CDC Demands 132 Passengers That Flew With 2nd Ebola Patient Report For Testing

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Ebola Is Coming. A Travel Ban Won't Stop Outbreaks


Air traffic connections from West African countries to the rest of the world (Image CC BY 4.0: Alessandro Vespignani / PLOS Currents Outbreaks)
Ebola has officially gone global.

The World Health Organization recently confirmed that a Spanish nurse was the first case of transmission outside Africa. Now it seems the first patient diagnosed in the United States transmitted the disease before he died.

More outbreaks are on their way.

While nations struggle to contain the epidemic in West Africa, other countries are discussing how to protect their own citizens, with governments and health authorities repeatedly asked the same question:

Why don’t we just ban flights from Africa?

The idea seems logical. Prevent sick people entering the country, keep your loved ones safe. It’s selfish, but understandable. A survey of over 1000 people by NBC News found that the majority of Americans (58%) support a ban on flights from countries where the Ebola virus has broken out.

Dr Tom Frieden, director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, has tried to explain why he doesn’t support a travel ban:

Importantly, isolating countries won’t keep Ebola contained and away from American shores. Paradoxically, it will increase the risk that Ebola will spread in those countries and to other countries, and that we will have more patients who develop Ebola in the US. People will move between countries, even when governments restrict travel and trade. And that kind of travel becomes almost impossible to track.

Simply put: you can’t seal the country. If you blocked air travel, it would force desperate individuals to use alternative routes – over land and sea – to escape the epidemic. They’ll still end up in the US, except you won’t know where.

An attempted travel ban would be like locking yourself in a cabin on a sinking ship and praying the flood doesn’t seep through the gaps, and that the water pressure won’t be enough to burst through the door.

There are many reasons why a flight ban would be practically impossible to implement. For example, remember that Thomas Eric Duncan, the US patient who caught the Ebola virus in his native Liberia, flew to Texas via Brussels in Belgium. An effective ban would require international coordination. Would every nation agree to quarantine West Africa, to cripple their economy and choke them of humanitarian aid? Unlikely.

But for the sake of argument, what happens when you reduce air travel?

Air traffic reduction

Professor Alex Vespignani, a physicist at Northeastern University in Boston, MA, has developed a computer model that predicts how air traffic affects the spread of Ebola.

His team at the Laboratory for the Modeling of Biological and Socio-technical Systems used a high-resolution map of human populations (3300 locations in 220 countries) and added daily airline passenger traffic. This model considers connecting flights and final destinations, plus details of the disease dynamics, such as incubation time of the Ebola virus and the fact a susceptible individual can only be infected by someone who shows symptoms of illness.

“All the people who have been exposed to the disease but are not yet in the symptomatic state can in principle travel,” says Vespignani. “So since we have this model that puts people on a plane, we can assess the probability of getting an infectious individual in countries around the world.”

Air traffic connections is a key factor influencing the chances of importing a case of Ebola. Over 6000 passengers normally flow into the United Kingdom every week, while the US and Ghana each receive over 3000 travellers (see image at the top of this page). The nations affected by the epidemic have urban areas with international airports, or are connected to West Africa’s travel hub, Nigeria, which has had one outbreak of 20 cases from a single importation from Liberia.

Vespignani’s computer model simulates a virtual world in which billions of individuals move around, come into contact with one another, and potentially spread disease. The aim is to predict cases like that of Thomas Eric Duncan.


Countries ranked by risk (relative probability) of importing a case of Ebola by 31 October. Red bars are nations that have already experienced case importation. LEFT: No air traffic reduction (ATR) reflects travel before the 2014 epidemic in West Africa. RIGHT: 80% ATR approximates the current reduction in air traffic to and from countries with Ebola. (Image: Alessandro Vespignani / www.mobs-lab.org)

The model calculates the risk of importing at least one Ebola case after running millions of simulations. They’re run under two scenarios: no air traffic reduction (ATR) to mirror travel before the epidemic, and reducing air travel by 80% to reflect airlines suspending flights and passengers avoiding travel.

The number of simulations in which a virtual country ends up with an outbreak gives a statistic for the risk of importing an Ebola case in the real world. So if a country gets the disease in half of them, the probability of case importation is 50%. That’s the prediction in October for Ghana, which lies between the affected nations – Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone – and Nigeria.

