One Political Plaza - Home of politics
Home Active Topics Newest Pictures Search Login Register
Main
Media overhypes Ebola fear factor.
Oct 18, 2014 16:47:59   #
Worried for our children Loc: Massachusetts
 
By: Linda Chavez

It’s time to take a deep breath. Ebola is an awful disease that has tragically infected a handful of Americans. Though it deserves the full attention of our medical community — most importantly, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — it should not be dominating our news, preoccupying our president and other political leaders, and frightening Americans into believing an epidemic on U.S. soil is just around the corner.

A Washington Post poll last week showed that two-thirds of Americans fear an epidemic in the U.S., and 4 in 10 said they are somewhat or very worried that a family member may contract the disease. This is simply not going to happen.

The disease can only spread through direct contact with the bodily fluids of an infected person. The Dallas hospital that treated Thomas Duncan botched procedures in dealing with the disease from day one — but as terrible as those mistakes were, they do not portend disaster for the country.

At times like these, it is usually helpful for our leaders to try to calm the fear. But unfortunately, President Obama has so squandered the trust of the American people over the past six years that the more he talks the less people seem to believe him. Nonetheless, he was right when he said, “The dangers of your contracting Ebola, the dangers of a serious outbreak, are extraordinarily low.”

Our fears are irrational. Statistically, most of us have a far greater likelihood of dying of influenza this winter than Ebola. Last year, about 30,000 people died of the flu in the U.S., yet less than half of Americans get flu shots, which can prevent the disease. Getting struck by lightning is likelier than catching Ebola. So far this year, 24 people have died from lightning strikes in the U.S.; one has died from Ebola.

So why are we so afraid? Ironically, the very measures necessary to protect those in actual danger of contracting the disease frighten the rest of us. Photos of men and women covered in hazmat suits dominate the airwaves and front pages of newspapers. The streets of Dallas outside the patients’ apartments and the tarmac at the airport where patients are being transported look like scenes from a science fiction movie. Creatures in bright yellow scuttle about squirting disinfectant on sidewalks, their faces obscured by masks. A new patient hobbles from an ambulance to a medical transport plane looking as if she’s just landed after a dangerous journey to outer space. And these images play in a constant loop on our living room TVs.

At one level, this phenomenon is nothing new. We saw it in the early days of the AIDS epidemic. We’ve seen it every time a new threat emerges — swine flu, bird flu, SARS, MRSA, even mad cow disease. People fear what they cannot see and do not understand. But worse, the media’s intense preoccupation with Ebola in the U.S. fuels fear. The attention focused on this story is simply disproportionate to its importance.

None of this is to suggest that the federal government’s response has been exemplary. It hasn’t. The CDC has sent inconsistent messages to health care workers and to the public. Its latest failure — telling a nurse who had treated Duncan that she could travel aboard a commercial airline despite having a fever — not only was wrong but also undermined the credibility of the agency. But it is highly unlikely that anyone on the plane is in real danger, even though the nurse has tested positive for Ebola. Unless there was contact with the woman’s bodily fluids, transmission was highly improbable, if not impossible.

If we really want to protect ourselves from Ebola, our concentration should be focused on Africa. It is the geometric expansion of the disease in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea that poses a real threat. We must stop the spread of the disease there. And that will require a greater effort on the part of the United States and other countries, including well-enforced quarantines and travel limits.

Regardless of what we do, it is likely we will see more cases of Ebola in American hospitals. The goal must be to provide the best treatment possible, to protect health workers who will come in contact with patients and to concentrate treatment in as few medical centers as possible.

The one thing the media could do to help is to quit treating Ebola as if it is the most important story of the day.



http://www.bostonherald.com/news_opinion/opinion/op_ed/2014/10/chavez_media_overhypes_ebola_fear_factor

Reply
Oct 18, 2014 17:04:20   #
Dummy Boy Loc: Michigan
 
Worried for our children wrote:
By: Linda Chavez

It’s time to take a deep breath. Ebola is an awful disease that has tragically infected a handful of Americans. Though it deserves the full attention of our medical community — most importantly, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — it should not be dominating our news, preoccupying our president and other political leaders, and frightening Americans into believing an epidemic on U.S. soil is just around the corner.



http://www.bostonherald.com/news_opinion/opinion/op_ed/2014/10/chavez_media_overhypes_ebola_fear_factor
By: Linda Chavez br br It’s time to take a deep b... (show quote)


I'm a bit stunned that you presented this...since I feel that you are typically a "henny penny", your screen says it all...but yea I agree...the intention, I guess is to allow Republicans to screw this up I guess...

