Monday, 29 June 2009

Tamiflu effective in treating flu in children with chronic conditions

This is an excellent article and a possible life saver. Make sure your
doctor read it as well.

Don't assume that doctors are uptodate with current medical practises.
Many just don't have time to read journals.

http://www.bcm.edu/news/item.cfm?newsID=1470

Tamiflu effective in treating flu in children with chronic conditions

RSS icon HOUSTON -- (June 29, 2009) -- Children with chronic health
conditions benefit from the flu-fighting drug oseltamivir (Tamiflu)
when doctors prescribe it quickly – as soon as they suspect the
youngster has influenza – said an expert at Baylor College of Medicine
in a study that appears in the journal Pediatrics.

"This study demonstrates that those individuals who have underlying
medical conditions and thereby are at greater risk from complications
from influenza benefit significantly from the use of Tamiflu early in
their disease process," said Dr. Pedro Piedra, professor of molecular
virology and microbiology and pediatrics at BCM, and lead author of
the study.
Confirmatory test

Using health-claims data from six influenza seasons, researchers found
that those children and adolescents between the ages of 1 and 17 who
were at high risk of influenza complications showed significant
reductions in the risks of respiratory illnesses other than pneumonia.
It also reduced the risk of otitis media (a middle ear infection) and
hospitalization within 14 days of the influenza diagnosis when
prescribed Tamiflu. Significant risk reductions were also apparent 30
days after the influenza diagnosis.

Piedra noted the importance of diagnosing the influenza virus using a
confirmatory test, which led to a higher likelihood of prescribing
Tamiflu.

"If you are not thinking about the flu, you are not thinking about how
to treat the flu," said Piedra.
Role in H1N1 treatment

He also noted the significance this will have with the current H1N1
(swine influenza) pandemic in which antiviral treatment is important.

"If we have a major wave in the fall months and the vaccines are not
yet available, antiviral treatments will be the only way we have to
either prevent or treat H1N1 (swine influenza)," said Piedra.

Others who contributed to this study include Kathy L. Schulman of
Thomson Reuters and Dr. William A. Blumentals of Roche. Funding for
this study came from Roche.

For more information on basic science research at Baylor College of
Medicine, please go to www.bcm.edu/fromthelab or www.bcm.edu/news.

Was this article helpful? We would like to hear from you.

Saturday, 27 June 2009

swine flu idiots! Why no flu deaths so far?

Swine flu had claimed 5 Australian deaths so far and yet none of them
are from normal flu.

How could Australian experts ever deem swine flu to be MILDER than
normal flu?

The difference in the deaths will determine the severity of Swine flu
over normal flu. If there are 10 swine flu deaths with only one normal
flu, it will mean that there will be 25,000 deaths due to Swine Flu
compared to 2,500 for normal flu.

Remember that some types of normal flu is already resistant to
Tamilflu but these are still rare, whereas swine flu is supposed to be
treatable with TAmilflu and yet it had caused 5 deaths in Australia
alone.

No details on the usage of Tamilfu but in Thailand and Chile, they had
used Tamilflu and yet patients still die.

What makes Swine flu dangerous is not its effects. It is much milder
than SARS but people take it so lightly that it will kill far more
than SARS just as normal flu is, expect that swine flu is many times
more lethal than normal flu, not milder. Australian so called experts
should wake up and study their facts clearly.

View of one sane Australian expert

An infectious disease specialist, not a doctor mind you, admit that
swine flu will kill more than normal flu because Australians don't
have immunity to it at all.

Even normal flu, we don't have immunity as well but we have vaccines
but they are given only to those who are in the highly risky groups of
younger than 2 and older than 60 and yet, many still died.

Never heard of any pregrant women dying from normal flu and no call
for them to be innoculated with flu vaccine.

I wonder what this expert believe that Swine flu is milder than Normal
flu!

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/06/27/2610255.htm?section=australia


More swine flu deaths 'a certainty'

By Jennifer Macey for AM

AM | abc.net.au/am

Posted 11 hours 36 minutes ago
Updated 11 hours 7 minutes ago
Too late...'in the ideal world you would vaccinate several months
before the outbreak starts.'

Too late...'in the ideal world you would vaccinate several months
before the outbreak starts.' (AAP Image: Dave Hunt)

* Audio: Swine flu yet to peak in Australia (AM)
* Map: Sydney 2000
* Related Story: UK swine flu tally tops 4,300
* Related Story: Torres Strait confirms first swine flu case

An infectious disease expert says the swine flu vaccine will be
available too late to help many of the people who are going to
contract the virus.

Four people have died so far and in New South Wales, two children are
in intensive care because of the virus.

One of the children has no pre-existing medical conditions.

Professor of Infectious Diseases and Epidemiology at the University of
New South Wales, Raina Macintyre, told AM it is certain more people
will die from swine flu in Australia.

"We expect that it will peak towards the end of July or early August,"
she said.

"That's when we'll really be at the height of the epidemic, and we
would expect something of the same range or higher, but in the same
ball park of a bad flu season.

"It could be anywhere from 10 to 30 per cent of the Australian
population over the whole winter. Every year from seasonal flu there
are about 2,500 deaths from flu and pneumonia."

She says swine flu deaths are expected to be higher because people
have not built up immunity to the virus.

"Any influenza, even seasonal influenza, has a higher rate of
complications and death in people with pre-existing conditions because
they're just more vulnerable to infections like influenza," she said.

"So, it's not unexpected really that the first deaths that we're
seeing are in people who are immuno-compromised or have chronic
diseases."

Professor Macintyre says the vaccine for the flu expected to be
available by the end of July will not be soon enough.

"No, it's not ideal. Normally with seasonal flu we vaccinate people in
February or March, and the flu season starts in June and beyond," she
said.

"So, really, in the ideal world you would vaccinate several months
before the outbreak starts.

"In this case, we'll be vaccinating at the peak of the outbreak, so
half of the people who are going to be get infected will already be
infected and won't be able to benefit from the vaccine.

"But, it's still worth doing, because there's still all the other half
of the people who have not been infected that could receive protection
from the vaccine."

Tags: health, diseases-and-disorders, swine-influenza, australia, nsw,
sydney-2000

Deaths despite taking Tamilfu

Deaths in Chile and Thailand occurred while they are being given
Tamilflu.

Not sure if they took Tamilflu too late but either way it is worrying.

If taken too late, it will increase the chance of Swine Flu that is
immune to Tamilflu.

It it was taken on time, it shows that Swine Flu is already immune to
Tamilflu.

http://www.philstar.com/Article.aspx?articleId=481534&publicationSubCategoryId=200

Chile reports four new deaths due to A/H1N1 flu
Updated June 27, 2009 09:41 AM

SANTIAGO (Xinhua) -- The Chilean authorities confirmed on Friday four
new deaths due to A/H1N1 flu, raising the death toll in the country to
12.

The authorities said that two patients were from Nuble province, one
from Valdivia and one from Osorio.

The victims from Nuble, southern Chile, were a 48-year-old female
patient and a 47-year-old male, said the authorities.

The female patient was treated with anti-viral drug Oseltamivir from
June 15, but she was taken to the hospital due to complications on
June 19.

The male patient did not seek medical consultation on time. When he
went to the health center, he was hospitalized and received treatment.

Nuble's health official Ivan Paul Espinoza said that most of the cases
showed light symptoms.

The other death was a male patient of 41 years old from Valdivia, 800
km south to Santiago, the capital of Chile.

The seven-year-old girl in Osorio is the first one who did not have
symptoms and the first child who died in the country.

Thai expert: swine flu milder than normal flu which kills 30%!!

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/2009/06/27/national/national_30106194.php

Despite having 2 deaths due to Swine flu of apparently healthy
individuals, Thai Minister of Health deemed Swine Flu less dangerous
than normal flu because normal flu will kill 30% of patients.

Avian flu and Sars BOTH kill about 60%. Which flu kills about 30%?
Not even Spanish flu can kill 30%, only about 5%.

One self appointed expert in scm even deemed that normal flu routinely
kills people older than 2 and younger than 60.

I have yet to see any evidence of it yet.

TYPE-A (H1N1) VIRUS
Flu death toll rises to 2
By The Nation


A-40-year-old woman and a 42-year-old man in Bangkok have become the
country's first two fatalities linked to the type-A (H1N1) influenza
virus, Public Health Minister Witthaya Kaewparadai announced Saturday.
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Witthaya told a press conference that the woman fell ill on June 8 and
wa admitted to a private hospital seven days later with high fever and
pneumonia.

She was given oseltamivir anti-viral drug for five days but she her
condition worsened and she died on June 20.

The second victim fell ill on June 18 with fever and running nose.

He was admitted to a hospital on June 23 with high fever, coughing and
pneumonia.

He was also given oseltamivir anti-viral drug but his condition
worsened and he died on Friday.

Despite the deaths, Witthaya pleaded the public not to panic.

He said so far 1,209 type-A (H1N1) flu cases have been reported in
Thailand. Of these, 1,190 patients have been cured and 16 are still
inside hospitals.

He said 90 per cent of the cases recovered by themselves.

Witthaya said the type-A (H1N1) influenza has much lower fatality rate
than normal influenza which killed about 30 to 40 per cent of
patients.

Friday, 26 June 2009

12 of 99 Swine Flu deaths have no previous diseases

Of course the sample is only 127 in USA but it should give you a good
idea if swine flu is milder than normal flu.

