|
[Dunia]
World Ebola Fears Grow With Europe and Asia On Alert.
[Copy link]
|
|
secretservice posted on 8-8-2014 10:52 PM
macam serangan senjata bio je bende ni
tak kot ..
harap2 tak ..
"Our people here eat monkey and bat ... we have warned them about eating bushmeat," said Tolbert G. Nyenswah, a health official in Liberia. "We have warned them about coming into contact with fresh meat. We have also warned them about eating dead animals when they don't know what killed them."
In Ivory Coast's commercial hub Abidjan, signs at the Yopougon bushmeat market still offer rats, porcupine, agouti, squirrels, pangolin and bats "stewed or braised".
"We've heard the announcement and we're worried because people won't buy our meat now," said vendor Sophie Ouattara.
kita lebih percaya ebola ni berkait dengan pemakanan
"If you handle wet meat, there's a much bigger chance," he said, saying a 1996 outbreak in Gabon was believed to have been caused by local people eating the still fresh body of a dead chimpanzee they had come across in the forest.
Large primates, like chimpanzees and gorillas, also die from Ebola, Swanepoel said. They are also often killed by bushmeat hunters despite campaigns by international conservation groups battling to ensure their survival.
siap jadi sup tu
The frightening disease has killed 672 people so far, and is transmitted by bats and by animals that have eaten fruit contaminated by bat feces or saliva. Because the local cuisine includes bats - usually cooked in a peppery soup or smoked over a fire
Credit to:
http://amazingstoriesaroundtheworld.blogspot.com/2014/08/experts-scientists-warn-deadly-ebola.html
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
se'terrer' mana pun ummah2, last2 minta ubat drpd amerika jugak... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tgk citer contagion. Virus baru menyerang satu dunia. Start dr hongkong. Kelawar mati atas babi. Pastu chef pegang babi. Gwyneth paltrow salam dgn chef. Pastu paltrow balik US. Merebak satu Us. Merebak kat benua lain. Memang huru hara. WHO nak buat antivirus pun amik masa berbulan2. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ari tu kecoh2 yg atlit dr serra leone ilang .. dkhuatiri ada ebola neh mcm mana eh?
ilang kt scotland lak tuh.. team mate lain kene kuarantin.. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
rajin2la membasuh tgn ye anda anda semua... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
skymania posted on 10-8-2014 08:47 AM
ari tu kecoh2 yg atlit dr serra leone ilang .. dkhuatiri ada ebola neh mcm mana eh?
ilang ...
yang ni ka?
Commonwealth Games athlete 'goes missing in bid to avoid returning to Ebola-hit Sierra Leone' after teammate spends four days in quarantine over fears he'd contracted deadly disease
Cyclist Mohamed Tholley was due to compete in time trial event yesterday
Reports claim he failed to turn up and has absconded to avoid going home
Spokesman denied claims, saying there were no reports of missing athletes
His teammate Moses Sesay, 32, revealed how he was tested for Ebola virus
He was admitted to Glasgow hospital and put in isolation for four days
But he competed in road race time trial yesterday after being given all-clear
Sesay is from Sierra Leone, Africa, where hundreds have died from disease
An athlete from Sierra Leone's Commonwealth Games team is reported to have gone missing - just days after his teammate was tested for the Ebola virus.
The team's mountain biking champion Mohamed Tholley was due to compete in the time trial event in Glasgow yesterday but allegedly failed to turn up.
According to a report in the Telegraph newspaper, Unisa Deen Kargbo, chef de mission of the Sierra Leone team, said Mr Tholley may have gone missing to avoid having to fly home and face the disease.
He said: 'Unfortunately one of our athletes has not turned up for his event and we do not know where he is. It is possible he is not coming back.
'The situation is very serious at home, and it is possible this is why he does not want to return. It is very bad there.'
But Jackie Brock-Doyle, a spokeswoman for Glasgow 2014, denied the claims at a press briefing this morning.
She said: 'We have not had a single report of any athlete that has gone missing.
'If someone didn't turn up and they had gone missing, they would have reported it to us.
'If athletes have gone missing and their chef de missions are concerned they will talk to us and let us know.'
It comes after a fellow Sierra Leone athlete at the Games revealed he was hospitalised and put into isolation for four days while he was tested for the deadly Ebola virus.
