<p>Gee, I hope not and I hope that the bridal shop has insurance that will cover the losses that will likely be incurred due to them being shut down and “sanitized.” I wonder if they have coverage that could cover reduced business and being in self-imposed quarantine as well? I suspect no one has such coverage.</p>
<p>Lol, Bay. </p>
<p>CDC is now contacting people on the flight to Cleveland. Vinson was showing symptoms of headache and malaise then. </p>
<p>Dallas is putting 50 HCW under house quarantine. No going anywhere. </p>
<p>CNN reports that Texas Pres is two-thirds empty. </p>
<p>WHO just doubled the recommended quarantine period to 42 days.</p>
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<p>I didn’t phrase myself clearly. </p>
<p>What I meant was that the plunge was caused by news of Nixon’s phlebitis, not by any loss of productivity or the actual performance of the companies devalued. The phlebitis-sparked plunge in stock prices would indeed affect the actual operation of the companies, and most likely negatively. </p>
<p>I agree with what AW says in #1043</p>
<p>^ So WHO is going “hysterical” :)</p>
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<p>They may not have a fever, but they will usually have one of the “flu like symptoms,” such as headache, muscle pain, malaise. Flu like symptoms for 1-3 days, then usually moves on to the vomiting and diarrhea, then on to the really serious stuff. (I saw a breakdown of this by days, but can’t find it). JMO, but a nurse who has cared for an ebola patient who begins “feeling funny” should have a clue that there is something wrong. But denial can be a powerful coping skill.</p>
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<p>That’s really interesting. Real bummer for anyone exposed. Talk about torture.</p>
<p>There are also folks who at a baseline don’t feel all that great on a daily basis and it can be hard to gauge when it’s their “regular” feeling junk or has turned into something more. I know quite a few folks whose baseline is that way. </p>
<p>I agree that someone who has been caring for an ebola patient SHOULD be on heightened alert for symptoms and extra cautious not to expose others. It is really hard to put yourself in the shoes of these people who cared for Duncan, since it appears that many may not have had much training in dealing with infectious diseases, particularly ebola, and very little guidance on what to be on the look out for. </p>
<p>If fever was supposed to be one of the big warning signs for them and the person didn’t start running that until later, and the other symptoms might be allergies, the start of an innocuous cold or something similar, it’s hard to say. As they say, hindsight is always 20-20.</p>
<p>About that incubation period for Ebola:</p>
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<p><a href=“Examiner is back - Examiner.com”>Examiner is back - Examiner.com; </p>
<p>@Mainelonghorn, I need to correct something I told you. Apparently with ebola, lab technicians must practice precautions way beyond “Universal.” </p>
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<p><a href=“Ebola - Wikipedia”>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ebola_virus_disease</a></p>
<p>Doubling the quarantine time to 42 days will be a huge financial burden for the employers and employees affected, especially when several employees are at the same company, like Texas Pres! If they are given leave with pay, that’s a huge amount, especially times 77 employees, 6 crew members from one Frontier flight and likely a similar amount for the other one, plus the staff that cleaned the airplanes, plus the bridal shop. The employers will likely need replacements to perform the work that the quarantined employees can’t do and still need to have done. There will be significant financial impacts!</p>
<p>If they are on leave without pay, how are they supposed to pay their bills and support their families? I would doubt many have any insurance that would cover these issues. </p>
<p>TatinG, can you provide a link to the WHO 42-day quarantine recommendation?</p>
<p>Louise is NOT going to like this. I wonder if she will remain on forced quarantine.</p>
<p>Yes, a link would be helpful to control the spread of FUD. Topical googling did not pull anything other than the 42 day outlier reports. </p>
<p>These employees will just refuse to care for Ebola patients unless they are guaranteed compensation.</p>
<p>The WHO is reported a famine crisis in the countries affected Ebola and quarantine. They are expecting more than 200,000 people to go hungry. Good luck keeping that quarantine.</p>
<p>On another note, non of the Duncan family members have been infected. Very impressive or just a testament that this is not a highly contagious virus until the end stages.</p>
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<p>The link is provided by scout in #1109.</p>
<p>Here’s another link. Yes, I think there has to be some guarantee that people will get some compensation or a guard will have to be sure folks maintain the quarantine. </p>
<p><a href=“Shock W.H.O. report: Ebola has 42-day incubation period, not 21 days! - NaturalNews.com”>http://www.naturalnews.com/047267_ebola_outbreak_incubation_period_viral_transmission.html</a></p>
<p>A video of Nina at Presby. Must be recent because she talks about going to Maryland. And she looks very good.</p>
<p><a href=“- YouTube”>- YouTube;
<p>There is also a reference made to her “volunteering” to work with Mr. Duncan. I suspected as much. What a generous young lady. I’m so sorry the system failed her.</p>
<p>Just saw this video on CNN. Yes, she looks great - was sitting up in bed, laughing, etc. I wish I looked that good when I’m sick!</p>