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originally posted by: buddha
I will ad the pick when I learn how? sorry.
a reply to: buster2010
She doesn't have Ebola anymore so why can't he hug her?
originally posted by: buddha
I just sore this pick on CNN.
edition.cnn.com...
I can Not believe this pic!
they are not hugging at all.
it if a fake photo shop't pic of obama
supposedly hugging a nurse that is cured of ebola.
I will ad the pick when I learn how? sorry.
go see the site quick.
it has a vid, no hug on the vid.
originally posted by: AttitudeProblem
a reply to: buster2010
She doesn't have Ebola anymore so why can't he hug her?
do you really want too take that chance.....
The title should be Nina Pham Thanks President Obama for giving her Ebola because he refused to close the borders.
Now, he needs to hug a drug resistant TB infected American and they can thank him for giving the illegal immigrant who gave it to them a bus or plane ticket to their town.
Oh, can't forget the most touching picture of all a child paralyed by the Enterovirus That would be a real tear jerker! Thank you President Obama for sending illegal children with this disease to my town who gave me the disease that paralyzed me. Oh, sob, a Jerry Lewis moment if there ever was one!
Q: Do these children pose a health risk?
A: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) believes that the children arriving at U.S. borders pose little risk of spreading infectious diseases to the general public. Countries in Central America, where most of the unaccompanied children are from (Guatemala, El Salvador, and Honduras), have childhood vaccination programs, and most children have received some or all of their recommended childhood vaccines. However, they may not have received a few vaccines, such as chickenpox, influenza, and pneumococcal vaccines. As a precaution, ORR is providing vaccinations to all children who do not have documentation of previous valid doses of vaccine. Children receive an initial screening for visible and obvious health issues (for example, lice, rashes, diarrhea, and cough) when they first arrive at CBP facilities. Onsite medical staff are available at CBP facilities to provide support, and referrals are made to a local emergency room for additional care, if needed. Children must be considered “fit to travel” before they are moved from the border patrol station to an ORR shelter. Children receive additional, more thorough medical screening and vaccinations at ORR shelter facilities. If children are found to have certain communicable diseases, they are separated from other children and treated as needed. The cost of medical care for the children while they are in ORR custody is fully paid by the federal government.