Now, I just want to say, this is not a fear mongering post. Ebola has been around a long time, and the human race still goes on.
We went from having a record of zero reported Ebola cases in the United States to 4 within the span of a month. To be sure, you have more to fear from natural causes and drunk driving than Ebola at those numbers. However, there are a couple features of every case except one: they involved the person flying back home on an airplane and being diagnosed shortly thereafter.
I repeat, 3/4 involved flying home on an airplane and immediately reporting symptoms thereafter as the first reported incidents of Ebola (in America) in the span of one month.
Now, just having Ebola incidents are rare, but the fact that they all share this specific social phenomenon is a red flag for me. I wonder if each case already had a hint that something was up and immediately flew home to get proper medical treatment at an American hospital, and in so doing, put people at risk by not self-reporting.
If you knew you were going to die for sure in a country ill-equipped to care for Ebola, and you knew you could fly home and have a fighting chance, one would think this is the self-preservation phenomenon, at the expense of a possible disease outbreak. Because of this, I think we need a new protocol that encourages honesty and proper medical transport, rather than confessing to symptoms shortly after arrival. All of the hiding and the secrets, followed by scary images of Ebola victims in Africa, are quickly turning this into the fear that originally existed over "GRIDS" in the 80s. And it doesn't help that the CDC does not have a national implemented Ebola protocol in place, and not enough preparation by American hospitals for deadly contagious diseases.
I suspect, that after having Ebola victims regularly over the span of a decade, the fear might decrease into something more along the lines of AIDS. Only education, honesty, transparency, and preparation of hospitals so this is not seen as a guaranteed torturous death sentence will restore sanity and good decision-making. There will always be infectious diseases, I don't think we need to be scared sheep over it.
The last concern I have is the political (and indirectly, religious) implications. Anyone attempting to use this for political gain is disgusting and not helping the situation. Manipulating the masses by fear is the wrong decision, and I hope that nobody falls for that.