The Hot Zone

Now that you've read the first part of The Hot Zone, what is your impression of Ebola, the scientists, and the repercussions of an outbreak? As you continue to read, answer each of the following prompts at least once.

To reply, click on the # Comments link at the end of blog entry, type your response in the Leave A Comment box, and under Choose Your Identity choose the Name/URL option, and type only your first name in the space provided. In addition to each of your reponses, respond to at least two of your classmates in a thoughtful manner by Dec. 19.

Write a full response to each of the following prompts:

  1. What is your opinion of what you just read?
  2. Is there an issue that you agree with? Disagree with?
  3. What steps or techniques did the scientists use to complete their job?
  4. List five science-related vocabulary words and define them.
  5. Write a letter to one of the characters.
  6. Write a letter to the author.
  7. Which character would you like to be? Why?
  8. Summarize what you have just read. (Entire book or a section)
  9. Draw a picture of something you read. Be sure to include a caption and explain why the illustration is important to the book. (Optional hand-in assignment)

I hope this foray into the minds of scientists, military and civilian personnel, and the peculiar spread of a virus will cause you to stop and reflect.

Comments

Anonymous said…
I think that this book is really discusting, I would hate to have Ebola... I can't believe REAL people went through all that
Anonymous said…
This is really dicusting I can't believe REAL people actually went through all that. I would hate to be sick with that... no, actually LOOKING at that
Anonymous said…
I think it was realy boring and very grose. It was although what i said it was very funny and it;s getting good.
Anonymous said…
So far the book has been kinda boring.
Anonymous said…
I disagree with when they kill the monkeys just because they look sick. They should just stop testing monkeys. They should use something else like rats.
Anonymous said…
The main issue I disagree with is when they kill the monkeys that were in Kitrum Cave when they knew they were heathy.
Anonymous said…
Q#1: I liked the book but I do not understand why the characters change so quickly
Anonymous said…
Q#1: I think it is difficult to understand the quick changes of characters
Anonymous said…
Q#2: I disagree with about the fact that the scientists hardly use gloves and infect themselves
Anonymous said…
Q#3: Try to give patients shot to heal them
Anonymous said…
In the section that i have read they believe that the Malburg virus came from monkeys on hot islands. A guy named Charles Monet went to a hospital and died there. He gave their best doctor the dicease. He died from it too. Then the hospital was put on lockdown and now almost everyone in their has the virus or is going to get it.
Anonymous said…
If i could be any character i would want to be Jerry Jaax because Hee his wife he can always persuade his wife into buying things. He bought a diesil cadillac and they even have a sailboat i think thats cool
Anonymous said…
1. I think that The Hot Zone is very decriptive. I think that the author was very accurate when writing this novel.
Anonymous said…
7. I would like to be Gene Johnson because he is on a dangerous mission looking for the birth place of Ebola. He also gets to deal with monkeys who are sick.
Anonymous said…
What is your opinion of what you just read?

My opinion is that Ebola is probably the worst way to die. I hate reading stories like this because I hate to hear about anyone suffering, but it's a good way to motivate people to start helping.
Anonymous said…
2. One of the issues in The Hot Zone is the euthan of the monkeys who did not get sick in Kitum Cave. I think that they should have let the poor monkeys back into the wild because they were not sick.
Anonymous said…
What is your opinion of what you just read?

Ebola is a vey serious and scary virus, especially since there is no cure for it. The scientists are infecting monkeys with this airborne virus to try to find a cure for it and to see where it originated. They suspect it came from an organism living inside Kitum Cave. This book shows you how once one person becomes infected with a virus that can survive in the human race, it is very easy to transfer the virus to another person.
Anonymous said…
8. Charles Monet likes his home in Africa. What he doesn't expect is a hidden monster that kills him. The doctors are stumped. What is this deadly virus? Research shows that it is Marburg, a less severe version of Ebola. There is no cure. Why is it terrorizing people? Where is it coming from?
Anonymous said…
Is there an issue that you agree with? Disagree with?

I agree and disagree with infecting the monkeys with Ebola. I disagree with this because I don't think it is right to infect a healthy animal with a virus that will kill them. I agree with it because I know that they are only doing this to try to find a cure for the virus and monkeys are very close to humans.
Anonymous said…
What steps or techniques did the scientists use to complete their job?

