DREW HINSHAW:

They just have no good answers right now. This is a huge debate. The CDC thinks it's a really horrible idea to basically give people gloves and painkillers and say, 'okay you know, feed your family members while they have Ebola.'

On the other hand, people like UNICEF think 'what else are you going to do.' People are stuck in a house with their dying relatives.

The rules are that you shouldn't touch them, that you shouldn't go near them, that you should leave them in a bedroom essentially to die, but that's just not a tenable option for most people when their loved one is dying, they get to a point where compassion overrules self-preservation.

That's exactly how Ebola has been spreading house-to-house and unless there is just a huge increase in the number of hospital beds available, it will continue to happen.