Tuesday, November 26, 2019
Problems and Preventions of Ebola and AIDS Essays - Ebola, RTT
Problems and Prevention's of Ebola and AIDS Essays - Ebola, RTT    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 sexsome 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    
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