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View Full Version : Ebola deaths pass 2,000 as Liberia shuts down............. V



Ponce
5th September 2014, 04:12 PM
"and many will die".......what can I say, when you are hot you are hot......related story to long to post...go to link for pictures and complete story.
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Ebola deaths pass 2,000 as Liberia shuts down contaminated police station and Sierra Leone's capital 'crumbles'
Almost 1,000 deaths in West Africa in last month alone, according to WHO
UN to set up Ebola Crisis Centre to stop transmission in affected countries within 6-9 months
Death toll now stands at 2,097 across five West Africa countries
Half the deaths have been in Liberia
Healthcare in Sierra Leone's capital city falls apart as Ebola outbreak has made people too terrified to go to hospitals


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2745399/Ebola-deaths-accelerating-rapidly-Liberia-shuts-contaminated-police-station-Sierra-Leone-s-capital-crumbles.html#ixzz3CUAmXaZF
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Ponce
5th September 2014, 04:21 PM
Stupid Amercanos, only 18%......what planet are they from? the planet Cuba? the Ebola is already here.
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REPORT: 18% chance Ebola spreads to USA…

Ebola Could Reach the U.S. By the End of This Month


There is an 18 percent chance that a case of the Ebola virus will reach the United States by the end of September, according to a study published on Tuesday in PLOS Currents: Outbreaks.



Despite restrictions reducing travel in and out of the infected countries by 80 percent, the study, which analyzes global flight patterns, suggests that a case of Ebola in the U.S. is becoming increasingly harder to avoid. It also lists the chance of the virus reaching the United Kingdom between 25 and 28 percent.



The analysis also warns that if the current West African outbreak is not contained the likelihood of the virus reaching Europe and the U.S. will “increase consistently.”



The study lists just a five percent chance of Ebola occurring in the U.S. today, suggesting that the disease is far from contained to countries in West Africa. According to numbers obtained by the World Health Organization, there have been an estimated 3,685 cases and 1,841 deaths from the virus since the outbreak began.



Although two Americans — Dr. Kent Brantley and Nancy Writebol — have been treated for Ebola in the U.S., both of them contracted the disease while working in Liberia. Doctors suggested that better medical care contributed to their eventual recovery.



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