Author Topic: Is Zika Changing How You Travel?  (Read 100762 times)

Online Something Fishy

  • Global Moderator
  • Dansdeals Lifetime Presidential Platinum Elite
  • **********
  • Join Date: Jan 2011
  • Posts: 8758
  • Total likes: 6254
  • DansDeals.com Hat Tips 44
    • View Profile
    • Kosher Horizons
  • Location: Iceland
Re: Is Zika Changing How You Travel?
« Reply #560 on: December 17, 2019, 11:24:43 AM »
or getting some other disease in Africa?

Zika aside, but there's a reason you need to get vaccinations and such before visiting many African countries.
Check out my site for epic kosher adventures: Kosher Horizons

Offline Yammer

  • Dansdeals Presidential Platinum Elite
  • ********
  • Join Date: Aug 2015
  • Posts: 3695
  • Total likes: 217
  • DansDeals.com Hat Tips 1
    • View Profile
Re: Is Zika Changing How You Travel?
« Reply #561 on: December 17, 2019, 02:01:04 PM »
Yet people aren't avoiding MIA, proving that the whole thing is a sham.
Don't forget that they originate in Miami either.

Offline Dan

  • Administrator
  • Dansdeals Lifetime 50K Diamond Elite
  • **********
  • Join Date: May 2008
  • Posts: 67757
  • Total likes: 17194
  • DansDeals.com Hat Tips 16442
  • Gender: Male
    • View Profile
  • Location: CLE
  • Programs: UA GS, AA EXP, DL Dirt, Hyatt Glob, Fairmont Lifetime Plat, DD Diamond, Blocked By @NeriaKraus
Save your time, I don't answer PM. Post it in the forum and a dedicated DDF'er will get back to you as soon as possible.


Offline shaulyaakov

  • Dansdeals Presidential Platinum Elite
  • ********
  • Join Date: May 2013
  • Posts: 2782
  • Total likes: 326
  • DansDeals.com Hat Tips 3
    • View Profile
Re: Is Zika Changing How You Travel?
« Reply #564 on: December 17, 2019, 02:21:48 PM »
Why not go to the source...

https://www.cdc.gov/zika/reporting/2019-case-counts.html

But again didn't originate here..
The 2 sources don't agree. The cdc link has 0 Florida travel based cases.

Also should be noted Bahamas, Mexico, Aruba etc have no reported cases, so there are plenty of riskier countries as compared to others.

Personally, I drew a thick line to avoid PR, as the cdc is specifically reporting locally transmitted cases.

Offline Dan

  • Administrator
  • Dansdeals Lifetime 50K Diamond Elite
  • **********
  • Join Date: May 2008
  • Posts: 67757
  • Total likes: 17194
  • DansDeals.com Hat Tips 16442
  • Gender: Male
    • View Profile
  • Location: CLE
  • Programs: UA GS, AA EXP, DL Dirt, Hyatt Glob, Fairmont Lifetime Plat, DD Diamond, Blocked By @NeriaKraus
Re: Is Zika Changing How You Travel?
« Reply #565 on: December 17, 2019, 02:37:38 PM »
The 2 sources don't agree. The cdc link has 0 Florida travel based cases.

Also should be noted Bahamas, Mexico, Aruba etc have no reported cases, so there are plenty of riskier countries as compared to others.

Personally, I drew a thick line to avoid PR, as the cdc is specifically reporting locally transmitted cases.
"Furthermore, the recent PAHO report indicates which countries in the Americas are reporting locally-acquired Zika cases during 2019, and which are not disclosing information.

As of October 5, 2019, the PAHO reports the following (cases in 2019):

Brazil = 3,322
Peru = 829
Mexico = 50
Bolivia = 27
Columbia = 11
Guatemala = 10"
Save your time, I don't answer PM. Post it in the forum and a dedicated DDF'er will get back to you as soon as possible.