Reply
Oct 18, 2014 17:20:07   #
vernon
 
Worried for our children wrote:
By: Linda Chavez

It’s time to take a deep breath. Ebola is an awful disease that has tragically infected a handful of Americans. Though it deserves the full attention of our medical community — most importantly, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — it should not be dominating our news, preoccupying our president and other political leaders, and frightening Americans into believing an epidemic on U.S. soil is just around the corner.

A Washington Post poll last week showed that two-thirds of Americans fear an epidemic in the U.S., and 4 in 10 said they are somewhat or very worried that a family member may contract the disease. This is simply not going to happen.

The disease can only spread through direct contact with the bodily fluids of an infected person. The Dallas hospital that treated Thomas Duncan botched procedures in dealing with the disease from day one — but as terrible as those mistakes were, they do not portend disaster for the country.

At times like these, it is usually helpful for our leaders to try to calm the fear. But unfortunately, President Obama has so squandered the trust of the American people over the past six years that the more he talks the less people seem to believe him. Nonetheless, he was right when he said, “The dangers of your contracting Ebola, the dangers of a serious outbreak, are extraordinarily low.”

Our fears are irrational. Statistically, most of us have a far greater likelihood of dying of influenza this winter than Ebola. Last year, about 30,000 people died of the flu in the U.S., yet less than half of Americans get flu shots, which can prevent the disease. Getting struck by lightning is likelier than catching Ebola. So far this year, 24 people have died from lightning strikes in the U.S.; one has died from Ebola.

So why are we so afraid? Ironically, the very measures necessary to protect those in actual danger of contracting the disease frighten the rest of us. Photos of men and women covered in hazmat suits dominate the airwaves and front pages of newspapers. The streets of Dallas outside the patients’ apartments and the tarmac at the airport where patients are being transported look like scenes from a science fiction movie. Creatures in bright yellow scuttle about squirting disinfectant on sidewalks, their faces obscured by masks. A new patient hobbles from an ambulance to a medical transport plane looking as if she’s just landed after a dangerous journey to outer space. And these images play in a constant loop on our living room TVs.

At one level, this phenomenon is nothing new. We saw it in the early days of the AIDS epidemic. We’ve seen it every time a new threat emerges — swine flu, bird flu, SARS, MRSA, even mad cow disease. People fear what they cannot see and do not understand. But worse, the media’s intense preoccupation with Ebola in the U.S. fuels fear. The attention focused on this story is simply disproportionate to its importance.

None of this is to suggest that the federal government’s response has been exemplary. It hasn’t. The CDC has sent inconsistent messages to health care workers and to the public. Its latest failure — telling a nurse who had treated Duncan that she could travel aboard a commercial airline despite having a fever — not only was wrong but also undermined the credibility of the agency. But it is highly unlikely that anyone on the plane is in real danger, even though the nurse has tested positive for Ebola. Unless there was contact with the woman’s bodily fluids, transmission was highly improbable, if not impossible.

If we really want to protect ourselves from Ebola, our concentration should be focused on Africa. It is the geometric expansion of the disease in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea that poses a real threat. We must stop the spread of the disease there. And that will require a greater effort on the part of the United States and other countries, including well-enforced quarantines and travel limits.

Regardless of what we do, it is likely we will see more cases of Ebola in American hospitals. The goal must be to provide the best treatment possible, to protect health workers who will come in contact with patients and to concentrate treatment in as few medical centers as possible.

The one thing the media could do to help is to quit treating Ebola as if it is the most important story of the day.



http://www.bostonherald.com/news_opinion/opinion/op_ed/2014/10/chavez_media_overhypes_ebola_fear_factor
By: Linda Chavez br br It’s time to take a deep b... (show quote)



sounds good but an epidemic starts with the first case.and as far as stopping it there ,i think you start by keeping every one there until you have it whipped.and its this pres responsibility to keep the american people safe and not worry about political correctness.
and if your black and support obama you need to consider is that the people that are comming here are black and you know they will be mingeling with you.

