ALERT Comprehensive Flu Thread, Latest reports, States, Countries, Closings.

SassyinAZ

Inactive
27 out of 72 have died in Egypt!!!

http://www.reuters.com/article/asiaCrisis/idUSLI493604

Egyptian girl dies of bird flu virus - agency
Mon May 18, 2009 8:04am

CAIRO, May 18 (Reuters) - A 4-year-old Egyptian girl has died after contracting the highly pathogenic H5N1 bird flu virus, Egypt's state news agency MENA said on Monday.

The girl, from the Nile Delta province of Daqahlia, brings the number of human cases of avian influenza in Egypt to 72, MENA said. Of those, 27 have died.

It's a big deal that there have been new outbreaks of avian flu while swine flu is actively spreading. The nightmare scenario is the two combining, every day the media gets a little closer to saying it...

We can't even handle one that is supposedly "mild" -- throw the worst case scenario into the mix and we should just all kiss our asses goodbye now.

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/WLA4543.htm

WHO chief says expects flu to keep spreading fast
18 May 2009 14:20:18 GMT
Source: Reuters

GENEVA, May 18 (Reuters) - The H1N1 flu virus is likely to keep spreading rapidly between people, within countries and across the globe, the head of the World Health Organisation said on Monday.

WHO Director-General Margaret Chan told her United Nations agency's annual meeting that the new strain may pose particular risks when it mixes with the H5N1 flu virus, which has proved deadly in birds but not transmitted easily between people.

It could also cause risks for people with HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis, and in crowded shantytowns, she said.
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
Greece confirmed

http://www.focus-fen.net/?id=n181424

Greece reports on first H1N1 flu case

18 May 2009 | 18:54 | FOCUS News Agency

Athens. Greece reported Tuesday on first case of swine flu, Minister of Health Dimitris Avramopoulos said, cited by Naftemporiki.

Greek citizen who had recently returned from US had been infected with the virus.

Minister had assured public health has not been endangered.

First test results on virus A/H1N1 were positive. Thus, more tests are made. The results will be announced by health authorities.
 

Marthanoir

TB Fanatic
Thanks Catbird I agree given the potential for H1N1 to recombine with H5N1 we should be keeping a close eye on updates on H5N1 ... scary thought but a real possibility.

Strange thing, alot of talk about H1N1 combining with H5N1 and the scary scary prospects that its brings but the Spanish Flu of 1918 was of the strain Influenza A H1N1, the sheeple seem to be under the impression that heck its fine as long as its stays as H1N1
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
16 schools closed in NY now, was 11 when I went to bed last night; also 1 closed in New Jersey after an additional confirmation. Bloomberg gave a presser today too, anyone know if he had anything useful to say or was his mouth just moving?

http://wcbstv.com/cbs2crew/queens.school.closings.2.1012152.html

May 18, 2009 5:04 pm US/Eastern

16 NYC Schools Now Closed Amid Swine Flu Fears
Bloomberg: 'We Can't Stop The Virus; Goal Is To Minimize'
Frieden: 'We Fully Expect To See More Severe Illness In The Coming Days' Reporting


Hazel Sanchez NEW YORK (CBS) ―

The number of New York City schools ordered closed amid rapidly growing fears of swine flu has grown to 16 after the Health Department annouced four more schools will shut down and one Manhattan private school said it would be closing its doors as well.

The news comes a day after the city reported its first death due to the H1N1 strain, and just as Health Commissioner Thomas Frieden said he "fully expects" to see even more significant cases in the near future.

The Health Deaprtment announced Monday afternoon that the Q209 building in Whitestone, which houses PS 209 and P9, along with PS 19 in Corona and PS 32 in Flushing will be closed for up to five days beginning Tuesday.

Frieden announced Monday afternoon that the Q209 building in Whitestone, which houses PS 209 and P9, along with PS 19 in Corona and PS 32 in Flushing will be closed for up to five days beginning Tuesday.

Officials at the private St. David's School on the Upper East Side chose to close on Monday morning, but not at the city's recommendation.

"We continue to see a rising tide of flu in many parts of New York City," Frieden said. "We fully expect to see more severe illness in the coming days, particularly among people who have underlying health problems."

According to the Health Department, 24 students reported having flu-like symptoms between the two schools in recent days at Q209. At PS 19, which enrolls nearly 2,000 students, 50 students have reported falling ill in the last six days, while 30 students have shown the symptoms at PS 32.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg and the health commissioner told New Yorkers not to be surprised if more closures will follow.

"We can't stop the virus. Our goal is to minimize it," said Bloomberg at his Monday morning news conference. "It's possible there will be more closings this week."

St. David's headmaster David O'Halloran says the number of children who fell ill over the last four days was "unusually high" and closing "seemed like the right thing to do for now."


New York State Health Commissioner Richard Daines said Monday that the number of confirmed cases include eight in New York City, where the number stands at 186. The total of new cases outside the city rose to 73, with five in Nassau County and one each in Westchester and Suffolk counties.

Late last week the city closed ten schools in Queens (IS 238, PS 16, IS 5, JHS 74, PS 107, MS 158, Our Lady of Lourdes, I.S. 25, World Journalism Preparatory and Q233) and one in Brooklyn (IS 318) after documenting confirmed cases of H1N1 at IS 238Q, and unusually high levels of flu-like symptoms in the other schools. The Health Department continues to work with the Department of Education to assess the situation daily and make decisions regarding school closures on a case by case basis.

"There is no doubt that he will continue to see cases in schools, cases in different facilities," said Frieden. "We may see additional serious cases, it would be surprising if we didn't."

The closing of 16 schools in New York City means more than 10,000 children will miss class this week. It's real struggle for many parents who are now struggling to find childcare.

"You don't go to work, you don't earn," said parent Joann Sison.

There are 400 students from St. David's, who are currently out of classes. The school's decision to close was made without a confirmed case at the school.

In New Jersey, the Robert Waters Elementary School in Union City also said it would close after one student tested positive. There are five other suspected cases at the school.

Mitchell Wiener, who worked as an assistant principal at Intermediate School 238 in Queens, died Sunday evening after succumbing to swine flu. Wiener, who had been hospitalized and placed on a ventilator, had been sick with the new H1N1 strain for nearly a week before his school was closed on Thursday. Complications besides the virus likely played a part in his death, officials said.

Symptoms of the swine flu include fever, cough, sore throat, body aches, headache, chills and fatigue. Some people have reported diarrhea and vomiting as well. Anyone experiencing severe symptoms, such as difficulty breathing, should seek health care and treatment. The best way to prevent additional cases of flu in schools is to stay home when sick, cover your mouth when coughing and sneezing, and wash hands frequently.

For those who are ill, the recommendation is to stay home until they are symptom-free for at least 24 hours.

Eating pork or pork products cannot spread the swine flu.
 

xtreme_right

Veteran Member
4/26/09 20 confirmed cases
4/27/09 40 confirmed cases
4/28/09 64 confirmed cases
4/29/09 91 confirmed cases
4/30/09 109 confirmed cases
5/01/09 141 confirmed cases
5/02/09 160 confirmed cases
5/03/09 226 confirmed cases
5/04/09 279 confirmed cases
5/05/09 403 confirmed cases
5/06/09 642 confirmed cases
5/07/09 896 confirmed cases
5/08/09 1639 confirmed cases
5/09/09 2254 confirmed cases
5/10/09 2532 confirmed cases
5/11/09 2600 confirmed cases
5/12/09 3009 confirmed cases
5/13/09 3352 confirmed cases
5/14/09 4298 confirmed cases
5/15/09 4714 confirmed cases
5/16/09 ? confirmed cases
5/17/09 ? confirmed cases
5/18/09 5123 confirmed cases

I didn't see any updates from the CDC this weekend.
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
We have been planning a trip to NY in the first week of September - and then the next week taking a cruise from there to Canada and back, then flying back of California. Because of this flu, and it spreading, my question is: Would you go on the trip or would you cancel because of the swine flu? We have to make this decision in the next week, so would like your opinions on this. Thanks in advance.

I echo catbird's sentiments, sorry to say.

Additionally, beyond the conerns she expressed, being quarantined in an airplane or immediately upon arriving or a cruise ship doesn't sound like my idea of a vacation. I know we aren't doing that now, but the world is pushing us too, so who knows what the status will be by September.
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
I know this is tinfoil, but could it be possible that this fella's death was due to 1) pre-existing conditions or 2) this "experimental drug"...?

Trying to turn gout into a pre-existing condition is a huge stretch for my mind and I don't recall exactly the experimental treatment that was used on him, but it gave him another day, I don't know that it could be called successful, but it wasn't unsuccessful either.

Just a tragic situation in NYC with that man, heart-breaking!
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
4/26/09 20 confirmed cases
4/27/09 40 confirmed cases
4/28/09 64 confirmed cases
4/29/09 91 confirmed cases
4/30/09 109 confirmed cases
5/01/09 141 confirmed cases
5/02/09 160 confirmed cases
5/03/09 226 confirmed cases
5/04/09 279 confirmed cases
5/05/09 403 confirmed cases
5/06/09 642 confirmed cases
5/07/09 896 confirmed cases
5/08/09 1639 confirmed cases
5/09/09 2254 confirmed cases
5/10/09 2532 confirmed cases
5/11/09 2600 confirmed cases
5/12/09 3009 confirmed cases
5/13/09 3352 confirmed cases
5/14/09 4298 confirmed cases
5/15/09 4714 confirmed cases
5/16/09 ? confirmed cases
5/17/09 ? confirmed cases
5/18/09 5123 confirmed cases

I didn't see any updates from the CDC this weekend.

They didn't do any, us wee people aren't on the need to know list!
 

Catbird

Inactive
16 schools closed in NY now, was 11 when I went to bed last night;

LOL Sassy - you go to bed in AZ and NY gets busy. Is there a correlation ? :dvl1:

I couldn't resist ... she deserved it for the breath and cognac comment of the other night :::slapping myself before she does::: :stfu:
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
LOL Sassy - you go to bed in AZ and NY gets busy. Is there a correlation ? :dvl1:

I couldn't resist ... she deserved it for the breath and cognac comment of the other night :::slapping myself before she does::: :stfu:

LOL, well when I went to bed the night before Japan was at 3, I hope there's not a message in there somewhere either!