Cyclist Moses Sesay, from Sierra Leone in West Africa where hundreds are reported to have died from the flesh-eating virus, was admitted to hospital in Glasgow after feeling unwell and developing fever-like symptoms.
However, he was later given the all-clear and yesterday competed in the road race time trial.
Last night, the 32-year-old said he and other athletes were scared of returning home because of Ebola and would try to remain in Britain until their special three-month visas for the Games expired.
Mr Sesay, who comes from the Rotifunk Moyamba area of Sierra Leone which has been hit by the disease, said: ‘I was sick, I felt tired and listless. All the doctors were in special suits to treat me – they dressed like I had Ebola. I was very scared.’
Speaking to the Daily Mirror, he continued: ‘I was admitted for four days and they tested me for Ebola.
'It came back negative but they did it again and this time sent it to London where it was also negative.’
ni kes lain ....
After this year's London marathon, a runner from Sierra Leone, 24-year-old Mami Konneh Lahun, went missing after finishing the race in 20th place.
She failed to turn up at an airport when she was due to fly home, but police later found her safe and well.
MailOnline tried to contact several representatives of the Sierra Leone team but none were available for comment.
Mr Sesay, a father of one, who competed in the Games on his 32nd birthday, finished last in his race.
He had arrived in Glasgow among a team of two dozen competitors and officials the week before the Games and felt unwell last Thursday, the day after he attended the Opening Ceremony.
‘All of us are scared about going back,' he said. 'We have a three-month visa in our passports and if I have the opportunity, I will stay here until it ends.
‘It is scary over there. My mother is a medical nurse so she may have to treat people. My wife is also doing work in the medical field.’
A West African official last night also denied that another member of the team had gone missing or that others had been hospitalised.
Credit To:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2712699/Commonwealth-Games-athlete-speaks-terror-quarantined-four-days-fear-hed-contracted-deadly-Ebola-virus.html
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
terjumpa yang ni..
Ebola virus: British aid worker's diary reveals horror as SIX nurses die from killer bug
DIARY
Day 1
It’s 5.30am and I’m the first out of bed. It’s a half-hour drive to the Ebola ­treatment centre. I arrive at 7.30am and change into scrubs and rubber boots in the “low-risk zone”.
I need to put on full protective gear. I pull on a pair of examination gloves, and then a yellow suit. It goes up to my neck and down to my ankles. Already I’m starting to sweat.
It’s very humid and hot. Next is the mask, the hood, and then an enormous plastic apron. I fumble with surgical gloves, then thick rubber household gloves. Finally I put on my goggles.
Before I go in the high-risk zone, a staff member checks to make sure not one millimetre of skin is showing.
I start by emptying buckets of faeces and vomit. Some people have terrible diarrhoea or are bleeding, so there’s a lot of cleaning. I make sure they all have water – most are so weak, they can’t even unscrew the lid of a plastic bottle; some can barely speak.
Soiled sheets go in bins, which are taken to the burning pits – once a day we burn the waste. Every day there are dead bodies, every day the number is increasing. When somebody dies, we put their belongings in bags and burn them, with the mattress cover and sheet.
Day 2
I am training some new staff, locals who will work as hygienists and cleaners.
I listen to a radio phone-in. Someone calls in to say there’s no such thing as Ebola. This is the first time the disease has broken out in West Africa, there’s a lot of fear and misinformation. We go through all the rumours and dispel them.
Then I explain what Ebola is and how you can protect yourself.
Day 3
I’m heading out of Monrovia to visit the main hospital in Bong County. It’s a three-hour trip.
When the outbreak started local health workers weren’t taking proper precautions. It spread through the hospital staff. Seven nurses from this hospital have been admitted to the centre in Monrovia; six are dead.
I meet the head of the health team. He’s doing his best in very difficult circumstances, with terrified staff.
They have only one ambulance. The burial team has to use a wheelbarrow, or garbage collecting truck, to move corpses around.
Local religious leaders are preaching against health workers, saying it is them spreading the disease. They’ve set up a small isolation unit, but there’s nobody to staff it. It’s an impossible situation.
