But then you have to put your hand in your mouth so the cardinal rule is to 
wash hands after contact with outside things I suppose...dee

Sent from my iPad

> On 8 Oct 2014, at 09:24, Kirsteen Wright <kirsteen.falcons...@gmail.com> 
> wrote:
> 
> Yes but from what I gather, unlike HIV, the virus can live outside the body 
> for quite some time. So if someone was to, say, sweat on a bus seat and you 
> sit on it after them or sneeze on a door handle that you subsequently touch, 
> it could be passed that way. It's not technically airborne but has passed 
> between animals in adjoining cages with no physical contact.
> 
> I'm sure the nurse in Spain, knowing the risks, would have been careful to 
> avoid the actual bodily fluids of her patient, yet she still caught it.
> 
> Apparently it needs level 4 containment and the UK only has 4 beds that meet 
> that requirement. In saying all that, I still wouldn't panic but I would be 
> extremely careful.
> 
> Cheers 
> Kirsteen
> 
>> On 8 Oct 2014 08:55, "Dee" <d...@deetroy.org> wrote:
>> But I read that you can only get Ebola from contact with the bodily fluids 
>> of an infected person.  Plus the medical system in civilised countries is 
>> much better so I don't understand what all the panic is about...dee
>> 
>> Sent from my iPad
>> 
>>> On 7 Oct 2014, at 18:27, TJ Garland <ironguard...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> 
>>> 
>>> http://www.theorganicprepper.ca/updated-prepping-for-an-ebola-lockdown-10022014
>>> 
>>> 
>>> If God wanted us to vote, he would have
>>> given us candidates.
>>> ~Jay Leno~
>>> 
>>> 
>>>  
>>> 
>>>