Friday 11 September 2009

Tamilflu resistance resistance rise to 22

The culprit is Australia despite its so called sparring use of
Tamilflu or more likely to be due to the use of Tamilflu after 2 days
after the onset of symptoms.

Fortunately Australia has Relenza, despite its compulsary use also not
less 2 days after the onset of symptoms, but it still has the largest
number of Tamilflu resistance.

The most liberal user of Tamilflu, Japan, does not have much problem.

Malaysia is following Australia with its ministry recommendation
prescription only after 3 days, contrary to instruction by
manufacturer of Tamilflu, but this time without Relenza as a backup,
in case of any occurrence of Tamilflu resistance.

Soon our millions of stocks of Tamilflu will be useless. Better use
them now, before all flu become resistant to Tamilflu as a result of
misuse of Tamilflu, especially using Tamilflu after more than 2 days
after the onset of flu symptoms.

It cecomes more vital that Swine flu vaccination be started to at
least slow down the infection of Swine Flu.

http://www.metronews.ca/toronto/local/article/308018--swine-flu-death-toll-over-3-200-cases-of-tamiflu-resistance-rise-to-22
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Swine flu death toll over 3,200; cases of Tamiflu resistance rise to
22
September 11, 2009 11:03 a.m.
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TORONTO - The World Health Organization says swine flu has claimed at
least 3,205 lives around the globe.

The Geneva-based agency also says in its weekly report that 21 cases
of resistance to the drug Tamiflu have been found.

An expert with the WHO says that figure is actually now 22, because
Australia reported a case of drug-resistant swine flu on Friday.

Charles Penn says most of the people who were found to have Tamiflu-
resistant viruses had been taking the drug, either to prevent
infection or to treat it.

But two cases have been found where people who haven't taken Tamiflu
were infected with viruses already resistant to it.

The WHO says the pandemic virus remains the main flu virus found
around the world, and the circulating viruses continue to look very
similar, genetically, to the strain used to make swine flu vaccine.

Thursday 10 September 2009

Swine flu strains hospitals despite liberal Tamilflu

USA has decided not to close schools but it uses Tamilflu in large
amounts.
Its policy of not closing schools is similar to Malaysia but Malaysia
has decided not to issue Tamilflu except after 3 days, past the
compulsory 2 days for Tamilflu to be effective.

This has resulted in high absenteeism.

Malaysia should escape the worst effects because Malaysia is having
perpetual summer.
It is not automn in USA.

Absences up as flu hits state schools
Students' early return seen as spreading illness
Wednesday, September 09, 2009
ANNA VELASCO
News staff writer

The early return to school for K-12 students likely has spurred the
rapid spread of swine flu in Alabama, according to the state's top
doctor and top educator.

While Alabama and most of the Southeast have the country's highest
levels of illness from the new H1N1 virus, other parts will be
catching up as their schools resume this week, said Dr. Don
Williamson, state health officer, and Joe Morton, state school
superintendent.

Three weeks ago in Alabama, about 20 percent of schools had absentee
rates at 5 percent or greater. By the end of last week, 54 percent of
schools were experiencing that level of absenteeism, and 21 schools
had between 15 and 20 percent of students absent.
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"It's here; it's spreading," Williamson said at a Tuesday news
conference. "It's spreading in schools. We also see it spreading
outside schools."

Williamson said the state released enough Tamiflu and Relenza from its
stockpile for about 20,000 patients to ease some temporary shortages
and help uninsured patients. Those medicines have been effective in
diminishing the severity of illness caused by swine flu, if taken
within 48 hours of symptom onset.

Morton said the statewide absenteeism rate was almost 7 percent on
Friday. The yearly average is 3.5 percent.

"We're quickly approaching about a double absentee rate than what we'd
normally see for a whole school year," Morton said. "Where that peaks,
we don't know. It is growing."

Morton said Alabama and other states may have to ask the U.S.
Department of Education for some leeway on national absenteeism
standards set out in the No Child Left Behind law if the trends
continue long-term.

Williamson said at the end of August, almost 8 percent of doctors'
visits in Alabama were for flu-like illnesses, a huge jump from fewer
than 1 percent of visits a month earlier. As of last week, about 20
percent of patients showing up for care in emergency departments had
flu symptoms and 5 percent to 6 percent of those were hospitalized.

Even so, the state still has bed capacity to treat both acutely ill
children and adults, Williamson said.

"Our health care system appears at this point to be weathering the
challenge quite well," he said.

The Associated Press on Tuesday reported a fourth state death from
swine flu - an 18-year-old Troy University student - but health
officials said they do not have official confirmation on that case.

Williamson pointed out that a national analysis of H1N1 deaths in
children showed that about 30 percent are of children without
underlying health problems.

"While this virus is generally mild, for some children and some
individuals, even in the absence of underlying conditions, this can
still be a lethal virus," he said.

Williamson said he expects mass H1N1 vaccination clinics in K-12
schools to begin in mid- to late October. If the new virus follows
typical seasonal flu trends, Alabama could see its outbreak wane by
November. Even so, Williamson said vaccination will be important, as
the virus could recirculate next spring.

E-mail: avelasco@bhamnews.com

A good historical comparison of Spanish Flu

A good summary of written documents but are not clear of theories vs
facts.

There is no proof that Spanish flu mutated. It was only assumed.
the fatality rate for Spanish flu was only 0.67% overall, as recorded
in Wales and collected by a doctor there.

Even the data in New York, recorded a case fatality rate of 1.4% peak
in winter. Current Swine Flu recorded even higher rates in some
places.

So I suspect the fatality rate is similar to common flu except that
Spanish and Swine flu affects all age groups, therefore it is more
infectious because it has more carriers.