Reply
Oct 18, 2014 17:28:50   #
Worried for our children Loc: Massachusetts
 
Dummy Boy wrote:
I'm a bit stunned that you presented this...since I feel that you are typically a "henny penny", your screen says it all...but yea I agree...the intention, I guess is to allow Republicans to screw this up I guess...





And in typical fashion, you jumbled some words together trying to put together a coherent sentence and failed yet again. Try using all your words, sound them out, after which, read what you write and correct as necessary. Jeeeezzzz, talk about screen names speaking volumes; good grief!!!

Reply
Oct 18, 2014 17:48:58   #
Worried for our children Loc: Massachusetts
 
vernon wrote:
sounds good but an epidemic starts with the first case.and as far as stopping it there ,i think you start by keeping every one there until you have it whipped.and its this pres responsibility to keep the american people safe and not worry about political correctness.
and if your black and support obama you need to consider is that the people that are comming here are black and you know they will be mingeling with you.





I agree with you in theory, but reality dictates that it would be near impossible to keep all infected persons from entering this country. And P.C. will always be a mainstay of the liberal progressive.

Reply
Oct 18, 2014 18:43:54   #
lpnmajor Loc: Arkansas
 
Worried for our children wrote:
By: Linda Chavez

It’s time to take a deep breath. Ebola is an awful disease that has tragically infected a handful of Americans. Though it deserves the full attention of our medical community — most importantly, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — it should not be dominating our news, preoccupying our president and other political leaders, and frightening Americans into believing an epidemic on U.S. soil is just around the corner.

A Washington Post poll last week showed that two-thirds of Americans fear an epidemic in the U.S., and 4 in 10 said they are somewhat or very worried that a family member may contract the disease. This is simply not going to happen.

The disease can only spread through direct contact with the bodily fluids of an infected person. The Dallas hospital that treated Thomas Duncan botched procedures in dealing with the disease from day one — but as terrible as those mistakes were, they do not portend disaster for the country.

At times like these, it is usually helpful for our leaders to try to calm the fear. But unfortunately, President Obama has so squandered the trust of the American people over the past six years that the more he talks the less people seem to believe him. Nonetheless, he was right when he said, “The dangers of your contracting Ebola, the dangers of a serious outbreak, are extraordinarily low.”

Our fears are irrational. Statistically, most of us have a far greater likelihood of dying of influenza this winter than Ebola. Last year, about 30,000 people died of the flu in the U.S., yet less than half of Americans get flu shots, which can prevent the disease. Getting struck by lightning is likelier than catching Ebola. So far this year, 24 people have died from lightning strikes in the U.S.; one has died from Ebola.

So why are we so afraid? Ironically, the very measures necessary to protect those in actual danger of contracting the disease frighten the rest of us. Photos of men and women covered in hazmat suits dominate the airwaves and front pages of newspapers. The streets of Dallas outside the patients’ apartments and the tarmac at the airport where patients are being transported look like scenes from a science fiction movie. Creatures in bright yellow scuttle about squirting disinfectant on sidewalks, their faces obscured by masks. A new patient hobbles from an ambulance to a medical transport plane looking as if she’s just landed after a dangerous journey to outer space. And these images play in a constant loop on our living room TVs.

At one level, this phenomenon is nothing new. We saw it in the early days of the AIDS epidemic. We’ve seen it every time a new threat emerges — swine flu, bird flu, SARS, MRSA, even mad cow disease. People fear what they cannot see and do not understand. But worse, the media’s intense preoccupation with Ebola in the U.S. fuels fear. The attention focused on this story is simply disproportionate to its importance.

None of this is to suggest that the federal government’s response has been exemplary. It hasn’t. The CDC has sent inconsistent messages to health care workers and to the public. Its latest failure — telling a nurse who had treated Duncan that she could travel aboard a commercial airline despite having a fever — not only was wrong but also undermined the credibility of the agency. But it is highly unlikely that anyone on the plane is in real danger, even though the nurse has tested positive for Ebola. Unless there was contact with the woman’s bodily fluids, transmission was highly improbable, if not impossible.

If we really want to protect ourselves from Ebola, our concentration should be focused on Africa. It is the geometric expansion of the disease in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea that poses a real threat. We must stop the spread of the disease there. And that will require a greater effort on the part of the United States and other countries, including well-enforced quarantines and travel limits.

Regardless of what we do, it is likely we will see more cases of Ebola in American hospitals. The goal must be to provide the best treatment possible, to protect health workers who will come in contact with patients and to concentrate treatment in as few medical centers as possible.

