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View Full Version : Spanish nurse in Madrid diagnosed with Ebola



Serpo
6th October 2014, 02:33 PM
Spanish nurse in Madrid diagnosed with Ebola
By JORGE SAINZ
Associated Press




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http://analytics.apnewsregistry.com/analytics/v2/image.svc/AP/RWS/hosted.ap.org/MAI/V4676-2014-10-06T1623Z/E/prod/AT/A MADRID (AP) -- In the first known transmission of the current outbreak of Ebola outside West Africa, a Spanish nurse who treated a missionary for the disease at a Madrid hospital has tested positive for the virus, Spain's health minister said Monday.
The female nurse was part of the medical team that treated a 69-year-old Spanish priest who died in a hospital last month after being flown back from Sierra Leone, where he was posted, Health Minister Ana Mato said. The nurse is believed to have contracted the virus from that priest.
The World Health Organization confirmed there has not been a previous transmission outside West Africa in the current outbreak. WHO spokeswoman Fadela Chaib told The Associated Press that so far there have only been confirmed cases in West Africa and the United States, and no known transmission outside West Africa. The organization is awaiting official notification of the case from Spanish authorities.
The woman went to the Alcorcon hospital in the Madrid suburbs with a fever on Sunday and was placed in isolation. Mato said the infection was confirmed by two tests.
The woman's only symptom was a fever and she was on vacation when she fell sick, Antonio Alemany, Madrid director of primary health care, told a news conference. Alemany said authorities are drawing up a list of people the nurse had contact with, though he did not say how many people that might be, or where she went on holiday. She is married but does not have children.
Nobody apart from the woman is in quarantine, but her husband and the paramedics who admitted her on Sunday are being monitored. Officials did not say how or where.
The nurse helped treat two Spanish missionaries who died after being flown back to Madrid with the deadly virus, officials said.
She cared for Manuel Garcia Viejo, who died Sept. 25. In August, she also helped treat 75-year-old Spanish priest Miguel Pajares, who was flown back to Spain from Liberia, but died after being treated with the experimental Ebola medicine ZMapp.
The woman will be transferred for treatment to Madrid's Carlos III hospital.
The virus that causes Ebola spreads only through direct contact with the bodily fluids of an infected person who is showing symptoms.
Spanish authorities said they were investigating how the nurse became infected at a hospital with modern health care facilities and special equipment for handling cases of deadly viruses.
More than 370 health workers in West Africa have become infected in this outbreak, and more than half of those have died. Doctors and nurses there have worked under difficult conditions, treating patients in overflowing wards, sometimes without proper protection. But even under ideal conditions, experts warn that caring for Ebola patients always involves a risk.
WHO estimates the latest Ebola outbreak has killed more than 3,400 people.

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crimethink
6th October 2014, 02:36 PM
I was going to start a thread; glad you did. I mentioned this in the Dallas Ebola Patient thread:

http://gold-silver.us/forum/showthread.php?79469-Dallas-ebola-patient-dead&p=731163&viewfull=1#post731163

This is the first known transmission outside of Africa.

Serpo
6th October 2014, 03:18 PM
cold weather transmission


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WaNsXJfcTr4#t=24

Neuro
6th October 2014, 03:31 PM
Just saw today on Swedish TV, they took home the first Norwegian Ebola patient for treatment in Norway from West Africa. The laxnes is just insane. They really must want to spread this. Instead of closing borders they keep them wide open and instead import Ebola actively by taking home victims. Probably in the long run it won't matter, the cat is out of the bag, but they do speed it up!

Dogman
6th October 2014, 03:35 PM
Bucks for pharma company's when it gets big enough!

Serpo
6th October 2014, 03:37 PM
Technology (http://indiatoday.intoday.in/technology/)
News (http://indiatoday.intoday.in/technology/category/news/1/895.html)


Xenex's Little Moe robot kills Ebola virus IndiaToday.in (http://indiatoday.intoday.in/author/IndiaToday.in/1.html) New Delhi, October 4, 2014 | UPDATED 13:31 IST


http://media2.intoday.in/indiatoday/images/stories//2014October/little-moe_650_100414122758.jpg
As the Ebola virus makes its presence known with the first known casualty surfacing in the United States, the scramble is on to develop vaccines and establish preventive measures before the virus grown endemic. A San Antonio based medical device manufacturer, Xenex has developed a hospital cleaning robot called "Little Moe" that uses pulses of ultraviolet light to fuse germ DNA and kill it.
Xenex claims that Little Moe is able to completely rid any room or space of its infections in just 5 minutes of UV pulses and it takes the robot just 2 minutes of pulses to kill the Ebola virus.
The robot works on channeling one of three types of UV rays called UV-C rays. The other two -UV-A and UV-B- are found in our environment and are the reason we get sun tans and sunburns. UV-C rays on the other hand are reflected away by the Ozone layer which is why organisms on earth are not used to them.

Little Moe uses this catch to blast 1.5 pulses per second in every direction and delinks the DNA of the organism and fuses it together, in effect killing it. The robot does not use any form of chemicals or other substances apart from light rays, making it safe for humans.
The only risk is to the human eye which is why the robot is placed in an empty room and left to clean it without human interaction.
The 150 pounds robot has an extendable 62 inch neck which houses the bulb elements that release the pulses. Xenex assures that the UV rays blasted by the robot do not pass through windows, walls and safety glass used in hospitals making them cafe for widespread automated use.


http://indiatoday.intoday.in/technology/story/xenexs-little-moe-robot-kills-ebola-virus/1/394122.html

Serpo
6th October 2014, 03:44 PM
Ebola protection myths

http://www.naturalnews.com/047135_airborne_Ebola_N95_masks_full_face_respirat ors.html

Serpo
6th October 2014, 03:46 PM
Bucks for pharma company's when it gets big enough!

No amount of bucks can help any big pharm co as they are all headed for the pit............





http://lh3.ggpht.com/-AAI4oC_-aZA/TfBMHxnr62I/AAAAAAAAODA/Q_A_3cL0a2Y/door-to-hell5%25255B2%25255D.jpg?imgmax=800

Neuro
6th October 2014, 03:53 PM
No amount of bucks can help any big pharm co as they are all headed for the pit............





http://lh3.ggpht.com/-AAI4oC_-aZA/TfBMHxnr62I/AAAAAAAAODA/Q_A_3cL0a2Y/door-to-hell5%25255B2%25255D.jpg?imgmax=800
Shalom Israel

crimethink
6th October 2014, 06:34 PM
Ebola protection myths

http://www.naturalnews.com/047135_airborne_Ebola_N95_masks_full_face_respirat ors.html

Adams pretty much got things right in this article.

I will disagree, in part, about N95s. The main benefit of N95s is that they prevent you from touching your mouth or nose, and, offer a basic shield against droplets. The most likely method of catching any infectious disease is your hands touch a surface with infected fluids, and then you unwittingly touch your mouth, nose, or eyes, infecting yourself. The N95s prevent two of those; goggles or a face shield the other. Unless one is working up close and personal with Ebola victims, a respirator is a cumbersome - and expensive - nuisance. Using a respirator takes some getting used to, since it reduces airflow, causing some to feeling as though they are SOB or even suffocating.