It also kills more people. As more people require intensive care,
hospitals cannot cope, raising the normal fatality rate of 0.1% to
more than 1%.

This time round, we have Tamilflu to treat swine flu but fatality
rates are still high. Imagine how it would affect populations as they
run out of Tamiflu. Many authorities are delaying the issuing of
Tamilflu to days after the allowed usage date of 2 days after the
onset of symptoms.

This is not simply a recommended date, but compulsory date. Tamilflu
manufacturer, Roche, does not allow its usage to treat flu after 48
hours.


The Mother of All Viruses?
Is Another 1918 Pandemic Possible?

September 09, 2009

virus_outbreak_bw-apha-090907.jpg

Undated photograph: The emergency hospital at Camp Funston, Kansas,
during the 1918 influenza epidemic.
Source: Courtesy Armed Forces Institute of Pathology/Contra Costa
Times/KRT

A working-class father and his young family stand outside a clinic,
masks over their faces. While his wife and children wait anxiously,
worry creases his forehead. A mysterious virus has engulfed the
country and he is concerned about its effects. What will happen to my
family if I'm unable to work? he wonders.

Short-staffed hospitals overwhelmed with patients attempt to
quarantine the infected before others contract the illness. But it is
so contagious that even nurses fall prey.

Frustrated about the unexplained sickness, authorities shut down
schools and force businesses to close, bringing the whole nation to a
halt. Transportation systems all but stop, and health officials urge
citizens not to leave their homes.

As the tired father waits in line, he recalls news reports about the
illness ballooning into a pandemic-level outbreak. Glancing at his
family, he wonders, Will we be next?

Although this description is eerily reminiscent of what is occurring
today with the H1N1 virus, the year is 1918. And the influenza
pandemic depicted above is not the current H1N1 swine flu outbreak,
but the Spanish influenza that took the lives of 40 to 100 million
people worldwide from 1918 to 1919.
Unparalleled in History

The early 20th-century pandemic started much the same as the current
one. Three years before the 1918 virus took its worst toll, it first
surfaced in birds, according to the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.

"Recently published sequence and phylogenetic analyses suggest that
the genes encoding the HA and neuraminidase (NA) surface proteins of
the 1918 virus were derived from an avianlike influenza virus shortly
before the start of the pandemic and that the precursor virus had not
circulated widely in humans or swine in the few decades before…
Regression analyses of human and swine influenza sequences obtained
from 1930 to the present place the initial circulation of the 1918
precursor virus in humans at approximately 1915–1918."

From 1915 to 1916, the United States suffered a hard-hit respiratory
disease epidemic, upping the death toll resulting from pneumonia and
influenza complications. Although mortality rates decreased by 1917,
people's weakened immune systems paved the way for the pandemic's
first wave in March 1918.

Spanish influenza initially appeared in Kansas in early spring, but
was first recorded as extremely virulent in several soldiers in
Boston, Mass., who had returned from fighting overseas in the First
World War. The bustling port city became a breeding ground for the
virus. Within three days, it infected 58 military personnel. The sick
were sent to Chelsea Naval Hospital. From there, influenza infected
civilians, with cases multiplying rapidly across the state and
country.

The pandemic continued in three stages over a 12-month period: The
first wave reached Europe, the U.S. and Asia in late spring and
summer; a second—and more deadly—strain spread approximately six
months later, wiping out entire families from September to November
1918; and a third wave struck in early spring of 1919.
"Most Viscous Type"

Unlike most viruses, which normally affect the very young, the weak
and the elderly, the 1918 influenza targeted healthy adults from the
ages of 20 to 40. Victims suffocated as their immune systems backfired—
overreacted—filling their lungs with a reddish liquid, which often
bubbled out of them as they died.
Expand Image

Global pandemic: People around the world wear face masks to protect
themselves against the risk of contracting swine flu, officially known
as influenza A (H1N1).
Source: AFP/Getty Images

A letter written by a military doctor on Sept. 29, 1918, described the
dreadful conditions at Fort Devens, near Boston.

"These men start with what appears to be an attack of la grippe or
influenza, and when brought to the hospital they very rapidly develop
the most viscous type of pneumonia that has ever been seen. Two hours
after admission they have the mahogany spots over the cheek bones, and
a few hours later you can begin to see the cyanosis extending from
their ears and spreading all over the face, until it is hard to
distinguish the coloured men from the white. It is only a matter of a
few hours then until death comes, and it is simply a struggle for air
until they suffocate."

Later he wrote, "It takes special trains to carry away the dead. For
several days there were no coffins and the bodies piled up something
fierce, we used to go down to the morgue...and look at the boys laid
out in long rows. It beats any sight they ever had in France after a
battle. An extra long barracks has been vacated for the use of the
morgue, and it would make any man sit up and take notice to walk down
the long lines of dead soldiers all dressed up and laid out in double
rows" (PBS).

One pandemic survivor recounted the bodies that stacked up in
Vancouver, Canada: "The undertaking parlours couldn't handle the
bodies as people died...they were having to use school auditoriums and
places like that to store bodies temporarily" (The Canadian Press).

A survivor stated that in Washington, D.C., "the flu's spread and the
ensuing restrictions 'made everybody afraid to go see anybody,' he
said. 'It changed a lot of society…We became more
individualistic'" (MSNBC).
Social Distancing

An effective measure at the time was social distancing—a method
(related to the quarantine laws of the Bible) that public health
officials in the 21st century still consider one of the most powerful
ways to stop illness without a vaccine.

In St. Louis, Missouri, officials instantly closed schools, cancelled
church services, and banned gatherings of more than 20 people,
including funerals, weddings, dances and sports activities. As a
result, the city's death rate was only one-eighth that of Philadelphia—
one of the cities hardest hit by influenza, which health authorities
maintain took action too late.