Offline shaulyaakov

  • Dansdeals Presidential Platinum Elite
  • ********
  • Join Date: May 2013
  • Posts: 2782
  • Total likes: 326
  • DansDeals.com Hat Tips 3
    • View Profile
Re: Is Zika Changing How You Travel?
« Reply #566 on: December 17, 2019, 02:39:31 PM »
"Furthermore, the recent PAHO report indicates which countries in the Americas are reporting locally-acquired Zika cases during 2019, and which are not disclosing information.

As of October 5, 2019, the PAHO reports the following (cases in 2019):

Brazil = 3,322
Peru = 829
Mexico = 50
Bolivia = 27
Columbia = 11
Guatemala = 10"
Re Mexico:

Offline Dan

  • Administrator
  • Dansdeals Lifetime 50K Diamond Elite
  • **********
  • Join Date: May 2008
  • Posts: 67757
  • Total likes: 17194
  • DansDeals.com Hat Tips 16442
  • Gender: Male
    • View Profile
  • Location: CLE
  • Programs: UA GS, AA EXP, DL Dirt, Hyatt Glob, Fairmont Lifetime Plat, DD Diamond, Blocked By @NeriaKraus
Re: Is Zika Changing How You Travel?
« Reply #567 on: December 17, 2019, 02:41:18 PM »
Re Mexico:
OK?
Don't forget that most people don't have symptoms when they get Zika or don't go to the Dr, so confirmed cases will be a fraction of actual cases.
Save your time, I don't answer PM. Post it in the forum and a dedicated DDF'er will get back to you as soon as possible.

Offline ethana

  • Dansdeals Platinum Elite
  • ****
  • Join Date: Mar 2013
  • Posts: 475
  • Total likes: 9
  • DansDeals.com Hat Tips 0
    • View Profile
  • Location: new york
Re: Is Zika Changing How You Travel?
« Reply #568 on: December 24, 2020, 07:12:05 PM »
is zika still an issue?

Offline Alexsei

  • Dansdeals Lifetime Presidential Platinum Elite
  • *********
  • Join Date: Sep 2011
  • Posts: 5823
  • Total likes: 1440
  • DansDeals.com Hat Tips 5
    • View Profile
    • Travel & Kivrei Zadikim
  • Location: Truckistan
  • Programs: COVID-23
Re: Is Zika Changing How You Travel?
« Reply #569 on: December 24, 2020, 07:20:44 PM »
is zika still an issue?
no it's out of beta and replaced by covid

Jews ≠ Zionists
Palestinians ≠ Hamas
Satmar ≠ SatmarHQ

Offline ethana

  • Dansdeals Platinum Elite
  • ****
  • Join Date: Mar 2013
  • Posts: 475
  • Total likes: 9
  • DansDeals.com Hat Tips 0
    • View Profile
  • Location: new york
Re: Is Zika Changing How You Travel?
« Reply #570 on: December 24, 2020, 07:21:33 PM »
But seriously...

Offline zagguru

  • Dansdeals Presidential Platinum Elite
  • ********
  • Join Date: May 2014
  • Posts: 3107
  • Total likes: 171
  • DansDeals.com Hat Tips 70
    • View Profile
Re: Is Zika Changing How You Travel?
« Reply #571 on: December 24, 2020, 09:56:16 PM »
I never thought i would say this but, wow, zika good times

Offline etech0

  • Dansdeals Lifetime 10K Presidential Platinum Elite
  • *******
  • Join Date: Dec 2013
  • Posts: 12880
  • Total likes: 3369
  • DansDeals.com Hat Tips 1
    • View Profile
  • Location: not lakewood
  • Programs: DDF
Re: Is Zika Changing How You Travel?
« Reply #572 on: December 24, 2020, 10:03:56 PM »
Workflowy. You won't know what you're missing until you try it.

