Wednesday, October 29, 2014

By Dr. Sanjay Gupta Ebola is a killer, but it is not very contagious and not a threat in the United States.

We now have a quadrupling down on the stoopid by the .gov controlled media...

Apparently Dr. Gupta was either bribed by the CDC,the Obama admin,Ebola czar Flounder,or he really is that stoopid.
While I'm not a Dr, I did get a passing grade in Middle school biology,and in college I got a passing grade in microbiology.
Anyone with an internet connection,common sense,and a half hour at most can refute Dr. Gupta's idiotic claims. Hell,my 5 year old granddaughter can tell you Ebola is a nasty virus and that our government should not allow people from the countries where Ebola outbreaks are ocurring to come to the U.S.
Either my granddaughter is super-smart-(of course she is-she's my granddaughter)- or Dr. Gupta is a tool and a moron.
How the f*ck can this asswipe who claims to be a Dr. state that "Ebola is a killer,but it is not very contagious,and not a threat in the United States"? 
What. The. Fuck.    What is the doc smokin, snortin or shootin ? Maybe all three? One for each mind altering drug?


"Ebola is a frightening disease, no question. It kills more than half the people it infects, and there is no cure. But here’s an important fact:  Almost nobody in this country needs to be worried about it.
If you are not a health worker or, for some other reason, in direct physical contact with someone who has Ebola, you are not at risk of getting it. Here’s what we know:
While Ebola is deadly, it is not very contagious. The flu virus is carried through the air, but the Ebola virus is not. You have to be in physical contact with a sick person and get their blood or vomit or feces on your skin.
Even in areas of Africa where the outbreak is spreading out of control, each sick person infects only two others on average. That is called the R-nought value. It is a measure of how contagious a disease is. Compare it to measles, for example, which is airborne like the flu. The R-nought for measles is 18, meaning each sick person infects 18 others on average during an outbreak.

Of course, even an R-nought of two is serious if the virus is allowed to spread unchecked. One person infects two, who infect four, then eight, sixteen, etc.
That is what is happening in West Africa. In Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone, the public health systems were not able to contain the outbreak, so it has become an epidemic. But that could not happen in this country, which has a robust public health system. Even if more Ebola-infected people come here, we can be sure the virus will be contained."


What a moron. What a lying scum sucking .gov bought and paid for piece of excrement.



http://www.everydayhealth.com/news/ebola-what-every-american-needs-to-know/ 

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