Day 4
I feel we’ve reached a tipping point. When I arrived in Liberia four weeks ago, there were four or five patients in the treatment centre. Now the centre is overflowing, we don’t know where to put people, the morgue is full, people are turning up with sick relatives.
Day 5
I wake with a sore throat – it’s almost certainly due to chlorine, but paranoia has set in and I take my temperature for the tenth time this morning.
At night, sleeping can be hard. You lie there thinking, I feel hot, am I getting a fever? If I catch Ebola, who will I get to tell my family?
ada kah ....... ?
credit to:
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/ebola-virus-british-aid-workers-3956692#.U-bIYKNrSkw
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ummah sunni Malaya bukan kesah pon pasal ebola ni...mcm diorang xkesah pasal penularan wabak denggi...
Tapi kalau pasal sedara seislam palestin diorang, bukan main semngat turun boikot siap demo.... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ramainya mat gelap masuk mesia... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Semalam terbaca berita ni di paper.. tetiba teringat pasal ebola ni..
|
This post contains more resources
You have to Login for download or view attachment(s). No Account? Register
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Researchers Suspect A 2-Year-Old Boy Was Patient Zero For The Ebola Outbreak
Researchers believe that the first patient in the recent Ebola outbreak was a 2-year-old boy from a village in Guéckédou, in southeastern Guinea, the New York Times reports.
The child died on Dec. 6, a few days after he got sick. A week after he died, the disease killed his mother, his 3-year-old sister, and his grandmother, reports the Times. Their symptoms included fevers, vomiting and diarrhea, but no one was sure how they fell ill or what the disease was.
The town of Guéckédou is at the intersection of Sierra Leone, Liberia, and Guinea, where the disease likely made its way into all three countries.
Researchers believe that two people who attended the grandmother’s funeral contracted Ebola and transported it back to their villages. A health worker who had cared for the dying patients carried it to his village, where both he and his doctor died, the Times reports.
From there, relatives of the sick who visited from neighboring towns were infected and brought it back with them. When Ebola was recognized in March, people throughout eight Guinean communities had contracted and died from the virus. Meanwhile, other cases were popping up in Liberia and Sierra Leone.
Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea are among the world’s poorest countries, and are recovering from decades of political corruption and civil war.
It is not yet clear how the 2-year-old boy contracted Ebola, or how the virus found its way to the region. It infects monkeys and apes, and prior outbreaks are through to have been caused by someone exposed to an infected animal’s blood while killing or butchering it.
This outbreak is thought to have spread so quickly due to an increase in urbanization. Previous outbreaks were better contained because the virus was isolated to specific areas, but as cities become more gentrified, there is an increase in travel between towns and villages.
A spokesman for the World Health Organization, Gregory Hartl, said that some towns did not cooperate with regulars early on.
“Early on in the outbreak, we had at least 26 villages or little towns that would not cooperate with responders in terms of letting people into the village, even,” said Hartl.
The outbreak occurred in three waves: “The first two were relatively small, and the third, starting about a month ago, was much larger,” Mr. Hartl said. “That third wave was a clarion call,” he said.
Now, there are 1,779 cases of Ebola, including 961 deaths. In West Africa the outbreak is out of control and worsening.
SOURCE |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
FanTasyCreaTioN posted on 10-8-2014 09:29 AM
terjumpa yang ni..
Ebola virus: British aid worker's diary reveals horror as SIX nurses die from ...
Thanks adik comel sebab banyak beri information kat thread ni. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Scary ja tgk makanan pelik2 dorang ni
Ade yg jd sup.Ade yg disalai
Tak tercapai dek akal tgk appetite dorang
Moga takdela sampai ke malaysia ebola virus ni
Tgk chite contagious. Sorg saje dh mampu menyebarkan senegara
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ida88 posted on 11-8-2014 05:13 PM
Scary ja tgk makanan pelik2 dorang ni
Ade yg jd sup.Ade yg disalai
Tak tercapai dek akal tgk appet ...
kalau baca berita kat atas tu ..
seriau jugak
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
RE: World Ebola Fears Grow With Europe and Asia On Alert.
FanTasyCreaTioN posted on 11-8-2014 05:10 PM
dah banyak hari try google tentang ni ..
takde
symtom2 memang macam ebola
saudara mereka yg baru balik umrah tu x di cek oleh KKM ke?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|