massmedia
Senior member
- Oct 1, 2014
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Not trying to offend anyone here, but nurses don't have a "crystal clear" understanding of what to do when presented with a multitude of patients because, well, that's not their role. Like I said earlier, Ebola is no different than say.. Meningitis when it comes to nursing protocol (in regard to infection control). There's no big "teaching" necessary, Ebola is droplet. The symptoms present similarly to other ailments that are droplet, there's nothing new here. /discussion.
Still missing the point completely.
if nurses think that they need to be taught what to do for Ebola, and nobody teaches them what to do, then they will not know what to do when a patient presents. Even if they already know the protocol (droplet according to you), if they don't know to follow that protocol for Ebola (and they have indeed said that they are NOT prepared... meaning that they don't know what protocol to follow) then there will be trouble when Ebola patients show up.
This point couldn't be more simple.
As to people thinking thag medical doctors are the authority... not so much actually.
Medical doctors tend to be great memory bots... excellent at memorizing and often quite lousy at actually thinking and very often waaay behind the literature. Scientists whose life work is to stay on the bleezing edge of this stuff (in this case Virologists and Immunologists) are the places to go for learning and critical thinking on this issue.
anyone suggesting that mass media (especially mainstream mass media and nut job conspiracy news houses) are the place to go for critical thinking and truthful non-spun information on Ebola needs a wake up call.
