03/23 | Daily Bird Flu: How a Pandemic Spreads (Bad News for Cats)

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Link to yesterday's thread: http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?t=190597

Since January, 2004 WHO has reported human cases of avian influenza A (H5N1) in the following countries:

* East Asia and the Pacific:
o Cambodia
o China
o Indonesia
o Thailand
o Vietnam

* Europe & Eurasia:
o Azerbaijan
(see update)
o Turkey

* Near East:
o Iraq

For additional information about these reports, visit the
World Health Organization Web Site.

Updated March 21, 2006

Since December 2003, avian influenza A (H5N1) infections in poultry or wild birds have been reported in the following countries:

* Africa:
o Cameroon
o Niger
o Nigeria

* East Asia & the Pacific:
o Cambodia
o China
o Hong Kong (SARPRC)
o Indonesia
o Japan
o Laos
o Malaysia
o Mongolia
o Myanmar (Burma)
o Thailand
o Vietnam

* Europe & Eurasia:
o Albania
o Austria
o Azerbaijan
o Bosnia & Herzegovina (H5)
o Bulgaria
o Croatia
o Denmark (H5)
o France
o Georgia (H5)
o Germany
o Greece
o Hungary
o Italy
o Poland
o Romania
o Russia
o Serbia and Montenegro (H5)
o Slovak Republic
o Slovenia
o Sweden
o Switzerland
o Turkey
o Ukraine

* Near East:
o Egypt
o Iraq (H5)
o Iran
o Israel

* South Asia:
o Afghanistan
o India
o Kazakhstan
o Pakistan (H5)


For additional information about these reports, visit the
World Organization for Animal Health Web Site.

Updated March 21, 2006

http://www.cdc.gov/flu/avian/outbreaks/current.htm#animals

WHO, Avian Flu Timeline in .pdf: http://www.who.int/csr/disease/avian_influenza/timeline.pdf

:vik:
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Cats

How a Pandemic Spreads

How a Pandemic Spreads March 22, 2006 3:52PM

Health & Human Services Secretary Michael Leavitt says the H5N1 virus that causes avian flu could reach the U.S. by summer or fall -- a reasonable assumption, given that it has spread to at least five new countries in March alone.


Springtime usually brings joy to Alaska after a long winter. This year, however, it is also likely to bring the avian flu virus, carried by infected wild birds migrating from Asia. If so, the virus could spread to birds in the lower 48 states in a matter of months.

At that point, the population that most worries the world's infectious disease trackers is not so much the nation's human population -- the virus has yet to evolve into a form that easily infects humans. It is not even domestic poultry, since most U.S. commercial bird flocks are sealed away in covered buildings, never coming in contact with wild birds.

What keeps some scientists up at night is the 75 million household cats, plus the 40 to 60 million feral cats roaming the countryside, some of which are sure to eat infected birds. "If it gets into cats in this country it will spread like crazy," warns Larry Glickman, a professor of epidemiology at Purdue University School of Veterinarian Medicine. "Many of these cats sleep in bed with their owners. The potential that they could spread it to humans is very large."

Cash Shortage


The federal government is well aware of the potential dangers of an avian flu outbreak in humans. So it is dramatically stepping up efforts to monitor migratory birds, particularly in Alaska.

Health & Human Services Secretary Michael Leavitt says the H5N1 virus that causes avian flu could reach the U.S. by summer or fall -- a reasonable assumption, given that it has spread to at least five new countries in March alone. In addition, the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC) just reported that a new variant of the virus has evolved with genetic characteristics that increase the risk of infection in humans.

At this point, surveillance efforts in the U.S. and overseas are focused on birds and the people who come in contact with them. There is no official effort to monitor household pets for infection. And while Purdue's vet school has, in fact, developed such a system under a grant from the CDC, no one has stepped forward to finance its implementation.

Birds, Pigs, People

Meanwhile, epidemiologists have confirmed that the virus has killed three cats, a dog, and a weasel in Europe in recent weeks. "This is what we're most worried about," says Walter Boyce, director of the Wildlife Health Center at University of California-Davis's School of Veterinary Medicine. "Every time this virus jumps into a new species, it has a chance to undergo more evolution."

In the virus world, evolution can lead to a scary narrative. As long as H5N1 is passed primarily among birds, a human pandemic is not in the cards. The virus has so far been found in 178 people, 101 of whom died. All got it from handling live or recently killed poultry.

As the virus finds new hosts, however, the opportunity arises for it to swap tiny bits of its DNA with a virus that can be exchanged among humans. Recent studies have suggested, for example, that the Spanish flu pandemic of 1918 was the result of an avian virus that mingled with bits of a virus found in pigs. The end result was a microbe that was both deadly and highly transmissible.

Monitoring Samples


Nobody knows whether or not the current strain of H5N1 will eventually cause a human pandemic. Boyce says we should be thinking of how to handle the intermediate stage: "What do we need to do when the virus is found in geese or even cats, but not in humans? How do we keep people from panicking?"

To keep tabs on the cat population,
Glickman and other researchers at Purdue have designed a computerized surveillance system that analyzes veterinarian records for unusual clusters of symptoms that might indicate an infectious outbreak.

The data flows in from more than 500 animal hospitals spread throughout the U.S. They are operated by Portland (Ore.)-based Banfield the Pet Hospital, which, unlike most hospitals for human patients, keeps sophisticated, system-wide electronic records. The data can be extracted on a daily, or even hourly, basis. "By routinely testing blood samples from cats and pet birds that come to the Banfield hospitals, we can monitor the emergence and movement of the avian flu virus," says Glickman.

Rational Fears?


Other researchers share concerns about animal populations. Tracey McNamara, a veterinary pathologist at New York's Bronx Zoo, worries about the feces of infected wild birds, a common reservoir for the virus. Geese produce a pound of feces a day and some studies have found that viruses can survive there for up to a week.

William Karesh, director of the field vet program for the Wildlife Conservation Society, says birds smuggled in from nations where the virus is well-established form the most likely path of transmission to North America. He calls for stepped up monitoring of the ports.

There is, of course, an optimistic cohort of researchers who believe the virus will never mutate to become an infectious human disease. Or perhaps, if it does, it will turn out to be more benign than everyone expects. The Hong Kong flu pandemic of 1964, for example, killed about 34,000 people in the U.S. That's actually fewer than die during a normal flu season. But since the course of this disease cannot be predicted, our best defensive action is to monitor the animals that are the first to succumb.

http://www.sci-tech-today.com/story.xhtml?story_id=11200002TIS0

:vik:
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Thin Line Stops Bird Flu Spread

Bird Flu Can't Infect Human Nose or Throat -- Yet

By Daniel DeNoon
WebMD Medical News

March 22, 2006 - A thin red line now keeps people infected with bird flu from infecting others.

This shallow line of defense is a matter of anatomy -- at the cellular level. A new study shows that bird flu can infect cells that line the human lung. But it can't infect most of the cells lining the nose, throat, and sinuses.

Getting the bird flu virus deep in the lung is hard to do, but it can be lethal when it happens. However, spreading the virus is another story. If the virus can't replicate in the nose and throat, it can't be spread by sneezing and coughing.


This may explain why the sparks that could set off a bird flu pandemic -- to date, 184 human infections with the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu -- have never turned into a conflagration, says study leader Yoshihiro Kawaoka, DVM, PhD. Kawaoka is professor of virology at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.

"It has been an enigma why people get sick and die from H5N1 avian flu virus, but the virus does not spread well in humans," he tells WebMD. "Our finding explains it."

Kawaoka's research team reports the findings in the March 23 issue of the journal Nature.


How Flu Virus Hooks Up

What stops the bird flu? Viruses infect cells by latching on to receptor molecules on the cell surface. Flu viruses bind to sialic acid (SA) receptors.

Most H5N1 viruses -- there are now many strains -- need a receptor in the alpha2,3Gal configuration. In humans, only deep lung cells carry that SA configuration. Nose, throat, and sinus cells have SA in the alpha2,6Gal configuration.

If that doesn't sound very different, it isn't. It would only take a few small mutations for the bird flu virus to be able to latch on to human cells, Kawaoka says.

Flu expert David Topham, PhD, of the University of Rochester, N.Y., says this part of the flu virus mutates rapidly.

"It is relatively easy for the bird flu virus to accommodate such a thing," Topham tells WebMD. "And when people get the infection deep in the lung, there would be selective pressure on the virus to acquire this mutation. So this adaptation to humans might not have to happen in another species. It might occur in humans."

In fact, it's already happened. Kawaoka finds that an H5N1 virus isolated from an infected patient in Hong Kong already was able to hook up to SA receptors throughout the human respiratory system. The world may have dodged a bullet when that virus failed to spread.

