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  • Ebola has been making headlines lately and if the hype is to be believed, weve all

  • already died. But if youre just mostly dead and want to know more, here are some

  • common misconceptions about Ebola clarified.

  • Hello germaphobes out there, I’m Julian with DNews and I have some info that might

  • help you sleep a little easier.

  • First let’s douse the flames of panic and clear up that Ebola has not become airborne.

  • It’s adapted to survive and thrive in bodily fluids, and some pretty radical and unlikely

  • things would have to happen for it to change its mode of transmission. It would need to

  • develop proteins that could attach to the upper respiratory pathway and it’s lipid

  • membrane means it doesn’t survive out of fluids. Because it’s already doing just

  • fine with its current mode of transmission it doesn’t have the need to evolve. So if

  • you find yourself around Ebola patients, take comfort that at least the air you breathe

  • isn’t trying to kill you.

  • These limitations help put another Ebola worry to rest; industrialized nations are going

  • to be able to stop the virusspread much more effectively than the West African nations

  • that have been hit. Knowing how the virus spreads means that we also know how not to

  • spread it. Avoiding bodily fluids of the infected goes a long way as casual contact with them

  • isn’t enough to spread it.

  • That also means a panic over a global pandemic is ill-founded. Ebola kills pretty quickly

  • and has up to a 90% mortality rate (though thanks to the efforts of humanitarian workers,

  • it’s closer to 50% in West Aftrica). Those horrible attributes are what makes Ebola so

  • scary, but it also means that the disease doesn’t become as widespread as it otherwise

  • could. That’s right, Ebola could be worse if it actually killed more slowly. Hooray?

  • The last misconception I’d like to clear up is that the outbreak is on the decline.

  • While the industrialized world probably won’t feel the effects of it, people in west Africa

  • are still suffering. Dr. Estrella Lasry, a tropical medicine advisor for Doctors Without

  • Borders, has called the international response, “slow and weak,” with China and Cuba the

  • only governments that have sent aid. China has sent 115 workers with a mobile lab and

  • another 59 pledged, while Cuba’s 165 workers are due to arrive in Sierra Leone by October.

  • President Obama added the United states to that list on September 16th with a plan that’s

  • projected to cost 763 Million dollars over 6 months. It’s still likely not enough to

  • contain the outbreak; more workers and beds are needed to treat the sick, and earning

  • public trust so people can be educated about Ebola is crucial to stopping its spread.

  • Knowledge is always a useful tool to protect yourself. If you’d like to learn more about

  • how fast viruses can spread, Ross Everett breaks it down for you on this episode of

  • DNews.

  • How are you getting involved to make the world a better place? Have you volunteered or gotten

  • involved in the fight against Ebola? If you don’t have a story to share, I urge you

  • to check out doctorswithoutborders.org to donate. Let us know if you do in the comments,

  • because we want to know were getting people involved. Stay healthy and I’ll see you

  • next time on DNews.

Ebola has been making headlines lately and if the hype is to be believed, weve all

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