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Post by avordvet on Nov 3, 2014 15:36:03 GMT -5
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Post by Michael Downing on Nov 5, 2014 20:45:32 GMT -5
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Post by watchful on Nov 6, 2014 8:23:24 GMT -5
Man only has those freedoms he is willing to defend to the death! This is how they will get you into a "Quarentine Monitoring Facility" run by FEMA and the CDC.
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Post by Michael Downing on Mar 23, 2015 14:07:31 GMT -5
h/t N C Renegade... www.frontpageafricaonline.com/index.php/health-sci/4759-86-persons-quarantined-in-new-ebola-virus-emergence86 quarantined in new Ebola patient’s house; over 100 contacts; 2,000 students at risk “On Monday she had a fever, but we were still looking after her and on Thursday, her fever became worse. During the night, when I went to check on her, she was in pain.” – Laurence Doe Innis, brother of Liberia’s latest confirmed Ebola patient Monrovia - Laurence Doe Innis, brother of Liberia’s latest confirmed Ebola patient, sits with hands on his cheeks, worried about what is going to happen to him in the next ten days or so. Doe says he is worried because he helped get his sister (who tested positive for Ebola) to the Redemption Hospital where it was noticed that she had symptoms of the deadly Ebola Virus. He said his sister, Ruth Tugbheh, 44, got sick on Sunday, March 15 and her condition became worse on Thursday of the same week. “On Monday she had a fever, but we were still looking after her and on Thursday she became worse and at night when I came she was in pain,” said Innis. “She asked me to help take her to Redemption Hospital. She walked from her room to the train tracks. We stopped the motorbike rider and put her on the bike and I sat behind her and it took us to Caldwell Junction. At Caldwell Junction we walked all the way to Point Four and took another bike into New Kru Town.” He said at the Redemption Hospital the health workers quickly recognized the symptoms after thoroughly examining her, they decided she should stay at the hospital, but did not tell him why. He said on Friday he received calls from several organizations about his sister’s condition. “I was very speechless because I’ve never had such an experience or met such people in my life. They asked me questions about my sister because I took her to the hospital,” he said. Innis said his life now is hinged on observation because he does not know when his Ebola symptoms will begin to show, because of the close contact he had with his sister. He said the health team has cautioned him to take the necessary prevention method and promised to monitor his health over the 21-day period. In the Kumasu community in the Caldwell area where the newly infected Ebola patient lives, her entire household of over eighty six persons have been quarantined with over one hundred contacts traced by national and community contact tracers. Benetta Koon, 18, is the daughter of the Ebola patient and attends the More Than Me School Academy on Ashmun Street. She said she is worried that she may never see her mother again because of the dangerous nature of the Ebola Virus. Koon said she and her cousin Baindu Fahnbulleh helped care for her mother in the early stages of the disease. She helped wash her mother’s hair and scrub her back when she was too weak to bathe herself and did so with no protection. But she said the most important thing to her now is having her mother back. “My mother was sick and they took her to the hospital. I’m feeling bad because if my mother dies I would be left without a mother,” said Koon, who is studying leadership at More Than Me. Continued Koon: “There won’t be anyone for me to call Ma. I saw my Ma from Friday to Tuesday because normally come for vacation and then Tuesday evening I go home. She didn’t know she had Ebola, because she has never experienced it before. She only said her throat, head and body was hurting.”
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