Kawaoka says bird flu viruses have to collect other mutations, in addition to the SA-receptor mutation, in order to cause a human pandemic.

"One mutation that makes the avian virus grow better in human cells was found in recent human H5N1 viruses -- which was scary," he says. "We don't know how many mutations in different genes are required for the avian influenza virus to become a human pandemic. That is the problem. We don't know where we are."

http://www.webmd.com/content/article/120/113701?src=RSS_PUBLIC

:vik:
 

New Freedom

Veteran Member
http://www.minnesotamonthly.com/articles/pandemicProphecy.html

The Pandemic Prophecy

He doesn’t know when it’s coming, or how bad it will be. But Dr. Michael Osterholm, one of the world’s foremost infectious disease experts, believes a flu pandemic is inevitable. And to hear him tell it, we’re nowhere near ready.

By Tim Gihring
Photographs by Eric Moore
Published April 2006

One hundred eighty million people are dead—two out of every hundred in the world—including 1.7 million in the United States and more than 30,000 in Minnesota. Vaccines are unavailable. Borders are closed, supply lines shut down. Victims huddle on cots in the Metrodome. Doctors and nurses are too scared to come to work. Bodies are piling up in the streets.

This isn’t the latest Steven Spielberg thriller; it isn’t the aftermath of a nuclear holocaust. It’s the flu. And former state epidemiologist Dr. Michael Osterholm, for one, believes this scenario could easily become reality.

“Pandemics happen,” Osterholm is fond of saying, as if it’s a catch phrase from a bumper sticker, as if it’s something we all just know. But most people don’t know that pandemics—diseases that spread across large swaths of geography and population—are as inevitable as earthquakes, hurricanes, and tsunamis. Or that the flu—which, in its so-called “common” form, currently kills 36,000 Americans each year—can potentially kill millions more. Pandemic influenza has rampaged around the world 10 times in the past 300 years, and three times in the past century: in 1918, 1957, and 1968. The big one was 1918, when more people died of the Spanish flu than fell in the trenches of World War I. And the disease didn’t just affect the very young and the very old. People between the ages of 20 and 40 stood a better chance of living if they went off to war than if they stayed home in America.

Some people, such as government officials and business leaders who might mitigate a crisis, should know this. But they don’t, or they don’t believe it, or they don’t know what to do with the information. Not all of them, anyway. Not yet. And that’s why Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy (CIDRAP) at the University of Minnesota, can’t stop talking about pandemic influenza. “I can’t emphasize enough,” he says, “that it’s not a matter of if but when.”

The pandemic may or may not be H5N1, the avian flu virus currently winging its way around the world from Asia, where bird-to-human transmissions of the strain were first reported in 1997. The outbreak may happen tomorrow or 10 years from now—there’s no way to predict. And it may not be as bad as the scenario described above, which assumes a repeat of 1918. But Osterholm believes H5N1 is “a 1918-like virus.” Given the way it continues to evolve, to change genetically, it may one day develop the capacity to jump from human to human. Then, Osterholm says, we’ll be updating the death toll not monthly, as we are now in Asia, but by the minute.

“I believe an influenza pandemic will be like a 12- to 18-month global blizzard that will ultimately change the world as we know it today,” Osterholm testified before Congress in December. He’s been singing this dirge for years now, on CNN, Oprah, Nightline, and in the ears of some of the world’s most powerful people. Osterholm served as an adviser to the Clinton administration, and he consults with the Bush administration on numerous public health issues, from pandemic flu to bioterrorism. He was also an adviser to the late King Hussein of Jordan, who would fly him across the world on a day’s notice for briefings on infectious diseases, bioterrorism, and Jesse Ventura (the king was a big fan).

But it’s only in the past year or so that a critical mass of interest has developed around the pandemic flu threat. In his final remarks as the nation’s czar of public health, former Secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy Thompson surprised many in Washington by naming pandemic flu the health threat that worries him most. Last November, Bush appeared on national television to announce the federal government’s pandemic flu response plan, which included the stockpiling of enough vaccine to inoculate 20 million Americans, and called on Congress for $7.1 billion in emergency funding (about half that much was appropriated).

Osterholm is right in the middle of these discussions, whether advising federal health officials or talking to the media. Former Nightline host Ted Koppel called a recent article in the journal Foreign Affairs, in which Osterholm outlined the need for pandemic flu planning at every level of society, “required reading for all Americans.” In February, Osterholm hosted a national summit in Minneapolis on flu preparedness for businesses; Thompson and his successor, Michael Leavitt, attended, as did Koppel. Tellingly, when national health officials launched a series of 50 state meetings on pandemic influenza planning in December, they chose Minnesota as the site for the first roundtable.

Will all this planning be too little too late? Or, as some skeptical scientists and journalists claim, is it too much? And while the nation obsesses over a falling sky, might the floor fall out from under us with the onset of some new public-health threat? Osterholm is convinced we must do whatever we can—as soon as we can—to prepare for pandemic flu. “I can’t think of anything that raises a greater threat to this country’s security, its health, and its economy,” he says. Lately, in fact, he’s been thinking of little else.

When I first meet Michael Osterholm, he loads me up with a transcript of his latest Congressional testimony, a printout of his new PowerPoint presentation, and several recent articles on pandemic flu. Osterholm does not merely chat with reporters, he educates them. We meet in his office, which is filled with memorabilia from the history of disease prevention: antique quarantine signs from diphtheria and scarlet fever outbreaks, a plaque that says “The bug stops here.” Within these surroundings, Osterholm monitors the world of infectious disease by phone, e-mail, Internet, and TV. The television, tuned to CNN, sits across from his desk, and he frequently glances at it as we talk. “See,” he says at one point, gesturing to the screen, “‘Bird Flu Facts,’ coming up.”

Osterholm does not look like the prophet of anything, much less a diviner of disease. Technically, he is an infectious disease epidemiologist, which means he’s concerned with the incidence and spread of infectious diseases within populations. With his trim silver hair and blue suits, however, Osterholm resembles a businessman. And, like any good executive, he’s obsessed with results.

During his 24 years at the Minnesota Department of Health (1975 to 1999), Osterholm got those results, leading some of the nation’s largest investigations of infectious disease outbreaks, from HIV infection in health-care workers to hepatitis B transmission in hospitals. He first garnered national attention in the early 1980s with his work on toxic shock syndrome (TSS), a mystifying illness he helped trace to its bacterial source. The case put Osterholm and other researchers up against the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which initially focused its TSS investigation on a brand of tampon linked to the illness and which disputed arguments made by Osterholm and others that the culprit was a new strain of the staphylococcus bacterium. Osterholm, then only in his mid-twenties, may have suffered publicly for disagreeing with the medical establishment, but his sharp—and ultimately vindicated—instincts placed him in the vanguard of public health officials.

In the 1990s, Osterholm made waves again with a study of the country’s disease surveillance capacity. He and his colleagues found—along with comparatively paltry funding nationwide—that in 12 states and territories no official was specifically responsible for tracking food- and water-borne diseases. “You could sink the Titanic in their backyard and they would never notice,” Osterholm told a Senate committee in an early demonstration of his flair for vivid characterizations.

In 1999, seeking to tackle public health issues beyond Minnesota’s borders, Osterholm quit his state epidemiologist post to found Ican, a Web-based clearinghouse for medical information. By then, he had a worldwide reputation as an outbreak sleuth, as well as something of a doomsday aura—a vibe enhanced by the 2000 publication of his book Living Terrors: What America Needs to Know to Survive the Coming Bioterrorist Catastrophe. But Ican, which at one time had 60 employees, couldn’t drum up enough new capital to avoid folding in the dot-com bust of 2001. Osterholm shifted operations to the University of Minnesota, with a handful of employees and about $850,000 in start-up money from the public foundation of the Robins, Kaplan, Miller & Ciresi law firm. One week later, 9/11 happened.

Osterholm was whisked to Washington to serve as a special adviser to Tommy Thompson on bioterrorism and public health preparedness. Suddenly, Osterholm was a frequent guest on talking-head news programs and a go-to source for reporters. But he was just getting started. The anthrax scare and SARS led to more interviews and more lectures. Now Osterholm is on the pandemic flu beat, his television appearances hyped with such dramatic sound bites as “Modern medicine will not save us.” Osterholm says he is “not trying to scare people out of their wits, but into them.” It’s just that the facts, as he sees them, aren’t always pretty.

