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Firestone Stopped Ebola in Its Tracks (npr.org)
183 points by mdturnerphys on Oct 8, 2014 | hide | past | favorite | 96 comments



Honestly what it really boils down to is resources and money ("resource" can also be described as "money" therefore really money and money).

Up until very recently there were simply not enough hazmat suits, not enough burn-able bedding, not enough people (who wants to work with Ebola?), not enough disinfectant, and heck even clean water in SOME areas.

Then you have to consider how damn hot it is there, so a $5 hazmat suit may not cut it (this article covers that). Now you're dealing with suits costing tens of times more than that for basic AC, just to allow the people in them to work longer shifts.

You also have a lot of local population pushback. The hazmat suits scare people, and all locals see is Ebola patients go into treatment and die. There is a lot of suspicion that Westerners are getting people sick to kill them, so they hide away family members until they get infectious.

What can be done? Money, and resources. It isn't a magic bullet but if you train a metric ton of local people and give them everything they could possibly need it would at least slow the spread if not reverse it entirely...

PS - This article is exactly WHY I am not legitimately concerned about a wide-spread infection in the Western world. We are simply too rich, we have or can acquire the resources, and even your average Joe Smith on the street can Google how to protect themselves from Ebola exposure.


>This article is exactly WHY I am not legitimately concerned about a wide-spread infection in the Western world.

Leaving aside the moral argument of preventing huge numbers of innocent people from dying Ebola if we can, there are two reason we in the west should be concerned:

1. There is a serious risk that Ebola will mutate to become more infectious. It is very unlikely to become airborne (this is about as likely as pigs becoming airborne), but it could relatively easily mutate to slow down its kill speed. At the moment Ebola kills so quickly that there is little time for a patient to spread it to other people. Ebola is under huge selection pressure to slow down the disease progression in humans. We could see a strain arise that takes a month to kill you where you are asymptotically infectious for a couple of weeks. Model this sort of virus and things look far less rosy for us in the west. The more people we let Ebola infect the more likely that such a strain will arise.

2. Once the number of cases get very large (25,000 a day by Jan 2015 according to the CDC) this is going to start disrupting international trade as countries close their borders. We already saw the sort of recession that can result from disruptions to trade when this happened in the GFC and the Asian crisis in the 90s. With interest rates at or near zero in most countries there is not much that can be done to buffer us economically.


the real threat is that this disease is going to come to more Westernize countries and fester amongst poor populations who already do not trust their local officials. combine this with a sense of entitlement far too many people have when it comes to travel and restrictions of such, already in the US there is push back from those being monitored who had contact with the Dallas patient. We even have protesters rallying because a dog was put down.

How do you contain irrational actions, the mutation of the disease may occur or not occur, but damn if a bunch of people aren't exercising self destructive behavior.

People love to ridicule the Africans suffering through this as backward and superstitious all the while ignoring that entitlement, arrogance, and such, will cause similar containment issues in supposedly better countries.

The fact that traffic hasn't been stopped already is criminal, its starting to read like World War Z. Europe will have it worse as they cannot easily control people getting in, the US has an ocean but air travel tends to mitigate that.


"The fact that traffic hasn't been stopped already is criminal,..."

Something, something, no city in the first world is more than 24 hours away from food riots, something, something.


>Ebola is under huge selection pressure to slow down the disease progression in humans. We could see a strain arise that takes a month to kill you where you are asymptotically infectious for a couple of weeks.

The virus doesn't gave a goal, to kill the patient. The death of the host is just an unfortunate side effect that really harms the spread of the virus. The really successful viruses have mutated to a form where they don't kill the host, don't make you sick enough to stay in bed, and just make you go to work and cough and sneeze all over everyone at the office.


This may all be true, but it does not say anything useful about Ebola and what the selection pressure it is under. At the moment the speed of disease progression to death is so fast that it is slowing the spread of Ebola. If the Ebola took longer to kill it would infect more people.

The problem with Ebola is its mechanism of transmission is quite closely linked to the reason it is lethal (large virus production and body fluid leakage). It would take a very large leap in genome space (mutations) to turn Ebola into a virus that is efficiently transmitted, but causes limited symptoms like a Rhinovirus. It is not a large jump in genome space for it to just become slower in progression.


I gave this some thought, and it occurred to me that smallpox, even after co-evolving with humans for at least 10,000 years, still had a mortality rate comparable to Ebola today, a similar incubation period, and a similar amount of time before the patient was incapacitated.

edit:

It seems that this wasn't accurate. From wikipedia:

>In the United States and South Africa a much milder form of smallpox, variola minor, was recognized just before the close of the 19th century. By the mid-20th century variola minor occurred along with variola major, in varying proportions, in many parts of Africa. Patients with variola minor experience only a mild systemic illness, are often ambulant throughout the course of the disease, and are therefore able to more easily spread disease. Infection with v. minor induces immunity against the more deadly variola major form. Thus as v. minor spread all over the USA, into Canada, the South American countries and Great Britain it became the dominant form of smallpox, further reducing mortality rates.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smallpox#Other_history


In regards smallpox there were multiple strains circulating at any point in time and some were more deadly than others. Which ones spread at any point in time depended on both chance and the particular selection conditions in the population. In populations with high levels of immunity (either natural or acquired) the more mild strains tended to spread, while in populations with low levels of immunity the more lethal strains would tend to spread (lot of complicated reasons for this).

