SeniorLearn.org Discussions

Archives & Readers' Guides => Archives of Book Discussions => Topic started by: JoanP on October 18, 2014, 07:53:11 PM

Title: Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online Prediscussion
Post by: JoanP on October 18, 2014, 07:53:11 PM
The Book Club Online is  the oldest  book club on the Internet, begun in 1996, open to everyone.  We offer cordial discussions of one book a month,  24/7 and  enjoy the company of readers from all over the world.  Everyone is welcome.

November Book Club Online  Will you join us?

The Hot Zone: A Terrifying True Story  
by Richard Preston
(http://seniorlearn.org/bookclubs/hotzone/hotzonecover.jpg)  
It reads like a detective thriller, but it's a true story--how the Ebola virus was discovered, and what happened when it turned up in a research lab just a few miles from Washington, DC.

"When Richard Preston's novel "The Hot Zone" was published in 1995, it was, for many, their first introduction to the deadly Ebola and Marburg viruses.
 Nearly two decades later, Ebola has infected hundreds of people in three countries across West Africa, in what is considered the worst outbreak in history. As fear over the deadly virus grows, we need a reminder of what we learned so long ago from Preston." British Broadcasting Corporation BBC
 



                                

DISCUSSION SCHEDULE:

Nov. 1 - 5~  First three chapters--Something in the Forest, Jumper, Diagnosis (Africa, 1980)

 

RELEVANT LINKS:
 Mt. Elgon National Park (http://ugandawildlife.org/explore-our-parks/parks-by-name-a-z/mount-elgon-national-park); Mt. Elgon Hotel and Spa (http://www.mountelgonhotel.com/);
BBC Ebola Primer (http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-28754546);

  


Discussion Leader: PatH (rjhighet@earthlink.net )
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: JoanP on October 20, 2014, 11:55:19 AM
Hopefully you will not have trouble getting your hands on a copy of this book!  Since the spread of the Ebola disease out of Africa - and some cases in the United States, the book has become scarcer at libraries across the country.  How can this be happening again?

Have we learned anything from the 1980's and from Richard Preston's book that will help us cope with the disease this time around?  If we return to the book, and then consider the recent cases, maybe we can find assurance that we can cope better this time.  (although we've had a rocky start in Dallas, haven't we?).  The BBC came out with a recent program we'll consider - the 10 Things we've learned from Richard Preston's book. 

Will you check Hold Lists at your local libraries and let us know how difficult it will be to find copies by Nov 1?  Also - the book has since come out in paperback.
We're looking forward to your input!  Let us know in a post below if you will be able to join us.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: Ella Gibbons on October 20, 2014, 02:00:54 PM
Joan, I'm going to buy a copy; sounds so interesting and we do need to learn all we can about this virus.  I know we have all been attached to the TV as the first man to bring it in to the USA died and now two nurses have been diagnosed with it.  NURSES!  NO DOCTORS??   Were the nurses careless?  Or just spent more time with the patient. 

And I never knew, or thought of, a hospital at the National Institutes of Health; I must google that.

My llibrary's copies were all out.

I also tried to get a copy of KILLING PATTon, try that one!!   My library has 159 copies and is ordering more, so think I'll buy a copy of that also.   My sister said she could not lay the book down.

See you in November, a month I've been dreaading as it is my birthday on the llth and I must renew my drivers' license.  My eye doctor says I should have no problem but when you are 86, you get this look from those in authority; dread it.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: Frybabe on October 20, 2014, 02:44:28 PM
My library has one three copies. They are all out with seven holds at the moment. I think I saw the book in my sister's home library. Still, I am not sure I want to terrify myself any more what with all the horrific thinks being reported lately.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 20, 2014, 04:47:15 PM
Ella, can your eye doctor do what they can do in Maryland, give you a filled out form which you can hand over instead of taking the eye exam?  That cuts out one bit of stress.

Indeed, NIH has a hospital.  I worked in it for 35 years.  It opened in 1953, and I went to work there in 1954, took some time off when having children, and retired in 1999.  They've built a new part, latched onto the original building, which doubles its size.  It's used for patients involved in studies.

http://clinicalcenter.nih.gov/ (http://clinicalcenter.nih.gov/)

The building has research labs as well as a hospital, and that's where I worked, doing chemical research that was disease-related in one way or another.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 20, 2014, 04:54:25 PM
Quote
Were the nurses careless?  Or just spent more time with the patient.