St. Louis, however, did make one fatal mistake.

"On Nov. 14, 1918—in high spirits three days after the armistice that
ended the war, and with influenza cases declining—the city reopened
schools and businesses. Two weeks later, the second wave of the
epidemic struck, this time with children making up 30 percent to 40
percent of the infections" (The New York Times).

Since the first wave of the pandemic did not hit as hard—merely
infecting thousands, but not killing them—people did not take it
seriously until it was too late. By the time influenza ran its full
course, a fifth of the world population contracted the flu—killing as
many as 100 million.

Throughout America, churches shut down, government banned public
meetings, schools closed, businesses collapsed from lack of customers,
state institutions became overrun with orphaned children, infected
postal carriers were unable to deliver mail, and rancid garbage lined
city streets. Decomposing bodies overflowed from morgues and had to be
stored in nearby elementary schools. Wherever people ventured, the
smell of rotting flesh haunted them.

In the book Flu: The Story of the Great Influenza Pandemic of 1918 and
the Search for the Virus That Caused It, Gina Kolata, commentator for
The New York Times, stated that if the Spanish Influenza were to
strike the U.S. now, it would have devastating results. "If such a
plague came today, killing a similar fraction of the U.S. population,
1.5 million Americans would die, which is more than the number felled
in a single year by heart disease, cancers, strokes, chronic pulmonary
disease, AIDS, and Alzheimer's disease combined."

This is not to mention that millions—perhaps even as many as 1.8
billion, according to current population estimates—would die
worldwide.

One of the strangest parts of the virus, Ms. Kolata noted, is that
scientists still have not been able to determine what made it so
deadly.

"No one knows for sure where the 1918 flu came from or how it turned
into such a killer strain," she wrote. "All that is known is that it
began as an ordinary flu but then it changed. It infected people in
the spring of 1918, sickening its victims for about three days with
chills and fever, but rarely killing them. Then it disappeared,
returning in the fall with the power of a juggernaut."
Snapshot of Today

As of this writing, the latest version of the swine flu has not
attacked as vehemently as did later strains of the 1918 influenza. The
World Health Organization (WHO) estimates there are 182,166 suspected
cases of H1N1 worldwide. However, unlike the Spanish flu, those who
contract the H1N1 virus today are more likely to live than die—the WHO
reports that only 1,799 people have fatally succumbed.

Nonetheless, the illness continues to spread. The most updated
information from the WHO revealed newly detected, first-time cases in
Ghana, Zambia and Tuvalu (the fourth smallest nation on Earth).

A map of the infected areas shows that even though almost all
countries have reported only 10-50 virus-related deaths, cases have
stricken all corners of the world. So far, the only places H1N1 has
not claimed lives are Greenland, Mongolia and parts of Western Africa.

But the death toll continues to accelerate.

Last month, swine flu cases in Britain doubled to 100,000 in one week
in July alone! The virus has had such a significant impact on the
country that within minutes of opening, the National Pandemic Flu
service website—capable of handling 1 million calls per week—crashed.

"Dr Alan Hay, director of the WHO's London-based World Influenza
Centre, said the extensive summer outbreak in Britain had not followed
expected patterns and warned that the health department needed to be
prepared for a more deadly form of the disease.

"'We have been a little surprised by the degree of spread of this
virus. A few weeks ago we anticipated that this was going to be a
short series of outbreaks that would probably peter out before
reappearing in the autumn or winter and that has proved not to be the
case,' he said" (Guardian).

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, recorded 569 new H1N1 infections in one day in
August—the highest number ever reported in such a short time period.
Around the same time, the Chinese Ministry of Health registered 132
new cases of H1N1 in two days, bringing the number of cases there to
2,861.

Even Martha's Vineyard, a small island off the coast of Massachusetts
known as a playground for the rich, was affected. A 26-year-old
Brazilian man died after being diagnosed with H1N1. He is among 447
people in the U.S. since April 2009 whose deaths have been linked to
the virus.

A startling report revealed, "Swine flu may infect half the U.S.
population this year, hospitalize 1.8 million patients and lead to as
many as 90,000 deaths, more than twice the number killed in a typical
seasonal flu, White House advisers said" (Star-Telegram).

The U.S. military also reported another 67 confirmed cases of swine
flu among soldiers in Iraq. Authorities suspect there could be dozens
more.
Just the Beginning

Although the virus initially jumped from one country to another,
sparking worldwide panic, deaths have been few and far between
compared to other pandemics. But researchers who have studied the
virus in the past, and the parallels of the 1918 strain to that of
today, say it may only be in its initial stages.

"The Spanish and swine flu viruses are very similar although the
current one does not seem to be as nasty—but it is in its early days
yet," John Powell, an associate clinical professor of public health at
Warwick University in the United Kingdom, said in an interview with
the British Daily Mail.

"There are enormous parallels with 1918 and our current pandemic," he
added. "They are spreading at a similar rate, but we don't know if the
virus will mutate…If it does, this is when it could become very
dangerous. But we are working on vaccines and we hope that they will
be sufficient" (ibid.).

The U.S. Health and Human Services originally ordered 120 million
doses of the inoculation to use before the approaching flu season, but
said that now only 45 million will be available by October due to
production delays—leaving up to 200 million Americans not immunized.

Next month, Australia may be the first nation to begin vaccinating its
citizens, making 2 million doses available. Already, "Australia's
death toll from the virus reached 128, and there are 460 people in
Australian hospitals with H1N1, 94 of them in intensive
care" (Bloomberg).