Offline Dawie

  • Dansdeals Lifetime Platinum Elite
  • *******
  • Join Date: Jan 2015
  • Posts: 1613
  • Total likes: 492
  • DansDeals.com Hat Tips 1
  • Gender: Male
    • View Profile
  • Location: KBLM

Offline Mordyk

  • Dansdeals Presidential Platinum Elite
  • ********
  • Join Date: May 2013
  • Posts: 4118
  • Total likes: 1027
  • DansDeals.com Hat Tips 3
  • Gender: Male
    • View Profile
  • Programs: Some of this and some of that.
Re: Is Zika Changing How You Travel?
« Reply #574 on: April 27, 2021, 02:29:30 PM »
This thread... HAHAHA

you remember when Zika was our biggest worry in life??

Offline Dan

  • Administrator
  • Dansdeals Lifetime 50K Diamond Elite
  • **********
  • Join Date: May 2008
  • Posts: 67757
  • Total likes: 17194
  • DansDeals.com Hat Tips 16442
  • Gender: Male
    • View Profile
  • Location: CLE
  • Programs: UA GS, AA EXP, DL Dirt, Hyatt Glob, Fairmont Lifetime Plat, DD Diamond, Blocked By @NeriaKraus
Re: Is Zika Changing How You Travel?
« Reply #575 on: April 27, 2021, 02:32:58 PM »
This thread... HAHAHA

you remember when Zika was our biggest worry in life??
Between Zika and COVID...really did a number on our travel game.
Save your time, I don't answer PM. Post it in the forum and a dedicated DDF'er will get back to you as soon as possible.

Offline jj1000

  • Administrator
  • Dansdeals Lifetime 10K Presidential Platinum Elite
  • **********
  • Join Date: Jun 2008
  • Posts: 13512
  • Total likes: 6229
  • DansDeals.com Hat Tips 29367
    • View Profile
  • Location: The value of a forum such as this one is not in that one can post a question and receive an answer, but in that the question has most likely been asked before, and the answer is available to him that will but only use the search function.
  • Programs: 1. Search on google. 2. Search in the right board of DDF with a general word or two. 3. Read the wiki. 4. Read the thread. 5. Ask away.
Re: Is Zika Changing How You Travel?
« Reply #576 on: April 27, 2021, 02:33:37 PM »
what could go wrong ....?
https://news.yahoo.com/florida-residents-uproar-scientists-prepare-155808739.html
Do you know the most deadly animal in the world?

Hint: it kills 1,000,000+ people every year...
See my 5 step program to your left <--

(Real signature under my location)

Offline S209

  • Dansdeals Lifetime Presidential Platinum Elite
  • *********
  • Join Date: Jun 2016
  • Posts: 7491
  • Total likes: 3968
  • DansDeals.com Hat Tips 1
  • Gender: Male
    • View Profile
    • Gowns By Shevy
  • Location: Lakewood
  • Programs: Marriott Gold, Star Alliance Gold, Hyatt Explorist, Hertz PC, National EE, Rock Royalty Wild Card, Wyndham Diamond, MLife Gold, Caesars Diamond, Hilton Diamond, Uber VIP, IHG Platinum Elite, ANA Platinum, DDF Lifetime Prez Platinum Elite, AmEx Platinum
Re: Is Zika Changing How You Travel?
« Reply #577 on: April 27, 2021, 03:00:32 PM »
Do you know the most deadly animal in the world?

Hint: it kills 1,000,000+ people every year...
I’ve heard this statistic before but felt this is missing a point. After searching I even found a paper that makes the same point as me.

Quote
While it is tempting to designate mosquitoes as the biggest killers on Earth, this does not appear to be absolutely accurate. To ascribe the deaths caused by malaria and other mosquito-borne diseases to mosquitoes would be equivalent to allocating to humans the deaths caused by tuberculosis, AIDS, coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), and other infectious diseases that are directly transmitted from one human to another. Humans already do feature on all the lists of the 'world’s deadliest animals' on account of their heinous actions, including homicides and wars. If we were to add to that number the deaths caused by human-to-human transmission of deadly pathogens there would be one undisputed leader in any list of killers, and that would be us.

Mosquitoes actually kill 0 people a year. They do often carry organisms that infect people with severe illness, much like humans and surfaces (albeit at a far lower level than either).
Quote from: YitzyS
Quotes in a signature is annoying, as it comes across as an independent post.