Here ya go :smkd:
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
I don't understand why China was smacking us all over the place yesterday for our lack of containment measures, said it would be discussed by WHO at the top-dogs meeting, and then backed down?

What did I miss in there, or do they want the containment measures (exit screening) that they are all implementing at this stage without raising it? I don't know what the difference is, their stages and our phasing seem pretty worthless to me.

Here's more in India.

http://www.thehindu.com/2009/05/19/stories/2009051957122200.htm

A(H1N1) case: two more quarantined
Aarti Dhar

NEW DELHI: Two more persons have been quarantined “as a matter of abundant precaution” at a hospital in Hyderabad after they complained of cough and sore throat — symptoms of A (H1N1) influenza.

According to an official spokesperson of the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, the two persons had also travelled with the patient from New York. The patient is on treatment on Oseltamivir and presently afebrile.


Screening

Meanwhile, screening of passengers coming from the affected countries is continuing at 21 international airports and over 39,991 were screened in the past 24 hours, including 14,245 passengers from the affected countries.

One passenger who disembarked at Delhi Airport has also been referred to the identified health facility. So far 6.76 lakh passengers have been screened.

So far samples of 66 persons have been tested including the one which tested positive for influenza. The rest tested negative.

The World Health Organisation put the figure of confirmed A (H1N1) cases at 8,829 globally with 74 reported deaths. Mexico has reported 3,103 cases and 68 deaths, U.S. has reported 4 deaths while one death has been reported from Canada . Forty countries have been affected by the flu.
 

xtreme_right

Veteran Member
Here's the WHOs (worldwide) numbers, not just the CDCs (United States)

xr

4/24/09 25 confirmed 9 suspected
4/26/09 38 confirmed
4/27/09 73 confirmed 7 deaths
4/28/09 105 confirmed 7 deaths
4/29/09 148 confirmed 8 deaths
4/30/09 257 confirmed 8 deaths
5/1/09 367 confirmed 10 deaths
5/2/09 658 confirmed 17 deaths
5/3/09 898 confirmed 20 deaths
5/4/09 1085 confirmed 26 deaths
5/5/09 1490 confirmed 30 deaths
5/6/09 1893 confirmed 31 deaths
5/7/09 2371 confirmed 44 deaths
5/8/09 2500 confirmed 46 deaths
5/9/09 3440 confirmed 48 deaths
5/10/09 4379 confirmed 49 deaths
5/11/09 4694 confirmed 53 deaths
5/12/09 5251 confirmed 61 deaths
5/13/09 5728 confirmed 61 deaths
5/14/09 6497 confirmed 65 deaths
5/15/09 7520 confirmed 65 deaths
5/16/09 8451 confirmed 72 deaths
5/17/09 8480 confirmed 72 deaths
5/18/09 8829 confirmed 74 deaths
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
Thanks for doing that, xtreme right, I'll poach it to the list with your CDC tallies.

This article increases the hospitalizations.

http://in.reuters.com/article/health/idINTRE54H3QO20090518?sp=true

U.S. health officials troubled by new flu pattern
Tue May 19, 2009 1:42am IST
By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The new influenza strain circulating around most of the United States is putting a worrying number of young adults and children into the hospital and hitting more schools than usual, U.S. health officials said on Monday.

The H1N1 swine flu virus killed a vice principal at a New York City school over the weekend and has spread to 48 states. While it appears to be mild, it is affecting a disproportionate number of children, teenagers and young adults.

This includes people needing hospitalization -- now up to 200, said Dr. Anne Schuchat of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

"That's very unusual, to have so many people under 20 to require hospitalization, and some of them in (intensive care units)," Schuchat told reporters in a telephone briefing.


"We are now experiencing levels of influenza-like illness that are higher than usual for this time of year," Schuchat added. "We are also seeing outbreaks in schools, which is extremely unusual for this time of year."
New York City Health Commissioner Dr. Thomas Frieden agreed with Schuchat.

"We're seeing increasing numbers of people going to emergency departments saying they have fever and flu, particularly young people in the 5 to 17 age group, " Frieden, who has been named by U.S. President Barack Obama as the new CDC director, told a news conference.

About half of all cases of influenza are being diagnosed as the new H1N1 strain, while the rest are influenza B, or the seasonal H1N1 and H3N2 strains. Flu season in the United States is usually almost over by May.

CDC officials say around 100,000 people are likely infected with the new flu strain in the United States and Schuchat said the 5,123 confirmed and probable cases and six deaths in the United States were "the tip of the iceberg."

MORE ILLNESS OVERALL

"We are seeing more reports of influenza-like illness from outpatient visits that we monitor than is typical for this time of year," Schuchat said.

Because doctors usually treat symptoms and only occasionally give flu tests to patients, the CDC must monitor reports of symptoms such as fever, cough and muscle aches to track flu activity. Some centers are doing actual influenza tests to confirm the patterns that are seen.

Influenza is a factor in 36,000 deaths a year in the United States and 250,000 to 500,000 deaths globally, the CDC says.

"Unlike the seasonal flu, we are seeing relatively few cases or hospitalizations in people over 65," Schuchat said. Usually flu kills the elderly and people with chronic diseases.

There is no evidence that a second, bacterial infection is worsening the H1N1 cases, Schuchat said.

When family members are questioned, it seems clear that children and teens are more prone to infection than older adults, Schuchat said. "People under 18 are more likely to have infections when another person in the family is infected," she said.

"One of our working hypotheses is that older adults may have some pre-existing protection against this virus due to their exposure long ago to some virus that may be distantly related," Schuchat said.

An alternative hypothesis is that it just has not had a chance to make its way into the older population yet.
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
From RSOE EDIS - Pandemic Monitoring System, Budapest, Hungary

KANSAS, up to 46

SITUATION UPDATE : 2009-05-18 17:43:31 - USA

Event ID: USA-20090426-1
Date & Time: 2009.05.18 19:42:18 [UTC]
Area: USA, State of Kansas Dickinson County

Description:

Two cases were identified in Geary County adults. Four cases were identified in Geary County children. Four cases were identified in Riley County adults.
One case was identified in a Riley County child. One case was identified in a Saline County child. Todays announcement brings the Kansas total to 46 confirmed cases.

KDHE is working closely with the Geary and Riley county health departments and local healthcare providers to identify close contacts of confirmed cases, in an effort to interrupt the chain of virus transmission.

Healthcare providers in these counties are strongly encouraged to submit specimens to the Kansas Health and Environmental Laboratories at KDHE on all patients presenting with influenza-like illness.

As of today, KDHE has identified the following cases of the 2009 H1N1 influenza A virus in Kansas. In all cases, the local health departments are following the guidance provided by KDHE and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Confirmed Cases 46 total - Dickinson County Two cases involving adults - Ford County One case involving a child - Geary County Nine cases total involving three adults and six children - Johnson County 11 cases total involving four adults and seven children - Ottawa County One case involving a child - Riley County Seven cases total involving five adults and two children - Saline County Three cases total involving one adult and two children - Sedgwick County One case involving a child - Wyandotte County 11cases total involving one adult and 10 children

Dead(s):
Infected (Susp.):
Infected (Conf.):
Quaranten:

Posted:2009-05-18 17:43:31 [UTC]

SCOTLAND, increases to 9 confirmed, 5 probable

SITUATION UPDATE : 2009-05-18 03:01:43 - United Kingdom

Event ID: GBR-20090427-22
Date & Time: 2009.05.18 05:01:20 [UTC]
Area: United Kingdom, Scotland The area was not definied

Description:

A three-year-old boy from the Greenock area has tested positive as Scotland\'s ninth case of swine flu. There are five confirmed cases in the Greenock area, three in Forth Valley and one case in Ayrshire and Arran.

Health Secretary Nicola Sturgeon said there was also one other probable case of the H1N1 virus under investigation and six possible cases.

The total number of cases of H1N1 infection in the UK have now reached more than 100. A mother and her five-year-old son in Greenock were confirmed as having swine flu on Friday.

A nursery and a primary school in the town had been closed earlier in the week, while tests were taking place on a five-year-old boy, who attends Ravenscraig Primary, and a three-year-old attending Ladybird Pre-Five Centre. Ms Sturgeon said: \"Risk to the public continues to be low, however it is important to remain vigilant so we can limit the spread of the virus as much as possible.

\"While the level of person-to-person transmission remains very limited, I would urge the general public to continue to take sensible hygiene precautions.\

" Worldwide, swine flu has affected more than 8,400 people in 39 countries and caused at least 72 deaths.

Dead(s): 0
Infected (Susp.): 4
Infected (Conf.): 5
Quaranten: 0

Posted:2009-05-18 03:01:43 [UTC]

HAWAII, increases to 26

http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20090518/BREAKING/90518039

May 18, 2009

Five new cases of swine flu confirmed, bringing state total to 26

The state Department of Health is reporting five new cases of novel H1N1 influenza — or swine flu — in Hawaii, bringing the total to 26.

The first three cases — involving an Army couple and a school-aged child — were diagnosed May 5.

Two more were confirmed on May 7 and another on May 8.

Since then, the numbers have risen more dramatically, with four on May 13, five on May 14 and six on May 15.

The Department of Health continues to investigate suspected illnesses as they are reported.

http://www.baltimoresun.com/health/bal-swine-flu0518,0,4628731.story?track=rss

MARYLAND, increases to 33 confirmed cases

Md. has 33 confirmed swine flu cases, health officials say

The Associated Press
11:39 AM EDT, May 18, 2009

Maryland health officials said Monday that the number of confirmed swine flu cases in the state has risen to 33.

Karen Black, a spokeswoman for the Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, said all 33 people have recovered, or are recovering.

