jezziesgirl123
jezziesgirl123
jezziesgirl123

She had to pee and poo in a bucket and didn't have access to a shower. That doesn't sound like clean to me.

Compare it to the 2009-2010 swine flu pandemic though, people were in an extreme state of panic and began exterminating pigs. Many farmers worldwide, and even some governments sanctioned the extermination of pigs because they thought there was a risk to human health. I haven't heard the same public health concerns

I read that article and it is misleading. The researchers found that ~9-25% of the dogs sampled (from regions that had an Ebola outbreak) had Ebola virus-specific IgG in their blood. They did not find any circulating Ebola antigens, Ebola viral DNA sequences, and were not able to isolate the virus from the samples.

So how come we aren't hearing about the massive widespread killing of dogs, cats, pigs, cattle (or any other animals that may be within close contact of humans) in West Africa in order to prevent the spread of Ebola? Perhaps because it isn't a risk factor?