Interesting to note that 10% are smokers versus 11% for asthma and 7%
pregnant.


http://www.rttnews.com/Content/GeneralNews.aspx?Node=B1&Id=990060


U.S. Has One Million Swine Flu Cases Now
6/26/2009 5:14 AM ET
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A Look Back At Michael Jackson's Life
(RTTNews) - The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said
Thursday that one million Americans were affected by swine flu--
accounting for roughly half the world's swine flu cases--since the
epidemic broke out in southern neighbor Mexico in April, reports say.

Lyn Finelli, a flu surveillance official with the CDC, made the one
million estimate in a presentation to the vaccine panel of the U.S.
Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices in Atlanta. The number is
derived from mathematical modeling, based on surveys by health
officials.

She said half those cases were in New York City and 6% or more of some
urban areas were affected. The percentage of the cases needing
hospital treatment was growing despite the normal flu season being
over, perhaps due to closer scrutiny of very sick patients.

Regular seasonal flu affects anywhere from 15 million to 60 million
Americans each year. Other health problems have been a contributory
factor in most cases: about one in three of the hospital cases had
asthma or chronic lung disease,16% diabetes, 12% immune system
problems and 11% chronic heart disease besides 10% are current smokers
and 7% are pregnant women.

An analysis of 99 of the 127 Americans who died of swine flu shows
that 87 of them also suffered from one underlying condition or the
other: 11% had asthma, 24% other lung diseases, 13% diabetes, 11%
morbid obesity and 34% obesity.

Thursday, 25 June 2009

Exposed: Australian Experts are not even doctors

In fact doctors' views are not even considered at all in Australia.

Otherwise, what expert will conclude that Swine flu is MILDER than
Common Flu????

What is worrying is the fact exposed by this Booy person:

"But Booy warns: "I wouldn't recommend throwing influenza parties -
you might be one of the unlucky ones that gets a severe case".

About 30-50 per cent of deaths in North America were among those who
had no underlying risk factors, he says."

I must have read it earlier but gave no emphasis to it because there
is very little detail.

I managed to scan 4 previously healthy deaths only, using Google News.


It was the flu Australia had to have
KATE BENSON AND LOUISE HALL
25/06/2009 7:46:00 AM
IT has been more than five weeks since swine flu landed in Australia.
Now more than 2400 people have tested positive and three people have
died. Thousands have been quarantined, schools have been closed, and
understaffed emergency departments have struggled with an influx of
patients, suddenly highly conscious of every sniffle and cough.

Since it was first detected in Mexico in March, the World Health
Organisation says at least 52,160 people have been diagnosed and 230
have died. But the real figures will be much higher. The WHO says its
statistics are unreliable because some countries are no longer
counting and poor countries do not have the means to reliably detect
cases.

What we do know is that swine flu or the A(H1N1) virus seems to hit
younger people hardest and, that while many people who died after
contracting the virus had underlying medical conditions, some did not.

When swine flu arrived in Australia on May 9, experts predicted it
could kill up to 25,000 people, lay low up to half the workforce and
cause "massive" economic damage.

If it resembled the 1918 influenza pandemic, health bureaucrats
warned, the nation could be crippled for up to 10 months, with the
tourism industry being particularly hard hit.

More than 2 million people would be infected and millions more
affected by university, school and child-care centre closures,
transport restrictions and health system chaos.

But last week, the Federal Government downgraded Australia's swine flu
alert phase, ending mandatory quarantine, thermal imaging at airports
and compulsory testing.

The "protect" phase was created after it became clear the Government's
pandemic plan had been devised for a more virulent and deadly strain
and the tough measures were not needed for such a mild virus.

The new alert level means those with flu-like symptoms will no longer
be routinely tested. Anyone who is sick is "strongly advised" to stay
at home until their symptoms resolve. But they will not be forced into
quarantine, nor will those who have had contact with a swine flu
victim.

Those moderately sick should see a GP and those who are severely ill
should go to a hospital emergency department. Antiviral medications,
such as Tamiflu and Relenza, will not be prescribed to people
diagnosed with, or suspected of having, swine flu, unless they are at
risk of developing serious complications. Pregnant women, the morbidly
obese, people with respiratory illness and suppressed immune systems
are considered to be at risk.

Pregnant women can take antiviral medications, but Tamiflu and Relenza
are relatively new drugs and yet to be declared safe in the long term.
Those breastfeeding can take Relenza, but it will be prescribed only
if there is a high risk of complications.

Mass gatherings, such as football finals, will go ahead and schools
will not be closed, even if many children are diagnosed.

A Department of Education spokeswoman says the Board of Studies may
award substitute marks to HSC students who contract swine flu and
allow some students to complete assessment tasks at home.

But the Government's sudden change of heart has left at least one
influenza expert dubious.

Calling the decision political, Nikolai Petrovsky, of Flinders
University in Adelaide, said "doctors who look after the patients who
die from influenza each year would never label it a 'mild' infection".

"Influenza, through its ability to mutate and exchange genetic
material with related viruses, has a potential to change its nature
overnight from benign to highly lethal," Petrovsky said.

"The biggest concern of all will be when [it] becomes established in
South-East Asia and particularly Indonesia and Vietnam where avian
influenza remains a major concern. Should swine flu mix with H5N1
avian flu then all bets are off."

Research published last year showed most new flu strains had their
beginnings in northern Asia during October to March each year, moving
to North America and Europe, then Australia a few months later,
mutating constantly.

Australia's most common strain of flu, H3N2, has been circulating
annually in Australia for the past 40 years, peaking every three to
four years.

Thus swine flu is expected to return for decades, the head of clinical
research at the National Centre for Immunisation Research and
Surveillance at the University of Sydney, Robert Booy, says. "But most
people will develop some immunity to it. The problem is that
eventually it will gain an important mutation that we have no immunity
to."

Genetic similarities between pigs and humans made it easier for flu
strains to jump between the two species, with the Asian and Hong Kong
flus in1957 and 1968 both originating in pigs in China, but
Australians should not fear contracting other animal strains, Booy
says.

"Even the avian flu didn't make the cross to humans easily. You
basically had to sleep with a chicken in your bed to get it."

But Peter Collignon, a professor of microbiology and infectious
diseases at the Australian National University and a vocal opponent of
the Government's hardline measures to stop the virus, says swine flu
is proving to be less aggressive than the seasonal flu and "99 per
cent of people just get better on their own".

He says there is still no data to back up fears of a second or third
more virulent wave in the next few months and years, and most of the
deaths from the more virulent second wave of the Spanish flu in 1918
were caused by bacterial pneumonia, a secondary infection which can
now be treated with antibiotics.

Swine flu may not be the mass killer it was first feared, but there is
no doubt it has left the NSW Health Department reeling and people
confused and fearful. At times, communication between the federal and
state health departments seemed limited, answers were thin on the
ground and major mistakes were made, leaving NSW open to ridicule.

Last month, about 1800 people aboard a cruise ship were allowed to
disembark in Sydney without being tested, despite swine flu being on
board.

The ship was subsequently cleared to travel to the Whitsundays the
same night, a move which infuriated Queensland authorities, forced to
divert the ship while swabs were taken.

Another cruise ship was denied access to dock in New Caledonia because
crew members developed swine flu, but the ship did dock in Vanuatu and
Fiji.

In Sydney, some hospitals turned suspected swine flu sufferers away
because they believed they had been designated as "clean", but NSW
Health said no emergency department had been given that status.

Federal Government guidelines to avoid mass gatherings and stockpile
food and water were quickly discarded, anti-discrimination experts
warned against shunning swine flu victims and GPs complained they had
not been given enough information on dealing with suspected cases in
busy waiting rooms.

One doctor, who did not want to be named, said NSW Health's rigid
bureaucratic protocols had denied his colleagues the right to make any
decisions on testing and medication, forcing them to call the Public
Health Unit on each occasion. "GPs have had six years of university
training and an additional four to five years of postgraduate
training," the doctor said. "They have far more knowledge and
expertise than most of the federal and state bureaucrats who rule over
them with an iron fist."

Others said that antivirals were being wasted and testing was too
slow.

Lindsay Grayson and Paul Johnson, both from the infectious diseases
department of Austin Health in Melbourne, told the Medical Journal of
Australia that testing was restricted to patients who fitted the
specific case definition, and tests on all other patients who had a
clinical illness suspected of being swine flu were initially refused
or given low priority.

"This is the opposite of what should have occurred," they wrote.

Practical issues such as the adequacy of the protective mask stockpile
or the means of distributing drugs and equipment to GPs did not appear
to have been planned in detail, they said.

Roche, the manufacturer of antiviral drug Tamiflu, was forced to
suspend deliveries for two weeks for fear that the drug was being
prescribed indiscriminately by GPs, while sales of masks and anti-
bacterial handwash soared.

Flight manifests were scoured every time an international traveller
was diagnosed, but quarantine rules seemed arbitrary.

Some people were told to stay at home for seven days; others were
never told they had been in contact with the virus.

One couple left an infected cruise ship to visit a newborn grandchild
because they weren't told they had been exposed.

Anecdotal evidence of people self-quarantining abounded.

Suddenly, swine flu became the desired diagnosis for anyone wanting a
week off work.

But Booy warns: "I wouldn't recommend throwing influenza parties - you
might be one of the unlucky ones that gets a severe case".

About 30-50 per cent of deaths in North America were among those who
had no underlying risk factors, he says.

YOUR QUESTIONS ANSWERED

What are the symptoms?Swine flu resembles any other flu. Main
symptoms: sore throat, cough, runny nose, fatigue, aching muscles.

How can you tell if you have it?

You can't, except by having a doctor take a throat swab for testing.
Health authorities said last week they would no longer support testing
of anyone likely to be infected, but only those with severe disease or
risk factors such as pregnancy or asthma.