Worldwide, the swine flu virus has sickened more than 8,800 people in 40 countries, including 76 deaths, as of Monday. In the United States, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta said 46 states have reported more than 4,700 confirmed and probable cases.

NEW HAMPSHIRE, increases to 20

http://www.boston.com/news/local/ne...009/05/18/20_swine_flu_cases_confirmed_in_nh/

20 swine flu cases confirmed in NH
May 18, 2009

Tests have confirmed a 20th swine flu case in New Hampshire.

The patient, announced Monday, is an adult from the greater Salem area. The Department of Health and Human service says the patient was admitted to the hospital for treatment, and at this point is recovering and doing well.

No new probable cases were reported

CHILE, increased to 5 confirmed

http://www.pr-inside.com/print1262122.htm

Chile swine flu cases increase to 5

2009-05-19 01:37:01 -

SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) - Chile's health ministry is reporting another child sickened with swine flu, bringing the total number of cases in the country to five.

Deputy Health Minister Cecilia Morales says an 8-year-old boy is the latest confirmed case at a school where a 6-year-old classmate was already diagnosed. Classes at the school have been suspended for one week.

The other three are women who recently returned from vacation in the Dominican Republic, though that Caribbean country has not reported any confirmed swine flu cases.

Morales said Monday all five patients are in good condition and receiving treatment.

UTAH, increases to 109

http://www.abc4.com/content/news/st...-in-Utah/_RY814bG2k-bcw56HN8w-w.cspx?rss=1451

109 confirmed swine flu cases now in Utah

Last Update: 5:40 pm

Swine flu (ABC News) SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Utah health officials say there are now 109 confirmed cases of swine flu in the state.

The Department of Health said Monday 50 of the cases are in the Salt Lake Valley Health Department district and 36 are in the Summit County Health District
.

Other cases have been reported from around the state.

--
On the Net:
http://health.utah.gov/epi/h1n1flu/

OKLAHOMA, increases to 42

http://www.kswo.com/Global/story.asp?S=10382490

42 cases of swine flu confirmed

Associated Press - May 18, 2009 4:45 PM ET

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) - Oklahoma State Department of Health officials say the number of confirmed swine flu cases in Oklahoma has reached 42.

The department announced four new cases on its Web site Monday - two in Kay County and one each in Oklahoma and Tulsa counties. According to the Web site, Oklahoma County has reported the most cases - 13 - followed by nine each in Kay and Tulsa counties and five in Cleveland County.

Officials say three persons were known to be hospitalized who had underlying medical conditions, but almost all of those confirmed to have had the virus have recovered.

TENNESSEE, increases to 84 confirmed

http://www.wsmv.com/health/19495508/detail.html

Health Officials Confirm 84 H1N1 Cases
42 Confirmed H1N1 Flu Cases In Davidson County


POSTED: 3:01 pm CDT May 18, 2009
UPDATED: 5:15 pm CDT May 18, 2009

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- Health officials said the number of confirmed cases of the H1N1 virus in Tennessee has increased to 84

Tennessee medical epidemiologist Dr. Tim Jones said Monday the prognosis with swine flu is not any worse than with regular seasonal flu, and the long-term outlook on the health status of Tennessee patients is good.

There are 42 confirmed cases in Davidson County, 13 in Williamson County and 15 in Knox County. Blount, Bradley, Maury, Montgomery, Shelby and Sullivan counties each have four or fewer cases of the virus known as H1N1.

The state laboratory is assisting Texas and Arkansas public health authorities with testing specimens. State health department spokeswoman Andrea Turner said Tennessee has tested 314 samples from Texas and 390 from Arkansas.

FLORIDA, increases to 101
Palm Beach County = 6

http://www.cbs12.com/news/h1n1-4717958-update-beach.html

Latest H1N1 Swine Flu numbers for Palm Beach County

May 18, 2009 - 5:21 PM

The Florida Department of Health Laboratory has now confirmed a total of six cases of H1N1 Influenza in Palm Beach County.

The latest three confirmations were a 36 year-old female, 7 year-old female and 6 year old female. All were isolated incidents diagnosed in early May and have since recovered by staying home during their illness and following the course of treatment.

In an effort to expedite the confirmation process all four Department of Health laboratories have received testing supplies from the Centers for Disease Control and now can test samples to confirm H1N1 Swine Flu. This expansion streamlines the process and probable cases will no longer be listed awaiting CDC confirmation.

Florida has 101 confirmed cases from areas throughout the state.


CDC no longer recommends that communities with a laboratory confirmed case of influenza A H1N1 consider adopting school dismissal or childcare closure measures.

A public health emergency has been declared by the State Surgeon General. Flu information can be obtained in Spanish and English at 1-800-775-8039.

Health Department Director, Dr. Jean Malecki said, "We continue to monitor the number of H1N1 and other flu cases in our county."

WASHINGTON, additional probable cases

http://www.tdn.com/articles/2009/05/18/area_news/doc4a11a4a91475f198256382.txt

Probable case of swine flu identified in Columbia County

Monday, May 18, 2009 4:45 PM PDT
By The Daily News

Health officials were notified Friday evening of a probable case of swine flu in Columbia County. Confirmation testing is in progress and may take several more days.

“This news comes as no surprise, since we know that swine flu is in Oregon and several confirmed cases have been reported in the Portland metro area,” Columbia Health District Health Officer Jennifer Vines said in a prepared statement released Monday morning. “Fortunately the individual had relatively mild symptoms and has our best wishes for a speedy return to good health.”

The Columbia County Public Health Authority is notifying those who may have had close contact with the individual.

“The best prevention strategies are to stay away from others if you are sick,” Vines emphasized. “Cover coughs and sneezes, and wash hands often with soap and water.”

Health also urged sick workers to stay home and parents to keep ill children out of school and day care until 24 hours after symptoms are gone.

On Friday, State health officials said there were 361 confirmed cases of swine flu in Washington, including the first cases in Island and Douglas counties.

On the Net:

Washington Department of Health: http://www.doh.wa.gov/swineflu

http://www.fox11online.com/dpp/mobi...765_confirmed_cases_of_h1n1_200905181647_rev1

WISCONSIN, increases to 765

Wis. has 765 confirmed cases of H1N1

Updated: Monday, 18 May 2009, 4:47 PM CDT
Published : Monday, 18 May 2009, 4:47 PM CDT

GREEN BAY - Wisconsin now has 765 confirmed cases of H1N1 or swine flu.

The state Department of Health Services said Monday that most of Wisconsin's 765 confirmed cases are in Milwaukee County, which now has 508 confirmed cases.

Locally, Brown County has 13 confirmed cases, Fond du Lac 7, Calumet 2, Outagamie 2, Shawano 1, and Sheboygan 5.

Officials continue recommending anyone with flu-like symptoms stay home from work or school to slow the spread of disease.

The H1N1 virus has been found in at least 40 countries, with nearly 9,000 confirmed cases. Most are in the United States and Mexico.

The Centers for Disease Control says at least 5,000 of those cases are split between 46 states.

Massachusetts, increases to 167

http://www.boston.com/news/health/blog/2009/05/massachusetts_s_1.html

Public Health
Massachusetts swine flu tally up to 167, two hospitalized

by Gideon Gil May 18, 2009 04:20 PM
By Stephen Smith, Globe Staff

State laboratory tests show that 26 more Massachusetts adults and children have swine flu, with two of the newly diagnosed patients requiring hospitalization, the state Department of Public Health reported this afternoon.

Since the virus first appeared in the state late last month, a total of 167 infections have been confirmed, with 100 of those patients living in Middlesex County. A total of 13 patients have been admitted to hospitals for treatment, although all have recovered
.

Only seven states have reported more cases of the disease, caused by the H1N1 virus.
 
Last edited:

SassyinAZ

Inactive
White out, make Scotland 10

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/8056498.stm

Tenth Scottish case of swine flu

A 22-year-old woman from the Greenock area has been confirmed as Scotland's tenth case of swine flu.

Health Secretary Nicola Sturgeon said the woman had tested positive for the H1N1 strain of the virus.

She said the patient's symptoms were mild and that her condition was "not giving cause for clinical concern".


There are six confirmed cases in the Greenock area, three in Forth Valley and one in Ayrshire and Arran. Four possible cases are under investigation.

They are in Fife, Forth Valley, Greater Glasgow and Clyde and Lothian health board areas.
...
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
Here's a short WHO blurb from European news on the combination of swine and avian flu

http://www.euronews.net/2009/05/18/who-says-flu-pandemic-could-be-unfolding/

WHO says flu pandemic could be unfolding

18/05 19:48 CET
Influenza A (H1N1)

The World Health Organisation says the A-H1N1 flu strain is spreading quickly in Japan in what may the first stage of a pandemic.

Experts and ministers from around the world have been discussing ways to battle the bug at a WHO conference in Geneva. The focus is on developing a vaccine and at what point to declare a pandemic.

The WHO is worried the strain – a mix of swine, human and avian flu – could combine with the more deadly H5N1 type, which has just claimed the life a child in Egypt.
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
This is also the same place where the death is being investigated as being from swine flu.

http://www.wxvt.com/Global/story.asp?S=10381382&nav=menu1344_2

New swine flu case detected in Arkansas

Associated Press - May 18, 2009 2:14 PM ET

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) - Arkansas health officials say they have confirmed a new case of swine flu in the state, this time from a resident of the state's most populous county.

Dr. James Phillips, an epidemiologist with the Arkansas Department of Health, says a person who lives in Pulaski County tested positive for the virus. Phillips says the person has recovered.

The doctor says three other "close contacts" with the patient came down with flulike symptoms. All recovered, and Phillips says they won't be tested.


So far, Arkansas has had seven confirmed cases of swine flu since the outbreak began several weeks ago. One came from Saline County, one was a school-aged child in Lawrence County and four others came from a group of National Guard airmen visiting from Nevada and New Jersey.

UPDATE -- He tested negative.