But the quantity available is still far less than that which was
originally expected, and health officials agree that while vaccination
is a start, it is not a surefire solution. The virus could morph and
render all produced vaccines unusable, making social distancing (as
with 1918) the best option.

In his book The Life of Reason, famed historian George Santayana once
said, "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it."

Judging from history, humanity is setting itself up to confront
another "Mother of All Pandemics." Will we learn from the past, and
glean from the experiences that those, such as the father standing in
line with his children in 1918, had? Or will we choose to ignore the
clear pattern of history that always repeats itself?

To learn more about this topic, read our series on the Four Horsemen
of the book of Revelation.

40% child flu deaths due to swine flu in USA

Note that swine flu still has not spread thoroughout USA.

It proves that flu deaths still continue. Swine flu deaths are in
addition to the common flu deaths.


http://newsminer.com/news/2009/sep/09/fairbanks-boys-death-one-43-child-swine-flu-deaths/

Fairbanks boy's death one of 43 child swine flu deaths in U.S.

By Christopher Eshleman

Published Wednesday, September 9, 2009

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FAIRBANKS — A 10-year-old student who died after contracting swine flu
was one of 43 such cases among children in the United States this
year, according to a spokesman for the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.

Doctors last weekend confirmed the boy, a Hunter Elementary School
student, had swine flu prior to his death Friday night at an Anchorage
hospital.

The CDC has received 111 reports of influenza-associated pediatric
deaths in the United States since Sept. 28, David Daigle, a spokesman
for the center, said Tuesday. Of those, almost 40 percent were because
of swine (H1N1) flu, Daigle said.

Swine flu, which world health officials labeled a global pandemic
earlier this year, differs from more common seasonal influenza partly
because the most severe cases and deaths occur in people under age 50.
The number of flu-associated deaths among children has worried the
CDC, Daigle said.

"Typically, we have seen between 50 and 100 per year," Daigle,
referring to pediatric flu deaths in the United States, wrote in an e-
mail to the Daily News-Miner.

A handful of parents reported to the Fairbanks North Star Borough
School District that they were keeping their children home Tuesday
because of the boy's death, school district spokesman Bill Bailey
said.

It was unclear Tuesday evening the degree to which parents' concern
about swine flu might have contributed to absences. Bailey said fewer
children, generally speaking, are attending school this year. The 92
percent attendance rate through the first three weeks is more than two
percentage points lower than last fall. That figure excluded Tuesday's
attendance numbers, which won't be available until today, he said.

Some parents called the district with concerns, asking how school
officials are controlling the spread of swine flu, Bailey said.

School officials are working with state education and health
specialists to monitor the flu and "make the best decisions about
student health and safety," Superintendent Nancy Wagner said in a
message through Bailey.

The Hunter student was the second of three swine flu-related deaths
reported in Alaska. State doctors late Tuesday reported the third, a
woman from Seward, was admitted to Providence hospital in Anchorage in
mid-August and died Aug. 28 "from a combination of respiratory and
other pre-existing medical conditions," according to a state news
release.

Another child from Fairbanks also spent part of last weekend in an
Anchorage hospital with swine flu.

Clay Butcher, a spokesman for the state Department of Health and
Social Services, said he heard from the hospital that the second child
is recovering and was "in stable condition" as of Tuesday afternoon.

Bailey said Wagner is sending letters to parents outlining the
district's path in "following the guidance of health officials" to
limit the spread of swine flu in schools. He asked parents to keep
their contact information with the district up to date — 2,000 e-mails
to parents during a communication last week were returned as
undeliverable because of incorrect addresses.

Sunday 6 September 2009

Ministry's advise means more guaranteed deaths

Advising ILI sufferers to contact hospitals on the third day if it
worsens will ensure certain death because Tamilflu is no longer
effective.

If you recover it is more of luck, since the fatality rate for those
who got worse on the third day is very high. Most will die on the
fifth day even in ICU. Unless there is sufficient lung machines. Even
then, it will take you years to fully recover from the other bacterial
infections.

The manufacturer of Tamilflu does not allow the usage of Tamilflu over
48 hours on the onset of symptoms. Using it will mean that it is
useless and can cause damages in the form of Tamilflu resistant flu
virus.

Of course not all those who suffer on third day will die, but a high
percentage of them. Certainly more than 1% which is much higher than
0.1% that is normal for Swine Flu with easily available Tamilflu
nations such as UK.


http://thestar.com.my/health/story.asp?file=/2009/9/6/health/4655738&sec=health

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Sunday September 6, 2009
When we have influenza-like illnesses ...

THOSE of us who have symptoms of influenza-like illness (ILI) should
focus on getting better and avoiding contact with others.

I. Do we need to see a doctor?

·Not all patients with suspected influenza A(H1N1) infections need to
be seen by a healthcare provider. This is because for most of us, the
disease is mild and self-limiting.

·However, if we are from one of the high-risk groups (see below), we
should seek immediate medical attention when we have influenza-like
illnesses.

·If we are not considered high-risk, we should monitor our symptoms
and seek medical help if they worsen or do not get better by day
three. If we experience any of the emergency warning signs (see IV),
we should also seek medical attention IMMEDIATELY.

·That said, not everyone needs to be tested for the influenza A(H1N1)
virus as current recommendations for the prescription of anti-virals
do not depend on a positive diagnosis.

·Anti-virals will be given to those who are admitted for moderate/
severe influenza-like illnesses, those who are in the high-risk
groups, and those whose high-fever has not gone away for more than two
days.

II. What can we do to help ourselves recover?

·If the fever is uncomfortable, paracetamol can be taken at standard
recommended doses. Lowering the fever will not make the illness go
away faster, but it may make us feel more comfortable. However, you
need to follow instructions on the label or talk to your healthcare
provider about products you could use, their dosage, possible side
effects, and conditions when you should not use the remedy.