A few of these nasty facts. Our health-care system, like our economy in general, operates on a just-in-time basis. Businesses order or make products only as necessary, rather than maintaining vast inventories. Osterholm has testified before Congress regarding health-care facilities’ lack of substantial stockpiles of surgical gloves, masks, and IV bags. On any given day, he notes, three-quarters of the mechanical ventilators in the country’s critical-care facilities are already in use; during a regular flu season, nearly all of them are occupied. In short, he says flatly, our hospitals have no “surge capacity,” which they’d need to accommodate a major pandemic. Or even a minor one. “It’s not that high-tech medicine doesn’t exist,” says Osterholm. “It’s that high-tech medicine won’t be available.”

Osterholm also points out that the raw materials for 80 percent of the pharmaceutical products in the United States come from outside the country. If international borders are closed in an attempt to seal off a flu pandemic, our drug supplies will dwindle. Moreover, the current prescription drug system doesn’t make it easy to stockpile medication, says Osterholm. With many insurance plans, you get a 30-day supply and that’s it.

Tamiflu, the most readily available anti-flu drug, is made by one company—Switzerland-based Roche Holding AG. Only recently has Roche agreed to sublicense Tamiflu production to a few select companies, none in the United States. And while Tamiflu is effective in treating everyday seasonal flu, a pandemic flu virus is quite a different beast.

Seasonal flu replicates almost exclusively in the respiratory tract; researchers believe the 1918 pandemic flu virus (much like the H5N1 virus, according to recent reports) replicated not only in the respiratory system but also in the brain, liver, and other organs—a veritable virus tsunami. Which brings us to the real killer: a cytokine storm. This phrase refers to what happens when the body, attempting to fight off the virus, releases a flood of immune chemicals. It sounds like a good thing until you realize this hyperactivity is a Keystone Kops–like response. When the immune system wildly fires off its guns, the bad guys escape unscathed while the body inflicts plenty of damage—specifically, acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS)—on itself. Osterholm and other researchers blame ARDS for the high number of deaths in 1918 among otherwise healthy people between the ages of 18 and 40. It takes a strong immune system to set off a powerful cytokine storm, and these people had immune systems just healthy enough to kill them.

As if that weren’t bad enough, H5N1 replicates in the body much more quickly than seasonal flu. In order to fight it off, you’d likely need Tamiflu sooner and for a longer period of time. If multitudes of people suddenly need immediate access to Tamiflu, who will receive the drug? For that matter, who gets the ventilators? A terrible pandemic flu, coupled with supply shortages, could trigger a Terri Schiavo–style debate—two people, one drug dosage, whose right to live?—every five minutes.

But there are always flu vaccines…right? Yes and no. Currently, almost all of the world’s influenza vaccine is produced—largely with 1950s technology—in just nine countries. Osterholm likens our ability to produce enough viable vaccine to help during a pandemic to “trying to fill Lake Superior with a garden hose.”

This is to say nothing of what might happen—or not happen—to the dead. In his recent media appearances on pandemic flu preparedness, Osterholm never fails to mention how offensive it was that, in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, dead bodies were left to rot in the open. During a pandemic, poor “corpse management,” as Osterholm calls it, might tip an already panicked populace toward angry chaos.

So we can build a missile defense system, but we’re just as vulnerable to a flu pandemic as we were in the Model T era? “I think we were better prepared in 1918,” argues Osterholm. And he has a point: America was more self-sufficient then, growing its food closer to home and producing a much larger share of its medical supplies and other essentials. Travel was slow, limiting the spread of diseases. During his lectures on pandemic flu, Osterholm always shows what he calls his most important slide: a graph of the number of days it took a person to circumnavigate the earth 150 years ago and today (365 versus 3), juxtaposed with a graph of the world’s population then and now (just under a billion versus more than 6 billion). His point is clear: since today there are many more people (read: potential virus hosts) in the world, and they get around much more quickly, we may be more susceptible to a pandemic than ever before.

“It’s obviously a big, big public policy issue,” Osterholm says of pandemic flu preparedness. He notes that HIV/AIDS has killed 28 million people over the past 30 years. Bad as that is, he says, pandemic flu “could easily kill 180 million people in one year…. [Pandemic flu] is the biggest thing I know I’ll ever be a part of in terms of a public health problem.” In fact, Osterholm says this is the first such threat that’s kept him awake at night. “In terms of how it’s transmitted, in terms of how it kills,” he says, “this is everything that you could ever dream up in your worst nightmares of what an infectious agent could be.”

The Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy is Osterholm’s command center. It comprises several offices tucked within the health center complex on the University of Minnesota’s Minneapolis campus, employs 14 people, and has an annual budget of about $1.5 million. But it’s not the sort of place that will save you when the flu hits the fan. There are no labs here, no microscopes, no test tubes. CIDRAP deals with information. Its staff analyzes the latest developments in bioterrorism, food safety, infectious disease outbreaks such as SARS, and, of course, influenza. They disseminate this news in staff-written reports on their website (www.cidrap.umn.edu), a leading source of information for public health officials around the world. CIDRAP also sponsors seminars on infectious disease issues and has several government contracts, mostly with the Department of Homeland Security and largely related to improving the nation’s bioterrorism surveillance program. To the general public, however, CIDRAP is Osterholm. And for Osterholm, the center is not just an information clearinghouse, but a nonpartisan stump from which he can organize, advocate, and critique without censure.

Osterholm’s myriad media appearances and colorful style have fueled suspicion that he’s promoting himself along with his concerns. But while he allows that his provocative words sometimes draw attention to himself, Osterholm insists that’s not his intention. He has no ambition, he says, beyond the walls of this office. “I’m where I want to be and should be,” he declares.

Of course, immediately following 9/11, he was often in Washington. And in 2002, when the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) was searching for a new director, Osterholm’s name came up. At Tommy Thompson’s behest, Osterholm was then serving as one of four people on the CDC’s transition team, helping to run the health agency until a director could be found. According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Osterholm’s name fell somewhere between the wish list of potential new directors and the list of those who provoked anxiety among the CDC rank and file. “Someone whom CDC employees both respect and are unnerved by,” the newspaper called him. Osterholm says he was never a candidate and, in any case, he values his freedom of speech too much to embed himself within a government institution. “I’m seen as a neutral broker,” he says.

This self-professed neutrality, however, hasn’t inoculated Osterholm against charges of bad science. In a September 2005 New Republic article titled “Chicken Little,” science journalist Wendy Orent (author of the 2004 book Plague: The Mysterious Past and Terrifying Future of the World’s Most Dangerous Disease), argues that a future bird flu pandemic of 1918 proportions is unlikely and that the officials suggesting such horrors are needlessly inciting panic. “Among these doomsayers,” she writes, “none has been more strident than former Minnesota Department of Health epidemiologist Michael T. Osterholm.” Orent suggests that Osterholm has promoted inaccurate assumptions before, citing public statements he made after 9/11 about King Hussein having evidence of illegal smallpox stashes in Iraq. (These stockpiles, putatively created for use in germ warfare, were famously never found.) Orent even quotes an anonymous government official as saying that these statements by Osterholm “had a significant impact in high places” on the decision to invade Iraq. Osterholm says the idea that his remarks would have had such an influence on the Bush administration is
“far-fetched” and “crazy.”

But the main reason Orent and other naysayers discount Osterholm’s pandemic scenario is that they believe the key to knowing whether a flu bug will spawn a pandemic is an understanding of how the virus evolves—and that Osterholm, not being an evolution expert, may not be in a position to know. These critics have aligned themselves instead with the theories of Dr. Paul Ewald, a University of Louisville–based expert on the evolution of infectious disease. Ewald believes a typical flu virus maintains itself at a low to moderate level of virulence, or infectiousness, because it needs its hosts alive and walking to propagate. The reason the 1918 flu evolved such exceptionally high virulence at the Western Front in Europe, he says, is that the trenches from which World War I was largely fought offered such an exceptional context in which to evolve—a place so crowded with bodies that transmission of the flu virus didn’t depend on a walking, talking person. The virus could kill with impunity. Such virulence, Ewald’s theory goes, won’t be seen again unless those exact conditions are duplicated.

“It’s BS,” Osterholm says of Ewald’s model, “plain BS.” He counters that the first country to be devastated by the 1918 flu was Switzerland, far from the front. Also, if unusually high crowding was a requirement of high virulence, he says, then the squalid, nearly trench-like conditions in developing nations today should provide even more reason for concern.

Other pandemic pooh-poohers, such as Time magazine’s medical columnist, Dr. Andrew Weil, suggest we could contain avian flu when it’s still localized. That would be nice, Osterholm observes, but he believes containment would be difficult, if not impossible. “We have as much chance of stopping a pandemic as we would of putting a curtain around Minnesota and keeping out winter,” he says.