Big risks

For most countries, the results indicate that an 80% air traffic reduction more than halves the probability of importing a case of Ebola. For the US, the risk is reduced from around 75% to 25%.

But those risks don’t stay static.

An 80% reduction in air traffic only postpones the inevitable. “This is just delaying by four weeks what would have happened without those travel restrictions,” Vespignani explains. What about a 90% reduction? It would only buy you another month or two.

Like weather forecasts, Vespignani’s virtual model is calibrated using real-world data. As conditions change, the model is revised and simulations are re-run. To make accurate predictions, it needs to be regularly updated with the number of cases and deaths at each geographical area. Like weather, there’s higher confidence in forecasts for next month than further into the future.

The predictions above are for October, calibrated from recent data. In the original study, the model was calibrated with data from 6 July to 9 August to predict how an 80% air traffic reduction affects risks for September. The results showed that outside Africa, the risk was tiny – under 5% probability for every country except the UK, which has the most connections. (England’s chief medical officer says the UK should expect a handful of cases.) A dozen countries have since joined the UK with a risk over 5%.

As the number of Ebola cases continues to rise in West Africa, so too will the risk of case importation. “We’re a little safer for a finite amount of time, but then you are not really solving the problem,” says Vespignani.

Small outbreaks

The forecasts aren’t all doom and gloom though.

As well as modelling the global spread of Ebola, Vespignani’s simulations also predict local transmissions within a community, in hospitals and at funerals. And the numbers for secondary infections from imported cases are reassuring.

“These outbreaks should be very, very small – 2 or 3 cases,” he says. “I won’t panic if tomorrow we hear that in Texas there is another case. This is totally normal.”

[Note: A prophetic quote, given that I interviewed Vespignani before it was revealed Thomas Eric Duncan had transmitted the virus.]


Projections for outbreak size (number of cases) after a country imports Ebola. LEFT: 1 September. RIGHT: 22 September. (Image CC BY 4.0: Alessandro Vespignani / PLOS Currents Outbreaks)

One thing that computer simulations can’t predict is human error. In the two cases of person-to-person transmission outside Africa (the Spanish nurse and second US patient), there might have been a breach in proper safety protocols.

“But these mistakes are very rare, and again this is not going to give rise to large outbreaks,” says Vespignani. “Obviously what is happening in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea is something that is of a totally different scale, with a healthcare system that we cannot even think of in our countries.”

Vespignani is confident that the healthcare systems in Europe and North America are strong enough to stop outbreaks from ever reaching epidemic proportions, but says Asia is another matter. “If you ask me about India, China, other countries, then there are a lot of question marks.”

Worse for the world

An Ebola epidemic in two countries with a combined population of 2.6 billion is not only terrifying, it further highlights the futility of attempting a travel ban. Could the US ban all flights from Asia and Africa? Where would it end, isolating the North American subcontinent from the rest of the world?

A travel ban is short-sighted, and would be ineffective in the long run. It’s the epidemiological equivalent of an ostrich sticking its head in the sand: ignore the problem and hope it goes away.

And the Ebola epidemic isn’t going anywhere. It’s actually getting worse: the number of cases in West Africa continues to increase at an exponential rate.

Projections based on current trends using a dozen different models give future figures in the same ballpark: WHO predicts the total number will exceed 20,000 by 2 November, for example, while Vespignani’s simulations say 18,100 to 55,400 cases by the end of October.


Projection for the total number of Ebola cases in West Africa by 31 October. Red circles are reported cases. Gray area is the range of projected cases, based on a worst-case scenario where the epidemic continues to grow exponentially. (Image: Alessandro Vespignani / www.mobs-lab.org)

According to a projection by the CDC, by late January 2015 there could be up to 1.4 million cases in West Africa alone.

War on Ebola

As Vespignani’s computer simulations show, Ebola can easily spread across the globe. “This epidemic has pandemic potential,” he warns. “What happens next year depends on what we are able to do in Africa. If we win this battle, it’s okay. If we lose the battle there, then this thing is serious.”

The only way to stop Ebola going truly global is to beat the epidemic in West Africa. Governments get this: the US is deploying 4000 troops to Liberia and the UK is sending 750 soldiers to Sierra Leone. Nonetheless, according to the NBC survey, over half (51%) of Americans disapprove of sending US troops to fight the spread of Ebola.

The survey also revealed that most Americans (72%) understand that the Ebola virus is transmitted via contact with bodily fluids, which suggests that health authorities like the CDC and WHO have successfully educated the public on how the disease spreads from person to person.