·Eat well, rest well and stay active

III. How can we stop spreading the influenza A(H1N1) virus?

When we are not feeling well or when we have influenza-like illnesses,
we should:

·Remain home and avoid going to the workplace, educational institution
or any public places.

·Practise good cough etiquette – We should cover our mouths and noses
with tissues when coughing or sneezing and dispose of the tissues
appropriately. After that, we should clean our hands with soap and
water or a hand sanitiser. If a tissue is not within reach, we can use
our sleeves or scarves to cover our mouths and noses. You can wear a
mask if you come into close contact with others.

·Improve personal hygiene: We should clean our hands often, using soap
and water or a hand sanitiser, especially after we cough or sneeze.
Paper towels should be used to dry our hands after hand washing but
avoid sharing cloth towels with others. We should also clean commonly
used household items or frequently touched surfaces regularly with
household detergents.

·Do not share personal utensils and linen: Linen, eating utensils and
dishes used by those of us who are sick need not be cleaned
separately, but these items should not be shared without washing
thoroughly first with water and soap.

·Social distancing:

i. We should try not to leave our homes when we have fever or during
the time we are most likely to spread the infection to others. (We are
likely to spread the virus from one day before we develop symptoms to
up to seven days after we get sick.)

ii. Staying in a room separate from other household members when we
are sick is a good idea.

iii. If we need to leave home (eg for medical care), we should wear a
surgical mask and practise cough etiquette and good hand hygiene.

IV. How do we know if we are getting worse?

If anyone has any of the following emergency signs, please SEEK
MEDICAL HELP IMMEDIATELY.

·Signs of breathing problems: We feel short/out of breath, have chest
pains or have difficulty breathing. In children, this may appear as
fast or troubled breathing.

·Signs of lack of oxygen: Our lips have gradually turned bluish or
purplish.

·Signs/risks of dehydration: We have severe or persistent vomiting,
feel dizzy when standing, and do not pass urine as much as we are used
to. Children may lack tears when crying.

·Signs of neurological problems: We are less responsive, drowsy or
confused than normal. Children may not be waking up as frequent, be
irritable or interacting as usual.

V. How do we know if we are recovering?

·Usually, the fever will subside, appetite will return, and the
headaches will go away in about three days. Generally we will feel
better and are no longer very lethargic, and gradually, the cough and
influenza-like symptoms will go away.

Saturday 5 September 2009

Suffering of Healthy Swine Flu victim who took advised precautions

She suffered because these advises are all wrong. For airborne virus
it is useless to just use hygiene to stop the virus.

What is not advised was the wearing of masks and quarantine, the only
defense against airborne virus like this Swine Flu.

Just by being healthy and fit does not guarantee your safety.

It took a lung machine to prevent her from being dead.

http://www.caller.com/news/2009/sep/04/girl-10-back-home-after-month-in-hospital-with/

'It's been a nightmare,' father says of daughter's swine flu
Girl, 10, fought the virus

By Elaine Marsilio (Contact)
Originally published 05:43 p.m., September 4, 2009
Updated 11:09 p.m., September 4, 2009
Girl recovers from swine flu
Kayla Piñon, 10, is all smiles as her mother, Melinda Piñon, talks
about her daughter overcoming the H1N1 virus. The Dawson Elementary
student spent weeks in the hospital battling the H1N1 virus and a drug-
resistant staph infection.

» View Photo Gallery

CORPUS CHRISTI — Kayla Piñon's parents said they took precautions
against the swine flu, or H1N1 virus.

Kayla's mother, Melinda, disinfected the house regularly and told her
daughter to wash her hands and avoid sick people.

Kayla, 10, carried hand sanitizer in her purse and often opened doors
with a napkin.

"It still managed to get her," her mother said.

Kayla returned home Wednesday after about a month at Driscoll
Children's Hospital. Kayla doesn't remember much about that month. She
was too ill.

Her parents only recently explained to her that she had swine flu.

On Wednesday, Kayla saw her 1-year-old miniature schnauzer, Kody, and
ate fajita tacos, her first home-cooked meal in weeks.

Her family doesn't know how the Dawson Elementary fifth-grader picked
up the virus.

Kayla has been a healthy girl, a runner on the school's cross country
team and a former participant in the Beach to Bay Relay Marathon.

Kayla's parents and her doctors consider her recovery to be a miracle,
and some of the credit goes to a machine that takes blood from the
body, oxygenates it as your lungs normally would do, and then returns
it to the body.

Within six to eight hours of Kayla being on a ventilator at the
hospital, Dr. Karl Serrao told her parents she would die unless they
used the extracorporeal membrane oxygenation machine, Serrao said.

The machine allowed Kayla's lungs to start healing, he said.

"The only thing between Kayla and death was that machine," Serrao
said.

Kayla also had a team of more than 20 medical professionals tending to
her, Serrao said.

She was admitted at Driscoll Children's Hospital on July 31 after
having flu-like symptoms, shortness of breath, fatigue and headaches.

Her physician had diagnosed her with the flu earlier that week, but it
wasn't clear what type it was, her parents said. Kayla was taking
Tamiflu, but she turned weak and tired. The doctor advised her parents
to take her to the emergency room.

X-rays showed she had pneumonia, and mucus blocking a lower portion of
her lungs, her father, Luis, said. "Things had gotten worse," he said.

Within 48 hours the family found out she had H1N1 — and a drug-
resistant staph infection in her lungs.

That combination can be deadly, Serrao said.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services released a summary
Thursday finding that most typically healthy children, older than 5
years old who got H1N1, also had bacterial infections.

