Obviously Borman was not closely monitored enough to prevent infection
Thanks for posting some actual evidence, drewid. It suggests that maybe the doctors weren't in fact incompetents who just threw up their hands and said "Can't be done".
It also illustrates how very stupid Patrick sounds when he warns us that letting astronauts poop in a bag exposed the others "to the risk of infection with Salmonella, Shigella, Camplobacter, Yersinia, Giardia, Cryptosporidium, C. difficile, and hepatitis viruses". He seems to ignore the simple fact that the crew would have had to be infected with these before the mission lifted off, and of course they were confined and closely monitored before the mission to prevent any such infection.
OBVIOUSLY BORMAN WAS NOT CLOSELY MONITORED ENOUGH TO PREVENT INFECTION(even if it was a pretend infection)
If NASA personal could not prevent Borman from acquiring viral gastroenteritis Jack by the Hedge, how would they prevent him from acquiring one of the other bugs transmissible in their real or pretend world?
You prevent these illnesses by way of sanitation, good hygiene. This is the whole point Jack by the hedge.
For those interested, there is variability among that which is reported with regard to the relevant numbers, but a few good rules of thumb for those interested in incubation period times;
1) Salmonella, 1/2 to 2 days
2) Camplobacter, 2-5 days
3) Shigella, 2-4 days
4) Giardia, 1-3 weeks
5) viral gastroenteritis, 12-48 hours
You are not a medical person Jack by the hedge, so I know you will not be offended when I tell you that you are missing my very point and thereby stepping right into it.
One cannot prevent these illnesses by placing astronauts in protective custody before a launch. It is all about hygiene, basic sanitation. If Borman really had viral gastroenteritis, he contracted it from a food worker, or off the surface of table there at NASA. The bugs are everywhere, the world is very much not a sterile place.
That said, you do not need to go looking for this stuff. One does not need to go and try and get oneself infected, especially if one is an astronaut, which is exactly what one would be doing, climbing aboard Apollo 8 and breathing Borman's crud, touching things and then swallowing. These guys are walking into a set up for a bad infection and there is no need for it. NASA could have figured out what to do. Obviously they have. Saying there is no room in the command module is not rationale. The place is not safe.
A person preparing Borman's food could be completely asymptomatic and not a good hand washer, or even be a good hand washer. Even very good hand washing cannot guarantee that a bug won't be transferred to another individual and cause a serious illness in him or her. Whether a good or bad hand washer, having touched Borman's salad, the food worker in so doing, passes our fearless commander the Salmonella a day before lift off. It incubates a day in him and makes him sick. One could say the same for a virus causing viral gastroenteritis, or Giardia he picked up somewhere 2 weeks before lift off.
Basic sanitation, basic hygiene is our first, and by far, most important line of defense against infection of all types. Once a bug "gets by that", it is on our skin, in our lungs, in our gi tract, in our blood and then up to our integument or immune system to help. Now Houston, even if their astronauts are immunocompetent, has a very very very big problem.
An Apollo ship has zero hygiene, zero sanitation with regard to the fecal material issue. Well almost zero. So for a bug that is highly contagious and once acquired makes you sick, as is the case with viral gastroenteritis, astronaut infections would be almost automatic in such an environment, an Apollo environment.
We may confidently conclude this is not a real environment......
Diagnosis; fake mission