This isn’t the first time Osterholm has been criticized for his predictions. In the mid-1980s, he was “royally panned,” as he puts it, in a series of Star Tribune articles on AIDS. The series offered an analysis of the threat in which Osterholm came off as a fringe figure for suggesting two things he’s so far been proven right about: that an AIDS vaccine wouldn’t be created in his lifetime and that heterosexual transmission of AIDS would become a major issue in developing nations.

On the wall of his office, Osterholm keeps a plaque he received for giving a flu-preparedness talk at the CDC in 2003. Then, too, few people took the threat as seriously as he did; he beat the drum for two years before pandemic flu suddenly became the talk of the nation. “That’s what’s hard sometimes,” he says, staring at the plaque. “Think how much progress we could have made.”

A few weeks later, Osterholm calls me to say that he’s taped an appearance on Oprah. New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman also has talked to him about a flu story, he says. Momentum is building on the issue. Two days after that, he e-mails a Nature magazine article regarding the H5N1 virus in Turkey. “The naysayers,” he writes, “can’t deny the virus is doing exactly what we worry about most…mutating.”

In early February, sure enough, there he is on Oprah—for the full hour. Generally, only Tom Cruise gets the hour treatment. Pandemic flu has arrived.

On Oprah, Osterholm is asked how regular folks can prepare for the flu. Stockpile food? Certainly, he says. How about masks? Maybe, if they’re the right kind of masks. Think about what you’ll do, where you’ll go, how you’ll work under pandemic conditions, Osterholm counsels. And beyond that, push, as he is, for a more robust public health system. The one thing you can’t do, he says, is hope it won’t happen.

And yet…what if it doesn’t? That is, what if it doesn’t happen the way Osterholm is suggesting it could. Or it doesn’t happen soon enough and the public, feeling duped, begins a backlash. Osterholm is prepared: “You gotta stay the course,” he says. “The risk isn’t going to change.” Pandemics happen. In fact, Osterholm’s supporters say that even if we somehow end up overprepared, a buildup of social services and health-care infrastructure is greatly needed anyway. Thompson, for one, commends Osterholm for all his preparedness work. “This country owes him a debt,” he says.

America has been dangerously unprepared before—9/11, Katrina—with the result that localized disasters became crises of national identity. When Osterholm calls for the country to unite against pandemic flu, he is hoping to preserve not just the health of the United States, but the union itself. When discussing pandemic flu, Osterholm frequently quotes Ben Franklin’s observation, “If we don’t hang together, we’ll all hang separately.”

Last November, Osterholm spoke at a pandemic flu preparedness seminar sponsored by the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce and aimed at local businesses. Osterholm was asked his opinion of the federal government’s commitment to preparedness. He mulled the question so long it seemed he might not answer. Finally, he did. “I don’t give a damn about not being liked anymore—this is too important an issue,” he said. And then he laid into politicians who’ve paid lip service to pandemic preparedness but done nothing.

“I’m afraid we’re going to have a commission like [the one convened after] 9/11,” he said. In other words, a sweeping, klieg-lighted investigation into everything that went wrong during the Great Influenza Pandemic of 200–. “And this time,” he says, “we’re all going to be held accountable.” MM
 

JPD

Inactive
The Feds Stock Up....

GlaxoSmithKline, Roche get federal orders

http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D8GGR0H06.htm?campaign_id=apn_home_down&chan=db

MAR. 22 3:14 P.M. ET Drug makers GlaxoSmithKline PLC and Roche Holding Ltd. received additional orders from the federal government on Wednesday to complete filling its stockpile of flu treatment drugs.

The drugs would be used in event of a bird flu pandemic, which could happen if bird flu becomes easily contagious between humans. Currently, people can only catch the often deadly virus from handling infected birds.

The Department of Health and Human Services said the purchase meets the stockpile goal of having about 26 million treatment courses on hand, with 2.2 million more treatment courses of GlaxoSmithKline's Relenza and 3.8 million more treatment courses of Roche's Tamiflu.

On March 1, HHS ordered about 1.8 million treatment courses of Relenza and 12.4 million treatment courses of Tamiflu to add to the 5.5 million treatment courses already in the Strategic National Stockpile.

HHS spokesman Mark Wilson said the companies have promised to deliver the treatment courses to the stockpile as they are made and expect to hit the 26 million mark by the end of the calendar year.

American depositary shares of GlaxoSmithKline rose 29 cents to $53.93 in afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange.
 

JPD

Inactive
Albania confirms 2nd case of bird flu

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2006-03/23/content_4333817.htm

TIRANA, March 22 (Xinhua) -- The H5N1 bird flu virus was confirmed on Wednesday evening in chickens found dead last week ina village near Tirana, local media reported.

This is the second outbreak of the deadly virus strain in Albania in one month.

"Final test results from Weybridge Lab in London showed on Wednesday that the dead chickens found last Friday in the village of Peze-Helmes contain the H5N1 strain of the virus," Albania's official news agency ATA quoted Jemin Gjana, the agriculture minister, as saying.

The dead chickens were found in the village of Peze-Helmes on March 17, 14 kilometers west of Tirana, the capital city of Albania.

It is reported that dead birds were also found in Berat in the southern part of the country, and in Shkodra in the north. With test results still pending, the death of domestic chickens has raised suspicions about the presence of the deadly strain of the virus in these regions.

Albania confirmed its first case of the deadly H5N1 bird flu ina chicken found in the southern Saranda region on March 8. Enditem
 

JPD

Inactive
Update 1: Bird Flu on Hospital Specialists' Agenda

http://www.forbes.com/infoimaging/feeds/ap/2006/03/22/ap2614848.html

By LINDSEY TANNER , 03.22.2006, 04:22 PM

Hospital infection experts bracing for a possible worldwide flu epidemic say the first U.S. cases might show up in travelers returning from bird flu hot spots overseas.

At the University of Chicago Hospitals, any patient with flu symptoms who'd recently traveled to Asia and had contact with live poultry would be sent to an isolation room, said Dr. Stephen Weber, whose job is to control infection outbreaks.

"This is a trigger for what's called the bio-outbreak response plan," Weber said.

With rising numbers of birds and humans abroad infected with a deadly form of the H5N1 flu, U.S. hospitals need to get ready now, a federal bird flu expert said Tuesday at a Chicago meeting of the Society for Healthcare Epidemiology in America.

"It's extremely important to investigate every H5N1 case," said Dr. Timothy Uyeki of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

A single U.S. human case might be just the start, and scientists need to know if the virus has mutated to become easily spread between humans - a development that could trigger a global pandemic, Uyeki said.

Health officials don't know if the virus that has decimated Asian poultry flocks will mutate enough to cause a pandemic, but they are fearful because of its rapid and unprecedented spread among fowl. There have been more than 180 confirmed human cases of bird flu and over 100 deaths. No U.S. cases have been reported.

Many American hospitals are still in the planning stage for a pandemic; others have plans in place.

Weber said if a suspected case turns up at his hospital, public health officials would be notified, and the patient's mucous or saliva would be whisked to a state lab in Chicago for tests and diagnosis.

The number of cases could quickly explode, causing a shortage of ventilators, isolation rooms, supplies and doctors and nurses.

"Awful" decisions will be commonplace if a pandemic hits, like whether a very ill 65-year-old patient should be denied a ventilator so that a 25-year-old more likely to survive can get one, said Dr. Andrew Pavia, an infectious disease specialist from Salt Lake City who attended the meeting.

The worst-case scenarios involving an onslaught of hundreds of severely ill patients would force hospitals to shut down some routine services and ration things like hospital beds and antiviral drugs.

Even slightly better scenarios will still stretch hospital resources thin, said Dr. Trish Perl, president of the epidemiology society.

"You have to figure out how you're going to keep a hospital open, delivering babies, and advocate for the patients and advocate for the health care worker and not have it all fall apart," said Perl, staff epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins Hospital. "It's very challenging."
 

JPD

Inactive
Experts struggle with issue of what medical masks to stockpile for a pandemic

http://www.mytelus.com/news/article.do?pageID=cp_health_home&articleID=2204831

ATLANTA (CP) - The issue of medical masks - who should use them, and what types should be stockpiled - is one of the vexing and potentially explosive questions facing public health experts working to prepare for a possible flu pandemic.

With precious little science to go on and in the face of the strong probability of a global mask shortage, they are struggling to craft recommendations that strike the best balance between the ideal and the feasible - without a clear picture of what either will be when the next pandemic hits.

Speaking on the wings of an international conference on emerging infectious diseases, experts readily acknowledge a global wave of illness could place modern day standards of infection control out of reach.