They were caring for a patient with massive diarrhea and projectile vomiting, the disease is transmitted through bodily fluids, and at first the protective clothing wasn't totally sealed, and it's tricky to get in and out of, especially if you don't have much practice.  It's not surprising that some of them got sick.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: marcie on October 21, 2014, 02:15:59 AM
I've added my name to the "hold" list for the book at my library. I'm looking forward to learning more about this disease and talking about the book with all of you.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: marjifay on October 21, 2014, 07:46:06 AM
No thanks, I'll pass.  I'm sick and tired of hearing/reading about Ebola!

Marge
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: ginny on October 21, 2014, 08:33:15 AM
I'm in. Knowledge is power. Those of us who spend a lot of time in airplanes want to know the facts so we'll be less likely to panic when the plane touches down in Dallas and the person in front of us throws up (which has happened to me in Dallas).. It will keep us from turning out to the TA in a space suit. It will give us a basis for understanding when  the news is going excitedly on and on because they are having a slow news day. I have quit watching CNN on the TV for this reason. I prefer it on the IPad where I can pick and choose from the day's stories.

 I read this book years ago, only remember that it was good, nothing more... I don't recall being "scared," or anything else. Now I'd like to see for myself. I've already learned something from Pat H's post in this discussion and she, having been a scientist herself, will add no end of interesting bits to the discussion.

How lucky we are to have the members on this website that we do, with their incredible backgrounds and experiences, and how reassured we'll all be that we're not going to "get it" by going to the grocery.  Nigeria is Ebola free already, and probably by the time we get thru this, the latest scare will be over.  I think it's something we owe it to ourselves to be informed about. I've ordered the paperback from Amazon, it's dirt cheap, and they just wrote it's on the way.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: pedln on October 21, 2014, 09:59:21 AM
Ginny, you make many good points.  Knowledge IS power.  I  think the  trail from The Hot Zone to now will be fascinating.  The Kindle version is $5.00.  I downloaded it the other night, but have just barely begun reading.  It seems to start out like a detective story.  Count me in for this discussion.

PatH, my son's MIL worked at NIH -- at the library, with the indexers for Index Medicus.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: JoanP on October 21, 2014, 11:46:33 AM
Can't think of a better leader than  PatH for this discussion!  
I think I heard that NIH only has 2 beds dedicated to the treatment of Ebola.  Let's hope that more are NEVER needed.

Minutes ago, I heard on the radio that the magic date is Nov. 7 - if no new cases emerge among those 120 who were exposed in Dallas by then, we might be free here in the US.  Did I hear that correctly?  Heartened to hear of those who are recovering.  It seems we are on the way to effective treatment.

My youngest son is living in Africa for the next two years...not West Africa, but South in Zambia.  He plans to come home for Christmas, flying first to London and then to DC.  I'm praying that there are no developments between now and then - the kind that will ban travelers from Africa.
Of course I pray for everyone who is in danger of becoming affected by this  horrible disease.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 21, 2014, 12:55:34 PM
That's worrisome for you, JoanP.  I like to think that by Christmas things will have quieted down.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: Ella Gibbons on October 22, 2014, 11:14:19 AM
No, PATH, I don't think that would fly for a renewed drivers license in Ohio; however, I think it would be great if it would.

Yes, I knew how the Ebola virus is spread, but do you know specifically  how the two nurses contacted it?  Through the discard of their hazmat suits or contact with the patient?  I'm sure all was as careful as     possible and I know it must be difficult.  But I would think it would be very helpful for future caretakers of Ebola patients (hopefully none in the USA) to know specifically what happened.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: Ella Gibbons on October 22, 2014, 11:19:30 AM
We read about numerous hospitals in the country preparing for ebola patients and the expense is staggering.  Could we make a prediction of our own how many new cases turn up in the USA in the next two years?

My prediction would be at the most 5-6 new cases?  And they are treated promptly and live.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 22, 2014, 11:57:46 AM
That sounds like a good guess, though I doubt we'll be able to save all of them.

As far as I know, they haven't pinned down how the nurses were infected.  It seems most likely through some failure in protocol or training, both of which have been tightened up and enhanced since then.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: JoanP on October 22, 2014, 08:09:02 PM
I think I read something about the importance of skin protection, Pat.  The new guidelines are specifying every inch of the caregiver be covered.  Don't know if this is a brand new requirement.

I'm heartened to hear of recovering infected patients.  Does that mean there is a cure, then?
Wouldn't it be wonderful to be able to share this treatment with the Ebola patients confined  in the countries of West Africa?

