You have a point.....but it is entirely possible to get a little overblown in this. Back when AIDS was first being openly acknowledged by the medical community, I worked as a phlebotomist at a hospital during which time we received our first AIDS diagnosis for a patient - a bisexual Haitian male. He was in total isolation in our ICU. I happened to walk by his room on my way to draw blood from another ICU patient. One of the other phlebotomists was standing outside the room, and she couldn't make herself go in there. She was scared to death that she would catch it. I told her that if she simply followed the protocols we were already supposed to be following (we were already exercising hepatitis precautions long before AIDS became a known issue), that she would be fine. She thought she could get it by airborne means. I had to remind her that HE was the one without an immune system, and that just by entering the room, she was a far bigger threat to him than he was to her. She wouldn't do it.RoyGBiv wrote:The people he interacted with from the day he first went to the hospital (maybe a day or two before that) to the day he was finally put in isolation... they were exposed and at risk. IMO, those people should all (everyone we can find) be placed in hospital isolation for 21 days. NOT "stay at home" isolation and have them running out for groceries or having the neighbors visit with them.The Annoyed Man wrote:http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/02/health/eb ... index.html
U.S. Ebola case: Searching for contacts
By Gary Tuchman, Jacque Wilson and Holly Yan, CNN
updated 10:53 AM EDT, Thu October 2, 2014My guess is that health authorities will have in the end nipped this thing in the bud, containing it to just patient 1. But, that isn't going to avert a sort of general panic for a while. Much common sense is called for.Dallas (CNN) -- Health officials are reaching out to as many as 100 people who may have had contact with the first Ebola patient diagnosed in the U.S., a spokeswoman with the Texas Department of State Health Services said Thursday.
These are people who are still being questioned because they may have crossed paths with the patient either at the hospital, at his apartment complex or in the community.
"Out of an abundance of caution, we're starting with this very wide net, including people who have had even brief encounters with the patient or the patient's home," spokeswoman Carrie Williams said. "The number will drop as we focus in on those whose contact may represent a potential risk of infection."
In the end, we traded patients, and I drew the guy's blood. Now, I do realize that Ebola Zaire is far more infectious than AIDS, but all the same, by observing some simple precautions, the spread of the disease can easily be overcome. I previously posted that we shouldn't let political correctness get in the way of dealing with this, and that does speak to your point. But, I ALSO think that panic doesn't serve ANYBODY's interests, and that is what I was trying to get across.