Khross wrote:
Diamondeye:
You're still fixated on human infection vectors. As for why pig farms are dangerous -- pigs mutate Ebola in a airborne variant called the Ebola Restovirus.
You're fixating on the animal vector.
Reston VirusQuote:
While investigating an outbreak of Simian hemorrhagic fever (SHFV) in November 1989, an electron microscopist from USAMRIID named Thomas W. Geisbert discovered filoviruses similar in appearance to Ebola virus in tissue samples taken from Crab-eating Macaque imported from the Philippines to Hazleton Laboratories in Reston, Virginia. The filovirus was further isolated by Dr. Peter B. Jahrling, and over the period of three months over a third of the monkeys died—at a rate of two or three a day.[10]
Blood samples were taken from 178 animal handlers during the incident.[11] Of them, six eventually seroconverted, testing positive using ELISA. They remained, however, asymptomatic. In January 1990, an animal handler at Hazelton cut himself while performing a necropsy on the liver of an infected Cynomolgus. Under the direction of the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) the animal handler was placed under surveillance for the duration of the incubation period. When the animal handler failed to become ill, it was concluded that the virus had a low pathogenicity in humans.[12]
Quote:
On 11 December 2008, pigs from farms slightly north of Manila, Philippines tested positive for the virus. The CDC and the World Health Organization are investigating.[18] On 23 January 2009, Philippine health officials announced that a hog farm worker had been infected with the virus. Although the man was asymptomatic and the source of the infection is uncertain, this could represent the first case of pig-to-human transmission of Reston virus - a fact that could cause concern, as pigs may be able to transmit more deadly diseases to humans. The situation was investigated.[19] Eventually six workers were found to test sero-positive for antibodies to Reston ebolavirus. None developed any noticible symptoms of illness.[20]
The Reston Virus version is of little concern compared to the others. The pig-to-human transmission has been ONE possible (albeit very likely) known case so far, and the concern is not with that virus, but rather that pigs "may" be able to transmit other dangerous diseases, which are not specifically Ebola at all.
And again, the virus has to survive the food-production and storage process in order to be a problem through the supermarket vector.