majority of
self identified Islamic people are not actively and
openly violent. The claim that Islam is a religion of
peace and that "Islamic terrorist organizations" are
not Islamic, is an argument over the definition of
Islamic. But if we could just call them all Islamic
and understand that there are some violent
people in Islam, some violent Christians, and some
violent atheists, we could use those three labels
to talk about someone's belief systems, and other
labels like psychopath, terrorist, or really nice
person to talk about what they do. |
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And while for an individual person what they do
can be highly related to what they believe, for a
classification of beliefs, there is a wide variation
in belief and the strength of that belief. For
example, someone who nominally believes that
there is a God may in some situations lie and cheat
because they have more belief in the immediate
advantage of those actions than in any eternal
consequences, while others may sacrifice
significant comforts in their life, or even sacrifice
their life (either to help or hurt), based on their
belief. |
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That gets more into their politics... |
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Why not just develop an Ebola vaccine? That way, you can develop antibodies without the threat of a liquified liver. |
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Oh come on. IS is most definitely an Islamic organisation. Saying that doesn't mean that all Islamic people are part of IS. |
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Question - are there any people who are part of IS that aren't Islamic? No. |
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There are parallels in other religions. There are, or have been Christian extremists, even violent ones. Likewise with some other religions. No one accuses those entire religious groups of being extremist. The real problem is fundamentalism, and to a lesser extent, too much intermingling of incompatible cultures. |
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Scratch that. The real issue there here is that one of my faviourite TV shows, Archer, has given in to the terrorists and is renaming it's (pro)tagonist group something other than ISIS. Which I think sucks big time. |
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//Why not just develop an Ebola vaccine?// |
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For the same reason that you can't snuff out the flu for all time. It evolves. |
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I think anyone recovering from Ebola virus MUST have some immunity, or they wouldn't have recovered. |
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