How infectious is it?

Every infected person infects an average of 1.5 others within 2 to 3
days. That is highly infectious, but on a par with other flu. Measles
and whooping cough spread much more readily.

How deadly is it?

Swine flu causes more hospitalisations than human flu. Its death rate
is about one in 1000 in developed nations - about double that of
regular flu.

Who is most likely to

be affected?

It affects healthy, young adults and children disproportionately.
Children are more at risk because they have not had previous flu
infections which may confer partial immunity. Older adults seem better
protected because they are more likely to have been exposed to flu
types similar to swine flu that circulated in the1950s.

If it's like other flu and

not exceptionally deadly,

why should we care?

Regular human flu kills 1500 to 3000 Australians annually. Depending
on how widely it spreads, swine flu could easily exceed that.
Australia is moving into the peak flu season. Hospitals may struggle
to cope.

Are there other dangers?

Swine flu in humans is a novel virus that could mutate further,
combining with other forms of flu to become more infectious, more
virulent or resistant to treatments. Because there is no vaccine,
there is still no way of holding back that worst-case scenario.

Is there any treatment?

Anti-viral medicines such as Tamiflu can prevent flu or reduce
severity and the likelihood of complications. But doctors have now
determined they should be used only for those at increased risk of
complications. Others should stay at home and use over-the-counter
medicines.

How can people avoid

catching or spreading it?

Stand a metre or more away from people with respiratory symptoms. Wash
your hands regularly; it makes a big difference. Use tissues and
dispose of them promptly. Stay away from work and keep children away
from school if you have symptoms. Support those around you, including
employees, to do this.

When will there be a vaccine?

Scientists are making rapid progress towards a vaccine, but large-
scale production will not start until late this year, at the earliest.

New Zealand also thinks that Swine Flu is milder

When New Zealand officials estimate that the deaths due to Swine Flu
to be less than 200 compared to 400 for normal flu, in a year.

This is despite infecting 50% of the population being infected.

Although 50% is high compared to 30% for the figures collected by WHO
for all over the world, New Zealand officials estimate the fatality
rate to be much lower than Normal Flu.

If current WHO statistics is to be used, the death rate will be 3000
infection rate is only 30%.

Unless New Zealanders are much fitter than US and Canada citizens, it
is very unlikely that New Zealand will have much lower fatality rate
for Swine Flu than Normal Flu.

Are there significantly less people who are obese, asthmatic and
diabetic in New Zealand? Maybe. But how about pregnant women? Are
there significantly less pregnant women in New Zealand compared to US
and Canada?

What is more worrying is that Swine flu killed even perfectly healthy
individuals of all ages, which Normal Flu will never kill. 4 cases had
been reported so far all over the world.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10580611

Number crunchers put their spin on flu toll
4:00AM Thursday Jun 25, 2009
By Martin Johnston

Swine Flu

* Critically ill NZ swine flu woman now stable
* University Games swine flu restrictions 'impractical'

More than 3000 people could die from a mild influenza pandemic,
according to Treasury figures.

The agency's April 29 briefing paper to Finance Minister Bill English
on the potential economic impact of a swine flu pandemic includes
assumptions for a "severe scenario", based on the 1918 flu pandemic,
and a "mild scenario" based on the 1957 and 1968 pandemics.

The current pandemic of swine flu is regarded as moderate so far in
New Zealand - the virus is highly infectious and spreads easily in the
community, but for most people it causes only mild to moderate
symptoms, although these can still be unpleasant.

The Treasury says that although much is uncertain about how swine
influenza may evolve, based on the mild scenario possibly 30 per cent
could become infected, of whom 0.25 per cent could die.

That suggests more than 1.2 million people could be infected, of whom
3200 could die.

However, the Ministry of Health's latest estimates - contained in a
document circulated to the health sector on Friday by Steve Brazier of
the National Health Co-ordination Centre - are that half the
population could catch the pandemic virus and that the number of
deaths is not likely to exceed 200 and may be substantially lower.

Advertisement Advertisement

The deputy director of public health, Dr Fran McGrath, said yesterday
that the ministry did not have firm assumptions about infection and
case-fatality rates because the situation was evolving.

"The current estimate from the World Health Organisation is that about
2 per cent of cases will develop severe illness."

Seasonal flu affected about 10 per cent of people each year and caused
around 400 deaths, Dr McGrath said.

The confirmed swine flu cases, past and current, stood at 386
yesterday, although the actual number will be far higher.

Tuesday, 23 June 2009

Singapore repeats Australian mistake

AT least Singaporean doctors don't pretend that Swine Flu is milder
than common flu.

But to assume that fatality rate is only 0.37% for Swine Flu compared
to 0.1% for common flu is wrong.

These figures are only case fatality rates, not true fatality rates.
Common flu figure is for the whole year so it is close to the true
fatality rate but for Swine flu, it is only 2 months

http://health.asiaone.com/Health/News/Story/A1Story20090623-150344.html

Singapore changes H1N1 strategy

By: Dawn Tay

SINGAPORE is changing its strategy in tackling the Influenza A (H1N1)
virus, following the surge in number of infections here.

The Health Ministry confirmed 26 new cases yesterday, bringing the
total number here to 168. Nearly half of those who had caught the
virus within the last few days were infected here.


At a press conference yesterday, Health Minister Khaw Boon Wan said:
"We have crossed the tipping point, beyond which local transmissions
will grow rapidly."

But life must go on, he said.

The Asian Youth Games will continue, and schools will reopen next
month as scheduled. Events like the National Day Parade and the F1
race will go ahead as planned.

The change from the containment phase to the community- spread phase
means a shift in strategy, from containing the virus to detecting and
treating the large number of infections, in particular "high-risk"
patients with existing health conditions.

Mr Khaw said: "There will be some deaths. We need to allow our
hospitals to focus on the high-risk cases and not be distracted or
overwhelmed by hundreds of mild cases."

He outlined several new measures that will be implemented:

PUBLIC HOSPITALS WILL HANDLE H1N1 CASES

993 ambulances have started taking suspected H1N1 cases to all public
hospitals.

PANDEMIC PREPAREDNESS

CLINICS FOR MILD CASES
To lighten the load on hospitals, H1N1 suspects with mild symptoms can
visit Pandemic Preparedness Clinics, marked by decals with a red tick,
at over 450 polyclinics and clinics run by general practitioners. Only
high-risk suspected cases will be referred to public hospitals.

SECURING VACCINE SUPPLIES
Singapore is in negotiations with several vaccine manufacturers to
acquire supplies of Influenza A vaccine.

While the virus has been described by the World Health Organization
(WHO) as posing a "moderate risk", its death rate in the United
States, at 0.37 per cent, is almost four times higher than that for
the normal flu.

As people have little immunity against the new virus, WHO experts
estimate that a third of a population could get infected, which means
over one million Singaporeans are potentially at risk.

Australia will pay for its slack Swine Flu control

Normal flu kills about 2,500. Assuming the population of Australia is
25 million, this should be about 0.01% fatality rate but this is for
normal flu.

Normal flu only kill those that are less than 2 years old and older
than 60.

This Swine flu, not only has no vaccination for it, unlike normal flu,
it also kills all age groups.

Its fatality rate will be many times higher than normal flu so at
least 5,000 additional deaths making the total death due to flu 7,500.

This is assuming that the Australian health care is still perfectly
intact and the supply of Tamilflu is fast and efficient, but worrying
news shows that Swine flu will kill in less than 2 days. Not enough
time for Tamilflu to help the immune system of the human body.

These are unnecessary deaths due to Australian experts treating Swine
flu as MILDER than normal flu, despite all the evidences reported in
the news of swine flu deaths all over the world.


http://www.thewest.com.au/aapstory.aspx?StoryName=582619

Domestic news
Vic man with swine flu dies in hospital
23rd June 2009, 15:38 WST

Victorian health authorities are refusing to confirm whether a Colac
man diagnosed with swine flu died as a direct result of the H1N1
virus.

The 35-year-old man from western Victorian presented to the Colac
Hospital with flu-like symptoms on Friday and was transferred to the
Maroondah Hospital in Melbourne's outer east where he died on
Saturday.

Test results released to the Victorian health department on Tuesday
showed the man tested positive for swine flu after swabs were taken
following his death.

Acting chief health officer Dr Rosemary Lester said the man received
treatment consistent with the symptoms of his severe illness.

"He wouldn't have been treated any differently if we'd known that he
had swine flu from the outset," Dr Lester told reporters.

"He arrived with an influenza-like illness and then I believe he
rapidly deteriorated.

"His respiratory function deteriorated and he went into shock quite
quickly."

Dr Lester said the man had a "range of underlying medical conditions".

She would not confirm whether the man's death was a direct result of
swine flu or one of the other medical conditions.

"I'm obviously not the clinician - that's for the clinicians to decide
what he's died from," she said.

"My information that it is respiratory failure, but other than that I
can't make any comment."

There are five Victorians receiving treatment in intensive care with
swine flu out of 18 in hospital.

"We know that around about four per cent of the ones we are testing
are currently swine flu positive," Dr Lester said.

"We do however expect that proportion to rise as more testing's
undertaken".

Dr Lester said more deaths from swine flu were expected.

"Unfortunately, I think it is quite possible that more people will die
from swine flu.

"We know that in a usual influenza season across Australia about 2,500
to 3,000 people will die from influenza, and we don't expect swine flu
to be any different."

All Australian state and territories including Victoria are now
operating in the "protect" phase, which focuses on the protection of
people in high-risk groups.

A West Australian man was the first Australian with swine flu to die
last Friday.