"If this thing rages for a year, all of this is academic, all of these stockpiles. Because we're going to burn through all of that. So we have to have plans," said Stewart Simonson, assistant secretary of the U.S. Department of Health.

"Health care may end up looking, for a little while . . . more like the '50s. And we may run out of rubber gloves. So we're going to have to have some way for people to sterilize their hands so they can safely do things. We've got to start thinking that way, I think."

Weighing on the minds of those deliberating is the fear that, while health-care workers will be desperately needed during a pandemic, some may refuse to show up for work if they feel they are not adequately protected.

Ontario nurses are already raising the issue, complaining that the federal government is stockpiling inexpensive surgical masks rather than the more costly N-95 respiratory masks.

The World Health Organization and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control currently recommend N-95 masks for health-care workers treating the rare but dangerous human cases of H5N1 avian flu. But neither group has issued recommendations on what they think should be the standard when the next pandemic hits.

Coming up with those policy recommendations is challenging.

There is almost no scientific evidence on whether wearing a mask cuts transmission during a flu pandemic. Pandemic strains of influenza are rare, they are different from annual flu strains, and they are different from one another. And modern protective devices weren't available during the last pandemic in 1968.

"It's just not settled the role that small particle aerosols" - the form of transmission best protected against with an N-95 mask - "will play in terms of a pandemic strain," said Dr. Martin Cetron, director of the CDC's division of global migration and quarantine.

Policy makers who are accustomed to issuing evidence-based recommendations are in the uncomfortable position of trying to find novel ways to devise guidance that is more than mere guess work.

Some are scouring medical histories, original source material from past disease outbreaks and even historical fiction looking for clues about how effective measures like the wearing of cloth masks across the face were during earlier outbreaks of infectious diseases.

"I find it very useful, not as a case control study, but as a historical reference point to study some of the original records from the various pandemic experiences and see: What did societies do?" Cetron said.

The Institute of Medicine, experts who advise the U.S. government, has been asked to investigate whether it would be feasible to develop reusable cloth masks, made of muslin, for use in a flu pandemic.

And those involved in discussions over the use of masks recognize their advice has to cover both what might be best if it is workable, and what might be an acceptable alternative if best isn't available.

"It's going to be important to establish the ideal and then plan for the real event," said Dr. Michael Osterholm, an infectious disease expert who has been warning of the amplifying effect the global just-in-time distribution system will have during the next pandemic.

"And the real event, we'll be seriously short of many of those essential goods and even some services that we count on on a routine basis," said Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota.

The WHO faces the additional challenge of making recommendations for the world - for the wealthy G-7 countries, for mid-level economies and the poorest of the poor.

Under those circumstances, recommending health-care workers be protected by the Cadillac of medical masks is ensuring the poorest countries can't follow the WHO's advice.

"If you take that perspective, it means that a lot of practical considerations have to be on the table as well as scientific considerations. And then you take some mix of those factors to come up with the best guidance that you can come up with," said Dr. Keiji Fukuda, acting director of the WHO's global influenza program.

"You don't want to make recommendations that are simply the ideal. You want to make recommendations which are practical. They're usable. They're feasible."


© The Canadian Press, 2006
 

JPD

Inactive
"This thing just continues to march"

The CP interview: Dr. Michael Osterholm of the University of Minnesota's Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy talks about the flu bug that could bring the world to its knees.

Part 1

http://citypages.com/databank/27/1320/article14219.asp

BY STEVE PERRY

Scare headlines about the possibility of a deadly flu pandemic have been with us for a few years now, ever since the H5N1 bird-flu virus that first appeared in Hong Kong in 1997 resurfaced in the region in 2003. But in the past month the drumbeat of such stories has grown faster and louder: Avian Flu Arrives in Poland. Turkey. Azerbajian. Germany. Denmark. And, just last Friday, Israel. The good news, according to Dr. Michael Osterholm, the director of the University of Minnesota's Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy, is that the arrival of infected birds in North America—sometime this year, in the estimation of most experts—is not likely to result in large numbers of human infections with the virus, because most domestic poultry in this part of the world is raised in factory-farm isolation units that prevent contact with wild birds.

The bad news is that that's pretty much the only good news. What matters in judging the prospects for a human pandemic version of H5N1 (the name is shorthand for the chemical structure of two of the virus's key components, hemagglutinin and neuraminidase) is not so much the global reach of the bird version, but the question of if or when the virus mutates to a form that's easily passed from human to human. If that happens anywhere in the world, says Osterholm, the virus would likely start hitching rides with travelers and seed itself around the globe in a matter of days or weeks.

Of the hundred-plus human cases of H5N1 flu recorded so far, the vast majority have involved bird-to-human transmission, mostly among open-air poultry handlers in Asia. In addition, there are confirmed clusters in which it has passed from person to person, though none of those has yet resulted in a breakout of the virus. One thing is clear, however: In its present form, H5N1 has killed over half of the people it's infected. The great flu pandemic of 1918-19, by contrast, killed about 5 percent of its victims.

Will it cross over? If it does, can it possibly remain as deadly? Though Osterholm notes that viruses usually do lose strength as they spread—it's not really in their own evolutionary interest to kill the majority of their hosts—he believes the only responsible answer on both counts is we don't know. But it's not just the characteristics of the virus that worry him.

One of the things that sets the former Minnesota state epidemiologist apart from other public health officials is his attention to the fate of the medical and social infrastructure in any serious contagious outbreak. With respect to bird flu, his outlook recapitulates in many ways what he had to say in his 2001 book about bioterrorism preparedness, Living Terrors—much of the human toll in death, hysteria, and anarchy would be exacted not by infection but by the wide-scale breakdown of global supply chains and just-in-time delivery systems for vital goods and services. "I think [Health and Human Services] Secretary [Mike] Leavitt has been brutally honest in telling American communities, you're going to be on your own," says Osterholm. "And I think he's right."

City Pages: Let me start with the question of the likelihood of a global flu pandemic. Yesterday alone, I saw two wire service headlines with radically different-seeming implications, one indicating that the H5N1 avian flu is likely to go global within six months, and another speculating that the threat of human transmission may be passing as we speak. Is it possible to say, based on the epidemiological evidence, how likely a human flu pandemic is in the next six months, the next year, the next two years?

Osterholm: "H5N1 is the most powerful influenza virus we've seen in modern human history"

Courtesy of CIDRAP
Michael Osterholm: First of all, let me take a step back and say that's a typical question we hear from the public. But it's almost like asking, how many apples can you harvest from the ocean? Because flu pandemics are like earthquakes, hurricanes, and tsunamis—they occur. There's going to be another one. There have been 10 in the last 300 years. What you're really asking, I think, is will it be H5N1? It's important to understand that when you're preparing for pandemic influenza, you're preparing for something that will happen. To say anything to the contrary would be like saying, now that Katrina's happened, we'll never have another hurricane like it.

Will H5N1 be the pandemic strain, and will it occur in the next six to twelve months? The answer is, we don't know. What is troubling about this virus is that this thing has continued to mutate from its earliest days, in Hong Kong in 1997. And what is very, very troubling to us is that it's mutating in very similar fashion to the way the 1918 virus did. We went back with the 1918 virus and found all eight genes of that virus in tissue samples—five from soldiers' pathology slides that had been stored away, three from the recovered corpse in Alaska. They didn't have any live virus, but they've been able to make the virus from those eight genes. And by studying that, they could determine how it actually mutated and jumped directly to humans from birds. It didn't go through other species as the 1957 and 1968 viruses did, where a bird and a human virus got together, most likely in a pig lot, because pigs happen to be the universal recipients for both [birds and humans].

They combined to make a third, dumbed-down virus that caused mild pandemics.

The 1918 virus jumped right from birds to people. There was no combining with other viruses. One of the problems we've had is, if you look at the 1918 virus and this one, they're in essence kissing cousins. Genetically, these things look very similar. Frank Obenauer and colleagues just published a paper the last week of January in Science, and they actually have gone back and looked at the full genetic codes for 169 avian virus genomes, dating way back. They looked at 2,169 distinct avian virus genes. There were two viruses that showed a protein tag at the end of one of the nonstructural genes that actually looks to help cause the cytokine storm that makes this a unique illness.* And guess which two viruses they were: 1918 H1N1, and the current H5N1.

Then, when you look at the Turkey virus—that thing mutated. This is the case of the young girl in Turkey who died from her infection, and so did her uncle. We definitely have clusters where it's not just bird contact [spreading the virus]. The uncle's only exposure to this virus was riding in the ambulance with her from hospital one to hospital two. He became ill three days later and died. Her virus has now been fully sequenced, and there were three mutations that occurred in that virus, between the bird version and hers. One was the substitution of a glutamic acid with lysine at the 223-hemagglutinin position. That is what changes it from a bird-receptor virus to a human-receptor virus. The second thing was two other substitutions that served to make it look more and more like a human virus.

