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by FollowSteph3 4290 days ago
My fear is that we're not able to stop a simple stomach flu which is spread almost the same way, through bodily liquids, so I don't think it will be easy to stop once it hits first world countries like most people currently assume...
1 comments

Wait a minute, when was the last time that the stomach flu was an epidemic?
It's frequently a public health issue. Once in a while a school will just close for a few days. Not the same ramifications as Ebola though.
Every winter in England there are reports of the "winter vomiting bug" aka norovirus, and people have a fair (double digits) chance of getting it. From memory over the last ten years I've caught that unpleasant virus a handful of times.

It is easily spread by sick people touching things (eg handle bars in the tube) which you then touch, before touching something that goes into your mouth. If Ebola came to the uk without major changes in behaviour it would likely infect millions of active, young people via London.

The last flu epidemic with a major death toll was the pandemic of 1918, which is estimated to have killed more people than World War I. A less deadly version of the same strain was officially listed as an epidemic in 2009.
Stomache flu, which is the symptom gastroenteritis, is unrelated to influenza. It's a misnomer. So the Spanish Flu is not a good example here.

And to the point, we've never successfully "beat" GI because the stakes were never this high.