Your general idea is correct though. Just because a disease has been in a population for a long time does not means that it is harmless, not are all new diseases dangerous.


Perhaps the problem is your choice of words. Saying "selection pressure" implies intent, determination, a collective mission, if you will. Evolution has none of those drivers. It has no objectives. It sets no goals. And it certainly does not operate in some collective purpose driven form within a population.

It's random mutations that either survive the environmental contex within which they exist, or they don't. In this case the fact that more people are infected does not mean that we are at the doorstep of a "super-ebola" mutation any time soon. It could take ONE mutation or 100 MILLION YEARS of intense mutations to arrive at "super-ebola". Nobody knows.

The virus certainly isn't under any "selection pressure" to do a darn thing. It could become perfectly benign in six months just as much as it could become horrifically good at killing us by the millions.


I guess I could be accused of using technical language with an audience that does not have an biology background. "Selection pressure" means something specific in biology and I used it in that manner.

To put what I said in layman’s terms an Ebola viral strain that has by chance a mutation that results in slower disease progression will have more opportunities to infect people than one that kills people faster. If out of the trillion and trillions of new Ebola viral particles being created every second in west Africa one viral particle were to be randomly created that happened to kill people slower, then anyone infected with this new strain would be more likely to live longer than if they had been infected with an original virus particle. This person would then have a greater chance to infect new people and so on. Such a strain would be more contagious, and depending on the exact properties of the strain it may be able to spread even in western countries.

I am not saying that this is likely (nobody know), but I would prefer we stop generating all those trillions of random Ebola viral particles and so end this rather dangerous experiment.


Thanks, learned something new. Obviously not a biologist. Perhaps a link to the definition would have been useful being that one can't assume the audience to familiar with terms that can easily be confused for something else.

Now to make sure I understand it. Are you proposing that selection pressure is being exerted, among other things, by he time it takes for the virus to kill the host?

Well, I guess one could say everything exerts selection pressure. What makes you focus on time-to-kill? Is there any evidence that time-to-kill is the most important variable here? For example, if the virus mutated in such a way that it caused the host to not develop a fever until a few days after it is communicable it could become really deadly very quickly? The same would be the case if it caused more violent coughing, etc.

In other words, now that I understand how you are using the term "selection pressure" I also understand that time-to-kill is but one of the factors causing it. Why do you focus on time-to-kill when arguably it is the easiest to control by means of isolation.

To further clarify, if someone gets sick with the current time-to-kill duration it will be identified and dealt with in N days. If time-to-kill doubled due to an unfortunate mutation it is unlikely that it will take 2N days to identify and deal with a patient. In other words, the fact that it takes twice as long for the virus to kill the patient is probably irrelevant. This, of course, only holds if the fabric of society holds. If you have sick and contagious people roaming the streets coughing on everyone they come across all bets are off. Then again, that would be true without any change to the time-to-kill time.

So, yeah, not sure I get why you think time-to-kill selection pressure is important in the context of a society that hasn't completely broken down.


If time to kill after becoming infectious increases, then the number of people the host is able to infect becomes greater.

If time to kill before becoming infectious increases then the host can travel further before infecting others and so spread a disease outside an affected area.

If this strain of ebola was killing ~90% in a few days, rather than ~50% in a week or so, then it probably would never have spread this far.

In terms of public health if it had been a lot more deadly to the individual, then it would probably have killed a lot less people overall.

Most outbreaks of an infectious disease become less deadly the further they spread as the longer lived hosts are the one's more likely to be able to pass things on.


> If time to kill after becoming infectious increases, then the number of people the host is able to infect becomes greater.

No. That is not correct. And that is my point. The virus can only infect more people if those infected with it are left to roam freely in the general population. If, for example, everyone is diagnosed within three days of showing symptoms it doesn't matter if time-to-kill is 10 days or 30 days. Those infected will be identified and isolated within the first three days. So, the virus will not infect more people.

What you are saying is absolutely true if society breaks down and infected people are free to roam and transmit the virus or if viral control mechanisms (identification, isolation and treatment) are substandard or nonexistent.

> If time to kill before becoming infectious increases then the host can travel further before infecting others and so spread a disease outside an affected area.

You are confusing time-to-kill with time-to-becoming-contagious (or whatever we want to call it). One does not imply the other. I am only asking about justification for time-to-kill being important in the context of the identification and isolation of people who are contagious within N days of showing signs. As I said before, if you catch them within N days and isolate them the fact that people can die within X days or 2X days is utterly irrelevant. If you don't isolate them the situation is, of course, very different.

> If this strain of ebola was killing ~90% in a few days, rather than ~50% in a week or so, then it probably would never have spread this far.

I don't think this is true either. The death of the person carrying the virus is NOT the end of the virus. A virus killing the infected in five days vs. ten days might be far worst. It depends on a huge number of factors. For example, take the case of a person who takes the subway to go to work every day. He becomes contagious after 21 days and does not go to the doctor until the fourth day. He has potentially infected a massive number of people. The fact that he dies on day 5 or day 10 is meaningless. The only way it could become meaningful is if this person, again, is roaming free after becoming contagious.