Calls for a travel ban illustrate that there’s yet another battle to be won over Ebola: explaining how the disease spreads between populations.

JV Chamary is a biologist and writer – read more of his stories on Forbes and follow him on Google+ and Twitter

My computer model says blah, blah, blah...
maybe your model is "Crap" because you can make it say what you want it to say...
My "Ass" in A seat on A plane tells me I'm going to get "Anywhere" on the planet faster than any other source of transportation you choose and I'll put my money where my mouth is...
As for restricting travel not doing "Any Good" slowing the spread of Ebola, I call "Bullshit"
In case this Rocket Scientist / Computer Wiz... whatever he claims to be guy doesn't realize, you need A passport to travel internationally and somebody traveling from A "Quarantined Area" in Africa could be intercepted @ any International Airport while checking passports if security that is already present @ all of them... was on "High Alert"

Common Sense Rules ;) Use It! :cigar:


You couldn't increase the possibility of A faster and more wide dispersion of Ebola with the current policies in place if you tried... :confused:
 
Reaper

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Hey! ,on caregivenken.
I know the 1st few couple of cases on American soil was here in TN. I'm sure everyone knows of the dr's that 1st returned to US. They took experimental drugs and were successfully treated. I think there is around a60%survival rate. I'm not sure what determining factors are. Anyway , he is back in the hospital now and they aren't sure if it's Ebola related or not. I'm sure they are keeping a lid on it. There's a lot of uncertainty, unknown and undisclosed info still there.

The people that were given the experimental drug were given Zmapp... It's not A vaccine that prevents Ebola, It's A cocktail that stops it from replication once you have it... so your body has A chance to fight it off. Also from Canada and in very limited quantity... Us peasants won't see that for A while either, I think there is currently around 1000 doses give or take A few hundred in existence, totally "Experimental"

The first nurse to come down with Ebola after treating Thomas Eric Duncan was given A plasma transfusion from the first dr. treated with Zmapp because his body now has A natural immunity resistance from surviving Ebola w/ the help of Zmapp...


Google Search Results
  1. Canada Leads The Way On Ebola Experimental Drugs: ZMapp, TKM-Ebola And VSV-EBOV
    International Business Times‎ - 11 hours ago
    With the Ebola death toll topping 4400 in West Africa, all eyes are on TKM-Ebola and ZMapp ...
  2. Public Health Agency gives Spain, Norway ZMapp-like drug to treat Ebola cases
    CTV News‎ - 1 day ago
  3. Why Can't We Have More 'Magic' Blood for Ebola?
    NBCNews.com‎ - 1 day ago
    More news for zmapp
  4. ZMapp - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZMapp
    Wikipedia
    ZMapp is an experimental biopharmaceutical drug comprising three humanized monoclonal antibodies under development as a treatment for Ebola virus ...
  5. [PDF]ZMapp™ Frequently Asked Questions
    www.mappbio.com/
    Does ZMappTM work? We don't know. The ZMappTM combination of antibodies was identified in January 2014. As an experimental product only limited ...
 
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Medusa

Medusa

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U want a honest Dr. reporting on it Dr. Anthony Fauci.... top doc for when Aids first started and one of the heads for the U.S. Infectious Disease center....one of my client a hemotologist i just did today invented the aids test with saliva...knows him says he is telling it how it is... major fuck up is what he said at the hosp .. anyway couple interviews on here just google...
 
Reaper

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What is the purpose of this ebola-related patent of the US government?
http://patents.stackexchange.com/qu...his-ebola-related-patent-of-the-us-government

One of my conspiracy theory-loving friends posted about this patent, thinking the government created ebola for the purposes of population control. This is obviously hogwash, but I don't quite get the dense language - what is the point of this patent?

1 Answer
Having skimmed though the patent, it looks like it is a patent for a weakened version of the virus, that is taking the existing virus and making it non-threatening -- it is certainly not a patent which is supposedly creating the virus.

Weakened version of a virus and disease agents in general are desirable for research purposes, so that they can be studied in laboratories without any unnecessary risk to staff or for using it in a vacination effort.

The process of weakening the virus is known as 'inactivation' and you can read more about it on wikipedia here.

