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Ebola spreading in West Africa: What you need to know
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<blockquote data-quote="wkmac" data-source="post: 1403148" data-attributes="member: 2189"><p>According to the latest CDC database updates (see above), the current mortality rate of the Ebola outbreak is at 50%. The outbreak continues so this will change either way too. I think we are all in agreement, let's hope it trends down. </p><p></p><p>The other question I have is why the massive outbreak all of a sudden? Since 1976', the largest outbreak in a single event was just over 400 cases (see above link from CDC) and now we're currently 5 times that amount and continuing. Why? Did the virus mutate? Was there an environment change which allowed the disease to explode? For nearly 40 years the disease has remained relatively quiet and isolated but now has chosen to try and become a wildfire. Again, why?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="wkmac, post: 1403148, member: 2189"] According to the latest CDC database updates (see above), the current mortality rate of the Ebola outbreak is at 50%. The outbreak continues so this will change either way too. I think we are all in agreement, let's hope it trends down. The other question I have is why the massive outbreak all of a sudden? Since 1976', the largest outbreak in a single event was just over 400 cases (see above link from CDC) and now we're currently 5 times that amount and continuing. Why? Did the virus mutate? Was there an environment change which allowed the disease to explode? For nearly 40 years the disease has remained relatively quiet and isolated but now has chosen to try and become a wildfire. Again, why? [/QUOTE]
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