The 26-year-old died in the Royal Adelaide Hospital on Friday
afternoon after being diagnosed with the virus on Thursday, but he had
also been suffering from a number of other serious health conditions.

Federal Health Minister Nicola Roxon said the latest death was a
reminder swine flu could present severe consequences for some people,
including those who have respiratory diseases, pregnant women and the
morbidly obese.

"I would also like to take the opportunity to remind people that for
the vast majority this infection remains mild and most people will
make a rapid and full recovery with no medical intervention," she told
parliament.

"Unfortunately, as this disease continues to spread through the
community, it is inevitable that we will experience more cases with
severe outcomes, potentially also resulting in death."
AAP

Another death of perfectly healthy individual

This is the second case that I have read using google news search of a
perfectly healthy individual who died of swine flu although older than
2 years old and younger than 60 years old.

There are many others but are not reported by the media or officials.
Please note that this is happening in Canada that is experiencing an
off-flu season, i.e. summer.

Just pray that doctors can find the true underlying conditions that
led to this death, so that we may take precautions. Otherwise, we are
in big trouble especially when vaccines are not ready yet.


http://www.torontosun.com/news/canada/2009/06/23/9894761-sun.html


News Canada
Girl, 6, dies of swine flu

Brampton school still open

By ANTONELLA ARTUSO, QUEEN'S PARK BUREAU CHIEF

Last Updated: 23rd June 2009, 3:19am

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+ What are these?

A six-year-old Brampton girl with no apparent underlying medical
conditions has died within about a day of first showing symptoms of
the human swine flu.

Dr. David Mowat, Peel's medical officer of health, said there have
been no other confirmed cases at the girl's school which remains open,
but there were a couple of mild cases of H1N1 in her extended family.

Dr. Arlene King, Ontario Chief Medical Officer of Health, said the
child began experiencing symptoms like coughing and fever and died the
following day on June15 without having been hospitalized.

"While the H1N1 flu virus appears to have been a factor in the girl's
death, the exact role the virus played is under investigation by the
office of the chief coroner," King said. "We're also investigating
whether the child had any underlying medical conditions."

King said influenza usually comes on quickly and then fades over four
or five days.

THOUSANDS OF CASES

Ontario has had 2,665 confirmed cases of H1N1 and four people who
tested positive have died, although the previous three victims all had
medical conditions that put them at greater risk of complications.

The virus is in broad circulation in the Toronto area, and Peel alone
has about 500 cases.

Twenty-four people were in hospital with H1N1 virus as of June 19.

"Symptoms to watch for are fever, cough, fatigue, lack of appetite and
sore throat -- in some instances, people with H1N1, have also reported
vomiting and diarrhea," King said.

Parents who are concerned about flu-like symptoms in their child
should contact their family doctor or call Telehealth Ontario
at1-866-797-0000 for advice.

King said there is no indication that the virus has evolved into a
more dangerous strain.

Officials did not identify the victim or her school.

ANTONELLA.ARTUSO@SUNMEDIA.CA

Monday, 22 June 2009

Swine flu prevented by Wind

Read this:

http://www.trinidadexpress.com/index.pl/article_news?id=161494383

If your house is not air conditioned the chance of you getting it is
almost nil, despite living with a confirmed flu victim. This was
proven during the last SARS scare in Malaysia.

Saturday, 20 June 2009

First hand evidence that Malaysia is lacking in Swine Flu control

They need a specialist to inform a completely willing and helpful lady
to home quarantine herself, while exposing herself to potentially
dangerous diseases.

She had been in body contact with a person confirmed to have Swine Flu
and yet nobody in Malaysian medical authority, including Sungai Buloh
told her to home quarantine herself.

Body contact is literally the case because she is dancing and holding
hands with that person.

Please note that even when symptoms do not appear, a person can still
infect. This is what I got from reading the news. No wonder a
specialist doctor advised her to home quarantine herself.

To be honest, 99% of cases, you will not get infected by a person who
does not show any symptom but just because of that 1%, I am willing to
home quarantine myself.

It is better to err on the side of caution. If no caution were taken
at all, I may infect millions that will result in thousands of death.
1% of 1 million is 10 thousand.

http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2009/6/20/focus/4157753&sec=focus

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*

Saturday June 20, 2009
Do more to check spread of virus

LAST Sunday night, my friends and I went out and were introduced to a
guy from Singapore. Throughout the night he seemed fine and we were
talking and dancing with him.

On Thursday morning, I was informed that the guy we met on Sunday
tested positive for H1N1.

Worried that I might have caught the disease, I decided to go for a
check-up at a clinic.

The GP told me to call the Sg Buloh Hospital or the Health Ministry
hotline.

At the Sg Buloh Hospital, I was informed that I did not need a check-
up and that I could go about my daily business as usual.

I would only need to go for a check-up if any symptoms arise. Besides,
the risk of infection was low as I came in contact with that guy in an
open area.

But I was dancing with him, holding hands and talking very close to
him. Also, if I were to go to work, I was worried I might spread the
disease in my workplace.

Not assured with the reply, I called the Health Ministry hotline.

I asked if I needed to home quarantine myself.

If not, why do they check and quarantine all passengers who shared the
same flight as the infected patients?

I asked many non-medical personnel and most of them advised me to go
to a hospital. So I headed to the Hospital KL.

At the emergency counter, I informed the medical staff of my situation
but they refused to do a check-up.

I insisted and they referred me to the outpatient counter. I was taken
to an enclosed area to wait for my turn.

In the enclosed area were three others who had flu symptoms.

Though we all wore face masks, I was actually put in a situation where
I could very well pick up the disease. As I waited, more and more
coughing patients came, thus increasing my vulnerability and fear.

After the medical officer consulted the specialist on my situation, I
was told that I need not go through any tests but was to quarantine
myself at home for the next couple of days to monitor for signs of the
symptoms.

Hospitals should allocate a different area for people like me, who had
come in contact with a H1N1 patient but had no symptoms yet.

This would encourage those in a similar situation to come forward and
get confirmation on the need for home quarantine, which would help
reduce the risk of community-level outbreaks.

Medical personnel at the emergency counter refusing potential virus-
carriers a check-up should at least record their accounts and provide
proper advice.

Proper systems/procedures should be put in place and stringently
followed if we wish to combat this pandemic.

GRACE LOH,

Petaling Jaya.

Swine flu is more widespread than admitted

This case of a Singapore PR getting infected in Malaysia is proof that
Swine Flu in Malaysia is more widespread than acknowledged by the
authorities.

It is up to the GP to detect these Swine Flu now.

http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/Saturday/National/2587163/Article/index_html

NST Online » Local News
2009/06/20
S'pore not taking chances

Email to friend Email to Friend Print article Print Article


SINGAPORE: The city state is not taking any chances in containing the
influenza A (H1N1) virus after its first suspected unlinked local case
was reported on Thursday.
Singapore had on Thursday reported 11 confirmed new cases of H1N1, and
one of them is believed to be locally-transmitted. This brings the
toll to 77 cases.

The health ministry said in a statement that the suspected locally-
transmitted case involved a 26-year-old Malay-sian, who is a permanent
resident here.

He had departed for Kuala Lumpur on June 14 to attend a conference.
Later that evening he developed symptoms while having dinner at a
restaurant.

The man returned to Singapore on June 17 and was warded at a local
hospital.
The statement also said that all security officers at schools in the
republic had been trained to record temperatures of visitors to the
schools, using a handheld thermometer or a thermometer scanner.

Those scanned and cleared will have a sticker on the clothing and are
required to wear it while they are in the school.

Visitors are also asked to sanitise their hands.

Visitors are also required to give their full name, contact number and
identity card number.

Those who recorded a temperature of 37.5oC and above will be held at
the security station until health ministry officers arrive.

Students are also required to bring a thermometer, costing S$5 (RM12)
each, to school. They will have to show their readings to the security
guard before they are allowed to enter.

Those without thermometers will be sent home.

Teachers are trained to lookout for students with flu-like symptoms.
Each classroom is equipped with a sanitiser.

Travellers entering the country will have their passports scrutinised
to find out if they had visited affected countries.

Those entering from Malay-sia via public transport are required to
walk through a tent that is fitted with scanners before having their
passports stamped at the checkpoint.

Those driving will be scanned at the secondary clearance checkpoint.

The driver and the passengers are not required to alight from their
vehicles.

Thursday, 18 June 2009

Evidence that even Super fit can die from Swine Flu

I'm beginning to doubt the statements by so called experts who believe
that Swine flu is just as mild as normal flu. They are killing
patients such as this super fit teen ager. She is not even a child at
an age that normal flu will kill.

Just imagine what Swine flu can do to less than fit individuals if
untreated or treated late with Tamilflu. Just a few hours late in
administering Tamilflu will kill.

I suspect these are what happened to all the Swine flu deaths. Doctors
just made mistakes in not using Tamillflu at the correct time due to a
misdiagnosis or misanalysis of Swine Flu virility.

Mom Who Lost Child to Swine Flu Speaks Out
By Elizabeth Braun and Lauren Leamanczyk

Story Created: Jun 17, 2009

Story Updated: Jun 18, 2009

MILWAUKEE - Tiara Mosely was an honor student at Madison High School.
She was a healthy teenager and that's what makes her death from swine
flu so shocking.

She was a dancer, a swimmer and a healthy 14 year old.

"She was healthy. Nothing to complain about," says her mother Edwina
Forrest.

That's why it's so hard for her to fathom her daughter's death.

"You hear about it on TV. You hear about it elsewhere, but you never
think it's going to happen to you. Not here."