Offline Kobe Bryant

  • Dansdeals Presidential Platinum Elite
  • ********
  • Join Date: Jan 2017
  • Posts: 3784
  • Total likes: 2287
  • DansDeals.com Hat Tips 17
    • View Profile
Re: Is Zika Changing How You Travel?
« Reply #578 on: April 27, 2021, 05:03:37 PM »
I’ve heard this statistic before but felt this is missing a point. After searching I even found a paper that makes the same point as me.

Mosquitoes actually kill 0 people a year. They do often carry organisms that infect people with severe illness, much like humans and surfaces (albeit at a far lower level than either).
Semantics

Offline yungermanchik

  • Dansdeals Presidential Platinum Elite
  • ********
  • Join Date: Nov 2018
  • Posts: 2690
  • Total likes: 2073
  • DansDeals.com Hat Tips 2
    • View Profile
  • Location: Previous Signatures: If you chapped hana'ah from a post, like it; You think you know the answers and things are the way they seem.. it just ain't so -The Rebbe from Lublin-
Re: Is Zika Changing How You Travel?
« Reply #579 on: April 27, 2021, 10:30:56 PM »
Do you know the most deadly animal in the world?

Hint: it kills 1,000,000+ people every year...
The Sacred Rac

         An Indian anthropologist, Chandra Thapar, made a study of foreign culture which had customs similar to those of his native land.  One culture in particular fascinated him because it reveres one animal as sacred, much as the people in India revere the cow.

         The tribe Dr. Thapar studied is called the Asu and is found on the American continent north of the Tarahumara of Mexico.  Though it seems to be a highly developed society of its type, it has an overwhelming preoccupation with the care and feeding of the rac -- an animal much like a bull in size, strength and temperament.  In the Asu tribe, it is almost a social obligation to own at least one if not more racs.  Anyone not possessing at least one is held in low esteem by the community because he is too poor to maintain one of these beasts properly.  Some members of the tribe, to display their wealth and social prestige, even own herds of racs.

         Unfortunately the rac breed is not very healthy and usually does not live more than five to seven years, for it has a tendency to throw its shoes often.  There are rac specialists in each community, perhaps more than one if the community is particularly wealthy.  These specialists however, due to the long period of ritual training they must undergo and to the difficulty of obtaining the right selection of charms to treat the rac, demand costly offerings whenever a tribesman must treat his ailing rac.

         At the age of sixteen in many Asu communities, many youths undergo a puberty rite in which the rac figures prominently.  The youth must petition a high priest in a grand temple.  He is then initiated into the ceremonies that surround the care of the rac and is permitted to keep a rac.

         Although the rac may be used as a beast of burden, it has many habits which would be considered by other cultures as harmful to the life of the society.  In the first place the rac breed is increasing at a very rapid rate and the Asu tribesmen have given no thought to limiting the rac population.  As a consequence the Asu must build more and more paths for the rac to travel on since its delicate health and its love of racing other racs at high speeds necessitates that special areas be set aside for its use.  The cost of smoothing the earth is too costly for any one individual to undertake; so it has become a community project and each tribesman must pay an annual tax to build new paths and maintain the old.  There are so many paths needed that some people move their homes because the rac paths must be as straight as possible to keep the animal from injuring itself.  Dr. Thapar also noted that unlike the cow, which many people in his country hold sacred, the excrement of the rac cannot be used as either fuel or fertilizer.  On the contrary, its excrement is exceptionally foul and totally useless. Worst of all, the rac is prone to stampedes in which it runs down anything in its path, much like stampeding cattle.  Estimates are that the rac kills thousands of the Asu in a year.

         Despite the high cost of its upkeep, the damage it does to the land, and its habit of destructive stampedes, the Asu still regard it as being essential to the survival of their culture.
Small people talk about other people.
Average people talk about things
BIG PEOPLE TALK ABOUT IDEAS.