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EBOLA Virus
Rank: Elder Joined: 10/4/2006 Posts: 13,821 Location: Nairobi
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Impunity wrote:SAD Yeah... Liberia imports most of its rice from outside and their ships are not being allowed to dock in some places and this will cause a huge hunger problem. All Mushrooms are edible! Some Mushroom are only edible ONCE!
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Rank: Member Joined: 11/19/2009 Posts: 3,142
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masukuma wrote:Impunity wrote:SAD Yeah... Liberia imports most of its rice from outside and their ships are not being allowed to dock in some places and this will cause a huge hunger problem. Tragedy of the African. Consuming what he does not produce then sobbing about it.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 10/4/2006 Posts: 13,821 Location: Nairobi
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Muriel wrote:masukuma wrote:Impunity wrote:SAD Yeah... Liberia imports most of its rice from outside and their ships are not being allowed to dock in some places and this will cause a huge hunger problem. Tragedy of the African. Consuming what he does not produce then sobbing about it. laugh laugh laugh mzungu mwitu! All Mushrooms are edible! Some Mushroom are only edible ONCE!
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Rank: Member Joined: 9/17/2006 Posts: 94
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Does anyone have an update of the suspected case in Nakuru? RINK
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Rank: Elder Joined: 10/23/2008 Posts: 3,966
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bubethi wrote:Does anyone have an update of the suspected case in Nakuru? RINK Word is, nothing serious. Luck is when Preparation meets Opportunity. ~ Lucius Annaeus Seneca
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Rank: Elder Joined: 3/31/2008 Posts: 7,081 Location: Kenya
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Ahahahaha.... A lady and a child from Liberia are turned away from entering Kenya through JKIA 9 days ago. The next we hear about the child is his sickness in nakuru... They traveled to Burundi and launched their re-entry from there... Only in Kenya!
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Rank: Elder Joined: 3/31/2008 Posts: 7,081 Location: Kenya
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Ahahahaha.... A lady and a child from Liberia are turned away from entering Kenya through JKIA 9 days ago. The next we hear about the child is his sickness in nakuru... They traveled to Burundi and launched their re-entry from there... Only in Kenya!
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Rank: Elder Joined: 10/4/2006 Posts: 13,821 Location: Nairobi
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Magigi wrote:Ahahahaha.... A lady and a child from Liberia are turned away from entering Kenya through JKIA 9 days ago. The next we hear about the child is his sickness in nakuru... They traveled to Burundi and launched their re-entry from there... Only in Kenya! Kwani you think Liberians have ebola springing up in them? Test everyone! All Mushrooms are edible! Some Mushroom are only edible ONCE!
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Rank: Member Joined: 5/13/2008 Posts: 558
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Why is kenyan media competing on which media house will report the first case?
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Rank: Elder Joined: 10/4/2006 Posts: 13,821 Location: Nairobi
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Jaina wrote:Why is kenyan media competing on which media house will report the first case? kenyans have the right to be informed when a west african vomits and diarrheas within our borders! the media has the responsibility to bring to our attention and inform us of incidences of congolese vomitting and diarrheing because this is the kind of thing that makes news worth watching. All Mushrooms are edible! Some Mushroom are only edible ONCE!
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Rank: Elder Joined: 10/4/2006 Posts: 13,821 Location: Nairobi
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Total fatalities so far... 50% Guinea 771 494 64% fatality Liberia 1,698 871 51% fatality Sierra Leone 1,216 476 39% fatality Total 3,685 1,841 50% fatality Nigeria 21 7 33.3% fatality Senegal 1 0 0% fatality Total 22 7 31.8% fatality All Mushrooms are edible! Some Mushroom are only edible ONCE!
