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Ebola coming to the US
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He is less informed on who they are taking and says "I would only take German citizens" because the cost is astronomical. He feels they have the capacity to contain the virus/treat the problems the same as they do here in the US. In other words, the German healthcare system is capable of containment /treatment to the same degree that we are.~Mom of 5, married to an ID doc
~A Rolling Stone Gathers No Moss
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Have you all seen this? Pretty interesting. I don't think I disagree with the choice to use this drug in these circumstances, but it does raise ethical questions. When is it okay to skip the general safety processes in place for drug experimentation?
http://www.cnn.com/2014/08/04/health...rum/index.htmlWife of a PGY-1 podiatric surgery resident, mom to two cat babies with a human one on the way!
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I agree, it's very interesting. It seems worth trying to me as death is quite certain and rapid, so the patient doesn't have much to lose.
If these two people recover, I'm curious what the next steps are. Especially how long they need to be quarantined. I don't know much about ID. Can doctors ever be certain that there's no risk of them transmitting the disease to other people?
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Originally posted by bobk View PostIf these two people recover, I'm curious what the next steps are. Especially how long they need to be quarantined. I don't know much about ID. Can doctors ever be certain that there's no risk of them transmitting the disease to other people?
On a related note, I saw that Mount Sinai has someone under watch for Ebola symptoms. think it was just fever and diarrhea at this point which, obviously, could be anything and has a 99.99% chance of NOT being Ebola. But still, kind of scary.PA and wife of a PGY2 in neurosurgery. And "cat-mom" to the two sweetest cats anyone could hope for.
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Bobk - I was wondering the exact same thing!
Semi related: did anyone see the video feed of Dr. Brantly coming into Emory? Dude walked into the hospital himself! I am guessing that's a good sign, but I wasn't prepared to see him walk on in!Wife, support system, and partner-in-crime to PGY-3 (IM) and spoiler of our 11 y/o yellow lab
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Have you all seen this? Pretty interesting. I don't think I disagree with the choice to use this drug in these circumstances, but it does raise ethical questions. When is it okay to skip the general safety processes in place for drug experimentation?Married to a newly minted Pediatric Rad, momma to a sweet girl and a bunch of (mostly) cute boy monsters.
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Originally posted by SoonerTexan View PostDoesn't it happen all the time with compassionate use? This time last year my FIL shared an interesting dilemma they were dealing with in regards to a cancer drug. Definitely interesting questions
I'm curious what they will do next if it really does work long-term for the two Americans. If they use it in Africa, it could be great. Or something could go wrong and it becomes "American company submits poor Africans to human drug testing." Or they wait and don't start using it there and it becomes "American company won't share life-saving drug with poor Africans." I'm sure the media will have fun with it regardless. It will be interesting to see how it all plays out.Wife of a PGY-1 podiatric surgery resident, mom to two cat babies with a human one on the way!
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I think it's so cool. What an impressive accomplishment for science. I hope the experimental treatment they received can be successfully used more widely. It sounds like it was also used on three Liberians, who are also recovering. It sounds so promising.Wife of PGY-4 (of 6), cat herder, and mom to a sassy-pants four-nager.
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Originally posted by scrub-jay View PostThe Spanish priest who was flown to Spain was also given the treatment, but did not make it. This was poorly reported in the news.Wife of PGY-4 (of 6), cat herder, and mom to a sassy-pants four-nager.
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Originally posted by MsSassyBaskets View PostI hadn't heard that. Obviously N=6 doesn't mean much, but it seems promising nonetheless.
It's also hard to say how effective it is when you also added much better medical care at the same time. I believe the WHO approved using the experimental drug in the impacted countries, the company is working to send 1000 doses, but I'm not sure how many to which countries.Wife to PGY4 & Mother of 3.
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