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June 20 at 4:06 PM BUTEMBO, Congo — A dozen young men revved their motorcycle engines in front of the wooden gate of a makeshift checkpoint — too impatient to have their temperatures checked or to wash their hands with chlorinated water. Health workers manning the post had little choice but to let them pass. Every day, thousands of people travel this road through the epicenter of Congo’s ongoing Ebola outbreak, where they are supposed to comply with field nurses toting gun-shaped thermometers testing for fevers. But that operation is far from perfect, and extinguishing the nearly year-old outbreak is months away at best. Days with a dozen new cases are normal. “Ebola is like water. If you don’t build a perfect dam, even a small hole can lead to a flood of new cases,” said Marie Roseline Belizaire, the World Health Organization’s deputy manager for the response. Health officials are confident the outbreak is not spiraling out of control but are worri...
itchy skin allergy :: Article Creator Spring Allergy Season Affecting Some People For The First Time Seasonal allergies aren't just for lifelong sufferers anymore. Doctors say it's increasingly common for adults who've never had allergies to suddenly experience symptoms like sneezing, runny nose, and itchy eyes, especially in the spring. "Allergies can develop later in life," said Dr. Jonathan Matz, an allergist and immunologist with Life Bridge Health. "Over successive exposures, the immune system starts to recognize these allergens and produces antibodies that bind to pollen proteins. It just turns it on." Right now, tree pollen is the biggest trigger. While local trees may not be fully in bloom, pollen from southern New England and the Mid-Atlantic is making its way north, carried by the wind. Experts say allergies often run in families, and people with asthma may be more vulnerable. The combination of p...
1st case of ebola :: Article Creator Ebola's Exponential Growth Monday, October 13th 2014 - 00:26 UTC The U.S. Government's Centers for Disease Control warned recently that we could have 1.4 million cases of Ebola by January. By Gwynne Dyer - Here are two good things about the Ebola virus. It is unlikely to mutate into a version that can spread through the air, as some other viruses have done. And people who have been infected by Ebola cannot pass it on to others during the incubation period (between two and 21 days). Only when they develop detectable symptoms, notably fever, do they become infectious to others, and only by the transfer of bodily fluids. Here are three bad things about Ebola. The "bodily fluids" that can transmit it include even the tiniest droplet of sweat: just the slightest touch can pass the virus on. The death rate for those who become infected is 70%. And the U.S. Government's Centers for...
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