They infect a monkey with the virus. When the monkeys die, the scientists put some of the infected monkey cells into a flask and examine the cells very carefully to try to see what type of virus it is and what medecines they can possibly give them to see if it will kill the virus.
Anonymous said…
Dear Author,

This book is a little boring at first but where i am at it is getting quite gruesome. It is realy weird because the more bloodier it gets the better it gets. If I could redo the book i would try to make it better. I hope that there is a second book because it is realy good.

Sincerely,
Matthew
Anonymous said…
Q#5: Dear Musoke, I think the reason you got the virus was because you did not use gloves.
Anonymous said…
An issue i disagree with is that they haven't done and autopsy on the body of the first victum yet.
Anonymous said…
Q#6: Dear Richard Preston, Ijust finished reading the first 155 pages in your book The Hot Zone. I enjoy the great descriptiveness in the book. I have one problem. I dont understgand why you decided to have character changes so quickly. To me it is kind of confusing. I enjoy your book and hope to read another opne of your books very soon.
Anonymous said…
Q#7: I would want to be Dr. Issacson. Even though she was a lad[y she was brave in almost letting herself die for another person.
Anonymous said…
I agree that Nancy shouldn't have done level 4. Especially becuase she had a cut on her hand. I disagree that they do there expieriments on monkeys.
Anonymous said…
Q#1: I think that the ebola and marburg virus is really interesting. Some strains of it kill nine out of ten people. That is really scary. It can even travel through the air some what. I wonder why they need to find the natural host. I just hope they get rid of it.
Anonymous said…
Q#8: Nancy Jaax was in a chamber with monkeys that had Ebola. Which was a disease that makes you bleed from any opening in your body. She got blood with Ebola in it on her hand. She saw her glove had a cut in it and she would get Ebola if blood got in her cut hand. She had three gloves on and two of them were cut she got so nervous she left and went home for the day.
Anonymous said…
Q#2: I strongly disagree with the killing of the monkeys at Kitum Cave when they knew they did not hhave the virus. Why did they not just take a flesh sample instead of complete death?
Anonymous said…
Is there an issue that you agree with? Disagree with?

Euthanasia, giving animals a deadly dose of sedative, is an issue that I don't know if I agree or disagree with. I hate seeing the monkeys in the lab suffering through their sickness and I know that it's the best way to contain the disease, but killing animals and even people this way seems immoral. People could say that they did it for good reasons, but I would never be able to euthanize or give permission to euthanize anything.
Anonymous said…
6. Dear Richard Preston,
I like your book, The Hot Zone. Even though it is hard to understand sometimes, it is a really cool book. I like how you describe the horrors of Ebola virus and Marburg. The way you write makes me feel like I was there. This is a really good book.
Anonymous said…
List five science-related vocabulary words and define them.

pathology-the science or the study of the origin, nature, and course of diseases

lethal- of, pertaining to, or causing death; deadly; fatal

quarantine-a strict isolation imposed to prevent the spread of disease

biohazard-A biological agent, such as an infectious microorganism, or a condition that constitutes a threat to humans, especially in biological research or experimentation

virions-A complete viral particle, consisting of RNA or DNA surrounded by a protein shell and constituting the infective form of a virus
Anonymous said…
Which character would you like to be? Why?

I would like to be Nancy Jaax. Her life is dangerous and exciting. She gets to travel and disect monkeys to learn more about Ebola and Marburg. She gets to wear a space suit at work and she gets to work with her husband. I think it is cool that she is the only woman that works with Level 4 hot agents at USAMRIID.
Anonymous said…
3. The scientists, when they were in the monkey house, went through these steps: First, they sealed off exits that the hot agent could escape through. Then, they injected the monkeys with a sleeding drug. After that, they took some blood to test the monkeys. The also cut out some of they liver. Next, They euthanized the monkeys. Then, the monkey bodies were burned in an incinerater.
Anonymous said…
Write a letter to the author.

Dear Richard Preston,
This book is very greusome and terrifying. It is scary when you read something in the book and then you realize that this book is non-fiction. Everything they say in this book has really happened to these people. I feel sympathy for the people that had to go through this stuf. I think overall, this book is an okay book.
Anonymous said…
What steps or techniques did the scientists use to complete their jobs?