Initial reports said he tested positive for multiple flu strains, yet none of them are mentioned, I thought that was odd

http://www.cwarkansas.com/news/loca...topsy-results-are/Joy5lgh33UunXmSiP_FPMg.cspx

Possible swine flu death autopsy results are negative

Last Update: 7:04 pm

The results are back on a possible swine flu death in Arkansas. This, as the state's health department announces a third case of the flu, this one in Pulaski County.

On Monday afternoon there are still no deaths from the H1N1 virus. Over the weekend the health department tested a person who coroners thought might have died from this new flu strain but we have now learned that person tested negative.

"The Pulaski County coroner had released the media that there was a possible death from swine flu. We tested in our lab, and that person did not die of swine flu. "

All patients have recovered. “No, I don't think we're seeing a resurgence here, these cases don't surprise us. We felt like we would have disease in the state,” Ann Wright with the Arkansas Health Department said.

“We're concerned in the sense that we want to stop the spread of illness. You don't want people to get sick, you don't want potential deaths. The good news is the illness we're seeing here is less severe than the illness we saw in Mexico. So, that's encouraging,” Wright said.

But people are still urged to take precautions. “You know, no one is out of the woods yet, I mean we had a new confirmed case today here in Arkansas. Everyone just needs to go on and be smart about it. That's the key. Just do the smart thing. Wash your hands often and if you're sick stay home,” Wright said.

Are concerned about resurgence in the fall CDC working on a vaccine. Over the weekend world health officials saw a surge in swine flu cases. In New York an assistant principal became the first death in the city from swine flu.

The flu has forced governments around the world to close schools and cancel events.
 
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SassyinAZ

Inactive
Some interesting nuggets in here, yeah, answering my own question from earlier, shhhhhh don't tell Dad, he loves it when I talk to myself.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/may/18/swine-flu-pandemic-britain-japan

Swine flu not yet a full-blown pandemic, UK and Japan tell WHOCountries fear raising alert from phase 5 to pandemic could affect fight against other flu viruses

Sarah Boseley, health editor
guardian.co.uk, Monday 18 May 2009 18.47 BST
Article history

Britain and Japan today tried to stave off any move to classify swine flu as a full-blown pandemic, arguing at the World Health Assembly in Geneva that the spread of the infection should not automatically cause an escalation in the global response.

"We need to give you and your team more flexibility as to whether we move to phase 6," the UK health secretary, Alan Johnson, told Margaret Chan, director general of the World Health Organisation.

Even though Japan now has more than 130 cases, mostly among teenagers, and has closed 2,000 schools and cancelled public events, it argued the WHO's alert system should be changed so that a pandemic would be declared only when the virus starts to be transmitted outside of institutions such as schools, where it inevitably passes around very quickly.


Although more than 8,829 cases have been reported worldwide, only 76 people have died, 68 of whom were in Mexico. The eight others, in the US, Canada and Costa Rica, all had other underlying medical conditions. The most recent deaths included a teacher in New York, Mitchell Wiener, 55, who died at the weekend.

If the WHO declares the swine flu alert should move up from the current phase 5 to the highest level of phase 6, a whole raft of new measures and precautions will be triggered. The worry for the UK will be the requirement for vaccine manufacturers to switch production from the seasonal flu jab to a vaccine specifically against the H1N1 swine flu strain.

The swine flu at the moment appears to cause a mild illness, whereas the flu strains that arrive in the winter can kill thousands of elderly and vulnerable people.

Chan told the assembly that the epidemic is in "a grace period" and said she does not want to raise the alert to phase 6 yet. However, she added that nobody could tell how long this stage of the epidemic would last. The danger, she said, is that swine flu could mix with other flu strains, such as H5N1 bird flu, and become far more lethal.

Scientists could argue that the conditions for phase 6 have already been met, with extensive transmission across the US, which has nearly 5,000 confirmed cases, and easy passage between countries.

The US, which does not have an all-embracing healthcare system which can easily diagnose and treat all those infected, is no longer able to contain the spread.

Dr Richard Besser, acting director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told the meeting the outbreak is "not winding down" and "widespread transmission" continues.

In Europe, the UK and Spain have the most confirmed cases, with 101 and 103 cases respectively.
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
hmmmmmm, come to think of it, we've not heard much of Americans travelling abroad being quarantined as citizens from other countries have been.

Now I need to tighten my tinfoil!

http://news.smh.com.au/breaking-news-technology/tuesday-ams-20090519-bd2h.html

CHINA-A WEEK IN QUARANTINE

LINGANG, China _ Greasy food, TV reruns, temperature checks and boredom. My wife and I are in perfect health, but we spent seven days in Chinese quarantine because our flight to Shanghai included a two-hour layover in Cancun, and Mexico is the epicenter for swine flu. Ironically, travelers from the U.S., which now has the most confirmed swine flu cases of any nation, do not require quarantine. By Will Weissert

Additional details -- gotta love their humor!

http://dailymail.com/News/NationandWorld/200905180734?page=2&build=cache

Monday May 18, 2009
Trip to China for wedding takes bizarre flu twist
Couple misses event as they are taken to remote hotel for 7-day quarantine


by The Associated Press

The Chinese government is sending Mexicans, and other travelers who were recently in Mexico, to a week of mandatory quarantine in the isolated hotel that is closed to the general public to prevent the spread of swine flu.

LINGANG, China - There are four of them waiting for us, tottering about the hotel parking lot in yellow biohazard suits.

"One question," says the translator, before he lets us out of a government van that's locked from the outside. "Would you like separate rooms or a room together?"

"We're married," we say.

"Yes," he replies, sweating under his plastic safety goggles. "Separate rooms or together?"

Uh-oh.


My wife and I are in perfect health, but after flying to China for my college friend's wedding we're being quarantined in a remote hotel for seven days.

The reason: Our flight from our home in Havana included a layover in Cancun, and China is taking no chances with swine flu.

Never mind that we were in Cancun for only two hours, that we didn't leave the airport and that Mexican doctors with electronic thermometers checked us for fever on arrival and departure.

Never mind that when our Continental Airlines flight from Newark touched down in Shanghai, we and everyone else on board were not allowed to leave our seats until health workers clamored aboard and pointed a blue beam at our foreheads to take our temperatures.

The Mexican stamps in our passports - my wife is Chilean, I'm American - are enough for authorities to pull us out of line at immigration and send us to a medical room where attendants in white lab coats take our temperature yet again and give us surgical masks.

I produce the wedding invitation with the groom's cell phone number, hoping the doctor will let us call. The doctor - one of the few people at the airport who speaks English - mistakenly thinks we came to China to get married.

"Sorry you have to spend your honeymoon like this," he says.

After 3 1/2 hours, a man in uniform - speaking by phone with a communist official everyone calls "the leader" - announces we will be confined to a hotel room for seven days.

We say we'll simply fly back home. He tells us that isn't possible.

That draws a protest from my wife, Chilean journalist Monica Medel, who notes that while the United States has more swine flu cases than Mexico, I'm the only one of the 200-plus Americans on our plane going into quarantine.

"Why aren't Americans being quarantined?" she asks.

"Right," says the doctor. "That's the same question all of us have been asking."


And so we are placed in a van and driven to a hotel in Lingang Harbor City, a new industrial zone south of Shanghai. We wonder if it's just a bad dream induced by jet lag, but the hotel workers in hazmat getups leave little doubt this is real.

The hotel is closed except for people in quarantine, and the first day we are the only foreigners. Because government attendants still think we're on our honeymoon, we get the nicest room: a suite with a king-size bed, a couch and a large balcony with a view of the ocean, vast open spaces and farmland in the distance.

The TV gets 25 Chinese channels, plus CNN International and one Chinese government station in English. A public service announcement about not stealing cable signals in Japan runs again and again.

We watch a lot of badminton, "Sister Act" dubbed into Mandarin and music videos from a Chinese act resembling the Backstreet Boys. We quickly tire of Larry King reruns, and switch to the other English-language channel, which constantly repeats a round-table discussion about trash collection in Beijing.

The English is iffy. A news anchor discussing a "cross-Straits forum" between Chinese and Taiwanese leaders pronounces it like "cross-dress forum," sending us into fits of laughter. You get your laughs where you can around here: We get more bored and stir crazy with each passing hour.

Pleasant women in biohazard suits and old-fashioned, underarm thermometers take our temperature every day at 7 a.m. and noon. They giggle when we try to speak with them in Mandarin. We think they are different women each time, but it's hard to tell behind the suits and masks.

Every morning, a man with a tank on his back fumigates the hallway carpets. Workers come into our room to scrub the floor and furniture with disinfectant. They give us disinfectant pills for the toilet: You throw in 10 before using it and 10 afterward. The garbage can has a mustard-yellow bag inside, marked "Warning! Infectious Medical Waste."

There's bottled water and green tea and three meals a day, featuring more pork, beef, fish, rice, soup, yogurt and fruit than we can possibly eat, though I'm afraid that not cleaning my plate may make someone think I'm sick. Everything is good at first, but so greasy that my wife starts claiming she's a vegetarian.

Hotel workers set the food in the hallway and move back so we can pick it up. Apparently, they're scared we'll give them the flu.

We put on the hotel's cotton slippers and spend most of the day in bed - sleeping, reading, watching TV - or on the bed, eating or playing cards.

There's no one guarding the door, but there are enough people around that we get the sense they'd know if we tried to leave. We put on our surgical masks and drift out into the hall to see who our neighbors are.

Most are Chinese who came into contact with a traveler from Mexico or another country China considers a swine flu risk. Eventually we meet Ivan Rojas, an auto parts engineer from Mexico who has lived in China for four years. He came back from three weeks' vacation in his native country, prepared for the quarantine.

He gives us his cell phone number and invites us for a drink once we're all out.

We have already missed the wedding on Saturday, in which I was to be one of the best men. A couple of days before the ceremony, the groom took a taxi out to our hotel - "an hour from the middle of nowhere," he says - and brought us a laptop, some wedding magazines his bride had lying around and a six-pack of beer we can't refrigerate.

We weren't allowed to go down and see him, but we waved from our balcony, six stories up.

