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World Health Organization: Swine flu could spread globally


karmakramer

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http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/04/25/swine.flu/index.html

 

The presence of swine flu in Mexico and the United States is "a serious situation" that could develop into a pandemic, the World Health Organization's director-general said Saturday.

 

"This is an animal strain of the H1N1 virus and it has pandemic potential because it is infecting people," Dr. Margaret Chan said Saturday speaking to reporters by phone.

 

In Mexico, 68 people have died from swine flu, according to a statement from the U.S. Embassy in Mexico.

 

Eight people were confirmed to have swine flu in the United States; six in California and two in Texas, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

 

All eight have recovered, according to CDC's acting Director Richard Besser.

 

Preliminary results from tests of students at a New York school do not rule out swine flu, the director of surveillance for the Bureau of Communicable Diseases said Saturday.

 

Dr. Don Weiss said the samples will now be sent to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Test results could be known by Sunday.

 

He said the samples came back positive for "Type A" flu and the tests will need to determine the samples' subtype.

 

He said up to 100 students at the Queens school reported feeling ill.

 

CDC has tested 14 samples of the virus from Mexico and found seven were identical to the virus found in the U.S. cases, Besser said. Watch an alarmed Mexico City react with face masks, cancellations »

 

"This situation has been developing quickly," he said. "This is something we are worried about."

 

Asked whether the committee would address raising the agency's alert concerning the virus to 6, a pandemic alert and the highest level on WHO's scale, Chan said, "Yes, indeed."

 

The alert stands at 3, meaning "No or very limited human-to-human transmission."

 

Chan said Saturday that WHO does not have indications of similar outbreaks elsewhere.

 

However, she said, "The situation is evolving quickly. A new disease is by definition poorly understood."

 

White House spokesman Reid Cherlin said Saturday that the White House was taking the situation "seriously and monitoring for any developments."

 

Health officials in Texas announced Saturday the temporary closure of Byron Steel High School in Cibolo, Texas, where swine flu was confirmed in two students earlier this month.

 

"The purpose is to reduce the risk to students, staff and the community," said Dr. Sandra Guerra, a public health official in Guadalupe County, Texas.

 

Mexico City has closed all of its schools and universities until further notice because of the virus, and on Saturday, the country's National Health Council said all soccer games would be played Saturday without public audiences. Watch as CNN's Anderson Cooper and panelists discuss the epidemic in Mexico »

 

More than 1,000 people have been sickened in the country, and officials are trying to determine how many of those patients had swine flu, the country's health minister, Jose Angel Cordova Villalobos, said.

 

None of the U.S. patients had direct contact with pigs, though a patient who lives in San Diego had traveled to Mexico, the CDC said. Watch for more on the U.S. cases »

 

Besser said officials had not found common exposure or behavior among the eight U.S. patients.

 

"We have not seen any linkage at all between the cases in Texas and California," he said.

 

The new virus has genes from North American swine influenza, avian influenza, human influenza and a form of swine influenza normally found in Asia and Europe, said Nancy Cox, chief of the CDC's Influenza Division.

 

Swine flu is caused by a virus similar to a type of flu virus that infects people every year but is a strain typically found only in pigs -- or in people who have direct contact with pigs.

 

There have, however, been cases of person-to-person transmission of swine flu, the CDC said. Officials found evidence, for example, that a patient transmitted the disease to health care workers during a 1988 apparent swine flu infection among pigs in Wisconsin.

 

Experts think coughing, sneezing and contaminated surfaces spread the infection among people.

 

The new strain of swine flu has resisted some antiviral drugs, officials said.

 

The human influenza vaccine's ability to protect against the new swine flu strain is unknown, and studies are ongoing, said Dr. Anne Schuchat, the CDC's interim deputy director for science and public health program. There is no danger of contracting the virus from eating pork products, she said.

 

Canada is also testing samples from Mexico "and has placed a travel alert for travel to Mexico," CDC spokesman David Daigle told CNN by e-mail.

 

The United States had not issued any travel alerts or advisories by late Friday, but some private companies issued their own warnings.