Your yearly flu short contains flu virus which has been 'inactivated' and you can read more about it here

Exact purpose for the patent is very likely basic research which is why it is being done by the government rather than by some private institution. As the motivation, it is very likely to gain sufficient information of the virus to defend against it should it ever come to the US as an outbreak.

Tags: Ebola Outbreak | ebola | patent | US | government
***************************************************************************************
US Govt Holds Patent on Ebola, But Researcher Rejects Conspiracy Theories
Thursday, 09 Oct 2014 11:24 AM

By Charlotte Libov
http://www.newsmaxhealth.com/Health-News/ebola-patent-US-government/2014/10/09/id/599636/

It’s true that the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention does hold a patent on one strain of Ebola. However, it is not the type that is causing the current outbreak, said David Sanders, professor of biological sciences at Purdue University.

What’s more, the government holds patents on many microbes discovered in its labs and there is “nothing nefarious” about it,” says Sanders, who has done research into how to prevent Ebola from being used as a biological weapon.

Websites including The Common Sense Show, Natural News, and White Out Press have spread the word about the U.S. patent on Ebola, along with headlines hypothesizing that government’s intention is to “raise billions from a pandemic.” “

Sanders said that the government patents viruses and other disease-causing microbes to make sure the pathogens remain available for research purposes in the public domain. If a private company held the patents, it could potentially hold onto pathogens or charge licensing fees that would stifle research to find treatments.

“The CDC does hold some patents on life forms, but it generally does this for the common good, so a commercial company can’t come along and patent it,” Sanders told Newsmax Health.

“The CDC lets researchers work with the strain without fees,” he said.
 
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Reaper

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The government held patent is "Exactly" as the link you posted states...

Modified by man (Viral inactivation) or in other words unable to infect as explained Here - > - > - > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virus_processing

Makes sense right? You couldn't have A "Live" virus that is A potential WMD being sent to various labs / corporations across the country for vaccine study etc. that has A 70% mortality rate... Think about the risk of that!
Vaccinations are designed / engineered from virus which has been "inactivated" so the government held patent is essentially on what would be the "Foundation" for a vaccine but not contagious or of any value as it is... because it is neither A "Live" virus or "Vaccination" o_O

That's why as it says above (post #45) “The CDC lets researchers work with the strain without fees” (essentially "open source") and what is the benefit / reason of doing that you ask...
A possible cure that hasn't been discovered yet by providing A harmless virus version for testing without the risk of an epidemic or viral outbreak that could kill 1000's
 
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Seamaiden

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Not "Hard to Make"... It's not available to the general public "Period" & won't be for years... Is completely "Experimental" & none have ever been through complete clinical testing so "Nobody" can be forced to take ANYTHING... LOL

Read this info in the link below from C.D.C. if you don't believe... How many times do people have to be told... :confused:

http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/outbreaks/2014-west-africa/qa-experimental-treatments.html

I'll give this post til the end of the day before people start piling on conspiracy theory B.S. along with political "Lip Service" & this post gets locked down just like the others because people can't manage to stick to facts vs. conspiracies / political mud slingin' ;)
THAT is what will get this and any thread shut down with a quickness. You see it, I know others see it and are able to comprehend. Will everyone?

To be clear, this is the site rule: NO politics outside cannabis. <--- (that's a period)

PUHLEEZE, keep it to the topic without turning it into a political debate, folks. Turn it political, and it gets locked. I have been having to spend an inordinate amount of time going through these threads to make sure they're in line with site policy, and if I get frustrated slogging through a thread I well may get a bad case of the fuckits and lock the fucker up.

Now I have to go through the next two pages of posts to see how bad it's gotten. And I'm a woman who loves to discuss politics. If I can do it, so can you.
 
Seamaiden

Seamaiden

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Alright. These threads are getting locked up because members don't seem to understand, or like to follow the site rules. You remember (or maybe you don't), the stuff you clicked "I Agree" to before you were able to register? One of them is no political discussion outside cannabis. This discussion is about disease, and I see that some are already making it political.

This site is about CANNABIS. If you want a political discussion site, go to a political discussion site. See how they feel about bringing up cannabis (most don't dig it, it's a political discussion site, not a cannabis site).

In the meantime, I am asking anyone who's posted up a news story or blog with pictures to PLEASE double-check your post. If it has pix that are not uploaded to the site, but are instead hotlinked, those need to be removed. If you're unable to, send me a message with the link to the post and I will remove the pix. I don't have the time to sit here and download each pic to my machine in order to then upload them to the farm. If you prefer to repost your post with the pix properly uploaded, that's fine. Beyond that, I'll simply have to delete the pix. I'll wait a day.
 
