As usual, there's enough blame to cover anyone who was within about ten miles of the Dallas Ebola cases.
Ebola is VERY dangerous. For an infectious disease to be that dangerous, it has to be 1) easy to transmit, which Ebola is and 2) have a high rate of death, which Ebola does. Ebola is both very contagious- like, for example, measles- and highly lethal, like, say, smallpox or rabies. Well, not as bad as rabies. In all of reported history, ONE person has survived rabies, as far as I know. Only one. Read on.
It's true that (for example) many more people will die of influenza this year than will die (in the USA) of Ebola. BUT- very few people are exposed to Ebola. If you had the same number of people exposed to Ebola who would be exposed to influenza viruses, the number of deaths would be HUGE in comparison. There is no vaccine against Ebola (yet) and seventy percent of people who get it die. AND- here's the crucial thing- just about everyone exposed to Ebola gets it, unless they are already immune from previous exposure. It is extremely contagious, is my understanding, and patients who are very sick with Ebola excrete billions of viruses in their body fluids. The virus is trying to get to the next host.
Terry, you are a bit unfair to Texas Presbyterian, I think. They did screw up- the biggest screwup was sending Duncan home, because if they had admitted him, he might be alive today. As far as the two nurses getting Ebola, Texas Pres. was doing the best they knew how with a lot of conflicting information. NOW there is a huge amount of information on how to dress to take care of Ebola patients. Even a few weeks ago there was not. To put it another way, it's unusual that more people didn't get sick with Ebola. I don't know if my own ER would have done any better than Texas Pres., although I hope so. We see a lot of tropical diseases where I worked, so we might have been more on the ball. But I'm not sure.
As political as threads on this forum get, the Ebola epidemic and the small number of cases here are not really a political issue at all. The comments made here are not much use in terms of actual fact with regard to the epidemic, but they do say a lot about the people making them and their political persuasions.