It all started a couple of weeks ago. Tiara complained of shortness of
breath. Eventually, Edwina took her daughter to the ER. She says
doctors had told her Tiara had a virus and sent her home. Tiara kept
getting worse.

"It just kind of went downhill after that."

Tiara spent several days in the hospital. Finally, her body just shut
down. Edwina wants parents to take swine flu seriously.

"I was watching the news where a father was at the park with his kids
and he was enjoying the day. I was enjoying the day when this happened
with my child and you never know when it's going to happen."

She urges everyone to wash their hands and do what they can not to get
sick. She doesn't want any family to go through the pain she's
feeling.

"It is hard. It's very, very hard. I wouldn't wish this on anyone."

A pediatrician says a death like Tiara's does tend to shock the
community. He says it's important to focus on good hygiene, but he
also says parents should not panic.

Taking Swine Flu easy causes deaths

This is the result of treating Swine Flu as milder than normal flu.
Unnecessary death when it is easily treatable using Tamilflu.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/canadianpress/article/ALeqM5hlx3d84zvglapdtE1xgS7HcxWraQ

Family of Manitoba fatal swine flu victim says she was turned away
from hospital

By THE CANADIAN PRESS – 12 hours ago

WINNIPEG — The family of a northern Manitoba woman who died after
contracting swine flu says she was turned away from hospital when she
first sought medical help.

Relatives of Lorraine Wilson, 45, say she went to hospital in The Pas,
Man., last week after she became ill.

Gladys Munro says doctors told her niece that she had a cold and sent
her home.

Wilson, who lived on the Opaskwayak First Nation, was flown to
Winnipeg on Sunday and died on Tuesday.

Munro says she could still be alive if she had received proper
treatment.

Dr. Joel Kettner, Manitoba's chief medical officer of health, says
deciding when to admit someone to hospital is a judgment call that
doctors have to make.

"We can't admit everybody to hospital with a mild influenza-like
illness - that's not practical and it's not desirable," said Kettner.

"We're looking carefully to see what we can learn from these (cases).
One doesn't want to draw a lot of conclusions from one or two events."

But that explanation isn't cutting it for the dead woman's family.

"I'm really disappointed in our health system," said Munro.

Wilson's brother Jeff Constant shares that feeling.

Copyright © 2009 The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

Healthy individuals succumb to Swine Flu in San Diego

This is a worrying fact which is reminiscent of Mexico in the early
days.
Could it be due to the lack of Tamilflu treatment?
If this is true, we should breath easily. Otherwise, it will be a very
dangerous revelation.


http://www.mercurynews.com/breakingnews/ci_12616535?nclick_check=1

ReprintPrint Email Font Resize
Health officials can't explain SD swine flu death
The Associated Press
Posted: 06/17/2009 11:07:43 PM PDT

SAN DIEGO—San Diego County health officials are investigating the
swine flu death of a 20-year-old Escondido woman, trying to determine
why the virus quickly became fatal to a seemingly healthy person.

Palomar Medical Center director Dr. Don Herip said Wednesday that the
woman, identified by the coroner's office as Adela Chevalier, began
experiencing mild flu symptoms on Friday, including a cough and
fatigue. He says by Monday she was running a high fever, having
trouble breathing and suffering severe muscle aches. She died at the
hospital's emergency room later that night.

County health officials say tests also were being conducted Wednesday
night on a specimen taken from a young man who died recently. They
suspect he also was infected with swine flu.

Information from: The San Diego Union-Tribune, http://www.signonsandiego.com

Tuesday, 16 June 2009

Pregnant women vulnerable despite Tamilflu?

UK is supposed to be aggressive in administering Tamilflu so why
should this pregnant woman die despite not having prior illness
related to Swine Flu?

Maybe she didn't get any Tamilflu shot which is good news for us.
If she succumb to Swine Flu despite Tamilflu, this is bad news.

http://www.thesun.co.uk/scotsol/homepage/news/2483090/Swine-flu-mum-Jacqueline-Flemings-baby-dies.html

Losing my son after his mum is simply too much to bear
JACQUELINE FLEMMINGS HOUSE

Shattered ... washing hangs at family's flat

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By DAVID GOODWIN, ANNABELLE LOVE,
ALEX PEAKE and BRIAN LEWIS

Published: Today
rigTeaserImage
A HEARTBROKEN dad told of his agony last night over the tragic death
of his baby boy — just 24 hours after the tot's mum was killed by
swine flu.

William McCann lost tiny Jack — who was born 11 weeks early — at the
same hospital where partner Jacqueline Fleming became the UK's first
death from the virus.

Devastated William, 39, said: "My beautiful son suffered from a number
of complications.

Police support ... officers arrive at Glasgow home

Police support ... officers arrive at Glasgow home

"Despite his brave fight he passed away at the special care baby unit.

"Coming so soon after the death of his mum, this is an extremely
distressing and difficult time for our family.

Tragic mum Jacqueline, 38, from Carnwadric in Glasgow, was critically
ill after giving birth to her third son. She lost her fight for life
on Sunday.

Distraught William and their other boys, Ryan, 18, and Sean, 11, were
yesterday being comforted by family and friends after being struck by
the latest tragedy.

A shocked pal said last night: "This is news they didn't want after
Jacqueline's death — it's a double blow that's hit them hard."

Another friend added: "It is a tragedy."

Complications ... baby Jack died in the same hospital as his mum

Complications ... baby Jack died in the same hospital as his mum

The Scottish Sun revealed two weeks ago how Jack arrived on June 1
after his mum was rushed to Paisley's Royal Alexandra Hospital with
the H1N1 virus.

The tot, born at 29 weeks, did NOT die of the infection.

Jacqueline is understood to have had "underlying health problems"
which were not related to swine flu.

The family said in a statement: "We are absolutely devastated. We are
doing everything we can to support Jacqueline's sons and her partner.

"Nothing can prepare you for such shattering news."

First Minister Alex Salmond last night offered his sympathies. He
said: "I think all in Scotland will feel very deeply for the feelings
of the family."

Health Secretary Nicola Sturgeon also offered her condolences last
night for the "unimaginably painful loss".

She said: "The death of baby Jack so soon after the his mother is a
tragedy."

But she said Jacqueline's death does not mean the virus has got worse.

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Click here

She added: "All outbreaks result in a small number of deaths, but in
most cases symptoms are no more serious than seasonal flu."

Scotland's chief medical officer Dr Harry Burns said pregnant women
could be more at risk.

He added: "Pregnancy adds to the burden your body is under. And any
chronic conditions that put stress on a person's system will cause
complications when combined with flu."

In Scotland 569 people have the virus, with 1,391 in the UK. NHS
Scotland is spending £15.2million on tissues and towels to prevent flu
germs spreading.

davidgoodwin@the-sun.co.uk
Share this article What is this?

Sunday, 14 June 2009

Swine flu is Spanish Flu

The low fatality rate at the beginning is also similar, but it is made
worse because despite Swine Flu's treatability with Tamilflu,
fatalities still occur.

Based on reports, this Swine Flu has worse effects. Many thought that
Swine Flu is milder than Normal Flu because its fatality within the
last 2 months is much lower than Common Flu for the full year.

If you catch it untreated, you'll suffer. Even with normal flu, you
can become incapacitated in your house. With Swine Flu, you will
suffer even more especially when you also suffer from diarrhoea and
vomiting.

Imagine if your family and neighbours are all sick. Who will look
after you in sending you to a hospital? Worse, with so many cases,
hospitals will be overcrowded. In Australia, it has started despite
having only less than 1000 cases. Imagine if it were 6000 times more?

So imagine it there are a lot of deaths also. Despite having a case
fatality rate of only about 1%, the number of deaths alone will be
about 200 thousands in Australia. Who will bury them when many are
also suffering from this Swine Flu?

Common flu is already bad killing about 1 million per year despite
affecting only the very young and old, and availability of antibiotics
and vaccinations.

Imagine, the effect that Swine Flu will have when we still haven't got
a vaccination for it, and it affects virtually every age.

You may not die, but by being sick you are contributing to the deaths
of others, because you can't help bury the dead or send them for
hospitals or even treat them by giving them food and medicine.

This is exactly what had happened in 1918. It is not just the flu that
kill, but the lack of treatment due to overloading.

http://news.smh.com.au/breaking-news-national/doctors-criticise-govt-on-flu-response-20090613-c6cm.html

Doctors criticise govt on flu response
June 13, 2009

Doctors have criticised Australia's response to the swine flu crisis,
with some patients waiting eight days for test results or receiving
anti-viral drugs too late to limit the infection.

GPs have blamed delays and inconsistent responses at state and federal
levels for undermining efforts to contain the disease, placing the
nation on the front line of the world's first flu pandemic in more
than 40 years, The Weekend Australian says.

The World Health Organisation conceded defeat on Friday in global
efforts to confine the new H1N1 strain, declaring a pandemic.

Despite that change, Australia did not lift its own alert status to
the highest level, on the basis that the disease remained a mild one
for most of the population.

Federal Health Minister Nicola Roxon on Friday sought to head-off
doctors' concerns by announcing almost $4 million in new funding to
provide extra support for GPs.

And Prime Minister Kevin Rudd defended Australia's preparations for
the swine flu epidemic as "among the best in the world".

© 2009 AAP

Friday, 12 June 2009

Half of Serious Swine Flu Cases were Healthy

This is something new to me and journalists and government officials
had hidden these facts from the public.

Fortunately in US, these healthy people managed to survive their
ordeals but it will burden the Health Care systems of all nations if
this Swine Flu is allowed to spread as what is happening in Australia
and USA.