Serrao said the combination of H1N1 and infection could affect anyone,
even if they're normally healthy. Those who are pregnant, young or
elderly have been found to be the most at risk, he said.

For Kayla, the H1N1 caused her pneumonia and affected her immunity, he
said. Her lungs were at risk of contracting the bacterial infection,
he said.

All five members of Kayla's family plan to get vaccinated for both
seasonal flu and the H1N1 vaccine, when it becomes available in the
fall.

"It's been a nightmare," Kayla's father said. "It's something you want
to wake up (from) and wish it's not true."

Kayla will do at-home respiratory treatment four times a day to break
up mucus in her lungs. She will continue the treatments for the staph
infection for as long as a year, her father said.

Kayla, who plans to bake brownies for her team of doctors, will be
home-schooled for at least a month to monitor her progress.

"She still has a long road ahead of her," her mother said.

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(4) User Comments:
Reply to this Post | Suggest removal
related links Posted by 710237 on September 4, 2009 at 6:12 p.m.

I am so glad this had a wonderful ending. It must have been a horrible
ordeal for everyone. Thanks to all the wonderful doctors!

It amazes me at how horrible this H1N1 is and how fast it can travel.
It equally amazed me to see that this family took all the precautions
necessary and yet their daughter contracted this illness. It's all
pretty scary to me.
Reply to this Post | Suggest removal
related links Posted by 232412 on September 4, 2009 at 6:32 p.m.

ECMO saved my son's life at birth. ECMO really is a last resort and
it's so difficult to imagine that the swine flu caused her to be on
ECMO...that is serious stuff! This just proves that the swine flu is
not the 'typical' flu and it's nothing to mess around with.

I'm just so glad she had Dr. Serrao and the rest of the staff at
Driscoll. They are an awesome bunch!
Reply to this Post | Suggest removal
related links Posted by 233517 on September 4, 2009 at 8:05 p.m.

Good news for this young lady and her family.
Reply to this Post | Suggest removal
related links Posted by 713600 on September 5, 2009 at 2:28 a.m.

God blessed this family! I cannot imagine having a child as sick as
this. Rest and recovery to all of you! Mom and Dad also, you deserve
it!

More evidence Swine Flu more deadly than Common Flu

This data is for children.
There is no data for toddler's death due to Swine Flu but it does not
mean that toddlers are immune from Swine Flu. It only shows that Swine
Flu is so infective that it kills children first before reaching
toddlers. Once Swine Flu reaches toddlers, its effect will be even
worse than Common Flu.


http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/technology/science/swine-flu-shown-to-be-deadliest-among-children/article1275321/

Caroline Alphonso

Toronto — From Friday's Globe and Mail Last updated on Friday, Sep.
04, 2009 03:39AM EDT

The H1N1 pandemic virus is deadliest among school-age children, a
departure from the seasonal flu, which is more often fatal to babies
and toddlers, early indicators from U.S. health authorities show.

The findings Thursday from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention come as health authorities brace for the start of the
school year, fearing that classrooms will serve as incubators for the
swine flu virus to spread rapidly.

Influenza deaths are generally rare in children. But the study of 36
lab-confirmed swine flu deaths in children suggest that those over the
age of 5 are among the groups who are at the greatest risk of being
severely infected by the new virus, and, as a result, should be first
in line to be vaccinated.

More than 80 per cent of the pediatric deaths from H1N1 were among
children between the ages of 5 and 18, the analysis found. In a normal
flu season, half or more of the children who die are babies and
toddlers.

Even more significantly, the agency found that children with
underlying medical disabilities had a higher risk of being severely
infected and succumbing to the virus. Almost two-thirds of U.S.
children who died with swine flu had epilepsy, cerebral palsy or other
neuro-developmental conditions. In a previous flu season, only a third
of pediatric deaths had those conditions.

"Child deaths from influenza are really tragic," Thomas Frieden,
director of the U.S. CDC, told reporters in a news briefing yesterday.

"If children have underlying conditions – and two-thirds of the
children in this report had conditions such as muscular dystrophy and
cerebral palsy – it's very important that they be treated promptly.
And if a child is severely ill, if they're having trouble breathing,
if their fever comes back after it went away, if they are having
difficulty keeping fluids down, then it's very important to get
treated promptly."

Dr. Frieden cautioned that it's too early to know whether there will
be more pediatric deaths from the H1N1 virus than seasonal flu. Each
year 50 to 100 American children die of seasonal flu, he said.

The virus, which first appeared in April, has caused relatively mild
disease. But health authorities have noted that it has
disproportionately affected younger people, unlike seasonal flu that
mainly burdens the elderly. Officials believe that while young people
have been exposed to other flu strains, they don't respond as well to
H1N1 as older people who have been exposed to similar viruses in the
past.

In Canada, there have been 227 pediatric cases of H1N1 – where the
children have been admitted to hospital – including three deaths.
David Butler-Jones, Canada's chief public health officer, said
Thursday that more than half of those children and adolescents had
underlying medical conditions, including asthma. The three children
who died had severe underlying problems that put them at a much
greater risk of disease and death, he said.

Canada has ordered 50 million doses of the H1N1 vaccine for all those
who need and want it. Health authorities have indicated that a list of
who should receive it first will be released in the middle of this
month.

"Immunization in childhood, given the risks, is going to be an
important part of the program," Dr. Butler-Jones said Thursday.

Thursday 3 September 2009

Swine Flu vaccine costs $5 in Venezuela

How come we have to pay RM50 , about, US$13 in Malaysia recently.
And RM200, the normal rate.