So this thing just continues to march. Changes are occurring in it all the time. [Human-to-human transmission] could happen tonight. Or it may never happen. But I don't know what will keep it from happening, because when you have this kind of worldwide bird population as we do now—China's a good example. In 1969, during the last pandemic, China only had about 12 million chickens. Now it's got over 15 billion.

CP: Do you think the rise of poultry farms of vast scale has contributed to the viral soup that influenza viruses grow in?

Osterholm: Not really, and I'll tell you why. When you look at the rise of the really big bird operations, they are actually raised in these bio-security barns, which people have all kinds of problems with for entirely different reasons—humaneness and that kind of thing. They actually are very safe, generally speaking, because they keep the wild birds and the domestic birds separate. It's in Asia where you have all these small 20-, 40-, 50-chicken operations where the birds are living in open space with you—that's where the vast majority of the chicken population is at in the developing world. A good example is Turkey, where we're seeing the first cases outside of Asia now. This is taking the virus out of a tropical area and putting it in a temperate area that gets cold. Every night, those people bring their chickens into the house. It's just a very different mindset.

And for as much as this is going to come here someday, [bird-to-human transmission] is not going to be a big risk factor to humans on this continent, because other than free-ranging organic birds that are out there, domestic birds aren't going to be at big risk.

CP: Can you explain in lay terms what makes a strain like H5N1 novel, and so potentially deadly?

Osterholm: Well, there are three things that make a strain of influenza virus potentially capable of causing a pandemic. First of all, you have to have a situation where you've got a novel or a new strain, meaning you don't have any antibody protection against it. Then you have to have one that is able to go from human to human. That's what we don't have yet. The third thing is, it has some virulence characteristics that make it cause severe illness.

This virus is quite different from what we see with the standard annual flu, and what we saw in 1957 and 1968, because of the cytokine storm it causes. In 1918, the vast majority of the people who died were healthy young people, 20 to 40 years of age. And that was in large part because they had the strongest immune systems.

CP: You're saying that the symptoms that cause fatalities, aside from secondary bacterial infections, are actually a function of the immune system working overtime.

Osterholm: That's it. And that's what we're trying to understand at this point, in terms of how to best prevent this [immune reaction]. And right now it doesn't look like there's much you can do. I mentioned this "kissing cousins" phenomenon. If you put 1918 H1N1 into animal models at very, very low doses, it basically kills all of them in 24 hours. The lab science people had never seen that. At 16 to 24 hours, that virus was different from anything they'd ever seen in killing these animals. The only virus that was similar was H5N1, and it was fatal at much lower doses. H5N1 is the most powerful influenza virus we've seen in modern human history.

What makes them so similar is that they both cause this cytokine storm phenomenon.

The deadly 1918-19 flu pandemic spawned stern public warnings—and widespread panic

Top and right: Courtesy of Temple University Libraries. Bottom left: Courtesy of National Library of Medicine
CP: Which essentially results in a person's drowning in his or her own blood as it fills the lungs, right?

Osterholm: It's even worse than that. You get that kind of leakage, yes, but it also goes in and begins to shut down all your vital organs. It's a domino effect. Your kidneys go down, then your liver goes down, you have all this destruction through necrosis of your lungs and your internal organs. Everything goes.

CP: In the limited human sample we've seen so far, this influenza has exacted a much higher mortality rate than the 1918 flu. Are there mechanisms that tend to dilute the virulence of a strain as it spreads?

Osterholm: That's a really critical question. We can only anticipate that this will attenuate. Meaning that once it starts spreading in humans, it will lose some of its punch in order to better adapt to humans. That's traditional with virtually all agents you see like this. The thing that is very difficult to talk about is, we don't know how much. If this were to go human-to-human—we talk about a worst-case scenario in terms of what happened in 1918, when roughly 2.5 percent of the world's population died. Of those who contracted it, roughly 5 to 6 percent of populations died, varying by age.

The mortality rate so far for this virus is around 55 percent, so this virus would have to attenuate a lot to get down to that level. And we do have good data. There are not a lot of mild, asymptomatic infections out there [with H5N1]. We're now aware of six studies involving over 5,000 close contacts of H5N1-infected people, in Indonesia, Vietnam, and Hong Kong, in which less than one person per thousand contacts had evidence of an H5N1 infection that was missed—that is, a mild infection.

This [virus] is not causing a lot of asymptomatic infections right now. Some people are saying there's a lot of mild [H5N1-related] illness all over out there, but it's just not true. That means we're not artificially inflating the mortality rate by missing a lot of infections. I'm actually pretty confident that the real mortality is almost that high.

So for that number to drop all the way down to a couple percent is a pretty big drop. Which says to me that when people talk about 1918 as a worst-case scenario, well, maybe that isn't the worst-case scenario. That's hard for people to hear, because then they think you're really trying to scare the hell out of people. But you know what? It's just the data.

If this virus were to ultimately go human-to-human, none of us know what the human mortality would be.

CP: Does the fact that it seems to be gaining more currency in other mammal species augur one way or the other for its becoming transmissible from person to person?

Osterholm: None of us know. In 1918, for instance, we don't know whether it infected cats and dogs. We've been trying to find that out. Nobody's got that data. There just weren't good reports. It surely can't be good that it's adapting to more species. It says that the lung receptors of chickens aren't the only ones that will take this virus. And we know humans surely will take it, on the off chance that they're exposed [to infected birds].

The bird-to-cat thing is not new. Some people have made a lot out of the German situation. That's not new. The Bengal tigers at the Bangkok Zoo died two years ago. They got fed H5N1-infected chickens, and 50 of the Bengal tigers died. They also transmitted to each other—there were cats there that did not eat the chickens. Even Albert Osterhaus's work of the past couple of weeks, which has been really important to confirm it, was not a surprise.

CP: I wanted to ask you about a scenario you described in your New England Journal of Medicine article from last year, "Preparing for the Next Pandemic." If a flu strain transmitted from human to human did break through in some part of the world, how would you expect events to unfold over the first weeks?

Osterholm: Well, look at what's already happening with the bird situation. You've got countries like South Korea saying, don't go to Egypt. You've got a lot of bird embargoes already taking place. If you saw this morning's Wall Street Journal, the travel industry in Europe is tanking. And this is a non-threat to a vast majority of humans. What we're concerned about is that if this takes off in a given area, it's going to move around the world quickly, just like SARS. Last year 750 million people crossed a national border somewhere in the world, either by plane, automobile, or on foot.

These things move fast. With SARS, we had one physician from China who came to Hong Kong, stayed in the Metropole Hotel on one floor where there were nine other individuals he infected just through breathing the air. They then took it to four different continents in the next two days. That gives you kind of a model, though influenza is much, much more infectious.

I was very critical of those models that came out last fall that suggested you could put a blanket over this with Tamiflu. My whole criticism was practical—that you would never find this quick enough and confirm it. Despite the fact we now know Turkey was going on for weeks before we understood what was happening over there, it was only last week that the uncle's isolates were confirmed, almost eight weeks after the fact.

*Cytokines are a class of proteins produced by white blood cells whenever the body finds itself responding to an infection. They vary in function—some cytokines attack invading microbes directly, others relay chemical messages from cell to cell, still others bind with cells in the hypothalamus region of the brain to produce fevers. Cytokines are toxic not only to infectious agents in the body but to the body itself: Much of the pain and discomfort that accompany illnesses like the common flu, for example, are in effect hangover symptoms from the toxic effects of the body's own immune response. The term "cytokine storm" refers to the immune response that occurs when the body is confronted with an infectious agent that reproduces at great speed and in huge volume. This "viral storm" generates an equally huge immune response—the cytokine storm—that can take such a toll on lung tissue (the main battleground where the virus and the immune system face off) that it deprives vital organs of enough oxygen to function, and sets off cascading organ failure.
 

JPD

Inactive
"This thing just continues to march"

http://citypages.com/databank/27/1320/article14219.asp?page=2

Part 2

CP: There's been a lot of covering up by some governments, hasn't there? It's been repeatedly alleged of the Chinese.

Osterholm: Exactly. So my whole point is that before anyone will have even figured out that this is going on with any certainty, it'll be gone—the cow will be out the barn door. With influenza, that's just...it's something you can't pull back in.

CP: Periodically we see stories about the race to derive vaccines, but that's not conceivable, is it, until we know which viral subtype will break through?