About the time of the wedding, a woman padded in to our room, her biohazard suit making swishing noises as she moved. She took our temperature and declared us normal.

"OK. OK," she said.

I think I'll celebrate by popping a warm beer.

AP-ES-05-18-09 1538EDT
 
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SassyinAZ

Inactive
Japan, 144

nn20090519a1a.jpg


http://search.japantimes.co.jp/print/nn20090519a1.html

H1N1 flu surges in Kansai
All Osaka, Hyogo schools close; public urged to be vigilant but calm

By ERIC JOHNSTON

Staff writer

KOBE — The number of domestic swine flu cases reached 140 in Hyogo and Osaka as of Monday evening, prompting fears of an epidemic and leading to calls from the two governors to shut down all schools in the prefectures and for the central government to do more.


Including the four cases confirmed early this month, in which three high school students and a teacher returned from Canada to Narita airport with the H1N1 virus, a total of 144 people have so far been infected with the new flu.


In Tokyo, the government urged the public to stay calm, saying it is doing everything in its power to prevent a further spread of the H1N1 virus.

"We would like to ask people to be on guard but at the same time continue to react calmly," Chief Cabinet Secretary Takeo Kawamura said. "The government will take all possible measures to completely secure the safety of the public and swiftly dispatch accurate information."

But local officials warned more confirmed cases were likely to follow throughout this week, while health experts continued efforts to discover how the potentially deadly virus infected people who had not been abroad and why the vast majority of cases so far are high school students.

All elementary, junior high and high schools in Hyogo and Osaka prefectures have been ordered closed for a week while health checks are conducted and students suspected of having contracted the virus are monitored.

Many private educational facilities in Hyogo Prefecture, including universities and technical colleges, have voluntarily canceled classes.

The closure of nursery schools was hitting working mothers hard, Kobe officials said, with many searching for friends and relatives to watch over their children.

At Sannomiya Station, Kobe's railway hub, there was concern but not panic Monday morning as the vast majority of commuters were seen wearing protective masks.

Coffee shops and restaurants had fewer customers than usual, but supermarkets and convenience stores were busy with customers purchasing food and supplies in case they are forced to stay indoors.

"In some ways, it's similar to what happened after the 1995 Great Hanshin Earthquake, when there were also fears of an influenza outbreak," said Toshio Kotera, 31, a Kobe resident who works near the station.

"Like then, everybody is now making emergency preparations in case they get sick or have to be quarantined."

Kobe residents were especially nervous about the news that a 50-year-old woman working at a kiosk in Sannomiya Station had contracted the virus.

West Japan Railway Co. shut down its kiosks at the station. A female employee in her 20s at Mitsubishi UFJ Bank's Sannomiya branch also contracted the virus and the bank responded by asking its staff at the branch to remain at home.

At Osaka's railway hub of Umeda Station, there were far more people wearing masks than Sunday, but businesses remained open and concern was minimal. In front of the Osaka Municipal Government office in Kita Ward, a Japanese Red Cross blood donation drive was taking place, with only a sign asking donors to spray their hands with disinfectant before giving blood.

But Hyogo Gov. Toshizo Ido and Osaka Gov. Toru Hashimoto, who were in Tokyo to attend a meeting of governors, told reporters that the situation is rapidly turning into an epidemic and that their prefectures are limited in what they can do.

"The situation is getting close to epidemic proportions and we need the central government's help," Ido told health minister Yoichi Masuzoe.

"The health minister has all of the authority and responsibility and has to get the central government to move. In this kind of a situation, we'll follow what the health ministry says," Hashimoto told a morning news conference in Osaka, where he issued an epidemic warning despite being urged by some officials that it was too early to do so.

Hyogo Prefecture announced a number of measures it was taking to deal with the spread, including assistance for purchasing medical kits to check for fever, and financial support for commuting to and from local fever centers.

Support for the local tourism industry, where hotels and other facilities are facing cancellations, especially by school groups from around the country, will also be offered, according to Hyogo officials.

Osaka officials said hundreds of people had called the prefectural flu hotline Monday.

In Kobe, health officials worried about patients overwhelming local medical facilities have asked that only those with high fevers go to hospitals and that all others call local fever consultation centers first.

Later Monday, signs of a further spread of domestic infections were seen beyond Osaka and Hyogo.

In nearby Nara Prefecture, more than 1,000 junior and high school students in the prefecture were absent from school Monday complaining of illnesses, although links to the H1N1 virus were unclear, officials said.

During a meeting to discuss how to handle the spreading virus, Nara officials learned that 1,117 students, including 453 junior high school students, 646 high school students, and 18 students at special schools, were absent Monday. Several teachers were reportedly sick as well.

The officials said the students will be checked for the H1N1 virus, but the results are likely to take a couple of days.

Additional reporting by Masami Ito in Tokyo
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
New York is a flipping mess of spreading germs. They were watching 18 schools last night, this afternoon, its 40.

http://gothamschools.org/2009/05/18/another-school-closes-uft-launches-flu-hotline/

Union says swine flu could be in 40 schools, launches flu hotline
by Liz Goodwin

A day after a Queens assistant principal died from swine flu, the teachers union says it is monitoring 40 schools where higher-than-normal numbers of children are calling in sick. The United Federation of Teachers said today it is launching a hotline to keep track of the disease.

The union’s watch list doubled in size over the weekend, spokesman Ron Davis told GothamSchools. At least four more schools were closed today, bringing the total number of closed schools up to 14, according to the Department of Education. Davis said the list of 40 schools includes some that have already been closed.

The union is using its hotline as an information source for people to call in and learn which schools are closed in their district. Union chapter leaders will report to the hotline daily about absentee numbers for students and teachers at their schools. (Each district in Queens, where the epidemic appears to be centered, has its own number; the other boroughs have one number each.)

The UFT gave the Department of Education and the Department of Health the list of at-risk schools today, Davis said. The two city agencies decide together which schools should close.

Davis said teachers are remaining calm. “There are teachers out there who are obviously concerned but our teachers as a rule don’t panic,” he said.

The mayor addressed the disease’s spread in a press conference today, saying that it’s possible more schools could close this week.
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
Update on the Montana prison employee, tested negative

http://billingsgazette.net/articles/2009/05/18/news/state/24-prison.txt

Prison employee has seasonal flu
By The Associated Press

HELENA - Normal activities are resuming at the Montana State Prison in Deer Lodge after tests revealed an employee with influenza did not have the swine flu virus.

Prison officials say the employee had a normal, seasonal flu.

Normal activities resumed Monday and visitation was scheduled to resume Wednesday.


Visitation was canceled over the weekend and the prison limited group activities and did not move inmates in or out of the prison while it awaited final lab results. The prison has 1,480 inmates and about 600 staff.
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
http://www.cbsnews.com/blogs/2009/04/28/politics/politicalhotsheet/entry4975598.shtml

April 28, 2009 5:12 PM
DHS Sets Guidelines For Possible Swine Flu Quarantines
Posted by Declan McCullagh |

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has sent a memo to some health care providers noting procedures to be followed if the swine flu outbreak eventually makes quarantines necessary.

DHS Assistant Secretary Bridger McGaw circulated the swine flu memo, which was obtained by CBSNews.com, on Monday night. It says: "The Department of Justice has established legal federal authorities pertaining to the implementation of a quarantine and enforcement. Under approval from HHS, the Surgeon General has the authority to issue quarantines."

McGaw appears to have been referring to the section of federal law that allows the Surgeon General to detain and quarantine Americans "reasonably believed to be infected" with a communicable disease. A Centers for Disease Control official said on Tuesday that swine flu deaths in the U.S. are likely.

Federal quarantine authority is limited to diseases listed in presidential executive orders; President Bush added "novel" forms of influenza with the potential to create pandemics in Executive Order 13375. Anyone violating a quarantine order can be punished by a $250,000 fine and a one-year prison term.

A Homeland Security spokesman on Tuesday did not have an immediate response to followup questions about the memo, which said "DHS is consulting closely with the CDC to determine appropriate public health measures."

The memo from McGaw, who is DHS' acting assistant secretary for the private sector, also said: "U.S. Customs and Coast Guard Officers assist in the enforcement of quarantine orders. Other DOJ law enforcement agencies including the U.S. Marshals, Federal Bureau of Investigation, and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives may also enforce quarantines. Military personnel are not authorized to engage in enforcement."

Quarantines are hardly new: their history stretches at least as far back as the Bible, which describes a seven-day period of isolation that priests must impose when an infection is apparent. The word literally means a period of 40 days, which cities along the Mediterranean shipping routes imposed during the plague of the 15th century, a legal authority reflected in English law and echoed in U.S. law.

Congress enacted the first federal quarantine law in 1796, which handed federal officials the authority to assist states in combating the yellow fever epidemic.

In response to the 1918 influenza epidemic, states levied quarantines and imposed mask laws – with the District of Columbia restricting residents to their homes and San Francisco adopting the slogan "Wear a Mask and Save Your Life! A Mask is 99% Proof Against Influenza." Public health authorities quarantined the entire campus of Syracuse University for two-and-a-half weeks in October of that year.

Until recently, the last involuntary quarantine in the United States was in 1963. Then, in 2007, Andrew Speaker, an Atlanta lawyer, was quarantined inside a hospital in Denver on suspicion of having extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis. It turned out that the CDC was incorrect and Speaker had a milder form of the disease.

The CDC's error is one example of how quarantines can raise civil liberties issues. If a suspected swine flu patient is confined to a hospital isolation ward for a week or two, who pays for the bills? What if private businesses find their buildings requisitioned in an emergency? Or if hospital employees charged with enforcing the quarantine fail to show up for work?

McGaw's memo on Monday also said that the federal plan to respond to pandemic influenza was "in effect."

The Bush administration released the National Strategy For Pandemic Influenza in November 2005; it envisioned closer coordination among federal agencies, the stockpiling and distribution of vaccines and anti-viral drugs, and, if necessary, government-imposed "quarantines" and "limitations on gatherings."