I think what's going on here is that many are making the assumption that people will do just that: No medical attention, no isolation, just going around infecting people for days and days without a care in the world. That's not the way things work unless society completely breaks down. Hence my questioning of the assertion that a longer time-to-kill is, by itself, significant in any way.

So I say again:

It is absolutely crucial that we take these outbreaks as the existential threats they represent. They can start small and virtually without notice. People run a fever pop some pills and continue about life for a few days. Failing to recognize the need for serious medical attention they go about life and infect many more. When they finally feel crappy enough to go to the doctor they've already set the chain reaction in motion. If medical professionals are not on their guard and dismiss the patient they could make things worst as well as exposing themselves and other medical professionals to the active virus. Imagine an outbreak of 50 or 100 cases in a city like Austin, TX. It will quickly change society for quite some time. If medical professionals fall victim it will only add a scary layer to the equation. The key to all of this is to both prevent it from reaching our shores and, if it does, have a massive information and awareness campaign to be able to stop it. It wouldn't take much to be in a situation where you have to ground every plane in the US and tell people to stay home for 21 days if a large enough outbreak happens in a mid to large city.

The key is prevention and quick isolation.

Not sure why we still have flights incoming from the afflicted areas without having them land at a military base for a mandatory 21 day holding period before contact with the general population.

I really hope this doesn't derail.


The virus can only infect more people if those infected with it are left to roam freely in the general population.

Tell that to the healthcare workers who are having to treat patients in full suits and are still getting exposed. It doesn't matter where you are, the longer you are infectious, the more chance you have of infecting someone, so strains that keep you alive longer are more likely to be passed on.

You are confusing time-to-kill with time-to-becoming-contagious

I misworded it cos I was tired, but yes I did mean time to becoming contagious for the second point.


Oh, please. Think about what you just said. Could it be that they got infected because they did not use proper procedure while wearing or removing the protective suits? Or is the explanation that despite protective suits they contracted the virus?

Let's see. If it's number one, well, it has nothing to do with the time it takes for the virus to kill the patient.

And, guess what? If it is number two it also has nothing to do with the time it takes for the virus to kill a patient. They are probably using the wrong suits. Or maybe they e Were damaged . Or maybe they were reused or not sanitized or...

Once a patient is identified and quarantined properly and all safety procedures are followed the time that the virus needs to kill the patient is utterly irrelevant as it pertains to spreading the disease. That should hold for all normal circumstances.


You are confusing the specific with the general. You may as well try and argue temperature from the perspective of a single atom.


The selection pressure doesn't seem to be that huge to me. There are only on the order of 10,000 human cases. That those cases are caused by trillions of ebola viruses doesn't seem relevant to measuring evolutionary pressure.


Selection pressure is the term used widely in evolutionary biology. If you can't get past that choice of words, you wouldn't be able to get anywhere in actually studying the subject, as that choice of words is used throughout.

http://scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?q=selection+pressure+evo...


You said:

"Saying "selection pressure" implies intent, determination, a collective mission, if you will. Evolution has none of those drivers. It has no objectives. It sets no goals. And it certainly does not operate in some collective purpose driven form within a population."

danieltillett said:

"At the moment the speed of disease progression to death is so fast that it is slowing the spread of Ebola. If the Ebola took longer to kill it would infect more people."

This seems like a true statement and in line with your own opinion; I can't quite see what you are objecting to.


The death of the infected isn't necessarily the end of the virus.

It looks like a police officer inspecting the home of the guy who just died in Texas has now contracted ebola. As I understand it he inspected the home days after the patient had been in isolation at the hospital. Apparently there was vomit, fecal matter, blood and who knows what else in there. Why he went in there without protective gear is incomprehensible to me.

The point is that death isn't the end of the virus, it's the end of the host. That's why they are cremating the guy who just died.


>> There is a serious risk that Ebola will mutate to become more infectious.

Not likely. Survival of the fittest for a virus usually means allowing the host to live longer - in other words LESS lethal. It is not likely to become airborne, and if it did it would not be ebola any more. The symptoms of most diseases are not an accident, they are tied to the means of transmission: Colds make you cough and sneeze. Flu makes you cough, sneeze, barf and sweat. Rabies makes you crazy and want to bite. STDs some think may make people horny. Ebola makes you barf, shit, bleed, sweat.

The one scary thing is I once read that a single gene make Ebola hemoragic, and if that were to transfer to a flu, that would be very deadly. But it would also be less virulent due to that same deadliness and so would be selected against as our response to related flu vidii would wipe it out.

None of that is helpful short term, but this notion of the virus getting more horrible than it already is, I don't think so.


>Not likely. Survival of the fittest for a virus usually means allowing the host to live longer - in other words LESS lethal.

Lethality is irrelevant to a virus, all that matters is the probability of transmission. Ebola is about as rapidly deadly as a virus can be and still be viable. The selection pressure is all on shedding large numbers of virus particle in all directions - there is no selection pressure on preventing you from dying.

So why does Ebola kill then? It is basically a side effect of its mechanisms of transmission. It diverts your body into producing an enormous number of viral particles and then makes your body “leaky” so that they are released into the environment to infect someone else. If you were to design a virus based on Ebola from scratch for maximum transmission in humans you would slow down the disease progression, but you would find it hard to remove the lethality.

Another way of thinking about Ebola is that the current strain is not at the local maximum for optimal transmission in humans as it kills too quickly. Any slow down in disease progression will cause the infectiousness in humans to increase. This is why this is something we should be worried about.