To find out what the monkeys were dying of, first the Tom Geisbert infected blood from a monkey with the disease. He looked at the blood, then he spun the flask of blood in a centrigufe machine. A small dot of dead or dying cells collected at the bottom. He put the dot in plastic resin, which would preserve it. Geisbert then put the dot into a machine, fitted the machine with a diamond knife, and sliced the dot of cells into pieces. The slices fell into water, and he fished them out with a miniscule grid. He carried the grid in a box to the electron microscope. He slid the small grid into place and examined the dead cells, and from there Geisbert was able to determine that this was an unknown virus.
Anonymous said…
4. Euthanasia- to kill by lethal injection
Pathology- The study of origin, nature and course of diseases
biohazard- The health risk posed by possible release of a pathogen in the environment
filovirus- Thread virus
quarantine- strict isolation to prevent the spread of diseases
Anonymous said…
Write a letter to one of the characters.

Dear Nancy Jaax,
You set a good example for younger girls and women. I think it's cool that you are one of the very few women that worked at USAMRIID at that time. Plus, you worked with Level 4 hot agents and you helped to disect and examine the dying monkeys. It takes a lot of courage to do what you did, and that is why you are my favorite character in this book.
Anonymous said…
Dear Mr. Preston,
Your book is gruesome and a little hard to follow. There are a lot of details that I was lost in. However, you explain Ebola and Marburg in enough detail to push the thought of how horrible this disease is into my head. If there hadn't been so much disgusting or seemingly pointless details, I wouldn't have understood the full extent of the sickness. If the flow of the book hadn't been so choppy (to me, at least) I would have liked it a lot.
Anonymous said…
Dear Dan Dalgard,
Sorry to hear about the monkey house incident. You made a lot of hard decisions in there. I'm glad you pulled through it without getting sick. I hope you were able to find a better job.
Anonymous said…
5. Dear Gene Johnson,
Don't kill the healthy monkeys from Kitum Cave. Let them go. The memories will haunt you for your whl life.
Sincerly,
Andre'
Anonymous said…
Which character would you like to be? Why?

I'd like to be Tom Geisbert, because he discovered a new disease and was able to name it. He has a pretty cool job and gets to look at all kinds of viruses. Looking through an electron microscope all day doesn't sound so bad.
Anonymous said…
Briley,
I agree with your conflict about agreeing or disagreeing about the euthanizing of the monkeys. I like monkeys, and the healthy ones from Kitum Cave shouldn't have been killed.
Anonymous said…
Summarize what you have just read.

A man named Dan Dalgard notices a strange sickness in the monkey house he works at. The monkeys in Room F suddenly stop eating, and, in a few days, drop dead. He thinks the virus is Simian Hermorrhagic Fever, but the monkeys don't have the usual simptoms. Their spleens, which should be soft, are one giant blood clot, and there is some internal bleeding. He contacts the army and sends them a sample of one of the monkeys' spleen and mucus, but the army is just as stunned as he is. The virus looks like Ebola Zaire, the deadliest kind of Ebola. America may be at a huge risk, and it's up to the Army to stop it.
Anonymous said…
Matt,
I agree with you when you disagree with the testig of viruses on monkeys. But if they start using rats, then they are doing the same thing to thse rodents. Think about the rat lovers out there who would say to stop testing on rats and testing on monkeys. Then we would have the same conflict.
Anonymous said…
List five science-related terms and define them.

Sterilization: unequivocal, total destruction of all living organisms. Extremely difficult to achieve in practice, and almost impossible to verify afterward.

Replication: self-directed copying.

Host: organism that serves as a home to, and often as a food source for, a parasite, such as a virus.

Filovirus: a family of viruses that comprises only Ebola and Marburg. Also called thread virus.

EnviroChem: green liquid used in air-lock chemical showers. Effective virus killer.
Anonymous said…
Andre, i know where your going with that but there are 4 times as many rats then monkeys. Also rats sometimes have a disease already. So i think they should use rats instead.
Anonymous said…
Q#3: Set up a bleed area and set up three different teams bleed, necropsy and euthanasia. They took blood from monkey's theighs and sent them to the bleed team.Give 5them ingection of T-61. Take the spleen out of the monkey and the monkeys died
Anonymous said…
The steps the scientists used in this book was that they: Found the subject or virus.Next the find information and where it came from. After they get information they test it to make sure it's right. Then they make a plan to destroy or stop the virus. Then they follow through on the plan.
Anonymous said…
Q#4:
Host:organisms that serve as a home to parasite
Hot Agent: Extreme lethal virus
Hot Suite: A groupof biosaftey level lab rooms
Replication:Self direct copying
USAMRIID: United States Army medicle research Institute of Infectious diseases
Anonymous said…
Q#5: Dear Charles Monet,
I would like to talk to you about what you saw on Mt. Elgon. What did it look like? What were you feel like? Nervous? How did you feel after you touched it? How are you feeling after you had that weird disease? Do you still feel bad? Are you ever going to try to look for it and destroy it
Anonymous said…
Jerome,
I agree with you. It's hard to keep up with what character the story is about because they change so quickly. I had to reread a lot of the book!
Anonymous said…
Matt,
In your letter to the author, you said the book gets better as it gets bloodier. Why do you think that? Gore isn't something to enjoy.
Anonymous said…
Summarize what you have just read. (Entire book or a section)