A Defense Department planning document summarizing the military's contingency plan says the Pentagon is prepared to assist in "quarantining groups of people in order to minimize the spread of disease during an influenza pandemic" and aiding in "efforts to restore and maintain order."
 

readerb

resident read-a-holic
These are the latest numbers for Wisconsin by county as of: 3p - MAY 18, 2009:
Courtesy: http://pandemic.wisconsin.gov/

County: Probable cases - Confirmed cases

Adams 0 - 1
Brown 0 - 13*
Calumet 0 - 2
Columbia 0 - 10
Crawford 0 - 1 (new county add)
Dane 0 - 61
Dodge 0 - 1
Door 0 - 1 (new county add)
Dunn 0 - 1
Eau Claire 0 - 1
Fond du Lac 0 - 7
Green 0 - 1
Jefferson 0 - 1
Kenosha 0 - 9
Manitowoc (removed)
Milwaukee 0 - 508
Outagamie 0 - 2
Ozaukee 0 - 9
Polk 0 - 3
Price 0 - 1
Racine 0 - 6
Rock 0 - 9
Shawano 0 - 1
Sheboygan 0 - 5
Waukesha 1 - 39

CountyID Pending 0 - 72
Total Count 1 - 765


*One confirmed case reported as a Manitowoc County resident on 5/15/09 was found to be a resident of Brown County upon further investigation.
 

readerb

resident read-a-holic
There was also this in local news:

Officials Close Lodi Schools Amid Flu Outbreak

Superintendent Says 6 Confirmed Cases As Of Friday
UPDATED: 8:23 pm CDT May 18, 2009

LODI, Wis. -- The Lodi School District announced on Monday that it planned to close its four schools after seven confirmed flu cases among students.

Michael Shimshak, Lodi school superintendent, said that there were seven confirmed cases of the so-called swine flu, or H1N1 virus, in the district located in Columbia County.

The students who are ill attend either Lodi Elementary, Lodi Middle or Lodi Primary school -- with the most confirmed cases at the elementary school. Columbia County has 10 reported cases of the flu virus, according to health officials.

The school shutdown starts on Tuesday. Shimsak said that the elementary and primary school will be closed for the week while the middle and high school will just be closed for the day. Officials said that the elementary and primary schools will reopen on May 26 after the Memorial Day holiday while they will close the middle and high schools on Tuesday and then monitor the situation.

As of Friday, four cases were confirmed at the elementary school and one each at the primary and middle schools, bringing the total to 6.

Late Monday afternoon, county health officials and the school district confirmed a seventh student has the virus and they were worried the virus may be spreading fast. To try to contain it, local officials, in consultation with the state Division of Health, decided to close the schools.

District officials said they need to collect more information on some very high absentee rates in the district. They said by the end of Monday, 26 percent of the elementary school population -- more than 90 students -- was out with influenza-like illnesses. The normal rate is about 5 percent, WISC-TV reported.

Local officials cite the "very high" absentee rate and the multiple confirmed cases as reason to close schools, even though the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has recommended that schools stay open.

Shimshak said that school officials are working cooperatively with the state health and education as well as county officials.

"I'm expecting we're going to be working with Columbia County health to evaluate the attendance records over (the) last two weeks to look for patterns in siblings and that kind of thing to ascertain whether or not we might expect another wave of this in our other schools," Shimsak said.

Lodi Primary School serves pre-kindergarten through second-grade students. Lodi Elementary School serves third grade through fifth grade.

Officials said that they've been communicating with area residents through the school district's Web site.

http://www.channel3000.com/news/19495837/detail.html
 

Catbird

Inactive
I thought I saw something about Greece being posted. If so, and this is a dupe, just scroll on by.


Greece confirms first case

From: http://english.capital.gr/news.asp?id=737559

"UPDATE: Greece Confirms First Case Of Swine Flu

ATHENS (AFP)--Greece on Monday recorded its first confirmed case of swine flu, a 19-year-old man who recently returned from the U.S., junior health minister Georges Papagiorgos told reporters.

The patient had returned from his first year of study in the U.S. on Saturday. "He only presented his first symptoms on Sunday."

He subsequently underwent tests at Sismanoglu hospital, one of two Athens medical centres equipped to deal with the new A/H1N1 virus, Papagiorgos added.

Although he was allowed home after initial treatment he had since been hospitalized at Sismanoglu, Greek media reports said.

His relatives were under medical surveillance and health officials were trying to warn those passengers who had shared the same flight from New York with him, Papagiorgos said.

Greece recording its first case brings to 41 the number of countries worldwide reporting confirmed cases. "
 

Catbird

Inactive
Family says he didn't, the "experts" say he did.

Clip from: http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/05/18/swine.flu.ny.death/index.html?eref=rss_health

"Official: Underlying condition present in N.Y. swine flu death

NEW YORK (CNN) -- An assistant principal who died after being hospitalized with the H1N1 virus did have an underlying condition, the New York City's health commissioner said Monday.

But Dr. Thomas Frieden would not discuss the nature of the condition.

Mitchell Wiener, assistant principal of Intermediate School 238 in Queens, died Sunday evening of complications of the H1N1 virus, commonly known as swine flu, hospital and state officials said.

A Flushing Hospital spokesman earlier had declined to say whether Wiener had any pre-existing medical conditions. ..."
 

Catbird

Inactive
Tuck this away for those nights when you have nothing else to keep you awake...

From: http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/2009051...90518185348;_ylt=Auw_HfiltvMRC.t_hRf9jfyJOrgF

"Swine flu poses dilemma for Hajj, say experts

HELSINKI (AFP) – Flu experts are casting a worried eye at the annual pilgrimage to Mecca, fearing that if swine influenza poses a threat six months from now, a health crisis would be massively complicated by the Hajj.

Specialists questioned at a major medical conference in Helsinki shuddered at the implications if a highly contagious, novel flu virus were unleashed at the world's biggest annual gathering.

In the grimmest scenarios, the pathogen would not only find easy pickings among the elderly, the weak and sick in Mecca -- it would also hitch a plane ride among pilgrims returning home and thus spread farther.

"Just imagine, you have a virus that starts to spread over the world, then you bring people together from all over the world, put them all together for a couple of weeks, then you take them out again," said Albert Osterhaus, a professor at the Erasmus Medical Centre at the University of Rotterdam in the Netherlands.

"If there's a mechanism by which you want to spread a virus, this is it."

Last December, an estimated two and a half million worshippers travelled to Islam's holiest site for the three-day fulfilment of their faith. This year's pilgrimage takes place November 25-28.

In interviews with AFP at the European Congress of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases (ECCMID), Osterhaus and other specialists cautioned against alarmism, but urged Hajj organisers to start formulating response plans.

"The Hajj will take place, it's not like one of those things which is like a Pink Floyd concert, and you say, 'we don't need the concert'. This event will go through, that's for sure," said Andreas Voess, professor of Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre in the Netherlands.

"I believe that the health authorities there, with the help of the WHO and others, would need to look at what do we do, what do we advise people... they have to be prepared and they have to start thinking about what to do now and not when they have got the first pilgrimage victim with influenza."

He added: "It is something that has to be looked at, it really does."

Since influenza (A)H1N1 swine flu leapt into the spotlight on April 24, nearly 8,500 people have fallen sick, according to the UN's World Health Organisation (WHO).

After originating in Mexico, it has swept into at least 39 countries and the WHO describes a pandemic as "imminent."

At present, the viral strain is considered relatively mild.

Even though it is a new genetic mix to which people do not appear to have immunity, it is roughly as contagious and virulent as normal (also called "seasonal") flu, which breaks out every year in slightly different strains and kills between quarter of a million and half a million people annually.

What will happen to the new virus in the coming months is the big unknown, creating a dilemma for watchdogs hoping to protect the Hajj.

"We cannot predict what will happen by that time, it might be striking, it might not, it might fade away," Osterhaus said.

One of Europe's top virologists, Osterhaus pointed to three ways the virus could go.

It could be ousted in the battle for Darwinian supremacy by the seasonal virus.

Or it could spread, developing into a pandemic that, by the standards of past killer flus, would be low-level. He drew a parallel with a 1957-58 pandemic that killed between one and four million people.

For pilgrims, the question is whether a pandemic vaccine will be available in time -- and in sufficient quantities -- to innoculate them.

The third, most frightening, scenario is that H1N1 could pick up genes by reassorting with other flu viruses, making it both more lethal as well as highly contagious. The nightmare benchmark for this is another H1N1 strain that in 1918-19 killed around 50 million people through "Spanish flu."

Pentti Huovinen, a professor of clinical microbiology at Finland's National Public Health Institute, said the challenge was to balance "the importance of religion and the threat of the disease."

"That's a question that we cannot answer very easily," he said."
 

Catbird

Inactive
Canada says the worst is over... except it might not be.

From: http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Politics/2009/05/18/9492646-cp.html

" Canada over worst of swine flu
By Steve Rennie, THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA - Canada's chief public health officer says the country has seen the worst of the swine flu - for now.

Dr. David Butler-Jones said Monday it appears that spread of the virus is waning. "It looks at this point like we're over the worst of it in Canada for this season," he said.

"But, again, I'm going to hedge my bets on that because we're watching very closely and it's still within the incubation period of previous cases, so you could see a second spike."


There has so far been a confirmed total of 520 cases - including one death - of the strain of H1N1 in Canada. Nearly all the cases have been mild.

The virus seemingly peaked around the end of last month and the beginning of this one, Butler-Jones said.

"Once we've been a couple of weeks past the presentation of cases, etc., and we see the numbers, then we can say with some confidence that we're over the worst," he said.


"We seem to be trending in that way, but we'll have to wait and see over the next few days."


Some health officials have suggested the virus isn't likely to peter out over the summer as flu strains tend to do when the mercury soars in the Northern Hemisphere.

Butler-Jones didn't rule out more cases over the summer and a resurgence in the fall.

"We are suspecting that this will be back in the fall given how widely it's spread so far," he said.

"We need to be planning for that, including the development of vaccines and other things."