The one thing the media could do to help is to quit treating Ebola as if it is the most important story of the day.



http://www.bostonherald.com/news_opinion/opinion/op_ed/2014/10/chavez_media_overhypes_ebola_fear_factor
By: Linda Chavez br br It’s time to take a deep b... (show quote)


You are absolutely correct. However, common sense and ordinary - doesn't interest the media at all. If it isn't an emergency, a crisis, or a scandal - they'll make it one - and milk it for all it's worth. Just as a TV show relies on ratings to stay on the air, the news networks rely on rating to keep the money flowing. Writers for TV, news, and political ads, are trained the same way and use the same tools and basically write the same stuff.

The only place where " just the facts Ma'am " apply, is on the old Dragnet police show, everywhere else, hyperbole, exaggeration and "between the lines" applies. When the media shouts " emergency!", I know it's anything but and the same applies to "Crisis!" and "new scandal!".

Reply
Oct 19, 2014 08:26:50   #
Dummy Boy Loc: Michigan
 
Worried for our children wrote:
And in typical fashion, you jumbled some words together trying to put together a coherent sentence and failed yet again. Try using all your words, sound them out, after which, read what you write and correct as necessary. Jeeeezzzz, talk about screen names speaking volumes; good grief!!!


How is this for coherent? You're an idiot. I kept it to 3 syllables and below and as few of words as possible for YOUR benefit. Because too many thoughts or what intelligent people call sarcasm is far beyond your 3rd grade reading level.

Reply
Oct 19, 2014 13:53:13   #
Worried for our children Loc: Massachusetts
 
Dummy Boy wrote:
How is this for coherent? You're an idiot. I kept it to 3 syllables and below and as few of words as possible for YOUR benefit. Because too many thoughts or what intelligent people call sarcasm is far beyond your 3rd grade reading level.





As far as coherent, much better, atleast I didn't have to fill in the gaps of missing words with this post of yours. Though you'll have to clarify where you used sarcasm, calling someone names is not using sarcasm. And you force me to dumb myself down to a third grade reading level, so that I can comprehend your first grade writing skills. Do you know what syllables are, or how to count them? Let's see if you can find where you used more than three, as apposed to your claim of using three or fewer, I'll wager you can't. Your name sure does suit you. Did you know if a "Dummy" calls another person an idiot, it is a compliment? I guess I should say thanks, but I won't.

Try harder next time little boy! Ahhhh hahahahaha!!!!!!!!!

Reply
Oct 19, 2014 15:26:13   #
Dummy Boy Loc: Michigan
 
Worried for our children wrote:
As far as coherent, much better, atleast I didn't have to fill in the gaps of missing words with this post of yours. Though you'll have to clarify where you used sarcasm, calling someone names is not using sarcasm. And you force me to dumb myself down to a third grade reading level, so that I can comprehend your first grade writing skills. Do you know what syllables are, or how to count them? Let's see if you can find where you used more than three, as apposed to your claim of using three or fewer, I'll wager you can't. Your name sure does suit you. Did you know if a "Dummy" calls another person an idiot, it is a compliment? I guess I should say thanks, but I won't.

Try harder next time little boy! Ahhhh hahahahaha!!!!!!!!!
As far as coherent, much better, atleast I didn't ... (show quote)


I guess if one uses the word syllable, one might go as far to assume that the user has an understanding of it. Can I help you with that? Do know what a dic-tion-ary is? And lastly, ..that's your best response, a Dummy calls someone an idiot so it's a compliment? You're an idiot...go home...and take your meds.

Reply
Oct 19, 2014 15:33:22   #
badbobby Loc: texas
 
Worried for our children wrote:
By: Linda Chavez

It’s time to take a deep breath. Ebola is an awful disease that has tragically infected a handful of Americans. Though it deserves the full attention of our medical community — most importantly, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — it should not be dominating our news, preoccupying our president and other political leaders, and frightening Americans into believing an epidemic on U.S. soil is just around the corner.
agreeing with your assessment to an extent,but---???did she maybe sneeze while on the airplane????
A Washington Post poll last week showed that two-thirds of Americans fear an epidemic in the U.S., and 4 in 10 said they are somewhat or very worried that a family member may contract the disease. This is simply not going to happen.

