Zero chance with no symptoms?
I read, I watch the new, I am educated. I hear the "scientific" fact that there is zero chance of getting it when no symptoms are showing.
1. What about a us citizen returning with no symptoms. He is excited to see his wife and they have sex the next morning. He leaves for the office and starts to get chills and fever on the way to work. Does that one hour really give her 100% chance of not being exposed if his symptoms turn out to be Ebola?
2. A West African citizen comes to USA to see a relative. His young nephew skins his knee playing and the uncle wants to take his mind off the boo boo, they start to play basketball and the man's sweat gets on the ball and then the hands of the young boy. Two hours later, the man goes into convulsions and is taken away by ambulance. If this man has Ebola, is this young boy really safe by two hours?
3. A woman returns from helping ebola patients in west Africa. The next week she returns and gets a sad phone call and is crying. Her husband wipes away her tears. He did not know he had a tiny paper cut. She starts to make dinner and gets chills. She starts to sneeze and the next morning other symptoms appear. Is he really sAfe by 30 minutes?
I can't believe it is 100% impossible to not get Ebola if symptoms are not showing. These hypothetical scenes would worry the crap out if me and they are all possible scenes with so many people exposed in these countries. Citizens or not, there needs to be a quarantine period before coming to / back to the USA from certain countries
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