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Rank: Elder Joined: 10/4/2006 Posts: 13,821 Location: Nairobi
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Vickie Hawkins (Executive Director Médecins Sans Frontières) wrote:Six months into the worst Ebola epidemic in history, the world is losing the battle to contain it. The British government, like a number of other states around the world, has invested in biological threat response. You have a political and humanitarian responsibility to immediately utilise these capabilities in Ebola-affected countries. In West Africa, cases and deaths continue to surge. Riots are breaking out. Isolation centres are overwhelmed. Health workers on the front lines are becoming infected and are dying in shocking numbers. Others have fled in fear, leaving people without care for even the most common illnesses. Entire health systems have crumbled. Ebola treatment centres are reduced to places where people go to die alone, where little more than palliative care is offered. It is impossible to keep up with the sheer number of infected people pouring into facilities. In Sierra Leone, infectious bodies are rotting in the streets. Rather than building new Ebola care centres in Liberia, we are forced to build crematoria. MSF medical teams have been on the front lines of this outbreak since it emerged. We have doubled our staff over the last month, but they are completely overwhelmed. We have been ringing alarm bells for months, but the response has been too little, too late. While funding announcements, roadmaps, and finding vaccines and treatments are welcome, they will not stop the epidemic today. We have been losing for the past six months. We must win over the next three. And we can. To curb the epidemic, it is imperative that states, including the UK, immediately deploy civilian and military assets with expertise in bio-hazard containment. We call upon the UK government to dispatch disaster response teams, backed by the full weight of logistical capabilities. This should be done in close collaboration with the affected countries. Without this deployment, we will never get the epidemic under control. The following must be prioritised: • Scaling up isolation centres; • Deploying mobile laboratories to improve diagnostic capabilities; • Establishing dedicated air bridges to move personnel and equipment to and within West Africa; • Building a regional network of field hospitals to treat suspected or infected medical personnel. While these disaster response teams will help to immediately shore up the response on the ground, the WHO and other public health agencies must put the Ebola Road Map into operation. We must also address the collapse of state infrastructure. The health system in Liberia has collapsed. Pregnant women experiencing complications have nowhere to turn. People are also dying of malaria and diarrhoea. Hospitals need to be reopened, and newly created. Lastly, we must change the collective mindset driving the response to the epidemic. Coercive measures, such as laws criminalising the failure to report suspected cases, and forced quarantines, are driving people underground. This is leading to the concealment of cases, and is pushing the sick away from health systems. These measures have only served to breed fear and unrest, rather than contain the virus. UN member states cannot focus solely on measures to protect their own borders. Only by battling the epidemic at its roots can we stem it. This is a transnational crisis, with social, economic and security implications for the African continent. It is your historic responsibility to act. We cannot cut off the affected countries and hope this epidemic will simply burn out. To put out this fire, we must run into the burning building. Only governments such as the UK have the resources. Please use them to address this desperate crisis.
All Mushrooms are edible! Some Mushroom are only edible ONCE!
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Rank: Veteran Joined: 12/4/2009 Posts: 1,982 Location: matano manne
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masukuma wrote:Vickie Hawkins (Executive Director Médecins Sans Frontières) wrote:Six months into the worst Ebola epidemic in history, the world is losing the battle to contain it. The British government, like a number of other states around the world, has invested in biological threat response. You have a political and humanitarian responsibility to immediately utilise these capabilities in Ebola-affected countries. In West Africa, cases and deaths continue to surge. Riots are breaking out. Isolation centres are overwhelmed. Health workers on the front lines are becoming infected and are dying in shocking numbers. Others have fled in fear, leaving people without care for even the most common illnesses. Entire health systems have crumbled. Ebola treatment centres are reduced to places where people go to die alone, where little more than palliative care is offered. It is impossible to keep up with the sheer number of infected people pouring into facilities. In Sierra Leone, infectious bodies are rotting in the streets. Rather than building new Ebola care centres in Liberia, we are forced to build crematoria. MSF medical teams have been on the front lines of this outbreak since it emerged. We have doubled our staff over the last month, but they are completely overwhelmed. We have been ringing alarm bells for months, but the response has been too little, too late. While funding announcements, roadmaps, and finding vaccines and treatments are welcome, they will not stop the epidemic today. We have been losing for the past six months. We must win over the next three. And we can. To curb the epidemic, it is imperative that states, including the UK, immediately deploy civilian and military assets with expertise in bio-hazard containment. We call upon the UK government to dispatch disaster response teams, backed by the full weight of logistical capabilities. This should be done in close collaboration with the affected countries. Without this deployment, we will never get the epidemic under control. The following must be prioritised: • Scaling up isolation centres; • Deploying mobile laboratories to improve diagnostic capabilities; • Establishing dedicated air bridges to move personnel and equipment to and within West Africa; • Building a regional network of field hospitals to treat suspected or infected medical personnel. While these disaster response teams will help to immediately shore up the response on the ground, the WHO and other public health agencies must put the Ebola Road Map into operation. We must also address the collapse of state infrastructure. The health system in Liberia has collapsed. Pregnant women experiencing complications have nowhere to turn. People are also dying of malaria and diarrhoea. Hospitals need to be reopened, and newly created. Lastly, we must change the collective mindset driving the response to the epidemic. Coercive measures, such as laws criminalising the failure to report suspected cases, and forced quarantines, are driving people underground. This is leading to the concealment of cases, and is pushing the sick away from health systems. These measures have only served to breed fear and unrest, rather than contain the virus. UN member states cannot focus solely on measures to protect their own borders. Only by battling the epidemic at its roots can we stem it. This is a transnational crisis, with social, economic and security implications for the African continent. It is your historic responsibility to act. We cannot cut off the affected countries and hope this epidemic will simply burn out. To put out this fire, we must run into the burning building. Only governments such as the UK have the resources. Please use them to address this desperate crisis.