The GP said "more infectious", not "more lethal".

Your comment is violently agreeing with his point.


Yes I know, but I thought it better to explain in a different manner than just point this out.

Another way to look at the problem is how optimised the current strain is for human transmission. As a zoonotic virus it is not very likely that Ebola is well adapted for effective human-to-human transmission. We should expect that the more people that it passes through the better adapted to humans Ebola will become and the more difficult it will be to contain. The unknown is we don’t know how well adapted it could become to humans, but personally I would rather not run this experiment in the wild to find out.


My point was that more infections would mean less lethal in this case.


Which is a confusing way of putting it because being less lethal would make it kill more people.


"2. Once the number of cases get very large (25,000 a day by Jan 2015 according to the CDC) this is going to start disrupting international trade as countries close their borders."

This is what has me worried. It seems somewhat likely that overreactions will cause more harm (and possibly kill more people) than the disease itself.


I would agree that the economic effects are much more likely to affect most of us in the west directly than the chance of coming down with Ebola. The world economy is not really in a good state to handle an external shock like massive trade disruption right now.


You can bet Madagascar will be the first to close their borders.


For those that didn't get the reference - this is a reference to the web game pandemic in which the objective is to design a virus/bacteria/parasite to infect the entire world - Madagascar is the hardest country to infect in this game because it only has one port in the game.


It's not like the US intentionally infected a bunch of people in a foreign country with a disease because they were curious about it, then waited 65 years to apologize for their crimes.[1]

And certainly the US government would never lie about treating people for a disease in a government program, and then just watch them die instead of actually helping them.[2]

Snark aside, have you ever considered that maybe there's a reason people don't trust the US government to act ethically or in their interests?

[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guatemala_syphilis_experiment

[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuskegee_syphilis_experiment


You're referring to things that happened 60 or 70 years ago as a reference basis for trust, for a government who has as its President a man born 53 years ago.

There's a long list of warranted criticism to throw at the US Government, but I don't see how your examples are valid criticism of today's government. The US Government of 1950 no longer exists. Yet you're referring to it as though it does.

I guess Angela Merkel is not to be trusted because of what happened 70 years ago? Or Shinzo Abe?


Well, 60-70 years is about the horizon over which previously secret programs become revealed. The US has been continually caught performing unethical actions in secret which either involve human testing (occasionally on their own citizens) or subverting medical programs for ulterior motives.

There was drug testing that the US got caught at 50 years ago, and only halted 40 years ago.[1] And in the past few years, they subverted a vaccination program in to being a tool of a spy agency.[2]

Had the Nazi regime merely "reformed" rather than been completely replaced following a war, apologized 60-70 years after the fact for their genocide during WW2 which they'd attempted to keep secret, and been caught at least once a decade running similar covert programs, I'd think citing a well documented historic case of their misdeeds would actually be a pretty good way to show exactly why people don't think highly of them.

[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_MKUltra

[2] Any recent news about how they found bin Laden.


You always here about this stuff 60-70 years afterwards unless it was leaked. This is because the people involved are long buried and everyone alive can deny involvement...


"It happened before I was born" is a pretty good denial of involvement.


Whether it's rational to not trust either the US or German government because of what happened in the past, the actual situation is that such actions are not easily forgotten. There are plenty of people who still carry suspicions against Germany for what happened 70 years ago.


What's the international crime statute of limitations these days? Maybe Africans don't want U.S. or European help because those countries used to steal Africans and turn them into slaves.

Or--maybe Africans actually do want U.S. and European help, and have repeatedly asked for it, and have expressed thanks that it is now being mobilized.

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/13/world/africa/liberian-pres...


Your comments too are quite irrelevant to the topic of this thread, which is about efforts to prevent the transmission of ebola.


I was trying to shed some light on why it was a tough battle to get people to trust Western medical teams, which is entirely relevant to the ebola crisis as this distrust is one of the main barriers to arresting the spread of ebola in Africa.


This is a really important point to consider. We have already had health teams killed by people in the affected countries out of fear. If we were going to start implementing an effective quarantine and treatment process then we are going to need a large amount of security and enforcement resources to support the health care teams. This is going to have to come from outside as the countries affected don’t have the resources.


We have already had health teams killed by people in the affected countries out of fear.

Source? Where is there a detailed description of exactly what happened?


http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-29256443

Yes. There is. Long story short - health workers killed by scared villagers.


Thank you for the link about one health team killed in one village in one country. (The comment to which I was replying, not posted by you, mentioned "health teams," plural, that were killed, without specifying a place.) The link you kindly shared reports,

"Eight members of a team trying to raise awareness about Ebola have been killed by villagers using machetes and clubs in Guinea, officials say.

"Some of the bodies - of health workers, local officials and journalists - were found in a septic tank in a village school near the city of Nzerekore."

Reading this, I'm not entirely sure whether or not any Western people were part of the group who visited the village. The participant here to whom I was replying referred specifically to

a tough battle to get people to trust Western medical teams

after previously writing

have you ever considered that maybe there's a reason people don't trust the US government to act ethically or in their interests?

