lawstudent
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- Joined
- Oct 6, 2013
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You don't have to be spattered to be infected. Taking off the equipment is difficult and carries risk. It is very possible to make a mistake. Making a mistake doesn't mean the caregiver is careless, just that they are human. Caregivers get tired, their buddy gets tired. It doesn't take a big contamination to infect someone when the patients are in the very sick stage and shedding tons of virus. Anything on a glove which is not removed absolutely correctly can contaminate the hand. People unconsciously touch their faces hundreds of times per day. It's really that easy.
Any health care worker who says that they cannot make a mistake or has never made a mistake is someone to be wary of.
We know that you have to make contact with body fluids to become infected. Someone who says they don't know how they were infected is not indicative that they did not come in contact with body fluids, just that they don't know when it happened. It doesn't indicate anything sinister or that it's possible to get ebola without coming into direct contact with body fluids. It also does not indicate that there are asymptomatic people infecting others.
THANK YOU! Very well-stated. Very careful, competent people mess up sometimes, and they may not even have an explanation why. Humans are imperfect and our brains sometimes don't hone in on what they should, even when we are well-trained and well-intentioned. There's no one out there who hasn't had the "what did I just do?" experience. Even the most cautious, responsible people have had a few.