@sukuma, MSF, have put it succinctly the WHO are still groping in the dark or in their own bureaucratic labyrinths, Uncls Sam is yet to decide esp ib regard ro direct impact of ebola on their own country. Time ia of essence
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Rank: Veteran Joined: 2/10/2010 Posts: 1,001 Location: River Road
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Quote:theory based on the monthly increases of Ebola starting at 1.86 ROI (RATE OF INFECTION) in March to the size of the world's population how long could this disease kill and spread if left unchecked and that spread rate is not slowed and no cures are found. Why does Ebola scare us in our worse nightmares? These numbers tell you why.
Mar, 2014 - Infected: 104 Dead: 62 Apr, 2014 - Infected: 194 Dead: 116 May, 2014 - Infected: 360 Dead: 216 Jun, 2014 - Infected: 670 Dead: 402 Jul, 2014 - Infected: 1,247 Dead: 748 Aug, 2014 - Infected: 2,319 Dead: 1,391 Sep, 2014 - Infected: 4,313 Dead: 2,588 Oct, 2014 - Infected: 8,022 Dead: 4,813 Nov, 2014 - Infected: 14,921 Dead: 8,953 Dec, 2014 - Infected: 27,753 Dead: 16,652 Jan, 2015 - Infected: 51,621 Dead: 30,973 Feb, 2015 - Infected: 96,016 Dead: 57,610 Mar, 2015 - Infected: 178,590 Dead: 107,154 Apr, 2015 - Infected: 332,177 Dead: 199,306 May, 2015 - Infected: 617,849 Dead: 370,709 Jun, 2015 - Infected: 1,149,199 Dead: 689,519 Jul, 2015 - Infected: 2,137,510 Dead: 1,282,506 Aug, 2015 - Infected: 3,975,768 Dead: 2,385,461 Sep, 2015 - Infected: 7,394,928 Dead: 4,436,957 Oct, 2015 - Infected: 13,754,567 Dead: 8,252,740 Nov, 2015 - Infected: 25,583,494 Dead: 15,350,096 Dec, 2015 - Infected: 47,585,299 Dead: 28,551,179 Jan, 2016 - Infected: 88,508,656 Dead: 53,105,193 Feb, 2016 - Infected: 164,626,099 Dead: 98,775,660 Mar, 2016 - Infected: 306,204,545 Dead: 183,722,727 Apr, 2016 - Infected: 569,540,453 Dead: 341,724,272 May, 2016 - Infected: 1,059,345,243 Dead: 635,607,146 Jun, 2016 - Infected: 1,970,382,153 Dead: 1,182,229,292 Jul, 2016 - Infected: 3,664,910,804 Dead: 2,198,946,482 Aug, 2016 - Infected: 6,816,734,096 Dead: 4,090,040,457 Reply @masukuma, worst case scenario when i say this I realized mother nature can be quite efficient in downsizing human population
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Rank: Elder Joined: 10/4/2006 Posts: 13,821 Location: Nairobi
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mkonomtupu wrote:Quote:theory based on the monthly increases of Ebola starting at 1.86 ROI (RATE OF INFECTION) in March to the size of the world's population how long could this disease kill and spread if left unchecked and that spread rate is not slowed and no cures are found. Why does Ebola scare us in our worse nightmares? These numbers tell you why.