The federal government has signed a contract with pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline to produce a new vaccine for swine flu when one is developed, Butler-Jones said. Every Canadian is covered for two doses of the vaccine under that deal.

Federal scientists are working on a vaccine strain at the National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg.

In a further sign that spread of the swine flu virus is tapering off, Ottawa lifted its advisory against non-essential travel to Mexico on Monday as flu cases there start to level off.

The federal government says travel to Mexico - the epicentre of the swine subtype of H1N1 - is no longer a risk to Canadians since the virus has been spreading through Canada for some time.

The Canada Border Services Agency will continue to visually check travellers for signs of illness.

But the Public Health Agency of Canada will cease some Mexico-specific travel measures such as distributing health alert notices to passengers on direct flights to Mexico and having quarantine officers meet every direct flight entering Canada from Mexico.

News of the travel advisory being lifted comes as Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq attends the annual World Health Assembly meeting in Geneva, Switzerland.

Several countries - including China, Britain and Japan - urged the World Health Organization against raising the swine flu alert to the highest level.

WHO Director General Dr. Margaret Chan agreed to keeping the alert level at the current Phase 5 out of a possible six - one level short of a worldwide pandemic.

Aglukkaq said Canada was one of the countries in Geneva pushing for the WHO to take into account whether the virus was causing severe or mild illness, not just how quickly it was spreading.

"It has been raised by other countries, as well," she said. "Canada is not alone in those thoughts." "
 

Catbird

Inactive
U.S. hospitalizations "up to" 200.

From: http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N18510599.htm

"US health officials troubled by new flu pattern
18 May 2009 20:00:32 GMT
Source: Reuters

* Pattern different from seasonal flu

* U.S. flu season running unusually long

* Average flu victim is teenager

(Updates throughout with news conferences)

By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor

WASHINGTON, May 18 (Reuters) - The new influenza strain circulating around most of the United States is putting a worrying number of young adults and children into the hospital and hitting more schools than usual, U.S. health officials said on Monday.

The H1N1 swine flu virus killed a vice principal at a New York City school over the weekend and has spread to 48 states. While it appears to be mild, it is affecting a disproportionate number of children, teenagers and young adults.

This includes people needing hospitalization -- now up to 200, said Dr. Anne Schuchat of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.


"That's very unusual, to have so many people under 20 to require hospitalization, and some of them in (intensive care units)," Schuchat told reporters in a telephone briefing.


"We are now experiencing levels of influenza-like illness that are higher than usual for this time of year," Schuchat added. "We are also seeing outbreaks in schools, which is extremely unusual for this time of year."

New York City Health Commissioner Dr. Thomas Frieden agreed with Schuchat.

"We're seeing increasing numbers of people going to emergency departments saying they have fever and flu, particularly young people in the 5 to 17 age group, " Frieden, who has been named by U.S. President Barack Obama as the new CDC director, told a news conference.

About half of all cases of influenza are being diagnosed as the new H1N1 strain, while the rest are influenza B, or the seasonal H1N1 and H3N2 strains. Flu season in the United States is usually almost over by May.

CDC officials say around 100,000 people are likely infected with the new flu strain in the United States and Schuchat said the 5,123 confirmed and probable cases and six deaths in the United States were "the tip of the iceberg."

MORE ILLNESS OVERALL

"We are seeing more reports of influenza-like illness from outpatient visits that we monitor than is typical for this time of year," Schuchat said.

Because doctors usually treat symptoms and only occasionally give flu tests to patients, the CDC must monitor reports of symptoms such as fever, cough and muscle aches to track flu activity. Some centers are doing actual influenza tests to confirm the patterns that are seen.

Influenza is a factor in 36,000 deaths a year in the United States and 250,000 to 500,000 deaths globally, the CDC says.

"Unlike the seasonal flu, we are seeing relatively few cases or hospitalizations in people over 65," Schuchat said. Usually flu kills the elderly and people with chronic diseases.

There is no evidence that a second, bacterial infection is worsening the H1N1 cases, Schuchat said.

When family members are questioned, it seems clear that children and teens are more prone to infection than older adults, Schuchat said. "People under 18 are more likely to have infections when another person in the family is infected," she said.

"One of our working hypotheses is that older adults may have some pre-existing protection against this virus due to their exposure long ago to some virus that may be distantly related," Schuchat said.

An alternative hypothesis is that it just has not had a chance to make its way into the older population yet.
(Editing by Julie Steenhuysen and Xavier Briand) "
 

Amberglass

Inactive
[B]Large outbreak of swine flu cases in Japan[/B]...OVER 5000

Large outbreak of swine flu cases in Japan


A station employee, right, and a train conductor wear masks as precaution against swine flu at Sannomiya station in Kobe
Testing at government laboratories in Tokyo have produced over 5,000 'highly likely' and 'probable' cases of swine flu.
Preliminary testing of samples collected this weekend by mandatory swabbing of all high school students leaving school by government labs in Tokyo and by a branch laboratory of Hoffmann LaRoche, who holds the patent on Tamiflu, has shown that there were 5,417 cases of influenza that were serotyped to be non-human/unknown origin A-H1N1.
Many of the probable cases should be confirmed after proper PCR testing of samples.
Cases are still mild
In a country where people routinely wear face masks on public transport to prevent the spread of coughs and colds, masks were sold out throughout all of Japan while several sellers attempting to hawk face masks at up to 800 yen (about £5.15 each) were arrested by police cracking down on scammers and scalpers.

Almost all of the probable cases are at home resting up, with students leaving classes being given 3 seperate full treatments of Tamiflu to bring home to family members.
One of the reasons that Japan quickly reached the status of most infected country may be the lack of space on the small island nation and the sheer amount of people that use public transport and carpool.

http://bbclatest.com/2/hi/asia-pacific/8158141.stm
 

Amberglass

Inactive
China reports suspected case of swine flu in Guangdong

China reports suspected case of swine flu in Guangdong


CHINA'S Ministry of Health said Monday that a man in the southern coastal province of Guangdong who returned home on May 15 from a tour in the United States and Canada via the Republic of Korea and Hong Kong was suspected of having caught the A/H1N1 influenza.

En route from Hong Kong to Guangdong by train T810, he displayed symptoms such as a fever, and he had an elevated temperature upon arrival. He was sent to a hospital in Guangzhou and put into quarantine. The ministry said he was currently in stable condition.

If the diagnosis is confirmed, he would become the fourth known case of the flu on the Chinese mainland. The other three were in Chengdu, Sichuan Province; Jinan, Shandong Province and Beijing.

http://www.shanghaidaily.com/sp/article/2009/200905/20090518/article_401257.htm
 

Amberglass

Inactive
Swine Flu’s Spread in Japan May Prompt WHO to Declare Pandemic

Swine Flu’s Spread in Japan May Prompt WHO to Declare Pandemic
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By Simeon Bennett


May 19 (Bloomberg) -- Dozens of swine flu cases in Japan may prompt the World Health Organization to declare a pandemic, a former WHO adviser said, spurring demand for vaccines to fight the contagion.

Japan reported its first locally-transmitted case on May 16, and the number of people infected with the virus, formally known as A/H1N1, has jumped to 135 from 4 in less than two weeks. Evidence of human-to-human transmission in a region outside North America may prompt the WHO to raise its pandemic alert to the highest level, said Hitoshi Oshitani, the former head of the agency’s Western Pacific region.

“Japan is definitely having human-to-human transmission,” Oshitani said yesterday in a telephone interview. “The WHO will have to take the Japanese cases into consideration when deciding whether to raise the pandemic alert.”

Margaret Chan, the WHO’s director-general, and United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon are scheduled to broker an accord with executives from drugmakers such as Sanofi-Aventis SA and GlaxoSmithKline Plc in Geneva today to ensure developing countries can gain access to pandemic vaccines.

The outbreak worldwide extended to 8,829 infections in 40 nations as health officials from more than 190 countries began a meeting yesterday of the World Health Assembly in Geneva to debate whether swine flu is spreading widely enough to upgrade the threat to level 6, and declare it the first pandemic since 1968.

New York Fatality

In the U.S., a New York assistant school principal became the sixth person in the nation to die of swine flu as a health official warned the outbreak may linger in North America as “summer influenza.”

Mitchell Wiener, a 55-year-old assistant principal at Intermediate School 238 in Queens, died May 17 at Flushing Hospital Medical Center, said Andrew Rubin, a hospital spokesman. The New York health department said yesterday it will shut three more schools to prevent the spread of the virus, raising the number of closures to 14 since last week when flu-like symptoms flared again among public school students.

“The H1N1 virus is not going away despite what you may have heard,” said Anne Schuchat, interim deputy director for science and public health for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta. “It’s still circulating in the U.S. and people are continuing to get sick, to get hospitalized and to die.”

‘Very Unusual’

Flu season in the Northern Hemisphere usually ends this time of year as schools release students for vacation. The U.S. swine flu outbreak continues surging, which Schuchat said is “very unusual.”

“We wonder whether this strain will continue and give us a summer influenza,” Schuchat told reporters.

The typical summer recess for schools should help reduce the spread of H1N1, said William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, who is advising the CDC.

“My cloudy crystal ball thinks we will have low-level transmission throughout the summer,” Schaffner said yesterday in a telephone interview. “What’s happening now is that kids are exchanging the virus among themselves and then bringing it home to adults in the family. Once the children are dispersed out of school, transmission rates are likely to fall.”

Schuchat said swine flu’s symptoms are similar to those of seasonal flu, which causes the most severe complications in the elderly. The swine-derived virus is landing people ages 5 to 24 in hospitals more often than seasonal flu and hits fewer people older than 65, she said. People younger than 18 are more likely to become infected from another family member than are adults.

Long-time Immunity

A “working hypothesis” is that older adults were exposed to a virus “long ago” that gives them immunity against swine flu, Schuchat said. Another possibility is that “children are very good at transmitting, have lots of social contact, and they may shed the virus for a longer time,” Schuchat said.

Schaffner said that because so many health officials are tracking influenza so closely, it’s unlikely swine flu cases will be missed.

