Hello, everyone who dwells at the Research Forum.
I really need some help from you, in the research of something important... this is for a story that I am planning to start writing very soon, and I ask for your assistance because I have failed to understand this subject by myself as well as I would like.
The story will be called Winter Hollow, and it will be set in the real world in modern times. The idea is that a peaceful Connecticut town is suddenly attacked by an obscure disease that few people know about, and the drama is described from the point of view of a common family.
To start with, I needed the obscure disease in question. I wanted something that few people have ever heard about, but dangerous and scary at the same time... The disease must be from the real world instead of something fictional, and I found a good candidate in an illness called Lassa Fever.
This Lassa Fever is the kind of thing that people search in Google the first time that they hear about it. Most likely you never heard about it before checking out this thread, so I want to start by giving you a picture about the history of this real world disease:
Back in January of 1969, there was a Nurse called Laura Wine. She was working at a small Nigerian village called Lassa, as part of the Church of the Brethren missionaries. One day they attended a patient who displayed a febrile illness, and a few days later Laura began to feel muscle pains in her back.
Laura's illness grew worse, and soon she was unable to work. She began to suffer from a very sore throat, hemorrhages, swelling and delirium, and sadly she died a short time later despite having been sent to a hospital for a better treatment.
Two other nurses cared for Laura: Charlotte Shaw died, but Penny Pinneo managed to recover after receiving intensive care at a New York hospital for several weeks.
This became the subject of a book and a TV documentary back then. The disease killed other medical staff and researchers some time later, and even Yale University decided to destroy its samples of the virus. You can read more about Laura Wine following the link right here.
The problem here is that Wikipedia and other sources describe Lassa Fever as a much milder and unimportant disease.
As far as I know this illness affects hundreds of thousands of people every year, killing thousands and causing deafness to many others. It's a very serious health problem in the countries affected, because it is spread by a particular species of rats and that makes it impossible to eradicate.
Some sources report that about 80% of the cases develop only minor effects, 20% suffer a more malignant form of the disease and just 1% dies. Other sources speak about fatality rates reaching 60% causing devastation of villages and destroying entire families, so I do not know what to think...
There are four different known strains of the responsible virus, and at least one of them is more aggressive than the others. It seems that a victim is likely to develop a severe form of the illness in case that it comes directly from another person, and some sources even report that the severity of the disease and your chances of survival depend on your racial background.
After a very extensive research I have failed to understand what Lassa Fever is and how it works.
In case that you can help me to research better and obtain a better idea of the disease, I would appreciate it a lot. I want to dedicate my story to the memories of Laura Wine and the other people that discovered it, and also raise some public awareness about the problem that it represents.
I really need some help from you, in the research of something important... this is for a story that I am planning to start writing very soon, and I ask for your assistance because I have failed to understand this subject by myself as well as I would like.
The story will be called Winter Hollow, and it will be set in the real world in modern times. The idea is that a peaceful Connecticut town is suddenly attacked by an obscure disease that few people know about, and the drama is described from the point of view of a common family.
To start with, I needed the obscure disease in question. I wanted something that few people have ever heard about, but dangerous and scary at the same time... The disease must be from the real world instead of something fictional, and I found a good candidate in an illness called Lassa Fever.
This Lassa Fever is the kind of thing that people search in Google the first time that they hear about it. Most likely you never heard about it before checking out this thread, so I want to start by giving you a picture about the history of this real world disease:
Back in January of 1969, there was a Nurse called Laura Wine. She was working at a small Nigerian village called Lassa, as part of the Church of the Brethren missionaries. One day they attended a patient who displayed a febrile illness, and a few days later Laura began to feel muscle pains in her back.
Laura's illness grew worse, and soon she was unable to work. She began to suffer from a very sore throat, hemorrhages, swelling and delirium, and sadly she died a short time later despite having been sent to a hospital for a better treatment.
Two other nurses cared for Laura: Charlotte Shaw died, but Penny Pinneo managed to recover after receiving intensive care at a New York hospital for several weeks.
This became the subject of a book and a TV documentary back then. The disease killed other medical staff and researchers some time later, and even Yale University decided to destroy its samples of the virus. You can read more about Laura Wine following the link right here.
The problem here is that Wikipedia and other sources describe Lassa Fever as a much milder and unimportant disease.
As far as I know this illness affects hundreds of thousands of people every year, killing thousands and causing deafness to many others. It's a very serious health problem in the countries affected, because it is spread by a particular species of rats and that makes it impossible to eradicate.
Some sources report that about 80% of the cases develop only minor effects, 20% suffer a more malignant form of the disease and just 1% dies. Other sources speak about fatality rates reaching 60% causing devastation of villages and destroying entire families, so I do not know what to think...
There are four different known strains of the responsible virus, and at least one of them is more aggressive than the others. It seems that a victim is likely to develop a severe form of the illness in case that it comes directly from another person, and some sources even report that the severity of the disease and your chances of survival depend on your racial background.
After a very extensive research I have failed to understand what Lassa Fever is and how it works.
In case that you can help me to research better and obtain a better idea of the disease, I would appreciate it a lot. I want to dedicate my story to the memories of Laura Wine and the other people that discovered it, and also raise some public awareness about the problem that it represents.