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- Problems and Prevention's of Ebola and AIDS
- Research Paper #4
- Thursday,
- April 18, 1996
-
- Viruses have become of great concern all across the
- world in the last few decades. The most common and the most talked about killer
- virus is AIDS, a virus that starts out as HIV and then proceeds to develop
- into a immune breaker that ultimately kills its human host. So far, there
- is no cure for AIDS, and most unfortunately the numbers of deaths from AIDS
- only continues to grow. However, another virus has gained much public and
- national attention. That virus is called Ebola. It is thought that Ebola's
- effect on humans is restricted to Zaire, Africa. Viruses that kill people
- in large masses is a major threat to mankind; the only hopes of destroying
- the viruses is dependant upon technology.
- AIDS is a deadly disease
- that most people understand as a sexually transmitted disease. In fact, the
- virus can be transmitted sexually, but it can also be transmitted through blood
- transfusions. The fact that it can be transmitted sexually causes a great
- problem. Everyday, enormous amounts of people have sex--some people with different
- partners. People may have less sex than before because of the threat that
- the virus poses, but it has already started, and cannot be stopped until a
- cure is found. Unlike Ebola, AIDS was not detected as early as one would
- have hoped. The AIDS virus can stay dormant for over a decade before it is
- noticed as a real problem (Shenon 8). During that decade, the virus can
- spread like a wild fire. One person contracts the virus, transmits it to another,
- and another, and so on. As Shenon explains, AIDS became recognized as a real
- problem in the early seventies and was mostly concentrated in the United States
- and in Africa, but surprisingly it reached Asia a decade
- afterward. He goes
- on to explain that AIDS has spread exponentially in Asia. Thailand, recognized
- for its proliferation of prostitutes and illegal promotion of sex with children,
- could be held responsible for the tremendous outbreak of the virus in Asia,
- explains Shenon. He also points out that now that the virus has already broken
- out, Asia has the best AIDS prevention agenda in the world (8). For now
- the best prevention of AIDS that is available is education and protected sex.
- Until a cure is found for the ruthless virus, this is the only means of prevention
- that is available to the public.
- Ebola is one of the most rapidly
- fatal viruses on the planet and is believed to have begun somewhere in Zaire,
- Africa (Altman 3). There is no positive explanation as to how the virus is
- spread. When the virus is contracted by humans it causes hemorrhagic fevers
- and becomes extremely transmittable (A Case of Deadly Virus 4). Like the AIDS
- virus, Ebola has no cure. The only advantage of prevention that Ebola has
- over AIDS is that it does not stay dormant for decades therefore, it can be
- isolated much quicker. Being able to isolate the virus in one town or country
- makes the termination of it much easier. It seems inevitable that the two
- most deadly viruses in the world are contracted by the idea of self preservation.
- As stated earlier, AIDS is transmitted sexually, and Ebola is widely spread
- through the consumption of chimpanzee meat that is a common delicacy in Asia
- (A Case of Deadly Virus 4). Just as sex is an act that is very widespread
- all around the world, eating chimpanzee meat in Asia is som
- ething that is
- very common. It is very hard to stop the spread of a disease when it is spread
- by something that seems "second nature" to a person. The action that probably
- ultimately stopped the virus from spreading to neighboring countries is the
- fact that the CDC (Center for Disease Control) and the WHO (World Health Organization)
- were prompt to go the scenes of outbreak and begin studying the virus (A Case
- of Deadly Virus 4). When just one man became infected with the disease in
- the western Ivory Coast, the WHO were on the case to examine the problem (A
- Case of Deadly Virus 4). Unfortunately, the people that are trying to stop
- the spread of the virus and those who are close with the victims are those
- people that have the greatest chance of being infected (Altman 3).
-
- After a great deal of studying the ways that the virus is spread, it became
- evident that there are other ways to become infected except by the eating of
- chimp meat. As depicted by Altman, scientists do not believe that the virus
- can become full blown like the common cold or influenza (3). It is known that
- the virus can become attached to droplets in the air, but the amount needed
- to be infected through the air is uncertain (3). Other ways of contracting
- the disease is through urine, contaminated blood, and through feces (3). The
- masses of underdeveloped villages in Asia is a breeding grounds for the Ebola
- virus for many reasons. Many people walk around with no shoes on and therefore
- contract the disease by stepping on the feces. Water is one of the prevention
- measures that is taken to help prevent the spread of the virus and there is
- little, if any, running water in the undeveloped villages (Altman 3). WHO
- claims that the Ebola virus is over in Zaire (Altman 3). The entire world is
- very fortuna
- te that the Ebola virus did not spread as quickly as it could
- have. Much respect is owed to the scientists and researchers who worked diligently
- to isolate the virus.
- The problems of the two viruses that have been
- discussed can be contrasted to the sicknesses that are discussed in the Bible.
- The Bible in many places mentions tremendous outbreaks of killer plagues.
- Technology and the recognition of diseases and sickness is much better than
- it was in Biblical times. But somehow the plagues of Biblical times were overcome.
- It could be that the AIDS virus will just die out over time or the human race
- will eventually build up an antibody to the virus. AIDS could be the pinnacle
- of all diseases to ever exist because it would be most unlikely that humans
- will build up an immune to a virus that does nothing but destroy the immune
- system until the organism that it lives in can no longer live. As for now,
- not knowing if and when the AIDS virus will be over, technology and research
- must keep working to find a cure for the ruthless virus. To the many people
- the Ebola virus did not affect, they should now realize how vulnerable their
- life and the entire human race reall
- y is. Viruses will probably always exist,
- but as long as they do, technology must continue to move on even where there
- seems to be no hope of finding a cure. Technology is the only answer to ending
- what has already begun.
- Works Cited
- Altman, K. Lawrence. "New Skin Test
- will Help Track Ebola Infection in
- Remote Areas." New York Times
- September 19,1995 C3.
- Shenon, Phillip. "AIDS Epidemic, Late to Arrive,
- Now Explodes in
- Populous Asia." New York Times January 21, 1996
- sect.1 1.
- "A Case of Deadly Virus Reported in Ivory Coast." New York Times
-
- December 9, 1995. sect.A 4.
- "10 in Gabon Die of Ebola after Feast
- of Chimp Meat." New York Times
- February 17, 1996 sect.A 5.
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