“If we’re looking harder we’re going to find more,” he said. “The question is how much more.”

The new H1N1 virus infected a woman arriving in the South Korean city of Incheon from Seattle, the fourth confirmed case in the Asian nation.

The 22-year-old transit passenger from Vietnam was quarantined at a South Korean hospital after she was suspected to have been infected with the virus, the Ministry of Health, Welfare and Family Affairs said today in an e-mailed statement.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=afY38M8xzhOg
 

Amberglass

Inactive
A New Pandemic Fear: A Shortage of Surgical Masks

A New Pandemic Fear: A Shortage of Surgical Masks
By BEVAN SCHNECK Tuesday, May. 19, 2009
A man wears a medical mask during the morning commute in New York City, April 29, 2009.
Brendan McDermid / Reuters
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The surgical face mask has become perhaps the most recognizable symbol of the H1N1 pandemic threat, but if the currently circulating flu virus does in fact reach full-fledged pandemic proportions, U.S. health officials say there won't be enough face masks to go around.



Schools Close As Spike in Swine Flu Cases Hits Japan
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A Plan for a Pandemic
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) says the nation would need more than 30 billion masks — 27 billion of the simple surgical kind, which can be worn safely for only about two hours before needing replacement, and 5 billion of the sturdier respirator variety, which also requires regular replacement — to protect all Americans adequately in the event of a serious epidemic. But the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Strategic National Stockpile currently contains only 119 million masks — 39 million surgical and 80 million respirator. That's less than 1% of the goal health officials set in 2007 following the devastation of Hurricane Katrina, which highlighted the country's shortages of vital medical gear. (See pictures of the swine flu in Mexico.)

The U.S. mask gap stands in stark contrast to what other nations have on hand: the U.S. has one mask for every three Americans (masks are not supposed to be shared), while Australia has 2.5 masks per resident and Great Britain boasts six. "With the recent outbreak of the novel H1N1 influenza virus," warned Representative Kay Granger, a Texas Republican, "it has become clear that we need to purchase more medical supplies and replenish the Strategic National Stockpile." (Read "How to Prepare for a Pandemic.")

Maskmakers are worried too, especially since ramping up production in the midst of a pandemic won't be easy. Most maskmaking operations have moved outside the U.S., and 90% of masks sold in the U.S. now come from Mexico or China. But if the U.S. suddenly put in orders for millions of masks, Mexico and China would be unlikely to export their supplies before making sure their own populations were fully protected. "HHS knows the problem exists and yet they won't tell the health-care industry," says Mike Bowen of Texas-based Prestige Ameritech, the largest and one of the last remaining American mask manufacturers. "If they would only admit the problem exists, American hospitals would buy American masks and the manufacturing infrastructure would return." (Read "Battling Swine Flu: The Lessons from SARS.")

Of course, the more basic question is, How much do masks really help to stem the spread of disease? It's unclear, according to the CDC, which isn't recommending that people wear masks amid the current H1N1 outbreak. The CDC website says that "very little is known about the benefits" of wearing masks during a pandemic, and that the best preventive steps are frequent hand-washing and covering one's mouth when coughing or sneezing. Along with these strategies, the most effective techniques for preventing contagion are so-called social-distancing measures, such as closing schools, churches, theaters and other public gatherings, and generally keeping people apart from one another — efforts that may be further encouraged by the presence of face masks.

Surgical masks by themselves may not do much to prevent transmission within the community in part because they are loose fitting, offering a weak barrier between infected and uninfected people — hence, the government's better advice to wash hands and cover up sneezes and coughs — and masks must be changed frequently to avoid contamination. Respirator masks, which have a tighter fit, filter 95% of airborne particles to give wearers better protection, so long as they wear them consistently — which most people generally fail to do.

Where masks do make a demonstrable difference is in the health-care setting, protecting caregivers from sick patients — both in hospitals and at home — and a national shortage could impact these front-line responders most severely. "Much of what is contained in the Strategic National Stockpile are vaccines and medicines," including 50 million doses of Tamiflu, says CDC spokesperson Von Roebuck, noting that more medical supplies must be purchased.

Meanwhile, as the H1N1 virus continues its rapid spread around the world — as of May 18, 40 countries had officially reported 8,829 cases, including 74 deaths — nervous customers have been snapping up face masks in the U.S. Prestige Ameritech's sales have doubled in recent weeks, forcing the company to maintain a seven-days-a-week production schedule to keep up with demand. Even though Prestige Ameritech is a wholesaler that sells its products to retailers, such as 3M, there have been so many people trying to buy masks directly from the Prestige factory in suburban Fort Worth that the company has had to lock all its doors. Whether or not face masks will protect people from disease, sometimes it helps just to have the illusion of security.

See TIME's Pictures of the Week.
http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1899526,00.html
 

Amberglass

Inactive
Japan shuts 4,000 schools over flu fears

Japan shuts 4,000 schools over flu fears
May 19, 2009 - 12:59PM
Japan closed more than 4,000 schools and kindergartens on Tuesday, double the previous day's number, to slow the spread of swine flu which has infected 163 people in the country, officials say.

Many people in the affected urban areas were wearing face masks after the western cities of Kobe and Osaka became the first in Japan to suffer domestic outbreaks of the (A)H1N1 virus which spread rapidly through two schools.

A total of 4,043 schools and kindergartens were closed in and around both cities at the request of government authorities, up from some 2,000 on Monday, an education ministry official said.

Japan's number of confirmed cases has risen to 163 - the fourth largest national figure on the world infection table - in the central Honshu island region since the first confirmed domestic infection was reported on Saturday.

No fatalities have been reported in Japan.

Experts warn the virus would likely soon spread to other regions, including the capital Tokyo, which with almost 36 million people is the world's most populous urban area and the heart of the Japanese economy.

The virus is believed to have spread between Kobe and nearby Osaka after high schools from the two cities met for a volleyball tournament, with some players and coaches feeling feverish after the games.

Japan's first confirmed cases of swine flu were four people who tested positive after they flew in from North America earlier this month. They were immediately quarantined along with about 50 fellow passengers.
http://news.smh.com.au/breaking-new...000-schools-over-flu-fears-20090519-bdmf.html
 

Hansa44

Justine Case
From Dr. Henry Niman

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/05180901/Swine_H1N1_Japan_6.html


Commentary

Transmission of Swine H1N1 In Japan Signals Phase 6
Recombinomics Commentary 14:46
May 18, 2009


Japan's four earlier suspected swine flu cases came from travelers inbound from North America, but this new bout appears to be wholly domestic. Most of the cases involve teenagers - the first confirmed infected on Saturday were high-school students on a volleyball team - but those sick with the new strain of flu now range from as young as 5 years old to 60. "It circulated silently without anybody thinking of it," says Peter Cordingley, spokesman for the WHO in Manila. "The virus is highly transmittable and signs of it breaking out of a contained area into the greater community must be watched and taken very seriously."

The above comments on community transmission of H1N1 in Japan (see updated map) again indicate that the pandemic is at phase 6. Early definitions of pandemic phases used sustained transmission as the definition of phase 6. However, the new definition used sustained transmission as the definition of phase 4, while phase 5 represent transmission in a region, and phase 6 was transmission worldwide.

Swine H1N1 has been transmitting worldwide for over a month. Testing outside of North America was largely limited to travelers from North America, but H1N1 was seeding prior to the enhance surveillance at airports, and transmission would have been largely undetected.

The levels in the United States (see updated map) are approaching the reported levels in Mexico, and travel from the US would increase seeding. However, these increases would also be prior to enhanced surveillance at airports. However, such testing is destined to fail, because travelers infected within a day or two of travel would not be detected. Similarly, as many as 1/3 of cases have no fever.

Although the CDC estimated that the number of true cases in the US was 100,00, that estimate is likely to be 1-2 orders of magnitude too low. Surveillance in the US detects about 0.1% of true cases, so the 1500 cases in the CDC weekly report would represent 1.5 million cases in the US alone, and this estimate may be low because many cases are mild, and those in regions not reported to have high levels are not tested.

Nationwide, the number of confirmed cases of swine H1N1 (including cases that are influenza A positive and non-typable) is close to the level reported for H3N2 for the entire season. The number of swine H1N1 cases is rapidly increasing, and in week 18 was almost 3 times the level of influenza A (1097 vs 401).

Thus, the widespread transmission in North America (Mexico, US, and Canada) insures worldwide transmission. Community transmission has already been reported in Scotland, and now there is confirmed transmission in Japan, leaving no doubt that the spread in North America has been extended to Europe and Asia.

The raising of the pandemic level to 6 is long overdue.

Media Link

Recombinomics Presentations

Recombinomics Publications

Recombinomics Paper at Nature Precedings
 

Caplock50

I am the Winter Warrior
Copied from post 3515:

“The H1N1 virus is not going away despite what you may have heard,” said Anne Schuchat, interim deputy director for science and public health for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta. “It’s still circulating in the U.S. and people are continuing to get sick, to get hospitalized and to die.”

‘Very Unusual’

Flu season in the Northern Hemisphere usually ends this time of year as schools release students for vacation. The U.S. swine flu outbreak continues surging, which Schuchat said is “very unusual.”

“We wonder whether this strain will continue and give us a summer influenza,” Schuchat told reporters."


Just as I predicted. "This flu likes hot weather".
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
Poor Dr. Niman, he's said that, and he's right by WHO's own standards, since Spain confirmed h2h on April 30th!!!

Cappy, that it likes hot weather has been confirmed in one of the early sequences by Dr. Niman as well, it adopted an avian feature that was posted about -- the seasonal thing, is just some useless words for the public to latch on to now.

5,000 in Japan :eek:

Only good thing going on there is we are finally getting some transparency from a .gov, timely testing and results (zippy fast they are), no playing with words, no delayed reporting, and their msm is up to date as well.

AND, their people are well informed, prepared, taking precautions and certainly NOT panicked as seems to be the American mantra.

I can't figure why so many want to keep their heads buried in the sand about this and its potentials, I really can't.
 
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