Level 4 Virus Hunters of the CDC
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Average customer review:Product Description
Sublimely equipped to survive, to propagate, to conquer, the virus is neither really alive nor really dead. It's dimensions are measured in molecules. It attacks by dismantling it's human targets cell by cell. An ancient adversary, resident on this earth long before our evolutionary ancestors arrived, the virus is without conscience or compassion, without mind. It enjoys the advantages of countless numbers and infinite time. It is a being almost too simple to understand and too basic to outwit. We are locked in a war with the virus. Each battle kills some of us. The battles have many names: Ebola, Lassa fever, Crimean Congo Hemorrhagic Fever, AIDS ....
Joseph McCormick and Susan Fischer-Hoch have met them all; and they have fought them all. Level 4 Virus Hunters of the CDC is their story. It is an intense, personal account of more than a quarter of a century on the front lines - in the ultra high-tech "hot zone" lab that McCormick was instrumental in creating at the Centre for Disease Control in Atlanta, as well as in the most primitive places on the planet, where the local climate, terrain and politics can kill as easily as any disease. Told in intimate detail by two of the world's best known virologists this book brings home brings home from the world of the virus the human stories of those who lived, and those who died.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #665618 in Books
- Published on: 1999-06-24
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 380 pages
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Dr. Joseph McCormick is one of the world's foremost authorities on Ebola and Lassa fever. He is also renowned as the first HIV investigator in Africa and the researcher who isolated the oldest HIV strain. Dr Susan Fischer-Hoch was born and educated here in England. Before joining the CDC she did pioneering work on Legionnaires' Disease, Ebola and Lassa fever. She and Dr McCormick were married in 1992 and are currently professors at Aga Khan Medical School in Pakistan.
Customer Reviews
Remarkable
Biologic agents, viruses, and the weapons they can be used with, have become common themes for movies and books. The Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta Georgia has also become a frequently mentioned locale as the HIV Virus grew in scope and with it the public's concern. The descriptions of some of these viruses seemed almost like science fiction, as the descriptions I read often seemed on the edge of hyperbole. This volume by two "virus hunters" is eminently readable by the layperson as it explains the basics about what a virus is, how they spread, and how horrible the consequences of infection can be.
Dr. Joseph B. McCormick and Dr Susan Fisher-Hoch are as amazing as the diseases they pursue. These doctors, when in the field, often perform tests that would normally only be performed in a Level 4 Biosafety Laboratory. This is a facility that is isolated, at times in a separate building, includes airlocks, and the researchers wear the pressurized suits you may have seen portrayed in movies or documentaries. Level 4 is as high as it goes, or perhaps better stated, Level 4 is where the most lethal, dangerous, and exotic agents are worked with. These Doctors however, will work with these same agents in a tent, or in the open, in the most primitive conditions where the tiniest of errors could mean their death.
As a reference point I went to the Centers for Disease Control website to see where HIV is placed on the 1-4 scale. HIV except for certain circumstances is handled in a Level 2 environment. This put into perspective for me just how incredibly violent and lethal are the agents these people deal with. The book gives a great deal of background on HIV from the earliest days it was identified. Hemorrhagic fever viruses are discussed in detail, as well as specific discussions of Ebola, Lassa fever, Dengue Fever and others.
The entire book is fascinating and at times surprising. These Level 4 killers are not new, their emergence is primarily the result of humans venturing where they have never been, or interacting with the environment in a novel manner. The book eloquently explains that these viruses are not lurking waiting to pounce on the first person that passes by; rather they exist in a biological balance with their natural host, until disturbed.
You will read about accidents when these toxins are handled, why these diseases that are so virulent, so deadly, don't race around the globe. This is an extremely engrossing read, as everyday "man" is pushing the limits of what is manipulated, what structures we may be able to modify, but cannot with certainty handle. And there is always the fear of creating an event over which control is lost with catastrophic results.
Better than any novel because this book is true, it is science explained and practiced by the world's experts. Those who often were the first to identify and deal with the disease tell the stories, and finally they are scientists, so what you read are facts, not the embellishments of a novelist. These viruses need not modified for fictional movies and books, for the reality are horrible enough.
Gripping true stories of life-threatening events
This is an outstanding book. First-hand true-life recollections of a diverse range of natural disasters across Africa over 3 decades.
The authors tell their stories well, putting you right there in the bush. They retain their sense of humanity throughout so you really feel for their patients and their families as human beings.
1 quibble : only towards of the end of the story do they get married; at the very end of the book they both thank their first spouses for their respective sacrifices – but you never even get to know their spouses first names – what sort of acknowledgement remains anonymous?
2 mysteries : whilst there are plenty of good maps, there are no photos; no pictures of colleagues or patients, and no pictures of the offending Viruses and Bacteria – why not?
Very good value for money - I've had to pay much more for far lesser books.
Gripping true stories of life-threatening events
This is an outstanding book. First-hand true-life recollections of a diverse range of natural disasters across Africa over 3 decades.
The authors tell their stories well, putting you right there in the bush. They retain their sense of humanity throughout so you really feel for their patients and their families as human beings.
1 quibble : only towards of the end of the story do they get married; at the very end of the book they both thank their first spouses for their respective sacrifices – but you never even get to know their spouses first names – what sort of acknowledgement remains anonymous?
2 mysteries : whilst there are plenty of good maps, there are no photos; no pictures of colleagues or patients, and no pictures of the offending Viruses and Bacteria – why not?