I wonder if the $ is Venezuela or US dollar. One of those South
American nations use US$ as its currency.


http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20090903-708562.html

* SEPTEMBER 3, 2009, 9:30 A.M. ET

Venezuela Swine Flu Death Toll At 41 - Health Ministry

* Article

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CARACAS (Dow Jones)--Venezuela, which less than two months ago was
reporting zero deaths from swine flu, has now seen 41 fatalities
related to the A/H1N1 flu, according to the Health Ministry.

Health Minister Carlos Rotondaro said 4,000 tests for the virus have
been given to people showing flu symptoms, and nearly a quarter of
them, 970, were positive, the state-run news agency reported.

Rotondaro said all 41 deaths involved people with chronic illnesses
and weak immune systems.

The administration of President Hugo Chavez will continue to provide
free medical attention at government-run clinics to affected citizens,
the minister said. He indicated some of the deaths could have been
prevented if medical attention had been sought sooner.

Rotondaro said the government has authorized the purchase of five
million vaccines to be imported at a cost of $5 each, or $25 million.

Other countries in the region such as Brazil and Argentina have been
harder hit by the virus, with each country reporting several hundred
deaths.

-By Dan Molinski, Dow Jones Newswires; 58-212-284-5651;
dan.molinski@dowjones.com

UK downgrades Swine flu fatality to 0.1% from 0.35%

Only Malaysia, Australia and New Zealand is estimating deaths at much
less than 0.1% when actual confirmed data indicates 0.4%.

In UK, it is understandable because they use Tamilflu liberally but
this 0.1% figure could be when Tamilflu was prescribed liberally. Just
a few weeks ago, UK changed its policies, limiting Tamilflu to only
those with underlying diseases, which had resulted in deaths of even
healthy ones, the most publicised was the one in Lancaster.

In Malaysia the optimistically low figure was the inclusion of the
unverified 20 times more undetected Swine Flu cases. Just as those who
estimates millions of cases in USA a few months ago. Surprisingly it
is still millions of swine flu cases still after a few months have
passed.

Relying on unfounded estimates is like relying on black magic, instead
of scientific data.


http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/sep/03/swine-flu-predicted-death-toll

Swine flu won't be as dangerous as we thought, official says

The estimate of the number of Britons who will die of swine flu this
winter has fallen dramatically after health experts admitted the virus
is less lethal then they feared

*
Comments (…)
* Buzz up!
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* Severin Carrell, Scotland correspondent
* guardian.co.uk, Thursday 3 September 2009 14.52 BST
* Article history

Swine flu microscope

Scottish health secretary Nicola Sturgeon has revised downwards the
official predictions for the swine flu death toll this winter.
Photograph: CS Goldsmith/AP

The official estimate of the number of Britons who could die this
winter from swine flu is to be reduced substantially to roughly 20,000
because health experts have decided the virus is far less lethal than
first feared.

Ministers and health officials predicted in July that up to 65,000
people could be killed across the UK by the H1N1 virus, as infection
rates accelerated over the summer and deaths began to mount.

But the Scottish health secretary, Nicola Sturgeon, said this morning
that that official worst case scenario had been revised downwards,
with experts now predicting a death rate of 0.1%, much lower than the
initial estimate of 0.35%.

Swine flu infections have continued over the summer and at least 66
people have died. Ministers still believe the number of cases will
rise steeply this winter, causing a full-blown epidemic and putting
public services and businesses under severe strain.

The new estimate is expected to be confirmed by Sir Liam Donaldson,
the chief medical officer for England and Wales, this afternoon.

Sturgeon's statement to the Scottish parliament today confirms strong
signals from government advisers, including the Scottish chief medical
officer Harry Burns, that H1N1 is a relatively mild virus. Burns and
other health experts noted that in the US, fatalities were rare.

Even so, health services, council morgues and crematoria, and the
economy could be put under severe strain. Sturgeon said that up to 30%
of the population could fall ill. Millions of people may have the H1N1
at the same time.

An official UK report published today warns: "It is possible that the
virus may mutate, becoming more virulent, and it is important to
remain prepared for the full range of possibilities."

Sturgeon disclosed that the first swine flu vaccines are due to be
given to key target groups, such as pregnant women, people with weak
immune systems and their immediate families, and people over 65, from
mid-October onwards.

The European Medicines Agency is expected to license the vaccines
later this month or in early October. The vaccination programme would
be backed up by a UK-wide publicity and public information campaign,
and 13 million people across the UK are expected to be vaccinated in
the first phase.

She said: "Estimates of delivery of vaccine from the manufacturers are
subject to change, but the current assessment suggests over 54m
vaccine doses will be delivered to the UK by the end of December. From
this we estimate a potential delivery to Scotland in the region of
300-350,000 doses per week from the date when the vaccine is
licensed."

She said the revised death rates estimate did not take account of the
vaccination programme, which could significantly cut the death rates
by targeting some of the most vulnerable groups.

"Furthermore, they are not predictions; they are assumptions that
allow us to plan for the worst, while continuing to hope for the
best," she said. "And while having lower estimates for hospitalised
cases and fatalities is positive, the assumptions will be kept under
review."

Saudi Arabia case fatality rate 0.66%: true fatality 2%

But as the title of this news article states, the recovery is only at
98%, making fatality rate at 2%.

0.66% could just be the case fatality rate without taking into account
the time.
It is just the number of confirmed cases vs number of fatalities.

Whereas the recovery rate is the number of patients confirmed of swine
flu versus those that that had recovered. Those that do not recover,
we assume them as dead.

Taking into account the number of Swine Flu cases that are mild, and
the fact that many people may not get infected, partially because they
already have built-in immunity if they are older than 54 years old,
the overall fatality should be less, down to about 1%.

