In a statement Friday, Jindal said, "Even countries in Africa have cut back on or stopped accepting flights from countries with Ebola outbreaks."
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In a statement Friday, Jindal said, "Even countries in Africa have cut back on or stopped accepting flights from countries with Ebola outbreaks."
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There are now 46 people in Texas being monitored for signs of Ebola because they had definite or possible contact with the man in Texas who has Ebola, officials said today (Oct. 4).
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As people are infectious only once they develop symptoms, isolating them and having health-care workers use personal protective equipment significantly reduces the risk of onward transmission.
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The man with Ebola in Texas has taken a turn for the worse, officials said today.
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Scientists involved in fighting the first outbreak of Ebola in 1976 are pointing to a crucial difference between that outbreak and the current one West Africa: the behavior changes among the affected communities.
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One of Ebola's most notorious symptoms is bleeding from places like the nose and mouth, but such bleeding has only occurred in a minority of cases in the current outbreak.
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People who had contact with the man with Ebola in Texas are still being monitored daily and none has shown any sign of disease so far, the CDC says.
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Five U.S. airports will implement screening some travelers for Ebola, starting this week, officials said.
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A Dallas hospital spokesman says Thomas Eric Duncan, the first Ebola patient diagnosed in the United States, has died. (Oct. 8)
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Thomas Eric Duncan, a Liberian man who was being treated for Ebola in Texas, died today, according to the hospital,
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Aerosolization is scary too, mot as scary as airborne, but plenty scary.
The Ebola virus that's causing the devastating outbreak in West Africa didn't even have a name just 38 years ago when it first surfaced and caused a mysterious illness among villagers in Zaire, now the Democratic Republic of Congo.
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