Ebola Patient Coming To U.S. |
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Ebola Patient Coming to U.S.
What the hell, Dallas?
She commutes to Dallas and lives in Fort Worth. Hmmm...That poor girl. Only twenty-six too.
The clock is ticking. Repent! The end is nigh!
any news on the cases in europe?
I should probably visit that nurse in Dallas today.
Asura.Kingnobody said: » I should probably visit that nurse in Dallas today. give her a good five minute french kiss from me! and the sad thing is you probably could just walk right into her room....
do the Dr. Nick HI EVERYBODY! YouTube Video Placeholder
super sweaty nausi hand all of my doorknobs...
And other objects in your house too.
I'll make sure to rub the objects under my armpits too, just for extra "spice" YouTube Video Placeholder do you use oldspice?
volkom said: » do you use oldspice? Caitsith.Zahrah said: » She commutes to Dallas and lives in Fort Worth. Hmmm...That poor girl. Only twenty-six too. Yeah I really feel bad for her. I really don't think the CDC is educating health care providers, specifically nurses, properly on ebola, which is frightening because nurses have to interact with the patients more often than the physician. This has a lot of RNs and NPs very angry. Bonnie Castillo pointed out that the Dallas hospital nurses are not represented by union which I find interesting. National Nurses United says most hospitals are not prepared for Ebola Quote: National Nurses United, the largest union of registered nurses in the country, said that more than 80 percent of nurses the union surveyed report they have not been given adequate training on Ebola. Thirty-six percent say their hospitals do not have sufficient supplies — including face shields and fluid-resistant gowns — to care for an Ebola patient, according the report by National Nurses United, which surveyed more than 1,900 nurses in more than 750 facilities in 46 states. Seventy-six percent of nurses surveyed report their hospitals have not issued adequate policies on how to deal with patients who might be infected with Ebola. “We are seeing that hospitals are not prepared,” said Bonnie Castillo, director of Registered Nurse Response Network, which is part of National Nurses United. “They are not doing active drilling and education they need to be doing.” Castillo said most of the nurses surveyed reported they have received only single pages of information about Ebola that refers them to a Web site. “That is woefully insufficient,” Castillo said. “We have to continue to sound the alarm. There is the potential for many more Dallases if hospitals are not mandated and do not commit to more vigorous standards. We see potential gaping holes for this to spread.” Castillo said the union has been trying to contact nurses at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital, where Thomas Eric Duncan, the Liberian man diagnosed with Ebola, died Wednesday. “That hospital has issued a directive to all hospital staff not to speak to press,” Castillo said. “That is a grave concern because we need to hear from those front-line workers. We need to hear what happened there. … They have them on real lockdown. There is great fear. This hospital is not represented by a union. Our sense is they are afraid to speak out.” Castillo said when she heard the news Sunday morning that a nurse at Texas Health Presbyterian had been diagnosed with Ebola, she reacted with anger. “I am angry because it was preventable in this country,” Castillo said. “We should be able to contain and eradicate it, but hospitals are not providing adequate training. Castillo said she is concerned about other nurses working on the front lines. “I’m fearful for my nurse colleagues who are putting it on the line when they walk through hospital doors,” Castillo said. “They walk through those doors every day and they know they could be exposed to infectious disease. The hospitals are not providing them with measures they need — the equipment, education and training, and without that, we know they are at great risk.” U.S. CDC head criticized for blaming 'protocol breach' as nurse gets Ebola Quote: "You don't scapegoat and blame when you have a disease outbreak," said Bonnie Castillo, a registered nurse and a disaster relief expert at National Nurses United, which serves as both a union and a professional association for U.S. nurses. "We have a system failure. That is what we have to correct." Saw a guy on the news dress up in the typical outfit they use. Lots of flaws :/
System failures with mortality rates up to 90% are a pretty serious problem.
Maybe the CDC is just using reverse psychology.
Ramyrez said: » Discuss. Hasn't ebola been around for 20+ years?
volkom said: » Hasn't ebola been around for 20+ years? Closer to 40. |
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