Gee, Ella, I don't want to even think of that many!  I read there are only 11 treatment rooms in the entire country...right now.  I'll go lower.  Three.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 22, 2014, 08:47:14 PM
I think I read something about the importance of skin protection, Pat.  The new guidelines are specifying every inch of the caregiver be covered.  Don't know if this is a brand new requirement.

I'm heartened to hear of recovering infected patients.  Does that mean there is a cure, then?
Skin protection over every inch: It's not new that you should do this for this kind of infection, but the hospital was not prepared to deal with this kind of infection.

Unfortunately, the recovering patients don't mean there is a cure, it means that they got a light enough dose of the infection that first-class medical treatment could support them while they pulled through.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: hysteria2 on October 22, 2014, 09:06:47 PM
I'm in. I now have the book on my Kindle. This hits home for me. I retired after 30 years of nursing, many of which were spent at the bedside in intensive care units. I remember "what a pain" it was to dress in isolation gear 10 - 12 times a shift. I also remember the contamination that occurred when the patient in isolation crashed. Adrenalin kicks in and you tend to forget about your protection. Your focus becomes the patient, and you worry about yourself later. None of these patients had ebola of course, so I was fortunate.

I am looking forward to this discussion!
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 22, 2014, 09:20:14 PM
I thought of a way to appreciate the contamination/decontamination precautions.  Think of putting on a pair of close-fitting rubber gloves.  Then imagine the outsides of the gloves coated with wet paint.  How are you going to take them off without getting paint on yourself?  If you pull the first one off by pulling with the other hand, then what?

Now imagine you are encased in a bodysuit coated with paint.  You can't take your gloves off first, because then you couldn't touch anything.  So you have to peel everything off, curling the suit around so the outside doesn't touch anything, turning things inside out as you go.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 22, 2014, 09:37:11 PM
hystereia2, you were posting at the same time I was writing my last post.

Welcome to our discussions.  It will be great to have your front-line view of the battle.  You can sometimes set us straight when we go off-course.

All honor to you for your dedication.  That's a vital part of the story, and you can help here.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 23, 2014, 12:35:53 PM
I've got the book.  It's a very good read, like a detective story or suspense story.  It does have some detailed clinical descriptions, though, so be prepared for some creative skipping if you don't want the detail.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: bellamarie on October 23, 2014, 03:29:01 PM
In trying to understand how the nurses contracted the virus from Mr. Duncan, I think this article will help.  They have revised protocol and equipment, with adding a shadow person to help dress and undress.  As of today, people I talk to who work in our area hospitals in the ER, have not received training or equipment.  I am praying we have this under control.

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/10/20/cdc-new-protocol/17638161/

I like the thought of the book reading like a detective story or suspense PatH., you may have piqued my interest after all. 
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 23, 2014, 04:31:17 PM
Welcome, Bellamarie.  You'll enjoy the suspense.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: JoanK on October 23, 2014, 04:34:28 PM
Here is a paragraph from the link Bellamarie posted.

"Hospital workers treating Ebola patients should wear double sets of gloves, disposable hoods with full face shields and special masks, according to strengthened guidelines issued Monday night by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The guidelines focus on personal protective equipment, or PPE, giving hospitals and clinics more specific instructions about gloves, gowns and face masks, and how they should be put on and taken off. ...  Nurses have complained that they were sent into the room of Ebola patient Thomas Eric Duncan, the first Ebola patient diagnosed in the USA, with the skin of their necks exposed."

Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 23, 2014, 10:06:18 PM
We have a decision to make--when to start.  Since the topic is so timely, it should be Nov. 1 at the latest, but we could make it a few days earlier if you want.  How many of you already have the book?  Once you start reading it, it goes quickly.  Not pushing too far ahead will be more of a problem than not keeping up.

What does everyone want?
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 23, 2014, 10:16:42 PM
By the way, I see we now have another Ebola patient in this country, but he didn't catch it here.  He's a physician from Doctors Without Borders, who returned to New York from Guinea a week ago.  He had been monitoring himself following the Doctors Without Borders protocol, and the instant he got the first sign of being sick, he isolated himself, calling the authorities as soon as he felt a little more sure.  Test results aren't back yet.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: JoanP on October 24, 2014, 07:41:37 AM
That young doctor seems to have followed protocol, monitoring himself on his return from Guinea - taking his temperature, etc....and yet, I think of the three crowded subway rides, the visit to the Brooklyn bowling alley, etc...before his temp spiked.  I pray that he wasn't contagious before he exhibited symptoms and called for help.  Don't want to be an alarmist...but there is so much we don't know.

I can be good to go on Nov. 1.

Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: bellamarie on October 24, 2014, 08:16:50 AM
Here is the link on Dr. Spencer:

http://insider.foxnews.com/2014/10/23/doctor-who-treated-ebola-patients-guinea-rushed-nyc-hospital

A timeline of events:
In mid-September, 33-year-old Dr. Craig Spencer was treating Ebola patients in Guinea as part of Doctors Without Borders.

Spencer left Guinea on Oct. 14 and arrived at JFK Airport on Oct. 17. He began to feel sluggish on Tuesday but didn’t have a fever.

Yesterday, he went for a jog, took three different subway trains, went to a Brooklyn bowling alley, then took an Uber cab home. He says he felt OK, except for some fatigue.

Spencer reported he first had a fever at around 10 or 11 a.m. today. He reported the fever to Doctors Without Borders, and ambulance crews in hazmat suits then picked him up and took him to Bellevue Hospital.

His fiancé and two close friends are now being quarantined.



What is most disturbing is the fact he had been working directly with Ebola patients in West Africa, came to the U.S., and did not quarantine himself for the 21 days.  He monitored himself, but continued to go out in public.  I don't understand why the U.S. does not follow the travel ban as all other countries.  We can't allow health workers to monitor themselves because so far the nurse from Dallas, and now this doctor both traveled on airplanes after working directly with Ebola patients, rather than being isolated/quarantined for the 21 days, so they would not take the risk of infecting others.  Being symptom free and monitoring their temp, is proving not to be the best prevention.  Both said they felt lethargic/fatigued, before the fever showed up.

Another troubling fact is this:  Spencer reports that he does not believe his protective gear had been breached while treating patients, and he says he was monitoring his own health.

If there was no breach, then we have to understand how he contracted this so we can take more precautions.

PatH., I am for beginning the book early, I purchased it for only $4.99 from my ibook store.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 24, 2014, 09:09:13 AM
We do seem to be pretty sure that victims are not contagious before their temperature starts going up, and Spencer's temperature didn't start to rise until the morning after he was out.  You're correct, that monitoring the temperature of the already infected victim does't keep him from getting sick, but the important question is, does it keep him from passing the infection to others.  It seems to be adequate, as long as the victim isolates himself as soon as his temperature rises.

It would be nice if we knew how he got infected.  He believes there was no breach, but there might have been one.  But he wasn't wearing protective gear 24/7, and he was working and living in very primitive conditions, where actively sick people aren't all quarantined, and medical waste is not always cleaned up.  So it's not really relevant to any precautions we should take.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: ginny on October 24, 2014, 09:19:15 AM
Oh good, Hysteria is here, too! With her long experience as a nurse and PatH's level head we should come out of this  so much better informed.

I'm well into the book and it's not hard at all to see how the doctors in Africa have been infected, it's quite frankly  a  miracle to me after reading it so far that this thing has not turned into another Black Plague, and  the workings of the disease and its horrible symptoms are graphically portrayed, perhaps too much so,  (and could be passed over),  but the result is, for me, completely the opposite of what one would think: I feel more reassured now than ever, and a great deal more sympathy for those who have had to suffer so, and the brave nurses and doctors who give up their own livelihoods and in some cases, lives,  to go over there and try to stop it.

I don't think the other bowlers or subway riders have anything to fear in this latest one,  unless it's gone airborne, which so far doesn't appear to be the case.

It's amazing what a book can do.

November 1 is fine with me. :)
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 24, 2014, 09:25:07 AM
To those who are starting to read the book: try not to read too far ahead, if you can.  There is a lot of suspense, and it's more fun if we read it together.  It divides into separate stories that are part of a total picture, and we'll probably take them in bunches, one or two at a time.  I'll work out a timetable as quickly as I can.  Unfortunately, the first story is pretty graphic, but it's worth sticking with. 
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 24, 2014, 10:25:21 AM
Ginny, I had the same reaction to the book that you did.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: bellamarie on October 24, 2014, 11:12:14 AM
Some interesting articles:

http://www.csmonitor.com/Books/chapter-and-verse/2014/1021/Ebola-thriller-The-Hot-Zone-is-back-in-the-spotlight

This is an interview a New York Times reporter did with Richard Preston on The Hot Zone  Oct 2014.

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/20/books/the-hot-zone-author-tracks-ebolas-evolution.html?ref=books&_r=0

PatH.,  I will wait to begin reading the book until you have figured out the timetable, so I don't get ahead.  Maybe we can place these links into the new discussion page.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 24, 2014, 06:56:47 PM
Bellamarie, I will certainly shift those links if we move to a new page.  The second one, especially, is important.

