ventilating particulated matter from their posterior orifices
Essentially, by relying on what we don't know or ignoring what we do know, like Shepard Smith did on Fox.
Since its appearance among humans in 1976 the Ebola virus has mutated several times. There are five species of the genus Ebolavirus, and four of them are known to infect people. There are cases of airborne transmission among animals, both in natural and controlled circumstances. The CDC is relying on airborne transmission being "undocumented", not that it is impossible, when they say that Ebola can only be contracted through contact with bodily fluids. Knowing how dishonest they've been in the past, and how they dissemble the data, one could easily come to the conclusion that they know about cases of airborne transmission of the four species, but are concealing that information.
The CDC discussion of the possibility of airborne transmission is
here. It mentions airborne transmission six times.
1 and 2)
Airborne transmission of Ebola virus has been hypothesized but not demonstrated in humans. While Ebola virus can be spread through airborne particles under experimental conditions in animals, this type of spread has not been documented during human EVD outbreaks in settings such as hospitals or households. In the laboratory setting, non-human primates with their heads placed in closed hoods have been exposed to and infected by nebulized aerosols of Ebola virus. In a different experiment, control monkeys were placed in cages 3 meters away from the cages of monkeys that were intramuscularly inoculated with Ebola virus. Control and inoculated monkeys both developed Ebola virus infection.
Monkeys are often used in modeling human diseases because their genetics and physiology is so similar to ours. I leave it to the reader to decide if that modeling is valid when Ebola is the disease, or if various UN and American health agencies are revealing the full truth.
3)
The authors concluded that “fomite and contact droplet” transmission to the control monkeys was unlikely, and that airborne transmission was most likely,
4)
A more recent experiment that was specifically designed to further evaluate the possibility of naturally-occurring airborne transmission of Ebola virus among non-human primates showed no transmission of Ebola virus from infected to control primates placed 0.3 meters apart in separate open-barred cages and ambient air conditions, but with a plexiglass divider that prevented direct contact between the animals.
5 and 6)
CDC infection control recommendations for U.S. hospitals, including recommendations for standard, contact, and droplet precautions for general care, reflect the established routes for human-to-human transmission of EVD and are based on data collected from previous EVD outbreaks in Africa in addition to experimental data. Airborne transmission of EVD among humans has never been demonstrated in investigations that have described human-to-human transmission although hypothetical concerns about airborne transmission of EVD have been raised
One thing for certain, N95 masks won't stop Ebola. Could aerosols sprayed from the mouth of a coughing Ebola victim contaminate you if you inhaled them?
They say that you can only contract Ebola by contact with fluids from the victim. Airborne fluids are fluids. Large droplets go farther than small drops. Drops landing on your face, face mask or body represent objected contaminated by an infected fluid. As the droplets evaporate the virus is left floating around, jostled by Brownian motion. These are the particles than can pass through an N05 mask.
Speculation: Perhaps Pham and Vinson did maintain "protocol" but being in the room exposed them to airborne particles before the ventilation system purified the air?
N95 respirators made by different companies were found to have different filtration efficiencies for the most penetrating particle size (0.1 to 0.3 micron), but all were at least
95% efficient at that size for NaCl particles.
Hence the "N95" designation. So, N95 masks can remove 95 out of every 100 viral particles between the ranges of 0.1 to 0.3 microns. Ebola viruses have a diameter of 80 nanometers (80/1000 of a micron) and lengths can vary from sub micron to 14 microns. All Firefighter / EMT/ Heavy Rescue & Haz Mat programs I've read about recommend N100 or
P100 masks. However, a mask does NOT a protocol make. What difference does it make if you wear the mask and then take it off before it is sterilized in place, before you touch it. If you were to touch it with gloved (contaminated) hands you risk contaminating the exposed mouth and skin it covered. If you remove your gloves your hands are exposed. Your entire exterior clothing and mask must be decontaminated before you remove any layer, and more than one layer is recommended so that you can go through at least two stages of decontaminations.
All of this points out that the best practice is not buying hazmat suits and N100 masks, but keeping a large distance between yourself and infected people. IOW, if you fear contamination or have been exposed then isolate your self along with safe supplies of food and water until at least 30 days since the last known infection has passed. BTW, did you notice in the CDC article cited above that the Ebola virus was found in semen 101 days AFTER the last symptoms disappeared? The article didn't say how long Ebola was detected in semen after the 101 days, but it did note that:
Sexual transmission of Marburg virus (but not Ebola virus) has been described. (in the literature)