Travel can worsen Ebola spread, Alabama A&M professor says

Alabama A&M University professor Dr. Jacob Oluwoye said travel will worsen the spread of the Ebola virus. (CONTRIBUTED)
Alabama A&M University professor Dr. Jacob Oluwoye said travel will worsen the spread of the Ebola virus. (CONTRIBUTED)

NORMAL – The possibility of an epidemic from the incurable and deadly Ebola virus has saturated the news media locally and around the world. One professor at Alabama A&M University is explaining the transfer for the deadly disease.

“Ebola is contagious,” Dr. Jacob Oluwoye said. At Alabama A&M, Oluwoye works as a professor of transportation and environmental health.

“Generally, the infectious agent may be transmitted by saliva, air, cough, fecal-oral route, surfaces, blood, needles, blood transfusions, sexual contact, mother to fetus and in other ways,” he said.

Although the disease is infectious, “it is not a genetic disease or one caused by a defective or abnormal gene,” Oluwoye said.

Transmission of Ebola occurs by “‘hierarchical diffusion’, meaning that it spreads from major population centers to the surrounding countryside. Transportation, coupled with highly fluid population movements between underdeveloped countries, has allowed Ebola to transcend the walls of underdeveloped countries and to enter the developed world,” he said.

“The Ebola epidemic jumps from city to city in hierarchical diffusion. Then, it spreads out by spatially contagious diffusion from regional epicenters into the surrounding countryside,” Oluwoye said.

In addition, the spread of Ebola at the current alarming infection rates “threatens to erode the growth of the world economy, as well as affect other aspects of citizens’ social lives,” Oluwoye said. “The more people travel, the faster and further Ebola can spread.”

As a result, an important factor in Ebola spread is the population movement in the form of transportation usage, he said.

Oluwoye earned a doctorate degree in traffic and transport management at New South Wales University. For more information, call Oluwoye at 256-372-4994 or email to jacob.oluwoye@aamu.edu.

Alabama A&M was founded in 1875 by former slave William Hooper Councill. The institution’s original name was Huntsville Normal School, which was located in downtown Huntsville. Today, the university functions as a teaching, research and public service institution, including its extension centers.

Digital Version

Digital version of The Madison Record – April 17, 2024

Events

Check out the 2024-25 edition of “Explore Huntsville-Madison”

Bob Jones High School

Business, Army groups offer scholarships

Bob Jones High School

Optimists award teacher grants, essay winners

Liberty Middle School

Kristen Brown named finalist for Alabama Teacher of the Year

Madison

Journey Math Team makes mark in 2 tourneys

Bob Jones High School

Artwork by Charity Stratton on exhibit at library

Harvest

Madison City Community Orchestra to present ‘Eroica’ on April 20-21

Events

Orion Amphitheater kicks off its third concert season tonight

James Clemens High School

James Clemens HOSA overshadows conference competitors

Harvest

It’s Spring! Plant sale returns to Huntsville Botanical Garden

Bob Jones High School

Bob Jones AFJROTC aces first try at obstacle course

Discovery Middle School

Clifton, Francois earn grants to enhance study of German

Bob Jones High School

Fantasy Playhouse summer camps to open in Madison

Discovery Middle School

Hogan Family YMCA to celebrate Healthy Kids Day

Bob Jones High School

Students in grades 3-5 to compete in Bob Jones Science Challenge

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

James Clemens Football Hosting Annual Mattress Sale

James Clemens High School

James Clemens baseball hot at the right time

Discovery Middle School

Register for Summer Spotlight Theatre Camp at James Clemens

Bob Jones High School

Bob Jones hails as section’s top team at Scholastic Chess Championship

James Clemens High School

James Clemens leads at Student Council Association conference

News

Messiah Lutheran’s Rummage Sale turns ‘discards into disaster relief’

Harvest

Madison Academy to present ‘High School Musical – One Act Edition’

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Remembering Tom Monroe- “Johnny Appleseed Of Disc Golf”

x