Osterholm: Well, even that's a misconception, I think. The concern we have is that people all want to know if some new vaccine is "the answer." The problem is, we do need a new vaccine. We're dealing with a 1950s-technology vaccine with only one update. Right now, given the amount of virus needed to make vaccines for H5N1—it needs a lot more antigen [than typical flu strains]—our total worldwide capacity right now, in one year's time, is only enough vaccine to protect 100-200 million people worldwide. That's in one year after a pandemic starts. And that's it. You can't make any more, given the limited capacity we have.

So you know what? It doesn't matter if we invent vaccines if we can't manufacture them. This is a point I've tried to make over and over again. We also are approaching this from a very American-centric point of view, which in the end will be the death of us. What's going to happen is, even if we could produce vaccines for our country in a timely manner, this global just-in-time economy we live in today is going to see the rest of the world shut down. Eighty percent of all the drugs we use in this country—all the childhood vaccines, everything—come from offshore. Your cardio drugs, your cancer drugs, your diabetes drugs, 80 percent of the raw ingredients come from offshore. I could go through a whole laundry list of other critical and essential products and services that come from offshore. If the rest of the world experiences a pandemic, we're still screwed. That's what people don't understand. Somehow they have this attitude that we can wall ourselves off in the Eighth District of Minneapolis and be okay.

The bottom line is, it will be years, even at the accelerated rate we're going now, before we even get the right candidate-vaccines. Then they still have to be approved. No company's going to embark on building manufacturing capacity without the certainty of a market. And second of all, they have to know exactly what vaccine will be used and how they need to develop their plant. All this means that an influenza plant, from start to finish, would probably take three to five years to build.

CP: Why don't we have the capacity to produce more in the way of basic vaccines here in the U.S.?

Osterholm: Because it's all about the market. Today, many of the anti-infective antibiotics and vaccines are not considered blockbuster products for any pharmaceutical company. We have a number of our childhood vaccines that are down to a single manufacturer now. If you go to the Society for Health Care Pharmacists' website, you'll see a list of 42 drugs today that are in short supply because of the just-in-time supply chain. Now, you put on top of that products that are marginal in their [profit] return, and it becomes a loss leader for these companies [to make vaccines]. They want out of it.

This is not true just for vaccines, but also for antibiotics. There, we tell people to hardly use them, and only for specific purposes and limited periods. It's not like the lifestyle drugs, where you're taking your statins for the rest of your life. So they just don't see the profitability [in antibiotics]. We're in real trouble. And it's not just with respect to the flu.

CP: The one easy-to-use drug that's been shown to arrest H5N1 in humans is Tamiflu—

Osterholm: Well, that's not really true. There's no evidence that it makes a difference in H5N1 infection. I have a slide here showing that the case mortality rate in Vietnam was identical for those who got Tamiflu and those who didn't. I actually believe Tamiflu could work, but the problem is, we're applying it in the H3N2 [average seasonal flu] model. Seasonal flu grows up much slower in a human, so that if you get the drug into somebody two days after their onset, you can still have a pretty measurable impact on the severity of their illness and the likelihood they'll have complications. With the H5N1 virus, the virus storm that precedes the cytokine storm is so remarkable in those first 24 hours that if you don't have the drug onboard in those first 24 hours, it may only have limited impact.

The second thing is, we're using the same dosage levels we use for H3N2 [seasonal flu]. This is a very different virus. We may have to double the dosage for twice the length of time. We have anecdotal data on people who got the drug early and appeared to do better, but then, after the typical five-day course was stopped, they died on day ten.

The problem we have is not whether Tamiflu is available and will work, but can you get it soon enough and in high enough amounts? How do you get the drug to somebody in the first 12 hours of their illness? The second thing is, when people talk about having 20 million or 40 million protective doses, what does that mean? If we're going to have to use twice the dose for twice as long, that means maybe you've got one-fourth as much of the drug you think you have.

That's the story on H5N1 and Tamiflu. I think it can work, but it won't work the way we're approaching it.

In the next five years, with [Tamiflu manufacturer] Roche outsourcing all of the production they can, our best guesstimate is that—using the old, low dosage standards—we could probably produce enough Tamiflu to treat about 7 percent of the world's population in the next five years, because of the precursor chemicals needed and the complicated nature of making this stuff. That's the sum total of production capacity. It's no panacea.

CP: How would you rate the public health infrastructure in the U.S. for its ability to deal with massive numbers of very ill people? You wrote in the NEJM last year that our system lacks "surge capacity" to deal with a lot of sick people at once—why is that?

Osterholm: It's much deeper and bigger than the public health system. It's really the total care system. For example, I talked [in that article] about the 105,000 mechanical ventilators? On any given day, 70,000-80,000 of them are in use, and in a normal flu season we butt up against the 100,000 mark. We have no excess capacity there whatsoever. Just right here in our own Twin Cities, we've reduced intensive care beds by 20 percent in the last four years, as a matter of cost containment.

We'll run out of masks and respirators overnight, because it's a global just-in-time supply chain. There are two manufacturers who have the largest share of the market there, but with virtually no surge capacity. We'll run out of IV needles. We'll run out of IV bags. We'll run out of drugs very quickly. Remember I talked about the 80 percent offshore figure? Go to the Society for Health Care Pharmacists' website and you'll see what I'm talking about.

So the whole medical system will collapse, at a time when we still need drugs for heart attacks, cancer, and everything else. We'll be in freefall. That may sound scary, but it's a reality. And unlike Katrina, where the hurricane did some of the destruction and separated people from health care through evacuation or otherwise, the same thing's going to happen here in every city, town, and village in this country as well. We're all going to need things at the same time, and there won't be any products.

At this Business Continuity Summit we just had, we actually had a major discussion in which a lot of voices expressed concern about the internet—that it doesn't have the backbone and elasticity that everyone thinks it has, and just a limited surge could bring down the internet.

Right after Katrina, when FEMA was trying to rescue itself, they put out a call for anyone who had a refrigerated truck unit to come and sit in one of several parking lots in the Gulf states down there, in case they had 10,000 bodies, etc. A contingent of them went. Not all of them, by any stretch of the imagination. Within 72 hours, major food manufacturers throughout the United States reported that they couldn't ship their goods. They had no trucks. We have a razor-thin capacity in this country right now on virtually everything. They had to get FEMA to release the trucks.

Cities like Seattle have already come to the conclusion they won't be able to have refrigerated trucks, because of that issue. For their work with corpse management, for example, they've already mapped out where every one of the ice arenas in Seattle is. Because you won't be able to bury people, either. In 1969, during the last pandemic, the average time from when a casket was made until it was in the ground was about six months. Today it's a little over a month, and in some areas of the country it's less than that. There's no surge capacity in casket manufacturing. Today, crematorium space in this country is a just-in-time situation too. This means we would quickly run out of the ability to handle bodies in a timely, respectful way. That's in a moderate pandemic, not at all like 1918. Everything now is done on the basis of just-in-time delivery systems.

Now, think about Katrina. As horrible as it was seeing the Superdome, seeing shots of bodies rotting would kind of take you over the top. What really offends the sensibilities of most Americans is when you see the dead handled in a disrespectful manner. I worry that one of the tipping points in a panic/fear situation over pandemic flu would come when we can't, in a timely way, handle the bodies or get them into cold storage. Those are issues we haven't dealt with at all.



As of last week, H5N1-infected birds had turned up in over 30 countries, and 178 humans had contracted the virus

Courtesy of PandemicFlu.gov
CP: Your answer to this is partly implicit in all you've said, but let me ask you to sum up how you'd rate the U.S.'s and Minnesota's state of preparedness for a pandemic.



Osterholm: I think the U.S. right now is leading the way in terms of the overall issue of pandemic influenza preparedness. The problem is that, for much of the developing world, they don't have a lot to prepare for. They don't have sophisticated supply-chain issues. In some ways I think they're better off than we are, because they already live a very simple, hand-to-mouth existence. For us, with our complicated supply networks, we have a long, long way to go. And I think that's as much a private-sector issue as a government issue. I think Secretary Leavitt has been brutally honest in telling American communities, you're going to be on your own. And I think he's right. You know how you creep, then you walk, then you run? We're still on our knees.

CP: What kind of measures might we in the Twin Cities expect to see undertaken in the short term if an outbreak did reach the U.S.?

Osterholm: I can't say. I don't know. I know that the governor today, in his State of the State address, said that he's just committed $10 million to influenza preparedness. What that means, I can't say. We don't have the details yet.

When the virus gets to this continent as a bird virus, it's important that we not overreact and misinterpret it to mean that now the pandemic's here. This will be an important issue for poultry, but as I pointed out, I think most of the poultry in this country—aside from the free-range organic poultry—is going to be pretty well-protected.