SpiderK

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Bbbb


CDC - 8.6 billion dollar yearly budget.

2007 - spending $1.75 million over seven years on a “Hollywood liaison” whose job was to help movie and television studios develop accurate plot lines about diseases

The CDC also spent lavishly on a new headquarters and visitor center that opened in 2006 – even though the agency already had one visitor center, and it’s hard to imagine many tourists wanting to check out something like the CDC.

The agency blew through more than $10 million in new office furniture and built a $200,000 fitness center and $30,000 sauna on-site.
 
SpiderK

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Precautionary steps: UMC patient says he traveled to West Africa, has 2 symptoms

LUBBOCK, TX (KCBD) -One person has been taken to University Medical Center and placed in isolation after a hazmat emergency crew responded to a home in East Lubbock.

Hazmat officials responded to an emergency call around 9 a.m. at a home in the 2600 block of East Auburn Street.

UMC confirms that one person was taken from the home and is now is isolation at the hospital.

Officials say the patient says he was in West Africa last week.
 
SpiderK

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Yale Student Hospitalized with Ebola-Like Symptoms

A Yale University student who recently returned from Liberia has been admitted to Yale-New Haven Hospital, where he is in isolation and being evaluated for Ebola-like symptoms.

Two Yale students who had been conducting research in Liberia returned on Saturday, Oct. 11 and have been kept in voluntary sequestration, Laurence Grothier, Director of Communication for Mayor Toni Harp.

http://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/...-279415262.html?_osource=SocialFlowFB_CTBrand
 
Supercharge

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Guess NaturalNews.com missed the memo... :banghead:

NaturalNews isn't exactly renowned for its unbiased reporting. ;)


My computer model says blah, blah, blah...
maybe your model is "Crap" because you can make it say what you want it to say...
My "Ass" in A seat on A plane tells me I'm going to get "Anywhere" on the planet faster than any other source of transportation you choose and I'll put my money where my mouth is...
As for restricting travel not doing "Any Good" slowing the spread of Ebola, I call "Bullshit"
In case this Rocket Scientist / Computer Wiz... whatever he claims to be guy doesn't realize, you need A passport to travel internationally and somebody traveling from A "Quarantined Area" in Africa could be intercepted @ any International Airport while checking passports if security that is already present @ all of them... was on "High Alert"

Common Sense Rules ;) Use It! :cigar:


You couldn't increase the possibility of A faster and more wide dispersion of Ebola with the current policies in place if you tried... :confused:

You're obviously misising the point.

1.) You do not need a passport to travel internationally. Try telling that to the 100s of 1000s of people moving past borders globally everyday without a passport. Where there is a will, there is a way and people will travel when they want to.

2.) In light of the above fact, legal air travel is far easier to keep track of than illegal land and sea travel, because those using air travel use passports and are in the system.

3.) Even with travel restrictions from "quarantined areas", as you put it, ebola could still spread, due to point # 1. Travel across a border out of the quarantined area and suddenly you're of no interest.
 
LittleDabbie

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Not a day has gone by in the last few weeks without a mention of Ebola. Having made its way into North America, Ebola has become reached the top of the “to fear” list, making many worry that it will only be a matter of time before the disease dominates the continent. Effective vaccines and treatments for Ebola have yet to be discovered, though one may be hiding in plain sight: cannabis.

Cannabinoids in marijuana have gained more and more of a reputation as a way to control and aid one’s immune systems, specifically with diseases that target a body’s natural defense measures against viruses, like HIV. Dr. David B. Allen, medical director of Cannabis Sativa, Inc, and Brad Morehouse, founder of NewCure.org, both believe cannabis can combat Ebola in the same way.

First, a rundown on what Ebola is and does, so everyone understands the argument. Ebola is a virus that targets the RNA (which creates proteins) in cells, takes over, then begins to replicate itself. The virus is able to hide itself from virus killing cells by creating indivisibility cloak-like surface proteins, which makes fighting Ebola especially difficult for the body.

Another consequence of Ebola being an RNA virus is that it makes each strain unique to the individual infected, thus making the creation of a widely applicable vaccine incredibly difficult.

