Well, he was shown walking mostly under his own power into/toward the facility so...........
So it is clear that he died en route and is now a zombie.... We are doomed.
Well, he was shown walking mostly under his own power into/toward the facility so...........
That was so encouraging. I'm rooting for the guy.Well, he was shown walking mostly under his own power into/toward the facility so...........
So it is clear that he died en route and is now a zombie.... We are doomed.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/...0878.html?ncid=fcbklnkushpmg00000044&ir=Green
When the lead doctor you send in to combat an outbreak dies in the outbreak I get a bit concerned. And there is news other doctors have contracted Ebola in their fight against it.
Ebola is scary stuff. Even with medical treatment it has a mortality rate that is terrifying.
The answer to your question of how scared you should be of the Ebola outbreak is, as long as you are rubbing diluted essential oils of oregano and cinnamon on your feet, not at all.
See [nfurl]http://www.essentialoilsforthewin.com/ebola/[/nfurl]
Current WHO data doesn't consider Reston as disease causing in humans.
And it also appeared in Italy.
Besides, France? I'd rather look to Reston, VA and Alice, TX: six asymptomatic people developed antibodies.Genus Ebolavirus is 1 of 3 members of the Filoviridae family (filovirus), along with genus Marburgvirus and genus Cuevavirus. Genus Ebolavirus comprises 5 distinct species:
BDBV, EBOV, and SUDV have been associated with large EVD outbreaks in Africa, whereas RESTV and TAFV have not. The RESTV species, found in Philippines and the People’s Republic of China, can infect humans, but no illness or death in humans from this species has been reported to date.
- Bundibugyo ebolavirus (BDBV)
- Zaire ebolavirus (EBOV)
- Reston ebolavirus (RESTV)
- Sudan ebolavirus (SUDV)
- Taï Forest ebolavirus (TAFV).
[nfurl][/nfurl] Huh? Not seen that code before but here's the fixed link:The answer to your question of how scared you should be of the Ebola outbreak is, as long as you are rubbing diluted essential oils of oregano and cinnamon on your feet, not at all.
See [nfurl]http://www.essentialoilsforthewin.com/ebola/[/nfurl]
[nfurl][/nfurl] Huh? Not seen that code before but here's the fixed link:
http://www.essentialoilsforthewin.com/ebola/
Hmm,... sorry. I should have verified in the preview that the link worked correctly. It's supposed to make the link with the rel="nofollow" attribute but it looks like it's broken. It looks like, for some reason, it stripped the ':' from the protocol section of the URL.
Edited to add: No it didn't. It added a second "http://".
HPV causes genital warts and is considered a pathogen.
I see.Hmm,... sorry. I should have verified in the preview that the link worked correctly. It's supposed to make the link with the rel="nofollow" attribute but it looks like it's broken. It looks like, for some reason, it stripped the ':' from the protocol section of the URL.
Edited to add: No it didn't. It added a second "http://".
I understand that but you can't just go calling everything a pathogen that might have some pathogenic activity we've not yet discovered. By your definition every virus and microorganism on the planet is a pathogen.I was talking about the apparent inactivity of virus, not about the obvious activity of virus. The example is to be read in that context and not to be complemented by a post about HPV from Dotheboys Hall as your comment suggests.
.Well there's my weekend plans ruined.
Seen on Twitter:
Wow. The dedication is awesome. The less that show up, the healthier the population gets.Quote:
I've noticed Homeopaths without Borders aren't lining up to treat the Ebola outbreak..
Seen on Twitter:
I've noticed Homeopaths without Borders aren't lining up to treat the Ebola outbreak..
Wow. The dedication is awesome. The less that show up, the healthier the population gets.

Gregory: ... When you look at some of the precautions that are taken, a specially-outfitted plane for him to be contained, the medical units onsite from the airport to his transport to Emory, and then in a containment unit at Emory, is this an unacceptable risk to bring somebody with Ebola back?
DR. TOM FRIEDEN: Well, first off, we have to say that he was coming home. And the organization that sent him to Africa made the decision to bring him home. He's an American citizen. And what our role is in public health is to make sure that if an American is coming home with an infectious disease, we protect others so that they don't spread it. And that's what we did in transit and when he's here.