It is only a matter of time for USA, with their lackadaisical attitude
towards Swine Flu to be overwhelmed with serious Swine Flu cases that
needs hospitalisations which will surely mean deaths even for those
who were perfectly healthy.

Since this Swine Flu is already declared a pandemic, can we still
claim under our Medical Insurance in Malaysia?

Australia is another case. Many Australians are taking it easy which
resulted in a huge increase in the number of Swine Flu cases. It is
still early to tell because it will take 14 days of infection for
fatality to occur.

A few Australians were reported to be in intensive care units.

WHO Raises Pandemic Alert To Phase 6, Director General Gives Speech
rate icon Featured Article
Main Category: Swine Flu
Also Included In: Public Health; Flu / Cold / SARS
Article Date: 12 Jun 2009 - 0:00 PDT

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Find other articles on: "swine flu deaths"

The World Health Organization (WHO) announced it has raised the level
of influenza pandemic alert from phase 5 to phase 6, following an
emergency meeting yesterday by WHO scientists in Geneva to assess the
available evidence on global infections of A(H1N1) swine flu.

WHO Director-General Dr Margaret Chan said:

"The world is now at the start of the 2009 influenza pandemic."

In an official announcement speech yesterday, Chan commented how this
particular A(H1N1) virus, which has not circulated in humans before,
emerged in late April, appears to be spreading easily from person to
person and country to country, to the extent that barely two months
later we now have 74 countries reporting nearly 30,000 lab-confirmed
cases of infection.

But this could be a very conservative estimate of the actual spread of
the virus because as she went on to explain:

"With few exceptions, countries with large numbers of cases are those
with good surveillance and testing procedures in place."

Also, in several countries, it is no longer possible to trace clearly
how the virus has passed from human to human and the WHO experts
consider that further spread will be inevitable.

"I have conferred with leading influenza experts, virologists, and
public health officials. In line with procedures set out in the
International Health Regulations, I have sought guidance and advice
from an Emergency Committee established for this purpose," said Chan,
explaining that the evidence available and the assessment of these
experts together meets the scientific criteria for an influenza
pandemic.

"I have therefore decided to raise the level of influenza pandemic
alert from phase 5 to phase 6," she added.

It is still early days in the progress of the pandemic and the virus
is being watched very closely. In fact this is the first time ever
that a pandemic has been detected so early or observed so intensely,
in "real-time" as it happens.

"The world can now reap the benefits of investments, over the last
five years, in pandemic preparedness," said Chan.

Chan explained that the world is in a strong position, "we have a head
start", she said. But the irony of advanced warning is the risk of
worry and panic, and people need to be reassured and advised about
what to do, in the midst of early but incomplete and uncertain
scientific knowledge about the disease.

The picture, which is currently very patchy, could change at any
moment.

"The virus writes the rules and this one, like all influenza viruses,
can change the rules, without rhyme or reason, at any time," warned
Chan.

On a global scale, there is good reason to believe that this pandemic,
at least for the time being, will not be severe. But, this could
change, as it has in the past, and it can vary from country to
country.

The vast majority of patients infected so far have had mild symptoms
and have made a full recovery, without medical treatment.

And on a global scale, while each and every death to the virus is
"tragic" said Chan, the number so far has been small compared to the
number of infections.

"However, we do not expect to see a sudden and dramatic jump in the
number of severe or fatal infections," she added.

The Director General summarized what we know so far about the new H1N1
swine flu:

* It tends to infect younger people: in nearly all areas with
large and sustained outbreaks, most cases have been in people under
the age of 25.

* In some areas with large and sustained outbreaks, about 2 per
cent of the cases became severe very quickly, progressing rapidly to
life-threatening pneumonia.

* Most of the severe and fatal infections were in people aged
between 30 and 50.

* This is a very different pattern to seasonal flu, where most
deaths occur among the frail and elderly.

* Many, but not all, severe cases appear to have been in people
who were already ill or had a chronic condition like asthma,
cardiovascular disease, diabetes, obesity and autoimmune disorders.
However, this is based on limited, preliminary data.

* But, importantly, we should note that about a third to a half of
the severe and fatal infections have been in young and middle-aged
people who were healthy and with no previous medical conditions when
they caught the virus.

* It is clear that pregnant women are at higher risk of
complications if they catch the virus, and given its prevalence among
younger age groups, this is a particularly worrying pattern.

* But perhaps the most worrying aspect of this pandemic is that we
don't know how the virus will behave in the developing world. Until
now, nearly all cases reported so far have been in comparatively
wealthy countries.

Chan said there were two reasons to be concerned about how the virus
will affect developing countries based on the evidence so far.

First, 99 per cent of maternal deaths, such as in childbirth or during
pregancy, are in the developing world. And second, about 85 per cent
of world's chronic diseases are in low and middle-income countries.

"Although the pandemic appears to have moderate severity in
comparatively well-off countries, it is prudent to anticipate a
bleaker picture as the virus spreads to areas with limited resources,
poor health care, and a high prevalence of underlying medical
problems," warned Chan.

Chan said that countries should be prepared to see further spread of
cases, and countries where the situation appears to have peaked should
prepare for a second wave.

Health ministries in all countries have now received guidelines on how
to protect against the spread of the virus, and countries who have
experienced no or only a few cases "should remain vigilant", she
urged.

Countries where the virus has already spread widely should concentrate
on managing infected patients, and should not waste valuable resources
on testing and investigation.

Chan said WHO has been talking closely with vaccine companies and
since production for the usual yearly doses of seasonal flu vaccine
are about to complete, this should free up full capacity to
concentrate on vaccine making for the pandemic strain.

WHO do not recommend countries to close their borders or restrict
travel.

"Influenza pandemics, whether moderate or severe, are remarkable
events because of the almost universal susceptibility of the world's
population to infection," said Chan, who closed her speech with one
final comment:

"We are all in this together, and we will all get through this,
together."

Source: WHO.

Written by: Catharine Paddock, PhD
Copyright: Medical News Today
Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today

SEcret of Mexico's Success Against Swine Flu

It certainly has nothing to do with treating Swine Flu as just
ordinary flu.
Mexico has gone to great lengths to contain this Flu.

Any nation who takes Swine Flu threat lightly will suffer as a result.
Hopefully Malaysia will not fall into this trap.

Argentina's medical services say they are being swamped

By Vicente L. Panetta – 14 hours ago

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — Argentines worried they may have swine flu
have overwhelmed some emergency medical services at the onset of the
South American winter flu season, health officials said Wednesday.

The Health Ministry said Argentina's confirmed caseload has grown to
281, with an additional 1,032 possible cases being studied in labs.
More than two-thirds of those sickened were young people, and 29
schools in Buenos Aires and the surrounding area have been closed for
two weeks after children tested positive.

Sergio Alejandre, hospitals director for Buenos Aires province, said
Wednesday that public hospitals are beefing up because with the
arrival of the Southern Hemisphere winter, "consultations begin to
increase ... for respiratory problems, adult flu and bronchitis in
children."

Though the number of confirmed cases is less than one-sixth of
neighbouring Chile's caseload, so many Argentines are seeking
treatment that emergency services have "collapsed" in and around the
capital, Carlos Chiarelli of the Chamber of Medical Emergencies said
at a news conference. "A single company fielded 10,000 calls yesterday
(Tuesday)."

Federico Diaz Mathe, director of national health organization Cimara,
said fears have led to an "excessive demand," so emergency crews do
not have enough ambulances, doctors or nurses for those seeking help.

"If this gets worse, medical services will have to select their
patients. If they have certain symptoms, keep an eye on them; if other
symptoms, send a doctor to their home," Mathe told Continental radio.
"The fear is unfounded. There is more fear than actual cases."

That fear isn't limited to the capital. On May 22, police in a city
near the Chilean border fired rubber bullets to disperse a small group
of people who pelted a bus with rocks and sticks after hearing rumours
that a man on board was infected with swine flu. One protester and six
officers suffered minor injuries after the protesters surrounded the
bus at a provincial hospital in Godoy Cruz. The Chilean passenger was
later determined not to be infected.

Chile has by far the most confirmed cases in South America, with 1,694
people sickened. But Chile's Health Ministry said just 29 are
considered serious cases, and only two patients have died.

U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention experts were arriving
Wednesday to study the disease's spread in the nation, Chilean Health
Minister Alvaro Erazo said.

Swine flu cases have been confirmed across nearly all of South
America.

On Tuesday, Colombia announced the first fatal case within its
borders: a 24-year-old who died last week in a hospital outside
Bogota.

In Mexico, which initially bore the brunt of the outbreak, the health
secretary said Wednesday that the country was no longer seeing serious
cases.

Jose Angel Cordova said the number of new cases has fallen to less
than 30 a day, down from a daily average of 300 at the peak of the
outbreak in late April.

He said Mexico had confirmed a total of 6,337 cases of swine flu since
the outbreak, including 108 deaths.

Cordova said he was concerned other countries now dealing with
outbreaks have not taken such drastic measures as Mexico, which closed
schools and restaurants for a week at the end of April to contain the
spread of the virus.

Associated Press writer Federico Quilodran in Santiago, Chile,
contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2009 The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

Coal power increases Swine Flu fatality

It is a very long article so I just include its link.

http://watchingthewatchers.org/article/17317/do-dirty-coal-plants-make-us-vulnerable

Thursday, 11 June 2009

Swine Flu similar to Spanish flu

More evidence of the similarity.
It is actually obvious if you study the Spanish flu epidemic case
fatality rate for New York in 1918.

The 1918 Spanish Flu has low case fatality rates for summer but became
worse in winter.

Now we have Tamilfu so fatality rates should be much lower and yet
they are not. The clue is presented in this article.

