I wouldn't be surprised if what's recommended by CDC is not adequate.
I totally agree. Theories are great but there is nothing quite as valuable as experience.
I wouldn't be surprised if what's recommended by CDC is not adequate.
Or the ER folks all quit.
IMO, we don't have any type of control over this situation, right now. I feel like whoever is making these idiotic decisions to take temps, rather than quarantine people, is delusional. What if you have a body temp that is normally around 2 degrees lower than 98.6 (I do)? So if you have ebola, and the fever, you're going to present as if you have no fever, or not the degree that they're looking for. My dh has a meeting this week with someone who just returned from Africa. I don't want him to attend. I want this person to stay away for 21 days. And if they're asymptomatic, then they can have the meeting. Who knows who they came into contact with in the various airports they've recently traversed? Do I sound like I'm making a mountain out of a molehill? I don't care.
When the CDC works with the ebola virus in the lab, they wear a "space suit" and have to go through a 7 minute decontamination shower before they take the suit off. IMO, healthcare workers should also have to go through a decontamination shower before removing their gear as the risk of exposure is very high at that point. Even in Africa, workers are sprayed down with a solution before removing their PPE! Maybe, I'm wrong and this was part of the procedure in Dallas, but I doubt it.
Even in Africa, workers are sprayed down with a solution before removing their PPE! Maybe, I'm wrong and this was part of the procedure in Dallas, but I doubt it.
Yeah I doubt if they were doing that in TX (or in Spain) and that is sad because honestly it is just so darn OBVIOUS and SIMPLE!
Of course the nurse in TX might not have even been wearing a PPE.
"We knew a second case could be a reality, and we've been preparing for this possibility," said Dr. David Lakey, commissioner of the Texas Department of State Health Services. "We are broadening our team in Dallas and working with extreme diligence to prevent further spread."
http://www.wfaa.com/story/news/health/2014/10/12/presbyterian-hospital-worker-ebola/17147507/
, It's my opinion that the emergency room is not accepting patients because it is getting a scrubbing, I think that is where the wroker was working up till the spike in temp.
Horrible.
This news makes me wonder if someone in the family is positive and they are not telling us.
I wonder the same thing. With confidentiality laws as they are, I assume that if the family says they don't want the news released, then doctors are not allowed to release the news. Does anybody know if that's true?
It is going to be interesting to see how this patient does with full blown, as good as it gets, medical care from the start.
CNN is reporting she was wearing full protective gear: a gown, a face mask, a shield and gloves.
I have seen someone wearing that gear and I was surprised because they were not wearing a 'cover-all' hood. They were in the UK, but looked very like the CDC guidance pictures.
Not wearing a hood leaves visible skin and hair around the neck area.
In Africa they appear to work on the principle of covering every square inch of skin so that there is absolutely no chance of some wayward splash of virus laden fluid coming into contact with any part of the healthcare workers.
However, I suppose you can cover up as much as you like, but it will not help if something goes wrong when taking the PPE off or if the 'disrobing' procedures are not stringent enough.
It seems to me when something is a public health issue, we should get details and lots of them.
Well, if people can get infected while following CDC guidelines (as the Dallas nurse apparently did) then guidelines are not adequate.
We don't know whether the guidelines are inadequate, the hospital didn't implement them properly, or the worker made a mistake.
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