No, haven't got it.
On a completely different forum somewhere, someone made a comment which I suspect, and I wonder if the more medically-inclined CSers would know some answers.
The comment was "I recently spent five weeks in hospital with cholera". The woman concerned is in a major Canadian city, the post was this year, and also she's pregnant.
1. Wasn't cholera wiped out of the developed world? I can find only suggestions to this effect online, nothing concrete that it Just Doesn't Happen any more in Canada.
2. The treatment for cholera that I could find was "drink water". In very extreme cases you could be hospitalised for an IV drip, but it doesn't say for how long. Five weeks seems an enormous length of time for something for which the treatment is "drink water".
3. Does cholera have an effect on unborn children if the mother does have a bout of it while up the duff? Does how far long she is make a difference? (Apparently due in September, so it would have been very early in the show).
TIA
On a completely different forum somewhere, someone made a comment which I suspect, and I wonder if the more medically-inclined CSers would know some answers.
The comment was "I recently spent five weeks in hospital with cholera". The woman concerned is in a major Canadian city, the post was this year, and also she's pregnant.
1. Wasn't cholera wiped out of the developed world? I can find only suggestions to this effect online, nothing concrete that it Just Doesn't Happen any more in Canada.
2. The treatment for cholera that I could find was "drink water". In very extreme cases you could be hospitalised for an IV drip, but it doesn't say for how long. Five weeks seems an enormous length of time for something for which the treatment is "drink water".
3. Does cholera have an effect on unborn children if the mother does have a bout of it while up the duff? Does how far long she is make a difference? (Apparently due in September, so it would have been very early in the show).
TIA
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