So it is in line with the overall fatality rate of 0.67% in Wales in
1919.

The sad thing is that there is a cure for Swine Flu this time in the
form of Tamilflu but it is deployed too late to be effective. Despite
reports of it being effective even after 7 days, it may be due to
other factors, such as luck. It was never verified scientifically or
even investigated in detail.


http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1&section=0&article=126027&d=3&m=9&y=2009&pix=kingdom.jpg&category=Kingdom


Thursday 3 September 2009 (13 Ramadan 1430)

Mail Article | Print Article | Comment on Article

98% H1N1 victims recovered
Arab News


RIYADH: Ninety-eight percent of the 3,500 people who contracted the
H1N1 virus in the Kingdom have recovered from swine flu, the Health
Ministry said.

In a statement issued here on Wednesday, the ministry said the health
condition of thousands of pilgrims in Makkah and Madinah was
satisfactory.

"The number of swine flu cases reported among pilgrims in Makkah since
the beginning of Ramadan was 28. None of them have died and all of
them have recovered," the ministry said.

As many as 265 swine flu cases have been reported in Makkah since the
virus first appeared in the Kingdom on May 27. In Madinah, a total of
206 cases have been reported including 17 during Ramadan.

"We have not noticed any increase in swine flu cases during the Umrah
season of Ramadan compared to previous months," the ministry said. It
also reported the death of four Saudis including three women recently,
bringing the total number of swine flu deaths in the Kingdom to 23,
adding that most of them died of previous health complications.

"The rate of swine flu deaths in the Kingdom stood at 0.66 percent,
coping with the international rate," the ministry pointed out.

Wednesday 2 September 2009

Quebec reports 0.9% Swine Flu fatality

Compared to normal flu at 0.1%.

We should believe this Quebec figures because they should do more
testing.

The comment that it is milder than Spanish Flu in 1918 is wrong
because in Summer fatality in New York was much less than 0.2%.

WHO has already admitted that it spreads very rapidly and some " self
appointed experts" argue that it cannot be the case because Swine Flu
is supposed to be milder than Spanish flu. What they miss is that WHO
only quotes the facts. Many of them also believe that Swine Flu is
milder than Spanish Flu.

It also kills all ages, like Spanish Flu.

What is worrying is that the death rate is higher despite having a
cure, i.e. Tamilflu and better health care.

There is no mutation in Spanish Flu.

The worst will be in the northern hemisphere. Although the infection
rate is high even in summer, it will be even worse in Winter.

The 10% of New Yorker infected in the summer months, will add another
40% in a short period in Winter. The seeds that were sown in summer
will germinate rapidly in winter overwhelming health care and cause
misery.

The end fatality rate for Spanish flu was only 0.67% worst case in
Wales.

What the world should do is to slow down the spread of this Swine Flu
so that health care and hospitals can cope. Also Tamilflu must be used
properly, i.e. within 48 hours on the onset of symptoms.

Wishing that Tamilflu will work even after 48hours is just wishful
thinking.

http://www.montrealgazette.com/health/guidelines+H1N1+Quebec/1910607/story.html

Quebec has decided against issuing new pandemic flu guidelines even
though public-health authorities predict a second, perhaps deadlier
wave of H1N1 infections might sweep North America as early as this
fall.

The government is basing its decision on the fact that to date the
swine flu has proved to be far less severe than initially feared,
Health Minister Yves Bolduc told reporters yesterday.

"The message we have from (the Public Health Department) is that we
have had a very low level of H1N1 infections," Bolduc said. "The peak
has passed.

"We have to be prudent," he added, "but on the other hand, we can't
close schools or put into practice measures that defy common sense."

As of Monday, laboratory tests have confirmed a total of 2,666 cases
of H1N1 infections in Quebec. Of that number, there have been 24
deaths - all involving people already at risk.

The Quebec death rate thus far is nine-tenths of one per cent, exactly
in line with the global rate. During a typical flu season, the
mortality rate is one-tenth of one per cent.

Horacio Arruda, director of the protection branch of the Quebec Public
Health Department, urged Quebecers to remain vigilant. He recommended
that people wash their hands frequently and cough into their elbows.
Those who are sick with the flu should stay at home.

Those considered at risk are infants under 2 years old, those
suffering from chronic disease like diabetes, people over the age of
60 and pregnant women, especially those in their second and third
trimesters. If anyone in those groups falls ill with flu symptoms,
they should see a doctor, Arruda advised. And since the death of a 23-
year-old pregnant woman from H1N1 on Aug. 14, Arruda noted that
hospitals have changed their practice slightly. Should a pregnant
woman be hospitalized with H1N1, the medical staff will treat the
patient with anti-viral drugs immediately, judging that the benefits
of the medications outweigh the potential risks.

As for schools and daycares, there is no reason to close them, Arruda
said. "If the epidemiological situation changes and becomes more
severe, we would then change our opinion," he added.

Some school boards have decided that all their pregnant staff should
go on preventive maternity leave. Arruda said that is not the
government policy and suggested that each case be assessed on its
merits in consultation with a doctor.

Quebec will launch an inoculation campaign to protect against H1N1
once the vaccine becomes available, probably by December or January.
That could coincide with the start or middle of the second wave of
H1N1 infections. Arruda said he plans to attend a federal meeting on
the H1N1 vaccine to determine exactly when it will be ready.

In the first weeks of the H1N1 pandemic, the new virus appeared to be
no deadlier than the seasonal flu. It's now viewed as a little more
severe than the seasonal flu, but far less deadly than flu viruses in
major pandemics. H1N1 has also been shown to infect a
disproportionately larger number of adolescents and young adults.

aderfel@thegazette.canwest.com
© Copyright (c) The Montreal Gazette