Originally posted by pHILSANITY07
					
						
						
							
							
							
							
								
								
								
								
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Sunny days are here again.Originally posted by Strychnine View PostIn less than 2% of cases. Statistically, that's way the fuck out there on the bell curve.class joke
{
private:
char Forrest, Jenny, Momma, LtDan;
double Peas, Carrots;
string MommaAlwaysSaid(const bool AddAnyTime = True)
};
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So Amber Vinson (the second infected nurse) happens to be black. She flew to Ohio the same day Duncan died to plan her wedding.
So she violated CDC and her hospital's protocols, went through two airports and visited friends and family that have since been to Kent State. She had a fever when she boarded the flight home.
It's like someone is intentionally trying to spread the disease.
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Good stuff. I need lots of traveling to occur so this oil starts to dry up. And the eboli have scared the masses.Originally posted by Strychnine View PostIn less than 2% of cases. Statistically, that's way the fuck out there on the bell curve.
And when looking at that remember this:

And on that note:
http://www.businessinsider.com/r-who...n-days-2014-10
Or we need boots on the ground
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Lets not get that started yet...Originally posted by BP View PostSo Amber Vinson (the second infected nurse) happens to be black. She flew to Ohio the same day Duncan died to plan her wedding.
So she violated CDC and her hospital's protocols, went through two airports and visited friends and family that have since been to Kent State. She had a fever when she boarded the flight home.
It's like someone is intentionally trying to spread the disease.Originally posted by LeahBest balls I've had in my mouth in a while.
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99.5 isnt a fever. The general accepted temperatures for people is +- 1*f from 98.7*f. You could be in the sun and be close to 100*f. Some people generally run 97.2*F and that is their normal body temperature. The general range is +-1 of 98.7f. That means 99.7f can be NORMAL for some people.Originally posted by Denny View PostCNN just said that the newest patient logged a 99.5 fever BEFORE her travel. If this is found to be true, they need to prosecute the bitch (if she lives).
Do you have first hand experience with ebola? Are you an expert? Hell, do you even don/doff PPE for a living? Any formal training?Originally posted by Denny View PostBro. I was saying medical staff suck at donning/doffing procedures well before this second person was even known about. 8mpg was telling people on here that his team is an exception. Remember? Go back a couple days on here and reread.
If you haven't had first-hand experience in this, you really don't know.
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What protocols did she break? Living a normal life? Break hospital protocols when you are off work living your own life? Should she completely stop her life because she took care of a patient with ebola that she didnt know she had an exposure to?Originally posted by BP View PostSo Amber Vinson (the second infected nurse) happens to be black. She flew to Ohio the same day Duncan died to plan her wedding.
So she violated CDC and her hospital's protocols, went through two airports and visited friends and family that have since been to Kent State. She had a fever when she boarded the flight home.
It's like someone is intentionally trying to spread the disease.
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For someone under surveillance, 99.5 is reason for action. Are you sure you're a medic?Originally posted by 8mpg View Post99.5 isnt a fever. The general accepted temperatures for people is +- 1*f from 98.7*f. You could be in the sun and be close to 100*f. Some people generally run 97.2*F and that is their normal body temperature. The general range is +-1 of 98.7f. That means 99.7f can be NORMAL for some people.
Do you have first hand experience with ebola? Are you an expert? Hell, do you even don/doff PPE for a living? Any formal training?
And yes. I've had more time in level B and A than most. Formal training and all. LMAO!
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