Many pregnant women refuse to take Tamilflu, supported by their
doctors.

Evidence of swine flu risk to pregnant women rises; experts urge early
treatment

By Helen Branswell – 10 hours ago

TORONTO — There are mounting and troubling signs that swine flu and
pregnancy don't mix well.

Six pregnant women in Manitoba are reportedly on ventilators because
they are severely ill with the virus. And at least two pregnant women
in the United States have died of swine flu complications after
delivering babies by C-section.

A pregnant teenager in the Dominican Republic died, as did a pregnant
woman in Scotland. A woman in St. Theresa Point, a First Nations
community in Manitoba, miscarried after contracting swine flu.

Humankind's relationship with the new swine H1N1 virus is still in its
infancy. But people who've studied the issue of pregnancy during flu
pandemics don't like the signs they are seeing.

Dr. Denise Jamieson, an obstetrician-gynecologist with the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control's division of reproductive health, says
she finds the evidence to date "very unsettling."

"I am concerned about this," Jamieson said in an interview from
Atlanta.

"There does seem to be increased severity in pregnancy. We don't have
hard and fast numbers but there are enough reports that are
concerning."

Data released by the CDC last month said at that point, 17 per cent of
Americans hospitalized for severe swine flu infections were pregnant
women.

A report a couple of weeks back in the World Health Organization's
journal, Weekly Epidemiologic Record, noted of 30 swine flu patients
hospitalized in California, five were pregnant women. Of those, two
developed severe complications - spontaneous abortion and premature
rupture of membranes.

Jamieson said the numbers are still small but seem to be pointing to a
pattern seen in previous pandemics, when pregnant women were
disproportionately harder hit than non-pregnant peers.

Dr. Danuta Skowronski, a flu expert with the British Columbia Centre
for Disease Control, recently published a review article on influenza
immunization in early pregnancy in the journal Vaccine.

In looking at the evidence about the impact of influenza on pregnancy,
she and co-author Dr. Gaston De Serres of Laval University noted that
the fatality rate was higher in pregnant women during the 1918 and
1957 pandemics, though not the milder pandemic of 1968.

Skowronski said that given the fact that younger adults don't appear
to have antibodies to the new swine flu virus, similar results may be
on the cards during a swine flu pandemic.

"If we base it on what we know of the 1918, 1957 pandemics, what we
know about pre-existing antibody levels to swine influenza in the
population, based on that I would say for this particular virus,
pregnant women may suffer more serious consequences, especially in the
third trimester," she said.

"And they should probably seek care early if they have influenza-like
illness."

Studies done after the disastrous 1918 Spanish flu - which took its
heaviest toll on young adults - showed astonishing death rates among
pregnant women, said Dr. Michael Osterholm, an infectious diseases
expert at the University of Minnesota.

Skowronski's review paper suggests there were also very high rates of
spontaneous abortions during that pandemic - 26 per cent in pregnant
women who became infected and 52 per cent among those who went on to
develop pneumonia from their infection.

Osterholm explained pregnancy is a precarious state for a woman from
an immunological point of view. In order that the mother's body does
not reject the fetus, part of the immune system has to be effectively
dialled down.

Other factors are also believed to come into play, including reduced
lung capacity, Jamieson added.

She said that while the CDC doesn't yet have firm numbers, they are
hearing that some pregnant women are reluctant to take antiviral drugs
when they are diagnosed with swine flu. In some cases, their
physicians share the reluctance.

Jamieson said given the risk swine flu poses to pregnant women, any
who feel they may have contracted it should seek care quickly and
should tell their doctor about potential exposures to people who had
the virus. And they should take the antiviral drugs, she said.

"The message we're trying to get out is: 'Don't delay. If you suspect
influenza, initiate antiviral therapy appropriately even before you
get the testing back," Jamieson said.

"We definitely feel like in a situation like this, the benefits
outweigh the risks of giving antiviral medication."

Follow Canadian Press Medical Writer Helen Branswell's flu updates on
Twitter at CP-Branswell

Copyright © 2009 The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

Sunday, 7 June 2009

It is winter not mutation that make flu worse

This news article supports my view that it is the weather that makes
flu more fatal. This should include Spanish Flu in 1918 and now Swine
Flu in 2008.

In UK, every winter cause 4000 fatalities so that the flu is called
Winter Flu when actually it is the same flu as in Summer. In Summer,
normal flu does not kill anyone, but this Swine Flu already attacks
young and middle aged people so severely that they had to be
hospitalised at the rate of 5 to 10%.

If the number of deaths in UK matches that in USA, it shows the even
with aggressive prescription of Tamilflu, it still causes
hospitalisation as severe as in USA. This invalidates my theory that
the US medical care is severely handicapped.

In Malaysia, we should expect the same incidence. Despite
administering Tamilflu to all suspected cases as in UK,
hospitalisation rate should be between 5-10 %. This is bad indeed.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8087213.stm
Swine flu total 'may be double'
Swine flu test
Anti-viral drugs are being issued to treat those affected by the flu

The number of swine flu cases in the UK is probably double the
official figure, a leading bacteriologist has said.

The official total stands at well above 500 after more cases were
confirmed on Saturday, but Prof Hugh Pennington told BBC 5 Live the
real figure is higher.

"I think it would be very reasonable to say we've got at least twice
as many cases as we know about," he said.

Meanwhile, a woman with swine flu who gave birth prematurely is
critically ill and her baby is in intensive care.

The baby was born on Monday afternoon, at 29 weeks, in the Royal
Alexandra Hospital in Paisley.

I think it would be very reasonable to say we've got at least twice as
many cases as we know about
Prof Hugh Pennington

On Sunday, a case of swine flu was confirmed at the British army's
biggest base, Catterick Garrison, in North Yorkshire.

The soldier has "mild symptoms" after coming into contact with another
infected person while away from the base.

Three of his close colleagues are also displaying symptoms, but it is
not confirmed that they have the virus.

Before this latest case, the number of people with swine flu in the UK
had increased to 541 after 19 more cases were confirmed in England, as
well as 13 new ones in Scotland and one further case in Northern
Ireland.

117 global deaths

Professor Pennington, a bacteriologist at Aberdeen University, says
that because swine flu is similar to seasonal flu, there will be many
more undeclared cases.

"All the experts think that the numbers we've got are a significant
underestimate.

"In the United States, they think for every case they know about,
every confirmed case, there are 20 other cases out there in the
community.

"I don't think we're anywhere near that, but I think it would be very
reasonable to say we've got at least twice as many cases as we know
about, and it may be more than that."

Worldwide there have been 19,315 confirmed swine flu cases in 66
countries, with 117 deaths - all in Mexico and the US.

Friday, 5 June 2009

Philippines may relax its Swine Flu Control

Because they think that Swine Flu is just like normal flu and can be
easily treated with Tamilflu, compared to Dengue.

However compared to Dengue's 6000 cases in a year, Swine flu will
certainly number in millions in just 6 months even under controlled
conditions albeit relaxed control as in US and Australia.

If the Philippines were to relax its Swine Flu control, it will suffer
worse fate than USA that in 2 months suffer more than 20 deaths. In
another 2 months it will be 20x20= 400 that is certainly higher than
Dengue deaths.

Dengue may not have a cure but with timely platelet donation, we can
easily save lives but with only 6000 cases, there will be no problem
with donation.

For Swine Flu to be treated with Tamilflu, it will require millions of
doses of Tamilflu at a cost of US100 per shot. Can the Filipino
government afford it?

For Sabah, it will be bad if the Philippines cannot control its Swine
Flu infection because there are many Filipionoes in Sabah.

http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/nation/06/05/09/doh-may-stop-hospital-based-treatment-h1n1-patients
DOH may stop hospital-based treatment of H1N1 patients

by Maria Althea Teves, abs-cbnNEWS.com/Newsbreak | 06/05/2009 5:13 PM

Printer-friendly versionPrinter-friendly version | Send to friendSend
to friend | Post commentPost Comment

The Department of Health (DOH) may soon abandon its approach of
containing people infected with the influenza A (H1N1) virus since all
the confirmed cases in the country are just similar to mild flu
cases.

At a press conference Friday, Health Secretary Francisco Duque said
the health department expects the number of swine flu cases to go up
even more because there are no restrictions on air travel.

As of June 5, the DOH has recorded 33 confirmed cases of H1N1 with no
deaths.

Duque said the DOH is more concerned about the rise in dengue cases
than swine flu.

He said the mortality rates of dengue, malaria, typhoid fever or
leptosperosis are even higher than H1N1. From January to May 2009, the
Philippines has had 6,538 cases of dengue with 57 deaths.

"It is not the 1918 Spanish flu," he said. The Spanish flu outbreak
killed between 3% to 6% of the world's population.

New approach planned

Since all H1N1 cases in the Philippines have turned out to be mild, he
said the DOH may soon adopt a new approach in managing influenza A
(H1N1) patients.

"No longer do we have to contain people," he said.

Instead, the DOH will adopt a mitigation strategy where, rather than
putting people in designated medical facilities, they will just let
people rest in their homes, visit the hospital, and ask them to get
tested.

Duque said it would be difficult to quarantine everyone affected if
the number of cases continue to go up. Shutting down commercial and
business establishments due to the spread of the virus will also harm
the economy.

Duque also noted that while "there are medicines to treat swine flu,
[there is] none for dengue." Doctors use the drug oseltamivir to treat
H1N1 cases.

As the current chair of ASEAN Plus 3 (ASEAN + China, Japan, South
Korea) health ministers, Duque said he is urging the World Health
Organization not to raise the alert level of H1N1 to pandemic phase 6.

