EBOLA: Your government has failed you!
CDC: 150 People Enter
U.S. Per Day from Ebola-Stricken Countries--or 4,500 Per Month
By Susan Jones
Both Homeland Security
Secretary Secretary Jeh Johnson and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Director Tom Frieden said on Wednesday that 150 people a day arrive in the United
States from Liberia, Sierra Leone or Guinea, the three West African countries
that have been hit by the Ebola virus.
"When somebody
travels from one of those three West African countries, even through a transit
point (in Europe), we know where they're coming from. So we're able to track
this. And we know that on average it's about 150 passengers a day,"
Johnson told CNN's Wolf Blitzer.
"The number of travelers is
relatively small. [REALLY] We're talking about 150 per
day," Frieden told a news conference on Wednesday. He announced that
questionnaires and temperature checks will begin at five major U.S. airports
that handle "95 percent of all the 150 travelers per day who arrive from
these three countries." [It only
takes one!]
One hundred-fifty passengers a day from West Africa works out to more
than a thousand a week (1,050), 4,500 a month, and 54,750 a year.
Given the 21-day
incubation period for Ebola and the 150 people coming in each day, that means
that at any given time there could be 21 x 150 people in the U.S. who could be
asymptomatically incubating Ebola, and who are free to wander around the
country.
That is 3,150 people who at any
moment could become symptomatic anywhere in the country and start exposing
people.
All passengers flying out
of West African countries already undergo temperatures checks and answer
questions about their contact with Ebola patients, but the screening doesn't always
work, as the case of Thomas Eric Duncan proves.
Duncan died of Ebola on
Wednesday in Dallas, after coming to the U.S. from Liberia on Sept. 20. He
reportedly failed to tell airport officials in Liberia about his contact with
an Ebola patient, and he did not have a fever when he left that country.
'Think
Ebola'
At Wednesday's news
conference, the CDC's Frieden told reporters that he expects some people
traveling to the U.S. from West Africa to have fevers, but it may not be Ebola:
"In
fact, we know that over the past couple of months, about one out of every 500
travelers boarding a plane in West Africa has had a fever. Most of those had malaria.
None of those, as far as we know, have been diagnosed with Ebola. So we expect
to see some patients with fever, and that will cause some obvious and
understandable concern at the airports."
Frieden said malaria is
spread by mosquitoes; it is very common in West Africa; and it is characterized
by a fever that "comes and goes." "So it would not be surprising
if we saw individuals with malaria have a fever after coming back here,"
he said.
Even if it turns out to
be malaria, Frieden said he wants all U.S. medical practitioners to "think
Ebola."
"We're working hard
to promote now is ensuring that doctors and nurses, pharmacists, health care
workers throughout the health care system think Ebola in anyone who has fever
and ask whether they have been in west Africa in the past 21 days."
The Obama administration has
ruled out a travel ban or even a quarantine on travelers arriving from West
Africa: "We need airlines to continue to operate in West Africa; and we
need borders to remain open," Secretary of State John Kerry said on
Wednesday. [Given the above, does anyone agree?]
Hours later, Frieden
stressed that "protecting Americans is our number one priority."
He also explained the
dire situation in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea:
"Liberia
has had the most extensive epidemic so far. There have been in some areas of
Liberia some decreases in recent weeks, but we don't know whether those will
hold. In Sierra Leone, we're continuing to see increases in cases that are very
concerning. Guinea has seen increase and decreases, and we're monitoring that
very closely."
Frieden said the
challenge for the international community is "how rapidly the disease is
spreading."
He also noted "signs
of progress" in West Africa: "For example, we're seeing more safe
burials in Liberia...We're increasing isolation and treatment capacity. So I
think we're beginning to see that kind of surged response have an impact on the
front lines, but it's going to be a long, hard fight and in West Africa we're
far from being out of the woods."
Not isolating those African
nations with EBOLA outbreaks is a fool's errand. It exposes innocent Americans
to a lethal disease that is proving to be unstoppable.
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