you do realize we are talking about ebola, right?
You do realize you're trying to talk sense to TexasHiker, right?
you do realize we are talking about ebola, right?
My stance has always been on the rights of [white, heterosexual males].
Did you read the thread? Or even part of the thread?
Did you see the part about the doctor in new york feeling "sluggish" while he was out and about the town?
Are you going to tell with 100% certainty that the doctor was not infectious while he was on the subway and later bowling?
How much of a fever does someone need with ebola to be infectious? 99? 100? 101? 102? 103?
You do realize you're trying to talk sense to TexasHiker, right?
yeah, and I read the post of yours after that where even you retracted that comment for being absolutely false.
Are you actually trying to reuse that same broken argument, in the same fucking thread?
you're an idiot.
Key Time Periods
The mean incubation period was 11.4 days (Table 2 and Figure 3AFigure 3Time between Exposure and Disease Onset.), and did not vary by country (Figure 3B, 3C, and 3D). Approximately 95% of the case patients had symptom onset within 21 days after exposure (Figure 3A), which is the recommended period for follow-up of contacts. The estimated mean (±SD) serial interval was 15.3±9.3 days (Table 2 and Figure 3E), which is the same as the estimated mean generation time (see Supplementary Appendix 1). The mean time from the onset of symptoms to hospitalization, a measure of the period of infectiousness in the community, was 5.0±4.7 days (Table 2), and was no shorter for health care workers than for other case patients. The mean time to death after admission to the hospital was 4.2±6.4 days, and the mean time to discharge was 11.8±6.1 days. The mean length of stay in hospital was 6.4 days in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone.
Answer the question.
How much of a fever before someone is infectious?
Low grade fever be enough? Or do you need a full 103?
Did you see my post on the last page?
How much of a fever does someone need with ebola to be infectious?
Would a low grade fever be enough? Maybe that is why the doctor was feeling "sluggish" while he was on the subway and later bowling?
Three weeks? You DO know, don't you, that 21 days is an arbitrary cutoff, based on data from hundreds (perhaps thousands) of cases. But in fact approximatey 5% of people who develop symptoms do so MORE than 21 days from the time of infection, as can be seen in the following plots:
And I assume that if you are from the U.S., and had to travel internationally for work you'd be fine being put in a mandatory quarantine for three weeks since you'd be traveling from a known country which has had multiple ebola cases.
Out of an abundance of caution of course.
I would not travel to such a country. Period.
Just because you lack the skills to help the people there and/or cowardly about it doesn't mean you get to suspend the bill of rights to people who are brave and selfless enough to do so.
Go hide in your hole/bunker and come out in a few months. Stop adding to the fear/hysteria.
President Ebola has...
I certainly do not support throwing people into quasi prisons with no access to due process and no protections or compensation as you and your ilk seem to ask for. If you want Iran, just move to Iran. Don't ruin it for the rest of us.
I look forward to Chris Christie being sued over this.
The supreme court in 1905 ruled public health trumps civil rights.
Deal with it.
If she tested negative, looks like the only reason to keep her in quarantine is for Chris Cristie to get on TV and score some political points. Good for her for speaking up and making those political points not free.
-snip-
I certainly do not support throwing people into quasi prisons with no access to due process and no protections or compensation as you and your ilk seem to ask for. If you want Iran, just move to Iran. Don't ruin it for the rest of us.
I look forward to Chris Christie being sued over this.
Answer the question.
How much of a fever before someone is infectious?
Low grade fever be enough? Or do you need a full 103?
Oh.. oh.. I get it. Public health, like Obamacare?
You have proven over and over you don't know what you are debating.
Many hospitals do require staff to have certain vaccines, the 'flu shot' is one of them.
Some give an option to wear a mask at all times on hospital property which means to eat or drink they need to leave the facility first.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacobson_v._Massachusetts
What does any of that have to do with my question?
Anyway, you justify people doing stuff against their will?
So you should have no problem with mandatory quarantine.
It's because you simply do not understand what you are trying to argue.