I have considered that possibility, and that is why I am looking for evidence. Where is the evidence that people in west Africa specifically distrust the United States as a source of medical aid more than they distrust their own local officials or modernity in general? (The west Africans I know locally, by definition people who have traveled to the United States to settle and work here, don't seem to have a general attitude of distrust of the United States government. Many of the health care workers who cared for my late dad in the years he was paralyzed after a spinal cord injury were nurses and nursing aids from Liberia.)

I appreciate your follow-up to my question. I'd like to see more on-point journalistic sources from other people who have commented in this thread.

AFTER EDIT: I was aware of the news story from National Public Radio[1] submitted to open this thread (of course!) about one area in Liberia that has enjoyed success in stopping spread of ebola as I asked the questions above in the thread. Fear of Westerners does not appear to be general in west Africa, not even in areas infected by ebola. That's why I think some of the comments here seem so off-topic. They refer to nothing in the article.

[1] http://www.npr.org/blogs/goatsandsoda/2014/10/06/354054915/f...


You may also be interested in this article. It also contains some internal references and links.

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/ebola-conspiracy-the...

There's more than just a single, isolated incident of violence and/or distrust.


You had me until I read the article. Then I came back to the link and saw that the article is from the Mirror, widely known to be a completely unreliable tabloid newspaper dealing in sensationalism rather than careful field-based reporting.


I was unaware of that. This was the first link I found when searching for the subject. You can find others with ease.


We also need to stop intentionally delivering fake medical care

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-cia-fake-vacci...

and then wait decades to earn trust back.


That episode probably (hopefully?) hasn't much to do with the Ebola thing. Apparently it has been a huge problem for the polio eradication effort in Pakistan. A very, very serious error by the CIA.


It may turn that those actions by the CIA result in more deaths than occurred as a result of 9/11. Absolutely no excuse or justification for using the cover of medical treatment for their para-military reconnaissance in that situation, particularly as it turns out it was never needed anyways.


There was Islamist opposition to polio eradication campaigns before anyone in the West was sure that Osama Bin Laden was in Pakistan. (That's why it surprised me that vaccination campaigns were used as a ruse for verifying his whereabouts, but apparently Bin Laden's personal crazy ideas didn't include opposition to vaccination.) It's not entirely a coincidence that even before anyone heard about Bin Laden, the last few places on earth with endemic polio were all places with militant Islamist movements. Personally, I would rather have my children live long healthy lives, no matter whose idea it was to invent vaccines or to use a vaccination campaign as a pretext to find an international fugitive, but logic doesn't always appeal to people who are already making excuses for being illogical.


particularly as it turns out it was never needed anyways.

Let's avoid armchair quarterbacking.


I was more commenting on zero dark thirty, in which the attempt to get genetic material by the doctor was prevented, and played no role in the actual decision to storm the compound.

You are correct in that the reality may have been somewhat different than the movie.


Your comment is quite irrelevant to the topic of this thread, which is efforts to prevent deaths from ebola, a disease for which there is currently no vaccine.


It's not about vaccines, it's about doctors' access to patients.


> This article is exactly WHY I am not legitimately concerned about a wide-spread infection in the Western world.

I guess you have never been in a disaster in the western world. Well, I have. More than once. And I have seen what people can devolve into. I'll probably get voted down mercilessly for saying this:

The truth of the matter is that "civilization" is thin-skinned. It doesn't take that much for people to revert to cave-men behavior. The worst thing we can do, by far, is to adopt a smug "won't happen here" attitude in the "civilized", "educated" and "sophisticated" west.

The minute we don't attack this as the existential threat it is, we are simply setting ourselves up for a catastrophe of unimaginable proportions.


It's not just resources, it's also about trust.

The government/foreign operations had basically shut down Ebola earlier in the epidemic. But there was an atmosphere of conspiracy theories associating the operation with the outbreak of the disease. Ebola cases went underground. The foreigners had started to pack up and go home when it reemerged.


I do agree that we(humans from other countries) should all just dump resources on the people there -

but I think the legitimate concern here is that while we squabble about resources and their cost, the virus spreads and mutates - and if it makes the jump to airborne, I think it will make the average Joe Smith pretty vulnerable.


It's a prisoner's dilemma sort of thing. The best outcome for ME is if YOU dump lots of money into it, so I sit around on my hands hoping you take action, while YOU do the same waiting for ME to take action. As a result, we arrive at the worse outcome- nobody does anything.


This is the philosophical explanation for government taxation. In this particular case I think we can say that it is now beyond voluntary funded NGOs to solve.


Donation pages for Médecins Sans Frontières:

http://www.msf.org.uk/make-a-donation

https://donate.doctorswithoutborders.org/

Send MSF money and we will see more successes like this.

Ebola can be beaten, but only if the resources are there.


All this story tells us is that what we have known since the mid 70s that if you can get and keep patients in a proper infection control facility that you can stop Ebola.

The problem we have right now is that we don’t have anywhere near enough functioning infection control facilities in the affect countries and we are not doing anywhere near enough to put them in place. The scale required is beyond anything ever attempted outside of a war setting.


"They grabbed a bunch of hazmat suits for dealing with chemical spills at the rubber factory and gave them to the hospital staff. The suits worked just as well for Ebola cases."

I suppose having a rubber factory nearby helped a lot. Not to diminish their managerial achievement, but I imagine getting proper equipment might be a major obstacle in other parts of the country.