 

Apparently the real number of deaths in Mexico is around 200+, but for some reason the media is being very hush hush about it... don't want to spread panic I guess.

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New York Times Article

 

“This situation is evolving quickly,” Dr. Chan said in a telephone news conference. “A new disease is by definition poorly understood.”

 

But officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said they understoodthat the outbreak potential in the United States was serious.

 

“It’s clear that this is widespread,” said Dr. Anne Schuchat, Interim Deputy Director for Science and Public Health Program for the C.D.C. said in a teleconference on Saturday afternoon. “We do not think we can contain the spread of this virus.”

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/26/world/am...tml?_r=1&hp

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Guest zaphod

so what does this mean for bacon? where do we stand on bacon guys? because frankly if i can't have bacon then we might as well call it right now. game over.

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Guest countchocula
so what does this mean for bacon? where do we stand on bacon guys? because frankly if i can't have bacon then we might as well call it right now. game over.

 

The article said eating pork products was okay, but maybe that is just to ensure that a agriculture market collapse does not happen lol. This has got me genuinely freaked the fuck out.

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Guest countchocula
i was touching all sorts of raw pork today at work.

 

*cough*

 

shit

 

As soon as I saw you were the most recent poster I thought "shit sneaksta is a butcher."

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i was touching all sorts of raw pork today at work.

 

*cough*

 

shit

 

As soon as I saw you were the most recent poster I thought "shit sneaksta is a butcher."

 

lol yeah... I'm not too worried.

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Guest Super lurker ultra V12

it's going to be the 'big one' since there are lots of young people around the world

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every one says different things, the number of deaths in Mexico was reported to be around 20. now it's 68 and over 200?

 

anyway is just flu, the number of deaths by seasonal flu is always considerable, the difference is that this was not expected.

 

health organization put on alarm because that's what they should do when something out of the ordinary happens, it's not really that big a deal. I think, but i'm no expert.

 

also there's a few zombies and stuff but nothing that can't be handled.

 

 

 

 

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every one says different things, the number of deaths in Mexico was reported to be around 20. now it's 68 and over 200?

 

anyway is just flu, the number of deaths by seasonal flu is always considerable, the difference is that this was not expected.

 

health organization put on alarm because that's what they should do when something out of the ordinary happens, it's not really that big a deal. I think, but i'm no expert.

 

also there's a few zombies and stuff but nothing that can't be handled.

 

I've read that before . . .is this Cell or The Stand?  Either way overpopulation is taking care of itself.

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anyway is just flu, the number of deaths by seasonal flu is always considerable, the difference is that this was not expected.

 

If it's similar to Spanish Flu (1918-1919) then its not just flu. It killed 25 - 50 million people. More than WWI. In some areas up to 30% of the population.

 

And there are similarities. Spanish flu was probably a mutation of swine and bird flu, as is the new one. It also killed young people, because it turned their healthy immune systems against them.

 

A pandemic on the scale of 1918 will kill people you know. Its just a question if this is the one, because it will happen again.

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UK monitoring swine flu outbreak

 

Meanwhile, a male British Airways cabin crew member is undergoing precautionary tests in a London hospital after falling ill with "flu-like" symptoms on a flight from Mexico City.

 

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/8018887.stm

 

 

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Guest my usernames always really suck
because it turned their healthy immune systems against them.

 

wat

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Guest Franklin

on an unrelated note, actually more related to what Fred brought up, one of my client's is a pork-worker and quite recently the pork factories (where live pigs get turned into pork products) have been producing 33% less than just 2 weeks ago. he did not know why.

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anyway is just flu, the number of deaths by seasonal flu is always considerable, the difference is that this was not expected.

 

If it's similar to Spanish Flu (1918-1919) then its not just flu. It killed 25 - 50 million people. More than WWI. In some areas up to 30% of the population.

 

And there are similarities. Spanish flu was probably a mutation of swine and bird flu, as is the new one. It also killed young people, because it turned their healthy immune systems against them.

 

A pandemic on the scale of 1918 will kill people you know. Its just a question if this is the one, because it will happen again.

 

i wonder if they had antiviral medicine.

 

 

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