Friday, September 19, 2014

Ebola Worst Case Scenario: 550,000 cases before epidemic subsides









  • Ebola Worst-Case Scenario Has More Than 500,000 Cases ...

    www.bloomberg.com/.../ebola-worst-case-scenario-has-...

    Bloomberg L.P.
    5 hours ago - The Ebola outbreak in West Africa could spread to hundreds of ... that puts one worst- case scenario at 550000 or more infections. ... last month that theoutbreak could reach 20,000 cases before being brought under control.

  • Ebola Worst-Case Scenario Has More Than 500,000 Cases





    Photographer: Cellou Binani/AFP via Getty Images
    Guinea's Red Cross health workers wearing protective suits carry a stretcher at the NGO... Read More

    The Ebola outbreak in West Africa could spread to hundreds of thousands more people by the end of January, according to an estimate under development by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that puts one worst-case scenario at 550,000 or more infections.
    The report, scheduled to be released next week, was described by two people familiar with its contents, who asked to remain anonymous because it isn’t yet public.
    The projection, which vastly outstrips previous estimates, is under review by researchers and may change. It assumes no additional aid or intervention by governments and relief agencies, which are mobilizing to contain the Ebola outbreak before it spirals further out of control in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea.
    “CDC is working on a dynamic modeling tool that allows for recalculations of projected Ebola cases over time,” Barbara Reynolds, a spokeswoman for the agency, said in an e-mail. “CDC expects to release this interactive tool and a description of its use soon.”
    The World Health Organization said last month that the outbreak could reach 20,000 cases before being brought under control. That projection is already outdated, WHO spokesman Dan Epstein said today in a phone interview.

    Steep Curve

    “In the three weeks since then the numbers have doubled, so all three countries are still reporting cases on a steep upward curve,” Epstein said. “We don’t have a good idea of how big this epidemic will become.”
    If the response is not increased, there may be as many as 5,000 new cases a week, he said.
    The WHO’s estimates are meant to help assess international relief needs, such as how many hospital beds to build and the amount of medical supplies needed. The U.S. is currently adding personnel and money to the effort.
    “It’s already the worst outbreak in history,” Tim Shenk, a spokesman for the humanitarian groupDoctors Without Borders, said in a phone interview. He said the actions of the U.S. government will determine whether the growing epidemic can be contained.
    “What we’ve been clear about is that we are doing everything we can do and it’s not nearly enough,” Shenk said.
    Since the start of the outbreak this year, the virus has infected 5,357 people, killing 2,630,according to a Sept. 18 WHO report. The disease has spread through five West African countries, accelerating in cities, including Monrovia, the capital of Liberia.

    Emergency UN Mission

    The United Nations yesterday announced the creation of a special emergency mission to respond to the crisis, saying the effort needs to increase greatly.
    “This is a disease outbreak that is advancing in an exponential fashion,” said David Nabarro, named special envoy to West Africa yesterday by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon. “I estimate that to get ahead of outbreak, the level of response needs to be about 20 times greater than it is at the moment.”
    The U.S. is intensifying its effort, planning to deploy about 3,000 U.S. military personnel to the region to assist with shipping and distributing medical supplies and building treatment centers.

    Military Arrives

    Major General Darryl Williams, U.S. Army-Africa commander, arrived in Monrovia on Sept. 17 with a 12-person team to assess the situation there, Rear Admiral John Kirby, a Pentagon spokesman, said today at a press conference. That includes deciding where to build treatment sites and what else will be needed from the U.S. military.
    One C-17 transport plane has already arrived, and two more are scheduled for next week, bringing 45 personnel and helping to set up a command headquarters, Kirby said.
    Asked about the CDC projection, White House press secretary Josh Earnest said the U.S. commitment of $1 billion for the response to Ebola will have the effect of spurring other nations to increase their assistance.
    “The projections you’re citing are long-term projections,” Earnest said. “That’s why the president was demonstrating a sense of urgency” when he spoke about the outbreak earlier this week.

    Unseen Scale

    Predictive models have varied as researchers struggle to estimate an outbreak on a size and scale never seen before with Ebola.
    A separate worst-case scenario modeled last month by researchers at the University of Tokyo and Arizona State University predicted there would be as many as 277,124 new cases by the year’s end.
    That was the high end of their estimate, though the researchers warned that “uncontrolled cross-border transmission could fuel a major epidemic to take off in new geographical areas.”
    Columbia University researchers predicted 18,755 cases by Oct. 26 if the situation didn’t change, and 49,129 if intervention and containment efforts degraded.
    “Our understanding of Ebola transmission dynamics is incomplete and data on the present outbreak are limited,” the researchers said.
    Curbing the outbreak will require investments of $988 million over the next six months, according to an overview of needs and requirements published by the UN. About 30 percent of what’s needed has come in so far, Nabarro said earlier this week at a briefing in Geneva.
    There is no cure for Ebola, which is spread by contact with the blood and bodily fluids of those infected. The disease normally is treated by keeping patients hydrated, replacing lost blood and using antibiotics to fight infections. The hope is that a patient’s immune system will fight off the aggressive attack of the virus.
    Several companies and government health authorities are testing experimental treatments and vaccines against the disease.
    To contact the reporters on this story: Caroline Chen in New York atcchen509@bloomberg.net; Brendan Greeley in Washington atbgreeley2@bloomberg.net; Kelly Gilblom in New York at kgilblom@bloomberg.net
    To contact the editors responsible for this story: Reg Gale at rgale5@bloomberg.net Drew Armstrong, Andrew Pollack
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      Ebola Worst-Case Scenario Has More Than 500,000 Cases ...
    Actually, if I am logical about this I don't see 550,000 cases as an upper limit. 
  • Why would 550,000 be an upper limit?
  • There isn't anything except maybe the 1918 Flu Epidemic that killed 50 million worldwide that has any 
  • comparison to this since then. I can see how uneducated people who don't trust western medicine are
  • going to be a real problem in trying to keep them alive with not trusting western Science. But, 
  • if it ever gets to Europe, Russia and the U.S. what then? So, I don't see how anyone can say with 
  • a straight face that 550,000 is an upper limit because we don't know enough information yet to say this.
  • Because there hasn't been anything like this since the 1918 flu that killed 50 million people here on 
  • Earth.
  • There is at  present no useful way to limit this thing for a variety of reasons. Therefore the only limiter I can see at present is the deaths of 77% of the human race if present death levels are useful. This could be the upper limit of deaths from this thing over the next 3 to 5 years worldwide. However, because of vaccines in Russia and medicines in the U.S. made from the blood of survivors of Ebola already I don't think it is going to get that bad. 77% would be if no medical interventions at all were available while air travel was still in place.
  • So, ways to limit Ebola are available if mass produced in the Western World, Russia and China. But, this might not save uneducated people who don't believe in  western medical science and who aren't capable therefore of western medical disciplines like an Army or educated citizens in places like the U.S.  would be following orders.
  • So, logically and theoretically speaking the worst case scenario wouldn't be 500,000. It would be
  • 5.39 Billion people dying over about 5 years here on earth. However, this would only be with 
  • maximum air travel being allowed with no medical intervention at all.
  • However, understanding this at the very least All of Africa up to about Turkey are really in for it
  • through at least December. If it isn't stopped by December, the whole world is in for it very likely.

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