EBOLA Three Ebola Stories the Mainstream Media Literally Scrubbed From the Internet -

LilRose8

Veteran Member
http://www.thedailysheeple.com/thre...a-literally-scrubbed-from-the-internet_102014

There’s a mysterious phenomenon that keeps happening to alternative media journalists lately, and it seems to be a side effect of Ebola.

Mainstream stories are being removed from the internet without a trace.

The first I heard of this was when a colleague, Mac Slavo, of SHTFplan wrote an article entitled “Disaster Teams Were Notified Months Ago They Would Be Activated in October”. The article was based on a twitter exchange with a large government supplier of emergency response products specializing in “high risk events”.

“DART teams were notified months ago they would be activated in October. Timing seems weird. Source: current DART member.”

Twitter exchange:

What we are now hearing is just the tip of the iceburg as we enter October. #Ebola virus will cripple EMS and hospitals. The wait is over!

— GoldenStateFIRE/EMS (@GoldenStateEMS) September 30, 2014

@FutureMoneyTren DART teams were notified months ago they would be activated in October. Timing seems weird. Source: current DART member.

— GoldenStateFIRE/EMS (@GoldenStateEMS) September 30, 2014

Be prepared to self quarantine yourselves if you experience flu like symptoms. Do not venture out as EMS & hospitals will be overwhelmed.

— GoldenStateFIRE/EMS (@GoldenStateEMS) September 30, 2014

There is speculation that this #DallasEbola case is not Ebola. DART teams were told months ago they would be activated in October.

— GoldenStateFIRE/EMS (@GoldenStateEMS) September 30, 2014

Wisely, Slavo linked to an archive of the screenshot.



And I say wisely because the Twitter account involved was subsequently CLOSED. Here’s the link:

https://twitter.com/GoldenStateEMS/status/517093803212042242

and here’s what you now get when you go to it.


SEE MORE AT SITE



- See more at: http://www.thedailysheeple.com/thre...from-the-internet_102014#sthash.MHpmQ244.dpuf
 

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
As myself and others have been saying, the worse the Ebola pandemic gets, the less information the MSM will provide the public. We've already been seeing this in the last few days. The Ebola stories have basically entirely ceased. Well, you can't tell me that the Ebola cases in the US have vanished....
 

LilRose8

Veteran Member
agreed...and now that a second case has been reported in Dallas, and that person in FULL protective gear... Seems weird that they are hiding what is so obvious.
 

imaginative

keep your eye on the ball
agreed...and now that a second case has been reported in Dallas, and that person in FULL protective gear... Seems weird that they are hiding what is so obvious.

While I'd hate to think that this outbreak is planned....there are some things that make you raise your eyebrows- and this scrubbing certainly is one. Another is the sealed many 10's of thousands of sealed coffins that were stockpiled years ago that the CDC says are for ebola victims. This will get you both martial law and control of the money system in short order
 

the watcher

Inactive
Yup, the scrubbing has become progressly worse. It isn't just recently, but anything that cast the gov in a bad light WILL vanish. As a side note....I added a PDF printer to my Firefox several years ago. This allows a whole page, pics and all, to be saved to a pdf doc locally. This also "locks" the page from tampering from outside soruces. And YES, I have had docs removed directly from my pc, about 5 years ago, when I was on windows. Me and about 50K others that had downoaded it. I failed to change the original file name and they reached out, searched the file name and deleted all copies, even on personal pc's. I was on Windows at the time.
 

dstraito

TB Fanatic
There is a theory that by allowed ebola (if not actually introducing it) in the US it would distract people from the poor economy and in general the POTUS failing agendas, the same reason most Dims are distancing themselves before the elections from the POTUS. If that theory held true, once again, TPTB are not allowing for unintended consequences like blowback for allowing in this country at all. Most feel the proper way to handle this crisis would be akin to an cattle anthrax crisis which would be to stop those animals from coming into this country and by analogy, stop incoming people from infected countries.

While this would not totally prevent the spread, it would definitely go a long ways toward prevention.
 

Sleeping Cobra

TB Fanatic
In my local news they say hospitals are ready. I bet they are NOT ready to handle Ebola Patients.

Ready for Ebola? Local health workers say yes

Originally published October 11, 2014 at 3:26 PM | Page modified October 11, 2014 at 7:19 PM

If Ebola reaches Washington, there’s no telling where it will show up.

A sick person might step off an airplane at Sea-Tac Airport.

Someone could walk into an emergency room, medical office or doc-in-a-box clinic, complaining of fever and headache. A relative could call 911, requesting an ambulance for a loved one too weak to stand.

Whatever route the virus might take, the state’s medical systems are gearing up to respond to the virus in a way that officials hope will minimize its spread and provide the best possible care for any victims.

“An Ebola patient could walk into any provider’s office, any hospital, any clinic in the state of Washington,” said Dr. Scott Lindquist, state medical epidemiologist for communicable disease. “They should all be ready to handle that patient.”

