Shit indeed. Although I'm still not convinced these estimates actually mean much. I'd ask is that infections or deaths, but it's almost irrelevant. 100,000 cases of ebola equates to an epidemic that is totally out of control, and because it has never happened before we have no way of knowing what happens after that. Where does it stop? When does the infection rate stop increasing? Are we going to see the whole of sub-saharan Africa quarantined? Would that be effective in stopping it from getting out of Africa and into other "backwards" parts of the world, or once it is established in Africa is it inevitable that it is going to spread further afield? Are we going to see ebola in the Indian and Chinese megacities? In south america? Is there going to be long-term, widespread disruption to international travel?maudibe wrote:big numbers now being posted - estimates of 100,000 to 270,000 by the end of the year.
Also an unrelated (?) breakout in the Congo with 35 infected.
Shit.
Nobody knows, but I do know that even 270,000 is a drop in the ocean compared to the number of people on this planet living in places at least as backwards, or only marginally less so, than the African countries currently affected. We're talking hundreds of millions.