What makes Ebola deadly is the way in which one’s immune system reacts as time goes on. Aside from creating hemorrhaging and leaking between cells, Ebola primarily kills when a person’s body releases a massive amount of enzymes (a cytokine storm) and an overabundant, and fatal amount, of immune cells being activated.

That’s where marijuana comes in as a potential saving grace to those afflicted with Ebola. As Joe Martin points out, cannabis is contains natural antiretrovirals and is also an anti-inflammatory able to reduce the harm to the body caused by a cytokine storm.

Dr. Allen also notes that cannabis has already become a legitimate regulator of immune system processes for those infected with HIV, with the same processes being applicable to Ebola. Being a natural virus killer, Allen also notes how cannabis can prevent the other harmful consequences of Ebola, namely hemorrhaging and cell leaking.

Strong evidence suggests that cannabis can be a positive treatment for those suffering from Ebola, but all of which should be taken with a grain of salt. These are hypotheses, based on research involving other viruses, and not proven fact. Still, the argumentation is enough to warrant a clinical trial. Worst to worst, Ebola sufferers will smoke a bit of weed, which won’t make things worse…we hope.
 
Supercharge

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The credibility of that article may have been enhanced if it didn't appear to be written by a 12 year old. Honestly, if you're going to publish something on a website, at least proofread it beforehand.
 
Reaper

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NaturalNews isn't exactly renowned for its unbiased reporting. ;)




You're obviously misising the point.

1.) You do not need a passport to travel internationally. Try telling that to the 100s of 1000s of people moving past borders globally everyday without a passport. Where there is a will, there is a way and people will travel when they want to.

2.) In light of the above fact, legal air travel is far easier to keep track of than illegal land and sea travel, because those using air travel use passports and are in the system.

3.) Even with travel restrictions from "quarantined areas", as you put it, ebola could still spread, due to point # 1. Travel across a border out of the quarantined area and suddenly you're of no interest.

I'm missing the point huh... Then why does it say the following on the website of the place that controls international travel? :rolleyes:

U.S. Passports & International travel...
http://travel.state.gov/content/passports/english/go/checklist.html

Do You Have All Required Travel Documents?
Most U.S. citizens must use a U.S. passport to travel overseas and reenter the United States. A passport is an internationally recognized travel document that verifies your identity and citizenship. Only the U.S. Department of State has the authority to issue U.S. passports.

Most foreign countries require a valid passport to enter and leave. Some countries may allow you to enter with only a birth certificate, or with a birth certificate and a driver’s license, but all persons, including U.S. citizens, traveling by air, must present a valid passport to reenter the United States.

If you are traveling by land or sea, you must provide evidence of both your U.S. citizenship and your identity when you reenter the United States. For many land or sea trips this means you can travel using the new U.S. passport card instead of the normal passport book. Read more about U.S. passport requirements.


Like I said before & I'll say it again... Bullshit, If you want to avoid people contracting Ebola stateside, Remove the travel of people that are the most likely carriers :meh:

Medical staff & military going to & from Africa on monitored flights for humanitarian reasons along with others that might have legit reasons like business etc. can be screened easier than the entire population of Africa having A revolving door to the rest of the planet. right? Limit "All" leisure travel from U.S. to infected areas... Period, until the outbreak is under control. Passport screaning would show travel to Africa immediately (stamped on Passport) for people from other countries to the U.S. instead of "Tell Us if you've been there" Be honest, Tell the truth OK? :rolleyes:
How reliable do you think that is :confused:
 
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SpiderK

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Fighting the 2014 Ebola Virus Outbreak Street by Street | The New York Times

A week on the road as Liberia’s capital dips deeper into crisis.

 
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AKRON, Ohio -- A spokesman for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says they have new information that shows Amber Vinson may have had symptoms of Ebola as early as Friday.

Vinson flew from Dallas to Cleveland Friday on Frontier Airlines Flight 1142. Authorities are now taking more aggressive measures to contact passengers on that flight.
 
Reaper

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@Reaper, you don't think anyone illegally enters the country?

Obviously, look @ the Southern Border of the U.S. but not as many enter illegally through "International Airports & Border Crossings" (besides S. America, and that's A whole other problem) because of passports... Some still make it with forged documents or using somebody else's papers but that's not as easy as "walkin' right in like you own the place" Right? o_O
 
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BREAKING: Yale-New Haven Hospital reported the @Yale student, who returned from Liberia, tested negative for #Ebola - Yale President Salovey
 
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