Essay on Ebola Virus

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    Ebola Virus Report

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    The magnitude of the Ebola virus outbreak of 2014-2015 was unforeseen and unplanned, leading to lasting social, political and economic implications. “The Ebola virus rose from an isolated case and, within 18 months, various countries in West Africa including Sierra Leone, Liveria and Guinea recorded 11, 147 deaths from the virus, including 507 deaths of healthcare workers” (Grinnell, Dixon, Patton, Fitter, Bilivogui, Johnson, Dotson, Diallo, Rodier & Raguhunathan, 2015). Foreign and domestic nurses

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    Deadly Ebola Virus

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    The Ebola virus is in Group V, the Mononegavirales order, the Filoviridae family, and the Zaire ebolavirus species. According to Wikipedia, the Ebola virus is one of the five known viruses that is in the Ebolavirus genus, and along with four out of the five known viruses in the Ebolavirus genus, it causes a very serious hemorrhagic fever and it can affect humans and other different types of mammals. There was a very deadly Ebola virus that started going around over in

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    The Ebola virus is a strong, serious, fatal illness, which has a large impact on the population today. In 2013, an outbreak of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) quickly grew into an epidemic of exceptional magnitude. The virus killed ten times more people than all previous EVD outbreaks taken together. The presence of the disease in towns and villages of countries such as Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea, made the lives of people who live there unbearable. The poor healthcare infrastructures and penetrable

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    from a virus, bacterium, or fungi, there is the possibility that it will become an epidemic. For centuries, deadly diseases have threatened to infect and possibly eradicate mankind. The Ebola virus, which causes an extremely fatal hemorrhagic fever, is considered to be one of the most aggressive contagions in the world. The Ebola virus is a member of a family of RNA viruses known as, “Filoviridae” and is composed of multiple distinct subspecies (Bausch et al. 2007). It causes Ebola Virus Disease

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    is essentially what having the Ebola virus would be like. The three affected West African countries of Guinea, Sierra Leone, and Liberia are doing all that they can to contain and eliminate the Ebola virus. However, every country has a different method for handling crisis. These differing methods can be shown in the recent bringing of the Ebola virus to the United States from Western Africa. The strategies used for containment as well as elimination of the Ebola virus in both Western Africa and the

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    of the Ebola virus in the U.S. has raised the question on how safe are the health care workers that are exposed to the infected patients. The dangers of contracting the virus and dying is too high; also, due to emotional and physical reaction to hospital environment, I personally would not be able to give adequate care to Ebola patients and knowing a cure is not available. The risks of caring for these patients is not worth my life; I would refuse to work as a health care provider for Ebola patients

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    The Ebola Virus Disease

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    2014). Emergency measures were instituted and everyone came together in a joint battle against the worst and largest outbreak of that deadly disease ever recorded in history. It was the Ebola virus disease, commonly referred to as Ebola. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2016), Ebola is a rare and deadly disease caused by infection with a strain

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    Worst Ebola Virus

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    viruses. To this day Ebola is one of the fastest destructive viruses ever known. The infectious disease mainly spreads in the lymphatic organ system like liver, ovaries and kidneys causing organ failure. Most victims experience severe symptoms of high fever, diarrhea, muscle pain, headache, vomiting, internal and external bleeding. Ebola virus is not airborne but transmits to other humans by direct contact with body fluids of the infected person and could kill in 1-2 weeks (WHO Ebola Response Team, 2014)

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    What Is Ebola Virus?

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    Ebola Virus The Ebola virus, which is native to regions of Africa, causes an illness resulting in severe bleeding, organ failure, and even death. Outbreaks in Africa and other regions occur often. The virus is transferred from person to person through contact with infected bodily fluids of sharing needles. Once contracted, a patient will experience sudden symptoms such as fever, headache, aches, chills, and weakness. As the disease progresses, the symptoms become more severe. The symptoms of

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    The highly dangerous virus- Ebola, causes high fever and death of 90% patients within days. Ebola virus and marburvirus are consider to be the most deadly human pathogens that cause severe fever syndrome in both humans and non human parasites. The virus is further divided into 5 species with different pathogenicities. 1. Zaire virus - most lethal, causing deaths of almost 90% people 2. SEBOV- Sudan Ebola virus, case-fatality rate about 50%. 3. CIEBOV- Côte d 'Ivoire Ebola virus, Linked to single non-fatal

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