Everyone: when shall we start?
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: JoanP on October 24, 2014, 07:13:22 PM
I will be back in town and can be ready by Nov. 1, Pat.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: JoanK on October 25, 2014, 04:09:12 PM
I was listening to a talk by Dr. Paul Farmer on U-Tube about ebola. Gave up: he's a poor and rambling talker, but heard a few interesting things. While 80-90% of the patients die, that doesn't mean they should die. Care that advanced medicine could provide, such as hydrating them when they're at the stage of losing fluids, could have prevented some of the deaths. Isolation and  contact tracing, early detection etc. But the epidemic has already completely destroyed the health care system in at least two countries.

As he and my-daughter-the-doctor say the virus as it is now is containable. but it's important to do it fast: all viruses mutate, and we don't want to give it a chance to mutate into a form that could be transmitted through the air. This has never happened before in such viruses, but it's what people fear.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lb11QbP3tOg&feature=youtu.be&utm_content=buffer1da85&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: hysteria2 on October 27, 2014, 12:58:34 PM
Nov. 1st is fine with me.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 27, 2014, 01:33:04 PM
Nov. 1 is in the lead, and there are two people who can't start early, so the 1st it is.

The book is a string of related stories and events, which makes it easy to divide.  Part One The Shadow of Mount Elgon, makes three chunks, about 50 pages each.  Lets take 4-5 days for each.  I'll put up a schedule, but we can speed up or slow down as needed.

1. (Africa, 1980) chapters 1-3: Something in the Forest, Jumper, Diagnosis

2. (Maryland, 1983) chapters 4-6: A Woman and a Soldier, Project Ebola, Total Immersion

3. (Africa, 1976, 1987-8) chapters 7-9: Ebola River, Cardinal, Going Deep

In my book, the chapters have names, but not numbers.  What about the Kindle version?  Does it have chapter names?

Addendum: my explanation was a bit confusing.  I've colored the part we read for nov. 1 red.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 27, 2014, 01:47:18 PM
Unfortunately, the first 3 chapters have some of the most graphic descriptions in the book.  Preston is very dramatic in his descriptions of this awful disease.  If you don't want to deal with that, try to skim or skip a bit, maybe cheer yourself up with section 2, which is very different.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: JoanK on October 27, 2014, 04:20:02 PM
I admit I was really put off by the description in Chapter 1. But I picked up the book again, and really enjoyed it. I suggest skimming over the descriptions  of symptoms if you're squeamish, like me (I can't even watch CSI).
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: JoanK on October 27, 2014, 04:28:49 PM
The Book Club Online is  the oldest  book club on the Internet, begun in 1996, open to everyone.  We offer cordial discussions of one book a month,  24/7 and  enjoy the company of readers from all over the world.  Everyone is welcome.

November Book Club Online  Will you join us?

The Hot Zone: A Terrifying True Story  
by Richard Preston
(http://seniorlearn.org/bookclubs/hotzone/hotzonecover.jpg)  
It reads like a detective thriller, but it's a true story--how the Ebola virus was discovered, and what happened when it turned up in a research lab just a few miles from Washington, DC.

"When Richard Preston's novel "The Hot Zone" was published in 1995, it was, for many, their first introduction to the deadly Ebola and Marburg viruses.
 Nearly two decades later, Ebola has infected hundreds of people in three countries across West Africa, in what is considered the worst outbreak in history. As fear over the deadly virus grows, we need a reminder of what we learned so long ago from Preston." British Broadcasting Corporation BBC
 

                               

DISCUSSION SCHEDULE:

Nov. 1 - 5~  First three chapters--Something in the Forest, Jumper, Diagnosis (Africa, 1980)

 

RELEVANT LINKS:
 Mt. Elgon National Park (http://ugandawildlife.org/explore-our-parks/parks-by-name-a-z/mount-elgon-national-park); Mt. Elgon Hotel and Spa (http://www.mountelgonhotel.com/);
BBC Ebola Primer (http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-28754546);

  


Discussion Leader: PatH (rjhighet@earthlink.net )








My kindle table of contents reads like this:

Part One. The shadow of Mount Elgon
Part Two The Monkey House
Part Three Smashdown
Part Four Kitum Cave

Main Characters
Glossary
Credits

Looks like almost, but not quite your division. I'll check with you.
No bibliography or credits to written sources, which is odd: he seems to have written it all from interviews. Maybe there weren't any written sources then.
JoanK
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 28, 2014, 07:31:13 AM
I guess my description was a little confusing, Joan.  In the table of contents, both book and Kindle, the book is divided into parts.  Part One is The Shadow of Mount Elgon.  Each part is divided into chapters, which have names.  These aren't listed in the table of contents, but are given in the text.  We're starting with the first three of these, Something in the Forest, Jumper, and Diagnosis.  In the Kindle, you have to watch for the chapter names as they appear in the text.

