Reusable Bags Blamed for Norovirus Outbreak


PDA
Popeye
05-10-2012, 04:37 PM
What could possibly make Occupy Los Angeles camps even smellier? If more liberals started using reusable grocery bags when the city bans plastic grocery bags.

Reusable grocery bags can infect people with the norovirus, which yearly hospitalizes 800,000 people and kills another 800, a infectious virus that causes severe vomiting and diarrhea.

And as more cities like Los Angeles try to ban plastic grocery bags (http://www.dailynews.com/breakingnews/ci_20500306/fight-brewing-keep-los-angeles-from-banning-single), reusable grocery bags will be more omnipresent in these cities, causing greater public health dangers.

A study will be published this week (http://vitals.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/05/09/11604166-reusable-grocery-bag-carried-nasty-norovirus-scientists-say?lite) in The Journal of Infectious Diseases that solves the mystery of how a “a nasty outbreak of norovirus infections in a group of soccer players” left a soccer team ill.

The culprit was a reusable grocery bag, exactly like the ones people will have to use if more cities decide to ban plastic grocery bags.

The study found that the reusable grocery bag that infected the soccer players were contaminated with “the perfect pathogens.” More disturbing, though, was the reusable grocery bags could transfer the norovirus without person-to-person contact.

Doctors tried to determine how nine people became ill with the norovirus, which has infamously caused havoc on cruise ships (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/46348304%2346348304), in less than 48 hours and, according to the report, “interviews revealed that most of those who became ill ate packaged cookies at a Sunday lunch” that were in a “a reusable grocery bag of snacks left in the empty hotel room occupied by the first girl who got sick.”

According to the report, “the puzzle fell into place. The girl had been very ill in the hotel bathroom, spreading an aerosol of norovirus that landed everywhere, including on the reusable grocery bag hanging in the room. When scientists checked the bag, it tested positive for the bug, even two weeks later.”

And yet, environmentalists seem to be fine with these public health risks, all in the name of their foolishly misguided “green crusades,” like banning plastic grocery bags, that inevitably have unintended consequences that end up doing more harm than good.

http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2012/05/09/Reusable-Bags-Can-Cause-Norovirus-Infections

If you enjoyed reading about "Reusable Bags Blamed for Norovirus Outbreak" here in the FamilyFriendsFirearms.com archive, you'll LOVE our community. Come join FamilyFriendsFirearms.com today for the full version!
KathleenElsie
05-10-2012, 09:55 PM
Yep and then the CDC can just tell everyone they need more vaccinations so they don't get sick.

Stevejet
05-11-2012, 04:40 AM
Paper, 15 cents. Plastic, no have. Just throw your stuff in that canvas "Petri-dish" you haul around in the trunk of your car.

Enviro-weenies and Democrats only accomplishments are the elimination of choice on 100W incandescent bulbs and they're working on eliminating plastic grocery bags and even many Styrofoam containers from fast food and restaurant business's.

What a bunch of self-absorbed, busy-body, self-anointed elites. A plague, hard cheese and sour grapes on them. For starters.......

Dwayne
05-11-2012, 08:31 AM
Yep and then the CDC can just tell everyone they need more vaccinations so they don't get sick.

<chuckle> . . .

Vern Humphrey
05-11-2012, 08:58 AM
Once again, we get to the root of a problem and it's the government.

deputy
05-11-2012, 09:37 AM
Once again, we get to the root of a problem and it's the government.


rekon how many federal agencies will be involved in conducting the study.......and what will they recommend?

A govt approved plastic tuper-ware tote with govt approved/mandated disinfectant sprayers before you can enter a store?.....and govt supplied latex gloves for the shoppers?:roll:

Urzandowski
05-11-2012, 10:54 AM
The viruses are transmitted by fecally contaminated food or water, by person-to-person contact, and via aerosolization of the virus and subsequent contamination of surfaces.

The key word here, fecally. Somebody didn't wash their hands.

rpp
05-13-2012, 06:13 PM
The viruses are transmitted by fecally contaminated food or water, by person-to-person contact, and via aerosolization of the virus and subsequent contamination of surfaces.

The key word here, fecally. Somebody didn't wash their hands.

I guess you do not know what "aerosolization" means. It does not matter how well you wash your hands, if it has been aerosolized, it is spreading through the air.

Besides, if you have ever had norovirus, you would realize that engaging in activities such as normal personal hygiene habit is virtually impossible for the sick person; they are incapacitated by the illness, often passing out while explosively relieving themselves orally, rectally and urinating while unconscious. People do die, indirectly, from norovirus; they die from dehydration, often within 72 hours on the onset of symptoms.


As for the premise of this thread, I have been saying this for years. I was not certain what the disease might be, thought I had speculated about salmonella, norovirus is not a surprise for me.

HK4U
05-13-2012, 07:16 PM
Yep and then the CDC can just tell everyone they need more vaccinations so they don't get sick.

As far as I am concerned they can take their vaccines, place them in their bags and put them where the sun don't shine.

rpp
05-13-2012, 09:06 PM
As far as I am concerned they can take their vaccines, place them in their bags and put them where the sun don't shine.
:up::up::up:

If you enjoyed reading about "Reusable Bags Blamed for Norovirus Outbreak" here in the FamilyFriendsFirearms.com archive, you'll LOVE our community. Come join FamilyFriendsFirearms.com today for the full version!