"They should take into consideration not only the geographic spread of
the virus, but also the fatality rate," he said.

He lamented that as a result of the panic brought about by the A(H1N1)
virus, people are not guarding themselves against more serious
diseases like dengue.

However, he said that although swine flu is not a big problem,
everyone should be cautious.

Duque also noted that unlike the deadly flu outbreak in 1918, there
have been advances in medicine and technology.

WILD Season

Duque said the onset of the rainy season means the rise of WILD
diseases--Water-Born Infectious diseases, Leptosperosis, and Dengue.

Eating food not prepared properly or drinking contaminated water are
sources of water-borne infectious diseases.

Rat urine is the source of leptosperosis, which could enter the body
if an open wound is exposed to contaminated flood waters. This disease
damages the kidneys.

Duque said dengue is even more worrisome today because mosquitoes are
feistier and more hyperactive due to climate change.

He said that even seven-day-old mosquitoes bite. "They are very
hungry. They need strength."

Get Rid of Trash

Meantime, Metro Manila Development Authority (MMDA) chair Bayani
Fernando urged the public to cooperate in fighting infectious diseases
by proper waste disposal practices.

He said the MMDA has been holding clearing operations and
environmental programs to help the health department fight infectious
diseases.

He said that instead of using a metric square of your house to keep
trash, throw it and have someone rent it.

"That is P200 per metric square when you rent in Metro Manila. That's
[rent] where the money is, not in trash," he said.

Fernando admitted that his reputation is suffering because of the
clearing operations they are doing.

He added it is his task to remove informal settlers near waterways
because this causes floods, which helps breed mosquitos and spread
mosquito-borne diseases.

"It is not anymore my concern to give them homes. That is the concern
of another agency," he said.

as of 06/05/2009 5:32 PM

Clue as to why more fatality in US

It may be just down to poor health care system in US especially for
migrant and poor workers.

It is time for the adoption of universal health care for US especially
for infection diseases or else it will suffer even more.

In Malaysia, I was told that for infectious diseases, even illegal
immigrants can get free medical care. This is vital for infectious
diseases like TB.

Fatality rate in Europe and Japan is still zero so hopefully this
Swine Flue can be controlled with proper care and Malaysia is up to
that standard.


http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601124&sid=ah5TJ82PZ_T0

Swine Flu 'Overwhelmed' U.S. Health-Care System, Report Says
Share | Email | Print | A A A

By Catherine Larkin

June 4 (Bloomberg) -- The swine flu outbreak has overwhelmed the U.S.
health-care system, a report said.

Communication between government agencies and doctors isn't well
coordinated and the World Health Organization's six-step pandemic-
alert scale causes confusion, according to an analysis released today
by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Trust for America's Health
and the University of Pittsburgh's Center for Biosecurity. Worried
citizens flood emergency rooms while undocumented immigrants and the
uninsured delay getting medical care, the report said.

The H1N1 influenza virus has spread to more than 11,000 people in the
U.S. and caused 17 deaths, according to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, in Atlanta. WHO is at phase 5 of its alert
scale, meaning a pandemic is imminent, even as the bug causes little
more than a fever and cough in most patients. Researchers say it is
critical to address vulnerabilities in the system before a crisis
strikes.

"H1N1 is a real-world test of our initial emergency response
capabilities," said Jeff Levi, executive director of the Trust for
America's Health, a nonprofit organization in Washington, in an e-
mailed statement. "The country is significantly ahead of where we were
a few years ago. However, the outbreak also revealed serious gaps in
our nation's preparedness."

The report includes 10 recommendations for strengthening the public-
health infrastructure, including halting job cuts in state and local
health departments, providing care for uninsured Americans during an
emergency and helping health-care facilities prepare for a surge in
new patients.

The work was supported by a grant from the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation, a Princeton, New Jersey-based endowment fund that provided
$523.3 million in grants and contracts last year to support health
programs in the U.S., according to its Web site. The family of Robert
Wood Johnson started Johnson & Johnson, now the world's largest health-
care products company.

To contact the reporter on this story: Catherine Larkin in Washington
at clarkin4@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: June 4, 2009 10:00 EDT

Thursday, 4 June 2009

More data on pre-conditions for Swine Flu Hospitalisation Rate

Hospitalisation rate indicates serious conditions and will burden
hospitals if there are too many of them. Untreated they can lead to
deaths.

41% are those with Asthma
18% under 2 years old
13% immune system compromised
12% heart disease
Other risk factors include pregnancy, diabetes, kidney problems, blood
disorders, emphysema and liver problems.

In a situation where there is no vaccine for swine flu, pneumoncoccal
vaccination should be give to those with the above risk factors.
Since asthma is among the highest, they should be given first.

My wife has her immune system compromised by taking steroids due to
SLE. Not sure if she can take any vaccination.


Two More Deaths in City Reported From Swine Flu

Article Tools Sponsored By
By JENNIFER 8. LEE
Published: June 3, 2009

Two more deaths linked to swine flu — both of adults in their 40s —
were reported by the New York City Department of Health and Mental
Hygiene on Wednesday, bringing the total H1N1-related fatalities in
the city to seven.

The department said that six of the seven people who had died —
including Mitchell Wiener, an assistant principal at a public school
in Queens, who was the first swine flu death in the city — had
underlying conditions that could interfere with normal breathing. The
seventh death is still under investigation. The city will not release
the underlying medical conditions, citing medical confidentiality.
Officials would not disclose where in the city the latest two victims
lived.

However, the department did release an analysis that showed some 80
percent of the more than 300 people hospitalized with swine flu since
mid-April have one or more underlying conditions that put them at
risk. Asthma, which affects 10 percent of New York City children, is
by far the most common underlying condition, affecting some 41 percent
of those hospitalized.

The analysis also found that about 18 percent of those hospitalized
were younger than 2, 13 percent had a compromised immune system and 12
percent had heart disease. Other risk factors include pregnancy,
diabetes, kidney problems, blood disorders, emphysema and liver
problems.

Both the city's health department and the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention have added obesity as a risk factor in swine flu
hospitalizations and deaths.

Obesity is not generally considered a risk factor for other strains of
flu. Dr. Donald Weiss, the director of surveillance for the
department's bureau of communicable disease, said that it was not
known why it was a factor in the swine flu cases.

A more detailed analysis of hospitalized patients' health histories is
still being conducted, as assembling the data has been relatively
challenging, Dr. Weiss said.

About 70 percent of the data about the hospitalizations that comes is
of decent quality, but 30 percent of it has to be chased down. Then
the information has to be double-checked. "It's a bit of work on the
part of the health department," Dr. Weiss said.

The health department recommended that people with chronic illness,
especially asthma, should see a doctor if they develop flulike
symptoms. It also emphasized only people with severe symptoms, like
difficulty breathing, should visit emergency departments, which have
been inundated by flu-related visits.

However, flu-related emergency department visits declined last week
from a peak on May 25.

Even if Swine Flu is not as bad as normal flu!

Normal flu kills 500,000 people worldwide annually. Some quote 1
million.

But normal flu has vaccine which limits its spread.
Swine Flu still hasn't got a proven vaccine so its death toll should
be higher anyway, certainly more than 500,000.

The increase should be proportional to the number of vaccinations for
normal flu.

Is it advisable to reduce the number of normal flu vaccinations in
order to shift production to Swine Flu? Given the large number of
doctors who believe that Swine Flu is not as bad as Normal Flu, we can
safely assume that there will be no vaccination produced for Swine Flu
making fatality of Swine Flu, similar to the normal flu fatality, but
this is an addition to the normal flu fatality, making the combined
fatality to be at least 1 million.

If some governments decide to divert production to Swine flu, the
number of deaths arising from normal flu will also increase,
offsetting the number of lives saved from Swine Flu. Either way, the
number of deaths will still increase.

Why did the world not care for the deaths of 500,000?

Flu: stop squealing normal virus worse


Alex de Vos


4th June 2009 04:00:03 PM

Doctors have advised residents that normal influenza is often worse
than swine flu as the virus begins breaking out in the Geelong region.

Barwon Health confirmed on Tuesday that doctors had diagnosed the
region's first case of swine flu.

The virus has been blamed for deaths overseas but has failed to claim
lives among Australia's growing number of victims.

General Practitioner Association of Geelong's Dr Jane Opie said the
organisation was expecting "more local cases" as the virus spread.

However, she considered swine flu relatively "mild".

"Certainly, what we've seen is no worse than normal influenza," Dr
Opie said.

Barwon Health spokesperson Kate Nelson said Geelong's first swine flu
victim was undergoing treatment in home quarantine.

"A patient presented at Geelong Hospital's emergency department and
tested positive for H1N1 Influenza," Ms Nelson said.

"Infection control measures have been adhered to and have followed the
guidelines for the control of infectious diseases."

Last week Ms Nelson told the Independent an outbreak was "inevitable".

She advised anyone with flu-like symptoms to contact their doctor.

"What you need to do is ring ahead first and advise your doctor
whether you have those symptoms so they can implement infection-
control procedures to minimise the risk of transmission," Ms Nelson
said.

"We also need people to practice good personal hygiene.

"Cover your nose and mouth with a tissue when you cough or sneeze,
wash your hands and avoid touching eyes, nose or mouth."

Ms Nelson said Barwon Health would continue working with Department of
Human Services, the city's General Practitioners Association and City
of Greater Geelong to contain the virus.

"But we need the public's cooperation to minimise transmission," she
said.

Swine flu has hit Victoria harder than any other state, accounting for
three quarters of the country's 500-plus confirmed cases.