If anyone doesn't have chapter names at all, let me know and I'll give the last sentence of each.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: ginny on October 28, 2014, 09:48:42 AM
That's good news. In the paperback I have, the third "part," Smashdown, ends on page 283, which is a heck of a beginning read. :)

But the first three chapters end with Diagnosis on page 47  in the paperback, and so that's the area we confine our remarks to? We of course can read beyond but we confine our comments to the first 47 pages of the paperback on November 1?

That seems doable, if so. I'm looking forward to this. Thank you for offering  it, Pat.

Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 28, 2014, 10:06:30 AM
Yes, that's right, Ginny.  I'm sorry that my first post wasn't clear.  I hope I straightened things out in time so no one is reading 283 pages. :-[
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: bellamarie on October 28, 2014, 11:18:34 AM
I agree, Chapter 1 was difficult for me to get out of my head.  Nov 1 is better for me as well.  Thanks PatH., for the schedule, that gives me an idea how far I can read.

I was listening to the news last night and heard the CDC has come out with yet new guidelines.  They are saying "high risk" should be quarantined for the 21 days.  Governors in many states are on board with quarantine for any person who has worked directly with Ebola patients traveling into the U.S. from West Africa, showing symptoms. 

http://www.nj.com/healthfit/index.ssf/2014/10/cdc_ebola_policy_changes_reject_quarantine_for_most_west_african_travelers.html

This is a very interesting article:

Dr. Beutler, an American medical doctor and researcher, won the Nobel Prize for Medicine and Physiology in 2011 for his work researching the cellular subsystem of the body’s overall immune system – the part of it that defends bodies from infection by other organisms, like Ebola.

He is currently the Director of the Center for the Genetics of Host Defense at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas – the first U.S. city to treat an Ebola patient and also the first to watch one die from the virus. In an exclusive interview with NJ Advance Media,

“It may not be absolutely true that those without symptoms can’t transmit the disease, because we don’t have the numbers to back that up,” said Beutler, “It could be people develop significant viremia [where viruses enter the bloodstream and gain access to the rest of the body], and become able to transmit the disease before they have a fever, even. People may have said that without symptoms you can’t transmit Ebola. I’m not sure about that being 100 percent true. There’s a lot of variation with viruses.”

In fact, in a study published online in late September by the New England Journal of Medicine and backed by the World Health Organization, 3,343 confirmed and 667 probable cases of Ebola were analyzed, and nearly 13 percent of the time, those infected with Ebola exhibited no fever at all.


http://www.nj.com/politics/index.ssf/2014/10/christies_quarantine_policy_attacked_by_aclu_cdc_and_even_the_un_is_embraced_by_2011_nobel_prize_win.html

There seems to be so much controversy, and uncertainty as to the transmitting of the virus. 

I would love to know what Richard Preston feels about this today.  He mentioned he wants to write another book on Ebola, with updated data. 
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 28, 2014, 12:21:31 PM
Thanks for the link, Bellamarie.  I'm not sure just where I stand on the quarantine issue.  Christie made it more difficult for everyone by trying to confine the woman in some really unpleasant setup, which anyone would object to.

Here's an article from this morning's Washington Post about goofs in handling disease outbreaks.  I don't altogether agree with him--I would be less forgiving--but it states the difficulties well.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/ebola-smallpox-and-anthrax-show-how-public-health-doctors-err-and-then-respond/2014/10/24/a641f02a-5abc-11e4-8264-deed989ae9a2_story.html (http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/ebola-smallpox-and-anthrax-show-how-public-health-doctors-err-and-then-respond/2014/10/24/a641f02a-5abc-11e4-8264-deed989ae9a2_story.html)

I'd love to know what Preston is thinking too.  I'm hoping he'll come out with a statement.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: bellamarie on October 28, 2014, 04:22:29 PM
I think Christie had his heart in the right place, wanting to take precautions to protect the people of his state, but, I think he may have gone about it in the wrong way.

