Call for quarantine, banning flights to U.S. from nations
with virus outbreaks, by Chelsea Schilling
A real-life horror story is playing out in Africa as Ebola
spreads, and President Obama’s decision to send 3,000 troops to Liberia to
combat the virus could very well put Americans at risk of contracting the
deadly illness at home, some health experts say.
According to the World Health
Organization, at least 4,985 people have contracted Ebola and at least 2,461
have died. Several doctors have fallen ill with Ebola, and two of them
have died. New
reports indicate a Doctors Without Borders staff
member has contracted the virus in Liberia and will be evacuated to France for
treatment.
“You can see that these doctors, who
are highly trained people, got themselves infected,” said Dr. Lee Hieb, former
president of the Association
of American Physicians and Surgeons.
“So sending troops into an area, if they’re dealing one-on-one with a patient,
they’re not going to be able to protect themselves very well. It’s not easy to
[prevent transmission], because you get tired and you get careless and you make
some simple mistakes. All it takes is one virus particle.”
Dr. Hieb said quarantine measures should be taken to control
the outbreak and prevent Ebola from coming to America.
“You don’t get Ebola from Europe,” she told WND. “You get
Ebola from Africa. And it’s a really simple formula: Don’t let people fly to
America if they’ve been to areas where there’s an outbreak. When there’s an
outbreak, stop air [traffic] flow.”
Hieb added, “If they’re going to use the troops to do
population control, which is one of the ways you contain it, basically you just
don’t let anybody out. You’d make a ring around where it is, and you’d
quarantine the area.”
With quarantines in places where the outbreaks are
occurring, even if a person infected with Ebola were to try to board a plane to
the U.S., it would be far more difficult for them to make the journey, she
explained.
“Could somebody sneak through by going to Pakistan or some
place?” she asked. “Yes, potentially. Ebola comes on so rapidly, you would know
it. They wouldn’t make it. We should not allow flights from nations that are
having Ebola outbreaks.”
Dr. Jane Orient, executive director
of the Association of American
Physicians and Surgeons, has warned
that the
U.S. must “treat Ebola as a wake-up call.”
“What African troops are doing is shooting people who cross
borders or violate quarantine,” Orient told WND, reacting to news of the U.S.
troop deployment. “Is that what we plan to support?” She added, “Africans are
already very suspicious of us. How will they react to an army setting up
hospitals?”
Orient called the planned U.S. deployment a “dubious
mission,” warning that the nightmarish scenario could bring Ebola to America.
“There is definitely a risk,” she said. “It seems
irresponsible to send more people there when the ones already there are having
trouble leaving. Probably anyone who has been exposed should be quarantined for
25 days since the last exposure.”
Orient echoed the
concerns of Elaine Donelly, president of
the Center
for Military Readiness, who told WND,
“I’m just appalled. Judging from this, the United States seems to have a very
confused vision of what ‘national security’ means.”
“But whether 3,000 American troops should be sent into that
area of the world to deal with that problem, I do not see the justification,”
Donelly said. “Surely there are alternatives in the international health-care
networks.”
WND
also reported when retired Lt. Gen. William G.
Boykin charged that sending American troops to combat Ebola in Liberia is “an
absolute misuse of the U.S. military.”
Donnelly emphasized it’s “not the purpose of our military.” “I
am very disappointed to see this announcement,” she said.
Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger appointed Donnelly to
the Defense Advisory Committee on Women in the Services for a three-year term
from 1984 through 1986. Then, in 1992, President George H. W. Bush appointed
her to the Presidential Commission on the Assignment of Women in the Armed
Forces.
Donnelly explained to WND her concern that the U.S. military
is not designed to fight health wars. “Our military people will show compassion
in Liberia, as they always do, and they will do everything asked of them,” she
said.
“Still, health wars are unhealthy for soldiers and all
living things. Like oxymoronic ‘peace wars,’ such as the incursion into Bosnia,
deployments such as this put our troops in causes having little impact on
America’s national security,” she said.
American military families will be put at greater risk,
Donnelly warned. “Here we have a ‘health war’ that could cost our troops’
health.”
Source: http://www.wnd.com/2014/09/doctors-irresponsible-to-send-troops-to-combat-ebola/
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