I think a "corporate micro-city" might be the solution for poverty in the 3rd world. I think a joint venture with google, facebook, apple, and 1st world governments etc to build a "hong kong/singapore styled city" next to a 3rd world capital could be the catalyst for transforming the country. I don't think providing internet access is enough. You need to break the cycle of poverty from birth to college. And you need a vehicle/brand that the 1st world can invest in/trust. I think you can avoid the obvious pitfalls by creating multiple independent neighboring "corporate mirco-cities" so there is competition for residents.


>> I think a "corporate micro-city" might be the solution for poverty in the 3rd world.

Funny, I was thinking it contributes to the problem. It clearly creates inequality which can be seen in this article. The company simply doing the minimum to exploit the resources in the area with no spill-over into the larger region. It would be more helpful to the locals if they were vertically integrated right there - producing tires. That would require building more infrastructure and more manufacturing capability and such. But no, they just want to grow the rubber there and keep the higher value stuff elsewhere.

To clarify, I'm not saying "companies=bad" just that companies only have self-interest and are not inherently good for the broader region they inhabit. This is abundantly clear from TFA which I don't think is the message they wanted us to take away.


Interestingly, that's similar to what Firestone did nearly a century ago - built a city in Liberia, and has been the major influence of the city ever since.

I'm not sure about Apple, Google, Facebook, et al (and even less hopeful about the success of building an ultra-modern city right next to an existing, poor-er [by comparison] capital) ... but ... there's a good notion here.

With a large plantation of rubber trees, it makes sense for Firestone. Rather than re-creating silicon valley in the jungle, finding and exploiting an economic resource there - and doing well by the locals at the same time - seems to be a great model to follow.

From the article:

Asked what's needed to turn that around, Flannery says, "More Firestones" — places that have the money, resources and unwavering determination to stop Ebola.

Maybe I'm oversimplifying, but this sounds like a situation where what we tend to call globalization turns out rather well for all sides.


An idea along these lines is that of the Honduran ZEDEs: http://fee.org/the_freeman/detail/startup-city-redux

(I'd link to a less ideological source but libertarians and their fellow travelers are the ones giving them the most comprehensive coverage and the Wikipedia article is atrocious.)


All I can do is scratch my head, wondering what the reporter isn't saying. Just what is it that Firestone is doing differently? It sure appears to be working, so it would be great to replicate if possible.

Marbel is a company town of 80,000 ... a city more or less owned and run by Firestone, benevolently it appears, for nearly a century.

Perhaps they're better at guarding and enforcing their border ... effectively keeping themselves mostly isolated from disease vectors coming in.

Perhaps that helps them avoid being outnumbered by the sick and, more importantly, the ignorant [1]. After all, it's easy to keep an eye on those exposed when they're comparatively few and you have reliable information ... which comes from having a literate, educated population you've been working with for decades.

Perhaps it's also easier to get honest [2], voluntary compliance when you're a close-knit community and the infected are usually coming from the outside (and, again, are few in number).

It sure is interesting that while Firestone has hazmat suits intended for dealing with chemical spills, that infected nurse in Spain [3] says the blame goes to her Level 2 biosafety suit since it wasn't the preferred Level 4. Please correct me if I'm wrong ... I get the sense Firestone's suits aren't comparable to Level 4.

Contrast this to the success (lack thereof) of the CDC, WHO, RSF, and other aid organizations. Sadly, they're either overwhelmed or incompetant. So what's needed is more Firestones, really? That's interesting.

-----

[1] Yes, ignorance is massively lethal. See this story from August, of a mob who decided it would be fun to ransack and rob and already-overwhelmed Ebola clinic, stealing everything and taking it home ... all while taking Ebola home with them.

http://pjmedia.com/richardfernandez/2014/08/16/man-without-a...

[2] As opposed to the diplomat who deceived his way into continuing on to a meeting of regional leaders ... thereby effectively causing the outbreak in Nigeria. And as opposed to the CDC today handing out fliers in airports and expecting voluntary compliance, in a sense informing travelers of how to lie in order to get into the USA where the good hospitals are.

[3] http://pjmedia.com/richardfernandez/2014/10/07/paradigm-shif...


> It sure is interesting that while Firestone has hazmat suits intended for dealing with chemical spills, that infected nurse in Spain [3] says the blame goes to her Level 2 biosafety suit since it wasn't the preferred Level 4. Please correct me if I'm wrong ... I get the sense Firestone's suits aren't comparable to Level 4.

As unfortunate as it is, it's more likely that the Spanish nurse was infected while removing her PPE.

Removing contaminated PPE is a non-trivial process. It requires practice, strict attention to detail, and ideally an equally trained buddy watching you while you're doing it. From what I've read, it sounds like they were just given 10 minutes of training.

Which isn't to say that better equipment and a proper decon shower wouldn't have helped. But the training is just as important as the equipment.


>All I can do is scratch my head, wondering what the reporter isn't saying. Just what is it that Firestone is doing differently? It sure appears to be working, so it would be great to replicate if possible.

They are doing nothing different than what has worked in all the other Ebola outbreaks which is catch the outbreak early and implement effective infection control.