In part three, they try to get rid of the virus by "nuking" the monkey house. They want to go in and kill all the monkey, even the ones that appear to be healthy because they might be in the incubation period. Newscasters are constantly coming to the monkey house in Reston to try to gather some information. During the process of euthanising the monkeys, one of them escapes from the cage and it took hours to catch him. After they finish cleaning the monkey house, they conclude that this virus was a new virus. They think that it only fatal to animals. It is hard to tell the difference between this new virus and Ebola-Zaire beacuse they are so closely related. They named it Ebola-Reston, because the monkey house is located in Reston, VA.
Anonymous said…
Jerome,
I disagree with you saying that scientist should wear gloves. In the book it says that before you go into a Level 4 room, you have to put on scrubs and gloves. Then the put on the space suit, and the space suit has gloves. The, before they start handling the mateirals, they put on more latex gloves.
Anonymous said…
Logan,
I agree that they should not have killed the monkeys at Kitum Cave. The monkeys were perfectly healthy and they knew that. But I don't think they really wanted to kill the monkeys.
Anonymous said…
Q#1 I think the ebola and marburg virus are really scary and fascinating at the same time. I keep on wondering what is in those other proteins that make the ebol-reston able to travel though the air but non-lethal to humans.
Anonymous said…
Q#2 I completely disagree with when that guy from the monkey house got sick he went to the normal hospital instead of the slammer. He could have started a chain reaction and made millions of people sick and die. He was just lucky he did not have ebola.
Anonymous said…
Q#3 They filled syringes with 2 doses of anethetic ketamine. They then attached it to a pole. One person would hold down the monkey with a broom or mop stick. The other person would push the pole syringe through the open door into the cage and give the monkey the shot. They would then take the monkey to the bleed area and place it on the bleed table. They would then take blood samples from the monkey. That person would give the monkey to the next person who gave the monkey a dose of euthanasia right into the heart.
Anonymous said…
Q#4 Host- the organism a parasite resides in.
Replication- when an organism makes copies of itself.
Filovirus- family of viruses that only contain ebola and marburg.
Hot agent- a lethal virus that may be airborne.
Sentinel animal- an animal prone to getting sick, or showing symptoms of something potently dangerous to humans, that are put in areas where harmful substances may be. If the animals get sick, it is a warning for humans to get out.
Anonymous said…
Q#5 Dear Nancy Jaax,
What was the first feeling when you found out you had blood infected with marburg in your glove? Did you think you where going to die, or did you have hope? Did your childhood flash before your eyes? If that happened to me I would probably panic and do something stupid. I would feel as if my life was over. I really admire that you acted in a professional way. You where really calm for that situation.
Anonymous said…
Q#6 Dear Richard Preston,
What inspired you to write The Hot Zone? Did you write it to inform people about the dangers of the virus, or just as a good story? Either way The Hot Zone was still a very good book. I would recommend it to anyone who is interested in viruses. I especially like the way you change the characters to give the reader a better feel for the story. If you had the choice would you wipe the filovirus of the face of the earth just because it is deadly yo man?
Anonymous said…
Q#7 The character I would want to be is Colonel Gerald Jaax. I would want to be him because for one, he survived, and because he got to help people by getting rid of the virus. He helped possibly millions of people because he helped to prevent outbreaks of the virus. He was not in it for the money, but to help people. He was a true hero.
Anonymous said…
Q#8 Monkeys began to have an outbreak with some type of disease in a monkey house. The caretakers sent a monkey sample to USAMRIID. When people looked under a micrsope, the cells had been blown apart. Meanwhile at the monkey house the virus had been jumping rooms and infecting monkeys that had not have any contact with the sick ones. When one of the researchers at the lab found out it reacted with the ebola-zaire virus. They then got together an organization to get rid of the virus in the monkey house.

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