From a commenter: “….[those with a] lower melanin count are not immune but you can be cured.. you have to ask yourself why the CDC has a patent for this particular virus.. you only need a patent for something CREATED.. its money to be made off this virus and it seems genetically engineered for the darker races.. go figure.. anybody who thinks that’s a coincidence is a idiot and don’t understand the history of man made diseases, and how they are tested from being blacks from Africa to the west.. the Tuskegee trials they did on blacks with syphilis, polio vaccinations on blacks and cancer, the aids genocide in Africa and Ebola in the 90s.. biological warfare, population control and big pharma all play a roll in this… #sign of the times”
“DeMoro said all of the nurses had direct knowledge of what had transpired in the days after Duncan arrived at the hospital on Sept. 28.
Among other things, they said that Duncan “was left for several hours, not in isolation, in an area where other patients were present.”
When a nurse supervisor demanded that he be moved into isolation, the supervisor “faced resistance from other hospital authorities,” the nurses said.
They described a hospital with no clear guidelines in place for handling Ebola patients, where Duncan’s lab specimens were sent through the usual hospital tube system “without being specifically sealed and hand-delivered. The result is that the entire tube system, which all the lab systems are sent, was potentially contaminated,” they said.
“There was no advanced preparedness on what to do with the patient. There was no protocol; there was no system. The nurses were asked to call the infectious disease department” if they had questions, they said.
The nurses said they were essentially left to figure things out for themselves as they dealt with “copious amounts” of body fluids from Duncan while wearing gloves with no wrist tapes, gowns that did not cover their necks, and no surgical booties. Protective gear eventually arrived, but not until three days after Duncan’s admission to the hospital, they said.
The nurses’ allegations conflict with what hospital officials have been saying since Duncan’s admission: that they have strict protocols in place for handling such patients and that a mistake led to Pham becoming infected while she treated him.”
(MSN)