I really think everyone is learning as they go.  Steps should have been taken back in March, when this was known, and now it's here and even the CDC is learning they were not prepared as they thought they were. 
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: JoanP on October 28, 2014, 04:27:01 PM
"This week, The New Yorker is publishing Mr. Preston’s latest reporting on the virus, a dispatch about the efforts to sequence its genome intertwined with a narrative about a doctor’s doomed effort to treat the disease on the front lines."
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/20/books/the-hot-zone-author-tracks-ebolas-evolution.html?_r=0

Here's the New Yorker article - The Ebola Wars, by Richard Preston in New Yorker, Oct. 27 2014        ` (http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/10/27/ebola-wars)

A little too much information, perhaps?
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: bellamarie on October 28, 2014, 05:33:26 PM
If you happen to be reading your book from an iBook on your iPad, the last page of Diagnosis is page 95.  This is where you want to stop.

Thanks for the link JoanP.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: Ella Gibbons on October 28, 2014, 06:29:23 PM
My book has not come yet.  I couldn't get it at Amazon, they didn't have a hardcover and I cannot read paperbacks anymore.   Need large print anything if I can get it.   I did order a hardback from B&N, which is coming by horse and buggy.

Clop, clop, clop. 
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: JoanP on October 28, 2014, 07:10:42 PM
So glad you are on the way, Ella!  I can hear your hoss  - clip clopping in the distance!
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 28, 2014, 09:47:13 PM
That's great, Ella.  I thought you weren't going to be with us.  Whenever you get it, it's a fast read to catch up.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: Frybabe on October 29, 2014, 06:29:43 AM
Interesting article. This is what PA is doing. Notice in the article that PA is one of the top destination states for people from West Africa. I am not entirely happy about this. http://www.pennlive.com/midstate/index.ssf/2014/10/pennsylvania_ebola_monitoring_1.html#incart_m-rpt-1

Meanwhile, I get the distinct impression that Kaci Hickox is not self quarantining herself in Maine. I am under the impression that public health safety trumps personal civil rights, but doesn't the government have to declare a public health emergency first? The Feds are unwilling to do this; some of the states, though, are. Hurray for them. Unfortunately for Christie, the quarantine tent that NJ put up seemed a bit hastily put together. I agree with Christie that you can't count on people to self quarantine themselves. How many of these health workers come back with the attitude that they know better than politicians and others (not entirely unwarranted assumption)? However, they ignore the possibility (spelled probability, in my estimation) that they don't know everything about Ebola yet, nor do they care about the psychological effects on an apprehensive population.

What I would like to know is how come Ebola hasn't made an appearance (aside from the infected monkey at Reston) here long ago. Or has it, and we don't know about it?   
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 29, 2014, 09:52:13 AM
JoanP, Thanks for that excellent New Yorker article.  It's good to see what Preston is up to now; I bet we get another book from him soon. 

It's a good description of the battle to treat patients at one African hospital, and how they treated some of the workers who got sick.  The parallel story is the work at Harvard and MIT doing gene sequencing on a large number of patient samples.  (The two institutions were collaborators.)  The virus makes minor mutations rapidly, and they were able to show that the current outbreak started with one person, and has become two distinguishable strains.  They're wading through red tape to import up-to-date samples to see what the current situation is.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: Frybabe on October 29, 2014, 11:17:59 AM
I just read The New Yorker article. A niece is working at one of the Harvard labs. I doubt it is with that particular one, but I have a call into my sister to find out. This is a little disconcerting.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: Ella Gibbons on October 29, 2014, 04:34:41 PM
105 people being monitored in PA?   Wow!  I don't know what to think about the release of identity as I know a little about the privacy of health laws; not enough to discuss though.

There's a long article in TIME this week about Ebola which I have not read yet.

The "hoss" must have run into bad weather or had to have new shoes?  Hasn't shown  up yet.

One thing I have always wondered  -  how does a virus mutate?  Is it temperature they encounter?  It sounds like a teenage monster movie when you think about these bugs' nature changing and becoming scarier - horrific.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 29, 2014, 05:40:42 PM
Quote
How does a virus mutate?
Good question, Ella.  The New Yorker article calls it a copying error, which is a good way to think of it.  Genetic material is just a long string of chemicals, and all sorts of random events can change some little bit of the string.  When it duplicates, there could be a copying error.  It could be a cosmic ray, some chemical insult, whatever.  Most mutations wouldn't do anything important.  From what I can read into the article, there isn't any clinical difference between the two strains.  What they worry about is the rare mutation that makes the virus worse.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: Frybabe on October 30, 2014, 07:45:32 AM
My niece is working at one of the labs at Harvard. She is not working on the Ebola project, but something that has to do with neurons in the brain.