Mar, 2014 - Infected: 104 Dead: 62 Apr, 2014 - Infected: 194 Dead: 116 May, 2014 - Infected: 360 Dead: 216 Jun, 2014 - Infected: 670 Dead: 402 Jul, 2014 - Infected: 1,247 Dead: 748 Aug, 2014 - Infected: 2,319 Dead: 1,391 Sep, 2014 - Infected: 4,313 Dead: 2,588 Oct, 2014 - Infected: 8,022 Dead: 4,813 Nov, 2014 - Infected: 14,921 Dead: 8,953 Dec, 2014 - Infected: 27,753 Dead: 16,652 Jan, 2015 - Infected: 51,621 Dead: 30,973 Feb, 2015 - Infected: 96,016 Dead: 57,610 Mar, 2015 - Infected: 178,590 Dead: 107,154 Apr, 2015 - Infected: 332,177 Dead: 199,306 May, 2015 - Infected: 617,849 Dead: 370,709 Jun, 2015 - Infected: 1,149,199 Dead: 689,519 Jul, 2015 - Infected: 2,137,510 Dead: 1,282,506 Aug, 2015 - Infected: 3,975,768 Dead: 2,385,461 Sep, 2015 - Infected: 7,394,928 Dead: 4,436,957 Oct, 2015 - Infected: 13,754,567 Dead: 8,252,740 Nov, 2015 - Infected: 25,583,494 Dead: 15,350,096 Dec, 2015 - Infected: 47,585,299 Dead: 28,551,179 Jan, 2016 - Infected: 88,508,656 Dead: 53,105,193 Feb, 2016 - Infected: 164,626,099 Dead: 98,775,660 Mar, 2016 - Infected: 306,204,545 Dead: 183,722,727 Apr, 2016 - Infected: 569,540,453 Dead: 341,724,272 May, 2016 - Infected: 1,059,345,243 Dead: 635,607,146 Jun, 2016 - Infected: 1,970,382,153 Dead: 1,182,229,292 Jul, 2016 - Infected: 3,664,910,804 Dead: 2,198,946,482 Aug, 2016 - Infected: 6,816,734,096 Dead: 4,090,040,457 Reply @masukuma, worst case scenario when i say this I realized mother nature can be quite efficient in downsizing human population while i agree with the spirit of the computation above - ebola is currently spreading in very poor poor places. these places have issues with healthcare, ignorance, stubborness e.t.c. but unlike other disease it does not spead efficiently. however the spirit of your computation is right - it's like a train getting out of hand, instead of stopping it early before it picks up pace and becomes increasingly difficult to stop - people are doing the opposite. barricading their doors and hoping that the train naturally (organically) stops itself. But let's put things in perspective... so far Ebola is still a west african problem and poor west africans represent the bulk of the infections HOWEVER depending on how people act now it could turn out to be everyone's problem simply because the train in some regions is picking momentum. currently this is still a poor person's disease but for how long will it stay that way? if it gets to people who can actually fly it becomes an international problem. All Mushrooms are edible! Some Mushroom are only edible ONCE!
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Rank: Veteran Joined: 7/1/2014 Posts: 903 Location: sky
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http://www.businessdailyafrica.com/Kenya-pledges---1-million-to-fight-Ebola-in-West-Africa/-/539546/2446794/-/xp1fcqz/-/index.htmlkweli tuko mbele There are only two emotions in the stock market, fear and hope. The problem is, you hope when you should fear and fear when you should hope
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Rank: Elder Joined: 10/4/2006 Posts: 13,821 Location: Nairobi
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World, you still just don't get it. The Ebola epidemic that is raging across West Africa, killing more than half its victims, will not be conquered with principles of global solidarity and earnest appeals. It will not be stopped with dribbling funds, dozens of volunteer health workers, and barriers across national borders. And the current laboratory-confirmed tolls (3,944 cases, with 2,097 deaths) will soon rise exponentially.
To understand the scale of response the world must mount in order to stop Ebola's march across Africa (and perhaps other continents), the world community needs to immediately consider the humanitarian efforts following the 2004 tsunami and its devastation of Aceh, Indonesia. The U.S. and Singaporean militaries launched their largest rescue missions in history: The United States alone put 12,600 military personnel to a rescue and recovery mission, including the deployment of nearly the entire Pacific fleet, 48 helicopters, and every Navy hospital ship in the region. The World Bank estimated that some $5 billion in direct aid was poured into the countries hard hit by the tsunami, and millions more were raised from private donors all over the world. And when the dust settled and reconstruction commenced, the affected countries still cried out for more.
the fact is.... PEOPLE DON'T CARE! All Mushrooms are edible! Some Mushroom are only edible ONCE!
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Rank: Member Joined: 11/19/2009 Posts: 3,142
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Masukuma,
Do you realise what you are doing?
Why appeal for foreign militaries, twice, assets of imperial arms to work in Africa?
Do you not see that is simply a re-colonization of the African?
Why not just call for NATO airstrikes against Ebola, iishe haraka? No one cares!!
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Rank: Elder Joined: 10/4/2006 Posts: 13,821 Location: Nairobi
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Muriel wrote: Masukuma,
Do you realise what you are doing?
Why appeal for foreign militaries, twice, assets of imperial arms to work in Africa?
Do you not see that is simply a re-colonization of the African?
Why not just call for NATO airstrikes against Ebola, iishe haraka? No one cares!!
just noting an article.... anyway if this article has any truth to it... they won't stay for long All Mushrooms are edible! Some Mushroom are only edible ONCE!
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Rank: Member Joined: 11/19/2009 Posts: 3,142
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masukuma wrote:Muriel wrote: Masukuma,
Do you realise what you are doing?
Why appeal for foreign militaries, twice, assets of imperial arms to work in Africa?
Do you not see that is simply a re-colonization of the African?
Why not just call for NATO airstrikes against Ebola, iishe haraka? No one cares!!
just noting an article.... anyway if this article has any truth to it... they won't stay for long Laugh! Laugh! Laugh!
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