Essay on Ebola Virus

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    With no cure or vaccination available for the Ebola Disease Virus (EDV) it seems nearly impossible to control. It spreads very much like the common flu except that it is only passed by direct contact so there are no airborne particles yet. Furthermore, the places most at risk are hospitals, funerals, and unreported homes that contain Ebola patients, dead or alive. These places are where the Ebola virus is most easily spread from infected to non-infected. Moreover, what makes containment so difficult

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    The Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) has spread across several West African countries, adding a significant medical and financial burden to their healthcare systems and economies. The virus has the potential to spread and efforts to halt its progression are challenged by already struggling economies and healthcare systems. The EVD epidemic started in resource-constrained settings and caused thousands of fatalities. However, given population mobility, international travel and an increasingly globalized

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    Ebola is one of the deadliest viruses known to mankind! Ebola was originally named Ebola hemorrhagic fever due to its hemorrhagic nature. It is a rare but deadly disease caused by infection from an Ebola virus vector. Ebola can be contracted by humans and nonhumans such as monkeys, gorillas, and chimpanzees. The Ebola virus has been detected in blood and many body fluids, including: saliva, mucus, vomit, feces, sweat, tears, breast milk, urine, semen, and vaginal fluids (Willett 16). Ebola can linger

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    When the Ebola Virus broke out in Nigeria two years ago, the fear in which we lived, knowing that even a handshake from the wrong person could move our legs to kick the bucket, was almost too palpable. People, including my closest friends and family, refrained from hugs and handshakes —which I have always seen as a reflection of love — Simply because they didn't want to die. Although their sentiments maintained a righteous level of Validity, it always made me feel Uneasy. So Uneasy that I sought

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    zoonotic, and have recently been traced to some species of African bats (CDC 2014). Currently, there are four species of ebolavirus that cause disease in humans: Ebola virus, Sudan virus, Tai Forest virus, and Bundibugyo virus (CDC 2015 B, 1). For the purposes of this scenario, Ebola virus will be the agent of focus and use. Symptoms of Ebola virus infection range from common illness characteristics, such as fever and fatigue, to the more detrimental characteristics of unexplained bleeding, vomiting, diarrhea

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    disposing of the syringe? It didn’t matter if she used it again, this boy was clean – all of the volunteers were clean, and even if they had not been, it wouldn’t matter – this was the communicable disease, so unless subjects just happened to contract Ebola, this is what would kill them. And they knew it, the two of them; they were both willing volunteers, willing saviors of the planet, and she was proud of him. June Carver, Doctor June Carver, Physician, Biologist, Chemist, and Environmentalist, turned

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    Japanese Sarin Cult, that it was discovered that they had within their inventory of biological weapons Ebola and Anthrax (Wright, 2008). How they gain access to these deadly viruses is somewhat unknown, but still they were obtained. Currently, research organizations and laboratories that carry these viruses are monitored and the security around the faculties is very advanced. But the Ebola virus made its way from Africa to the United States, not too long ago and who is to say that that particular

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    thousand people dead, the Ebola virus is a very serious and dangerous virus found mostly in some parts of Africa. The Ebola virus is a filovirus that can be deadly if left untreated, and one of the first cases of Ebola was documented at the Ebola River in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The Ebola virus can be transmitted from person to person in several ways, one way is by having contact through the skin or through bodily fluids with someone who has the virus (WebMD, 2014). The virus is first obtained

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    wondering when it will be your turn to proverbially “kick the bucket”. For many survivors of the Ebola disease, this situation would be far too familiar. In March 2014, the Ebola virus outbreak began in West Africa, mainly in Sierra Leone, Liberia, and Guinea. According to a recent figure from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), there have been a total of 28616 Ebola cases and 11310 deaths from Ebola in these three countries (2014). There were many unpalatable symptoms of the disease, such

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    Purpose To determine if African migrants should be permitted to enter Canada given the current outbreak of the Ebola virus disease (EVD) in regions of Africa. Issue EVD is a serious, infectious and often fatal hemorrhagic fever that is found in both humans and animals. EVD is commonly fatal when untreated because it affects the vascular system leading to internal bleeding and organ failure (CNN, 2014). The current outbreak of EVD is the worst in history and has already killed hundreds (CNN, 2014);

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