Neither of my sisters are overly concerned about Ebola here. In fact, one has given me the "why are you upset/afraid (an exaggeration on her part)" since I, personally, am not anywhere near Ebola. What an attitude. Because I am interested in and have an opinion I am afraid? I am concerned for public safety, lack of enough knowledge about the Ebola virus, and the extraordinary measures needed to combat it. I do believe in erring on the safe side until more is known rather than having a caviler attitude about it. Caution, common sense, and interest in the subject are not the same thing as being afraid. So what do we have? We have three groups of people:  those who are totally unconcerned/uninterested, those who panic, and the majority of us (I hope) that keep an eye on developments and are interested but not panicky.

Sorry about the rant.

Oh, my other sister, the nurse, read The Hot Zone when it came out. She also read The Plague (sorry, didn't get the author's name). She liked that non-fiction book better for the information about viruses. I'm thinking she didn't have the entire title because I can't locate a non-fiction work by just that name. However, I did find an interesting title that may be relevant to the public and political actions and reactions to a plague here today, Plague, Fear, and Politics in San Francisco's Chinatown by Guenter Risse.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: PatH on October 30, 2014, 08:35:51 AM
It's annoying to be misinterpreted like that, isn't it, Frybabe.  I'm like you; I'm totally not worried for my personal risk, which is zero, but very interested in everything about the disease itself (after all, I'm a science nerd) and concerned that the fight will be mishandled so that we don't win while we still can.

Preston doesn't give us as much information as I'd like about the viruses.  Less was known in '95, dunno how complete his reporting is for then.  We can find sources to fill in, like that New Yorker article.  He also plays up the drama of the course of the disease to the maximum; he's describing the worst it can get.  I sort of wish he'd toned it down a bit.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: bellamarie on October 30, 2014, 10:50:36 AM
Frybabe,   
Quote
Caution, common sense, and interest in the subject are not the same thing as being afraid.

I got the same reaction from a friend yesterday when all I said is, I was reading a book about Ebola, with my online book club.   Her response, "I just don't get why everyone is so afraid, they did the same thing with HIV."  I told her I am not afraid, I am interested in learning about the virus, and concerned we are doing all we can to contain it, so it can not become an epidemic.  It was a non subject with her.  I think your three categories were pretty accurate. I think I would have included a fourth group, those who want to politicize this as well.

I am in the group of wanting to be informed, but no reason for panic.



Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: ginny on October 30, 2014, 12:00:33 PM
I find  his hyperbole interesting and was fascinated to find he's Douglas Preston's brother (of Preston and Childs)...Relic, Reliquary...the writing style is very similar.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: bellamarie on October 30, 2014, 02:47:20 PM
I personally was very upset with the attitude of  Kaci Hickox.  She refuses to quarantine herself, with as far as I am concerned a reckless attitude, assuming because her fever is gone, she is risk free of the virus.  I pray she is, but with people like her refusing to cooperate, it opens the door for others to resist to be quarantined.  I was listening to the legal argument if she has the right to refuse due to the safety of the country, and from what Judge Napolitano cites civil liberties law, states the mandated procedure must be in place, and anyone traveling to West Africa then is aware that if they go and when they come back, they will be mandated to be quarantined the 21 days.  Because the procedure has NOT yet been put in place, she legally can refuse.  The other side of the argument is the constitutional law, putting others at risk.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: Frybabe on October 30, 2014, 03:13:15 PM
I've been interested in that development too, Bellamarie. To me, her attitude seems arrogant to say the least.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: JoanK on October 30, 2014, 04:31:57 PM
GINNY: " he's Douglas Preston's brother (of Preston and Childs)...Relic, Reliquary...the writing style is very similar."

That's interesting: wonder if he had his brother's help. The writing is very good-- he draws you in (as does his brother).
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: JoanK on October 30, 2014, 05:15:44 PM
I've lost this post twice. Hope third time's a charm.

I read  one of the books discussed in a review posted a few days ago (thank you) "Ebola" by David Quammen. Interesting to get a different perspective: I'll mention in more detail later. Since it's up to date, he discusses a few cases in the US too recent for Preston's book. But surprisingly few.

As the review says, he criticizes Preston's lurid descriptions of symptoms, saying they are exaggerated and in some cases inaccurate. The massive bleeding so vividly described does not happen in all cases.
Title: Re: The Hot Zone by Richard Preston ~ November Bookclub Online
Post by: jane on October 31, 2014, 04:24:42 PM
The discussion for the HOT Zone is now open!

Please go to:

http://seniorlearn.org/forum/index.php?topic=4488.msg236477#msg236477

This prediscussion is now locked.