Hospitals across the state have been briefing their staffs and drilling in the use of protective gear. The state public health lab in Shoreline has stocked up on Ebola test kits with unbreakable plastic test tubes. And new protocols are in place to guide ambulance crews and 911 operators.

“I have a lot of confidence in our health system,” said Dr. Meagan Kay, epidemiologist for Public Health — Seattle & King County. “But this is a very scary virus for a lot of people, and there’s a lot of misunderstanding about how it’s transmitted and who’s at risk.”

The death in Dallas last week of Thomas Duncan, the Liberian man who was the first person diagnosed with Ebola in the United States, rattled nerves and showed that even American medicine can’t save everyone from the virus. Then a nurse picked up the disease from a patient in Spain, likely because she accidentally touched a contaminated surface when removing her protective gear.

It was standing-room only last week at Harborview Medical Center for a series of employee briefings, said Associate Medical Director Dr. Timothy Dellit. Harborview is one of a handful of hospitals in the country — and the only one in Washington — that have agreed to accept American Ebola patients airlifted from Africa.

That decision caused consternation among some of the hospital staff. “I think there’s lot of unknowns, and it seems like we’re just jumping into it,” said one employee who asked not to be named out of concern over possible reprisals.

But Dellit said an airlift would be a tightly controlled situation, with little chance of public exposure. “Quite frankly, I’m more concerned about the potential random individual who ... just shows up in our emergency department or clinics,” he said.

Following protocol from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, health providers in Washington will ask anyone showing up for care — and all those calling 911 to request medical assistance for illness — whether they have any Ebola symptoms, such as fever, headache and weakness, and whether they have recently visited the region of West Africa where the disease is raging.

If the answer to both questions is “yes,” the person is considered a possible case, and extra precautions will come into play, Kay explained.

A patient who is already in a hospital will be immediately placed in an isolation room. At Harborview, that would be one of the hospital’s 20 negative-pressure rooms, equipped with ventilation systems that don’t allow any air to escape.

If the patient is at a clinic or doctor’s office, he or she will be isolated in a room with the door closed and a warning sign posted on it. An ambulance will be called to transport the patient to a hospital, Kay said.

A similar procedure would be followed for a case at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. Though SeaTac has no direct flights from Africa and is not one of the five U.S. airports where formal Ebola screening will be conducted, the CDC has long stationed a team of experts at the airport on the alert for a wide range of infectious diseases.

American Medical Response, a private company that operates a fleet of about 120 ambulances in Washington, has drawn up guidelines for wrapping the interior of any ambulance used to transport a suspected Ebola case, said spokesman Brant Butte.

“Basically, we’ll just wrap it with Visqueen and tape it off,” he said. “Some might say that’s overkill, but this is a very bad bug, so it pays to be cautious.”

Ambulances are also being equipped with “Ebola kits,” which include Tyvek suits more sturdy than normal protective gowns.

King County Emergency Medical Services, which oversees the 911 system and government ambulances, is preparing new training videos and offering guidance to its crews.

“We’re partway there,” said EMS Director Dr. Mickey Eisenberg. “ We’re doing everything we can to get everybody informed and trained.”

One thing ambulance crews are advised not to do is draw blood or insert breathing tubes if there’s a chance the patient is infected with Ebola — since the disease is transmitted by contact with bodily fluids.

“Imagine trying to do some of these things in a bouncing vehicle,” Eisenberg said. “It’s much better to put it off until you get to the hospital.”

The Washington Department of Health laboratory in Shoreline was recently approved as one of 13 labs in the country to do Ebola testing. All suspect patients will be tested, with results available in as little as eight hours.

But health officials will likely start tracing the patient’s contacts even before the results come back, Kay said. It can be a laborious process, but hospitals will keep logs of everyone who comes into contact with the patient, and public-health staff are expert in tracking people down.

In the case of a confirmed Ebola infection, the CDC will dispatch teams to assist.

“We have a lot of experience doing this,” Kay said. “It’s the root of the public-health process.”

Depending on the degree of potential exposure, most people who come into contact with an infected person would not be quarantined if they have no symptoms. But health officials would visit each person twice a day, to check their temperature and general health, Kay said.

Dellit said he wouldn’t be surprised to see an Ebola case in Washington, but he doesn’t expect many. “I do not think there is going to be an outbreak in this country,” he said.

If some Harborview staff are reluctant to treat Ebola patients, Dellit said, the hospital would consider their objections on a case-by-case basis.

Roy Godwin, a nurse in Harborview’s cardiac intensive-care unit, where Ebola patients would likely be housed, said he would not hesitate to care for an infected person.

“I’m not afraid to do this because I’m confident in my skill set and in the system we have in place,” Godwin said.

For example, every time a staff member puts on and takes off protective gear, an observer will watch his or her every move to make sure no patch of skin is left exposed or any potentially contaminated surface is touched.

“I don’t know if we can save everyone that comes to us,” Godwin said. “But we will do everything we can.”

If it isn’t enough, Kay said, health officials are working with medical examiners and mortuaries to set up procedures for safe cremation of human remains.

http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2024758129_ebolaprepxml.html
 
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