A better question is why did this outbreak get out of control? The sad reason is incompetence. The WHO staff in west Africa appointed to watch out for Ebola outbreaks were, to quote Peter Piot [1], “[not] the most capable people but ... political appointees”. Some genius had also decided that gutting the department for hemorrhagic fever and the one responsible for the management of epidemic emergencies at the WHO was a great idea. This meant that there was no one around to respond. The outbreak was allowed to run wild for six months until it got so big that it overwhelmed the local health authorities (this occurred around August) and the case numbers took off exponentially.

[1] http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/interview-with-pet...


"Forty-eight were treated in the hospital and 18 survived."

That's an interesting point on the actual lethality of the disease under more modern treatment conditions. Still, 60% is only slightly less scary than 90%.


Wow, a company that can handle a thing like this in stride has to make a good product. I will look at them next time I need tires.


Wow, someone that understands capitalism. :)


Or is simply vulnerable to good marketing campaigns.

It's been a while since I used Firestone tires, but I'll bet anyone quite a lot that their product development and quality control have very little to do with their human resources practices in the third world. (Even though I think they sound really good, too.)


It's a marketing campaign that ends up helping people and the real world.

They have that money to spare because their customers think their products are desirable.

It seems to me you're trying to detract from what happened here by trying to argue that their products aren't that good? I'm not sure what you're implying, but I'll repeat, they've only been able to help, even as a marketing ploy, because they have accumulated profits - proof that their customers value what they produce.

The quality of their product, in the eyes of their customers, has everything to do with their ability to pull off this stunt.


I'm not trying to detract from anything they've done, and their products are fine, as far as I know.

What I'm saying is that there is no correlation between their success in dealing with an infectious disease in the area around one of their facilities and the quality of their consumer products.


The quality of their products (in the eyes of their consumers) is what enabled them to have all this money sitting around, that came from profits, to help deal with this situation.

I see some correlation there, no?


Nigeria has ended Ebola too. But its proximity to the main infections could mean reoccurence.


Amazing what happens when western money has an interest in Africa.


Anyone is free to use this Ebola awareness poster I made http://bit.ly/1vF1COO


Also, the UCSC ebola portal is worth a look: https://genome.ucsc.edu/ebolaPortal


Yep. Ebola is just not a very scary disease. Its incubation period is short and reliable, it doesn't become infectious until symptoms display, it's not particularly infectious in the first place, and its transmission mechanisms are downright pedestrian. 90% of the first world can make themselves completely safe by googling "Ebola Safety". The other 10% are homeless or hippies and will either get similarly informative pamphlets or are living in communes and won't infect the rest of us. And even if all of that fails, we have the industry to literally give every American a hazmat suit. Ebola may become a crisis, but it will not become a pandemic.


Well, it's one of those low-probability high-risk diseases.

You probably won't get it, but if you do there's a better than middling chance you'll die a horrible death and if you survive you're guaranteed it won't be any fun. Oh, and there's no cure and basically no treatment. You're on your own.

The treatment for it is basically "drink lots of fluids", "keep pumping blood into the patient" (since they're literally losing it all out of every hole in their body) and "pray real hard".

Even with all these resources the tale is pretty bad

Forty-eight were treated in the hospital and 18 survived.

Less than 40% survival rate.


A moderately effective treatment for ebola will come out of all of this.

There hasn't been a huge sum of money poured into ebola therapies, and we already have promising options. ZMapp or a similar treatment will be scaled up over time, and if ZMapp proves itself to work across a larger base of test patients, we'll simply begin keeping X doses available at all times to shut down ebola outbreaks in the future.


That's exactly what people said when AIDS first showed up.


And they were right.

Magic Johnson was diagnosed with HIV in 1991, during the relative early days. 23 years later, he's apparently very healthy. The first AIDS cases in the US were in the mid 1970s give or take, with the first recognized at the time to be in 1980. So 11 years after recognizing that first case, they were able to take someone like Johnson and keep him alive indefinitely with a virus that was thought to be a death sentence in 1991.

And that's all prior to having cracked the human genome, prior to understanding stem cells, and so on. So progress was naturally slower in the 1980s or 1991 than it is now. The biotech industry was nowhere near as large in 1980 or 1990 as it is now (Genentech having been founded just in 1976).

Ebola doesn't stand a chance, even though the short term will be scary.


> Ebola doesn't stand a chance, even though the short term will be scary.

Never ever underestimate the rate at which viruses can adapt to new circumstances.


... and treatment for AIDS has improved phenomenally.


The first world had problems with the single patient in Texas. He was not quarantined white showing symptoms and came in contact with many people. Then those people were not immediately quarantined.

All it takes to get a pandemic going is to lose track of a few dozen infected people. That is easy to do.

You'll probably be very disappointed in the "first" world when you see how it responds if this outbreak spreads further. No one will give out hazmat suits in time, even if we have such an industry.


We're dealing with a living thing. Ebola has never been in a large enough human population to evolve much, but perhaps now it will. We've already underestimated the transmission rates.

Keep in mind how many medical professionals have become infected. These people have a lot more knowledge than somebody who just "googled" some safety tips.

There's a good chance that the active strains are more transmissible than we assume, and might become worse through natural selection.


>There's a good chance that the active strains are more transmissible than we assume, and might become worse through natural selection

We actually have a very poor idea of what is going on the ground in most of the affected countries as the hospital system has effectively stopped admitting new patients. The CDC is using a correction factor of 2.5 (i.e. there are 2.5 case outside of the hospitals for every case in inside), but once you stop admitting new patients then you really have no idea how many infected people there are.