The disease can only spread through direct contact with the bodily fluids of an infected person. The Dallas hospital that treated Thomas Duncan botched procedures in dealing with the disease from day one — but as terrible as those mistakes were, they do not portend disaster for the country.

At times like these, it is usually helpful for our leaders to try to calm the fear. But unfortunately, President Obama has so squandered the trust of the American people over the past six years that the more he talks the less people seem to believe him. Nonetheless, he was right when he said, “The dangers of your contracting Ebola, the dangers of a serious outbreak, are extraordinarily low.”

Our fears are irrational. Statistically, most of us have a far greater likelihood of dying of influenza this winter than Ebola. Last year, about 30,000 people died of the flu in the U.S., yet less than half of Americans get flu shots, which can prevent the disease. Getting struck by lightning is likelier than catching Ebola. So far this year, 24 people have died from lightning strikes in the U.S.; one has died from Ebola.

So why are we so afraid? Ironically, the very measures necessary to protect those in actual danger of contracting the disease frighten the rest of us. Photos of men and women covered in hazmat suits dominate the airwaves and front pages of newspapers. The streets of Dallas outside the patients’ apartments and the tarmac at the airport where patients are being transported look like scenes from a science fiction movie. Creatures in bright yellow scuttle about squirting disinfectant on sidewalks, their faces obscured by masks. A new patient hobbles from an ambulance to a medical transport plane looking as if she’s just landed after a dangerous journey to outer space. And these images play in a constant loop on our living room TVs.

At one level, this phenomenon is nothing new. We saw it in the early days of the AIDS epidemic. We’ve seen it every time a new threat emerges — swine flu, bird flu, SARS, MRSA, even mad cow disease. People fear what they cannot see and do not understand. But worse, the media’s intense preoccupation with Ebola in the U.S. fuels fear. The attention focused on this story is simply disproportionate to its importance.

None of this is to suggest that the federal government’s response has been exemplary. It hasn’t. The CDC has sent inconsistent messages to health care workers and to the public. Its latest failure — telling a nurse who had treated Duncan that she could travel aboard a commercial airline despite having a fever — not only was wrong but also undermined the credibility of the agency. But it is highly unlikely that anyone on the plane is in real danger, even though the nurse has tested positive for Ebola. Unless there was contact with the woman’s bodily fluids, transmission was highly improbable, if not impossible.

If we really want to protect ourselves from Ebola, our concentration should be focused on Africa. It is the geometric expansion of the disease in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea that poses a real threat. We must stop the spread of the disease there. And that will require a greater effort on the part of the United States and other countries, including well-enforced quarantines and travel limits.

Regardless of what we do, it is likely we will see more cases of Ebola in American hospitals. The goal must be to provide the best treatment possible, to protect health workers who will come in contact with patients and to concentrate treatment in as few medical centers as possible.

The one thing the media could do to help is to quit treating Ebola as if it is the most important story of the day.



http://www.bostonherald.com/news_opinion/opinion/op_ed/2014/10/chavez_media_overhypes_ebola_fear_factor
By: Linda Chavez br br It’s time to take a deep b... (show quote)

Reply
Oct 19, 2014 18:50:29   #
Worried for our children Loc: Massachusetts
 
Dummy Boy wrote:
I guess if one uses the word syllable, one might go as far to assume that the user has an understanding of it. Can I help you with that? Do know what a dic-tion-ary is? And lastly, ..that's your best response, a Dummy calls someone an idiot so it's a compliment? You're an idiot...go home...and take your meds.




Hey Dummy, you're the one using the word "syllable" , saying you would keep your post under three, and you end up not doing that. All I did was point out how stupid you are, and you ask if I need a dictionary. Silly little boy. If I have to keep holding your hand from post to post, it's going to get real boring, real fast. So try to keep up.

The only thing you can help me with is having you step away from your keyboard, really, this helps you out more than it does me. I can't fix your stupidity all by myself, you'll have to pitch in a little.

That's your best response? Go home and take your meds?

Ok judges, let's hear it for originality!!!!!!!!! = 0


Sorry Dummy, you're still going to have to try harder. Ahhhh hahahahaha!!!!

Reply
If you want to reply, then register here. Registration is free and your account is created instantly, so you can post right away.
Main
OnePoliticalPlaza.com - Forum
Copyright 2012-2024 IDF International Technologies, Inc.