You sound as if you have very little experience treating patients with communicable diseases. Similar precautions take place on a daily basis in hospitals across the nation and the world when caring for other infectious diseases. I have donned those same types of PPE for the last 30+ years taking care of patients who don't have Ebola. These precautions even have a name:universal blood and bodily fluid precautions.
My statements have not contradicted anything the CDC said. It is your ignorance that seems to drive you to conclusions that are not supported by the scientific facts. The CDC has not said "all is well" but rather that despite the hysteria generated by the media and vocal uninformed people, there is no cause for undue alarm. Is there a problem? Yep, just as if they were concerned about any other communicable disease. Rather, what they said is that we can control the spread thru standard precautions and standard public health efforts. Could more people get infected? Possibly.....will there be the same type of widespread death and illness here? No.
I find it somewhat ironic that most folks on this forum lament the sensationalist nature of the main stream media and how frequently they get facts wrong, rather on purpose or because of political ideology. Yet folks like yourself will unquestionably take for gospel what the MSM says about Ebola and buy into the hype intended to sell airtime and advertising.......
It's not the sensationalized media that has done anything to me. It's the continual incompetence and misinformation put out by this government that tells me that no matter how nice the picture seems, the reality is always worse.
Obama promised they are doing everything necessary to keep Ebola out of the US. That was obviously not good enough.
Then we are told if Ebola ever did come to the US, we are prepared and have procedures in place to deal with it quickly and effectively. What happens? The ER sends the patient home.
Now the Hawaii "suspected" case is deemed to not be Ebola. Is it because he tested negative? No. It's because they say he hasn't traveled anywhere to pick it up. To me, that's not definitive enough to sound the all clear.
Humans are not infallible. Nobody is perfect. No plan or procedure is perfect. I don't care how professional and well trained and educated you think the CDC and other government and private health agencies are. It only takes a couple of lapses in procedure, or some malicious people, to bypass the safeguards to infect more people.
I've never had to personally care for infectious patients, but I fail to see how that matters? When the ER staff who I assume DO know about infectious diseases let a patient go home after he disclosed his trip from Liberia speaks volumes to my point.
That point being: no matter how hard we try to control our lives and environment, there are always gaps in our policies, plans, and procedures.