Let me respond point by point.

> Ebola is just not a very scary disease.

Ebola is a frightening disease. On a psychological point, I feel like the shock of the symptoms itself is lessened due to the fact that most of the infected have dark skin. End-stage Ebola leads to the patient bleeding everywhere. Not only is the patient bleeding from obvious places like the eyes, nose, mouth, ears, penis, vagina, rectum, the whole body becomes covered with bloody petechiae (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vasculitis#mediaviewer/File:Vas...). On lighter skin, the patient's agony is really apparent. Their bedsheets will be dripping with blood and their eyes swell up and turn a deep maroon color.

> Its incubation period is short and reliable, it doesn't become infectious until symptoms display,

Yep.

> it's not particularly infectious in the first place

I feel like that's a point that doesn't have nearly enough information. Previous outbreaks have generally been limited the virus burning its way through a small population before it can hit a major population center. Healthcare workers who are currently treating Ebola patients (who should know proper protocol), are being infected at a rate far higher than expected. (http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/ebola/25-august-2014/en/)

> its transmission mechanisms are downright pedestrian

I'll grant you that transmission by fluid is generally fairly easy to contain. However, when the patient is draining all of their bodily fluids out onto the floor, cleaning and containment becomes far harder. Not only that, there have been several incidents (at least before this current Mar 2014 outbreak) of patients infecting health workers by coughing and aerosolizing blood droplets into the mouth, nose, and eyes of their caregivers.

> 90% of the first world can make themselves completely safe by googling "Ebola Safety"

I don't think it's that simple. Currently, the CDC holds training sessions for:

"Currently licensed by a recognized professional agency to provide clinical care in some jurisdiction (e.g., hold a medical license to provide care in a state in the United States) and have recent (current or within the past 2 years) relevant experience providing direct care to patients. Participants should be licensed medical doctors (MD, DO, MBBS degrees), licensed nurses (RN, BSN, LPN, etc.), or other licensed clinical care providers (e.g., paramedics, physician assistants, and other clinical providers)."

These training sessions solely concern biohazard safety and last for three full days. Given that the target audience has already has extensive medical training, three full days of lecture, procedure, equipment, and technical training seems far above and beyond what we should expect from a normal citizen. Let me also point out that even with training and equipment, healthcare providers are still getting sick. (http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/hcp/safety-training-course/inde...)

> The other 10% are homeless or hippies and will either get similarly informative pamphlets or are living in communes and won't infect the rest of us.

I don't even know where you get that 10% from. It's also facetious to state that people "living in communes" "won't infect the rest of us"...do people in communes live in outer space?

> And even if all of that fails, we have the industry to literally give every American a hazmat suit.

I'd like to see how you arrived at that conclusion.

> Ebola may become a crisis, but it will not become a pandemic.

I agree. Ebola may not become a pandemic, but it will still cause great suffering to a large amount of people. I'll also grant that until it becomes a real problem in western countries, no one will really make a move as generally, western pharma ignore diseases which don't hold the promise of profit (see schisto). However, there is a very real chance that we can help and reduce the spread of the suffering by taking violent action _now_.

This goes without saying, but the one thing that anybody can do is to donate to Doctors Without Borders or any other institution trying to quell the crisis.

http://www.msf.org/donate


You make a lot of very good points. The only things I disagree with you on is your final point.

>This goes without saying, but the one thing that anybody can do is to donate to Doctors Without Borders or any other institution trying to quell the crisis.

The scale of the outbreak is now beyond what MSF or any NGO can handle. Only the military can now command the resources needed to get things under control. All donating to MSF is doing is delaying the point in which we activate the military.


On your last point. MSF are not just fighting Ebola on the ground, they are also putting pressure on governments. Sending them money helps them have the resources to do both jobs more effectively. Sure, we should be putting pressure on our governments to do more ourselves, but I do not think that there is an inverse relationship between funding MSF and the speed of government response, when MSF are one of the groups trying to increase the rate of government response.


I suspect donations are not going to have any impact on the effectiveness of MSF’s lobbying efforts (i.e. I don’t think MSF’s lobbying for military intervention by the west is money constrained). I am more than happy to be corrected on this if anyone has any data.

What I am hoping by my comment is breaking people out of the thinking that this can be solved by donations to NGO’s like MSF. I believe it is far too big now for any NGO to deal with no matter how well resourced. If we can only get on top of the outbreak by military action lets stop messing around and start lobbying for this directly - every day we delay is only making the problem bigger and harder.


This is a big if - If the data is to be believed, the plots on wikipedia show liberia getting a handle on it in the last couple weeks. The exponential growth in number of cases has been reduced (concave down on the plots). I suspect the people there are finally believing the disease is real and changing their ways, which is reducing transmission. Or it's just a blip or a reduction in quality of the data. I dunno.


>This is a big if - If the data is to be believed, the plots on wikipedia show liberia getting a handle on it in the last couple weeks.

No this is a sign that the hospitals have stopped taking in any new cases as they have reached capacity and hence new cases are not being recorded. No one has any idea of how many new cases there are out in the community. It could be that the R0 has been reduced because of changes in behaviour, or it could be because people are dying at home unrecorded. I hope it is the first, but given the state of things at the moment I fear it is the second.




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