It's about the birds and it's not about the birds. It's about the birds now, but when real pandemic influenza occurs, the birds become inconsequential. It's human-to-human transmission that matters then. That's where we're not any better prepared here than anyone else in the world.

CP: How would you rate the media's performance in covering this story—too salacious, too understated, just right?

Osterholm: It's like talking about the weather, I guess—depends on which day, and where. There have been some outstanding reporters on this issue. Helen Branswell, from Canadian Press, covered SARS and has become the primary person on this. She's done it as well as anybody. On the whole, it has been poorly covered in the sense of distinguishing H5N1 in the bird population from pandemic influenza. That part has not been covered in depth. The issue about covering preparedness—no one has really gone into depth and explored the supply-chain issues to say, okay, what does this all mean? Let's take a community and say, what would happen here? We're so fixated on the news cycle that it's too often about, "what new country has just been infected with bird virus?" and not really get into the issues. Ted Koppel at Nightline did an excellent series of stories and asked good, hard questions. But now he's gone and Nightline hasn't picked it up since he left.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Bird flu confirmed in West Bank

The deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu virus has been found in poultry in a Jewish settlement the West Bank, the Israeli agriculture ministry has said.
Initial tests found dozens of birds had died of the virus on Wednesday in the Bekaot settlement in the Jordan Valley.

A 10km (six-mile) quarantine has been imposed around the farm and veterinary officials have begun to cull poultry.

Last week, thousands of birds died of the virus in two Israeli farms in the western Negev, near the Gaza Strip.

Bird flu was also found on Wednesday in the southern Gaza town of Rafah, on the border with Egypt.

Acting Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has instructed Israeli officials to offer the Palestinian Authority assistance in order to prevent the spread of the virus in Palestinian areas.

On Tuesday, neighbouring Egypt reported its fourth suspected case of bird flu in humans. Earlier this month, Egyptian state TV said a woman had died from the H5N1 virus.

The H5N1 strain of the virus has killed more than 100 people worldwide.

It does not pose a large-scale threat to humans, as it cannot pass easily from one person to another.

However, experts fear the virus could mutate to gain this ability, and in its new form trigger a flu pandemic, potentially putting millions of human lives at risk.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/middle_east/4836428.stm

Published: 2006/03/23 10:51:36 GMT

:vik:
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
China

Woman dies of suspected bird flu in Shanghai-TV
Thu Mar 23, 2006 11:26 AM GMT

SHANGHAI (Reuters) - A woman has died of what could be bird flu in the eastern Chinese city of Shanghai, state television said on Thursday.

The patient, a 29-year-old female migrant worker, died on Tuesday of a pneumonia of unconfirmed origin, an official at the Shanghai municipality information office told Reuters.

The case is under investigation for bird flu, Shanghai Television said.

China has recorded 15 confirmed cases of bird flu in humans since late last year, 10 of whom have died.

Doctors and nurses who tended the patient were under quarantine, said a source at the hospital, adding it was awaiting final test results.

"It's a suspected case, but not confirmed," the source told Reuters.

The Ministry of Health declined immediate comment. The World Health Organisation said it was investigating.

"We are verifying this rumour at the moment. We are still treating this as a rumour since there is no confirmation yet," said Aphaluck Bhatiasevi, WHO spokeswoman in Beijing.

Epidemiologists fear that bird flu could trigger a pandemic if it mutates to a form which can be transmitted from human to human.

http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/new...Z_01_PEK136595_RTRUKOC_0_UK-BIRDFLU-CHINA.xml
 
Last edited:

JPD

Inactive
Azerbaijan Teenager taken to Baku hospital with suspected bird flu

http://www.interfax.ru/e/B/politics/28.html?id_issue=11484016

BAKU. March 23 (Interfax) - A teenager has been hospitalized in Baku with suspected bird flu, the Azerbaijani Health Ministry press service told Interfax on Thursday.

"A fifteen-year-old girl from the Salyan district was taken to Baku's Clinic No. 2 with suspected bird flu," press service head Samaya Mamedova said.

The condition of the patient is serious but stable, she said.

Another patient with suspected bird flu has recovered and been discharged from hospital, Mamedova said.
 

JPD

Inactive
Woman dies of suspected bird flu in Shanghai-TV

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/PEK136595.htm

SHANGHAI, March 23 (Reuters) - A woman has died of what could be bird flu in the eastern Chinese city of Shanghai, state television said on Thursday.

The patient, a 29-year-old female migrant worker, died on Tuesday of a pneumonia of unconfirmed origin, an official at the Shanghai municipality information office told Reuters.

The case is under investigation for bird flu, Shanghai Television said.

China has recorded 15 confirmed cases of bird flu in humans since late last year, 10 of whom have died.

Doctors and nurses who tended the patient were under quarantine, said a source at the hospital, adding it was awaiting final test results.

"It's a suspected case, but not confirmed," the source told Reuters.

The Ministry of Health declined immediate comment. The World Health Organisation said it was investigating.

"We are verifying this rumour at the moment. We are still treating this as a rumour since there is no confirmation yet," said Aphaluck Bhatiasevi, WHO spokeswoman in Beijing.

Epidemiologists fear that bird flu could trigger a pandemic if it mutates to a form which can be transmitted from human to human.
 

narnia4

Inactive
Heres how some of the news is being spun. An article above discusses this, not really new, the "experts" already knew mutations would be needed. These "words of comfort" will deceive many people. Maybe we won't have a pandemic (we all pray), but to foolishly say "Don't Worry ... Be Happy" is a crime.

Flu viruses ALWAYS mutate, or we'd never get the flu.

Most people only read the headlines. This is from the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel.



Find human barrier that limits spread of bird flu.


Disease would have to mutate several times to trigger pandemic, they say
By SUSANNE RUST
srust@journalsentinel.com
Posted: March 22, 2006
An international team of researchers, led by University of Wisconsin-Madison flu expert Yoshihiro Kawaoka, has identified the biological roadblock that prevents the avian influenza virus, H5N1, from transmitting easily between people.


Researchers familiar with the study, published today in the journal Nature, say the findings are "comforting" because they indicate that it may be difficult for the disease to become the deadly human pandemic many have feared.
 

JPD

Inactive
One more case of H5N1 bird flu confirmed in Greece

http://english.pravda.ru/news/23-03-2006/77753-Greece-0

03/23/2006 14:43

A wild swan found dead near the northern city of Thessaloniki has tested positive for the H5N1 strain of bird flu, the Agriculture Ministry said on Thursday.

The new case, some 25 kilometers (15 miles) from the country's second-largest city, brings to 33 the number of H5N1 cases in wild birds in Greece. Most were detected in the northern regions of Macedonia and Thrace.

No H5N1 cases in humans or farm birds have been reported in the country, where the first H5N1 bird flu case was confirmed Feb. 11, reports the AP.
 
=




<B><center>March 22, 2006
<font size=+1 color=red>U.S. Braces for Bird Flu as Global Efforts Falter for Want of Money </font>

by Abid Aslam
<A href="http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0322-06.htm">www.commondreams.org</a></center>
WASHINGTON - Bird flu likely would be detected in the United States this year, federal officials warned Monday as a top UN official said efforts to fight a pandemic in Africa were hamstrung by a lack of money.

Migratory birds are increasingly likely to bring ashore avian influenza to the United States and would be subject to increased monitoring under government plans to reduce the risks of a viral wildfire, Interior Secretary Gale Norton, Agriculture Secretary Mike Johanns, and Secretary of Health and Human Services Michael Leavitt told journalists.</b>

Nigeria, February 11, 2006. Fewer than three dozen nations are capable of the early detection and quick response needed to contain rapidly spreading bird flu and other viruses that could threaten humans, a health official said on Tuesday. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde

''None of us can build a cage around the United States. We have to be prepared to deal with the virus here,'' said Johanns, a former Nebraska governor.

In particular, monitoring would concentrate on Alaska, Hawaii, and Pacific islands, Norton said. That is where scientists have said the more dangerous strain of H5N1 virus most likely would arrive.

The World Health Organization has blamed H5N1 in the deaths of 98 people worldwide since 2003.

Johanns cautioned against panic once bird flu is detected on U.S. soil, saying that alone would not mean the start of an epidemic among humans.

Were the virus to hit the $29 billion-a-year American poultry industry, however, authorities would quarantine affected areas, destroy infected flocks, and compensate farmers for their loss, he said.

U.S. authorities and poultry producers had dealt with three previous outbreaks of other forms of bird flu: in 1924, 1983, and 2004.

Bird flu is hard to catch. Humans can contract the virus when handling--and especially slaughtering--infected birds but the flu does not appear to be transmitted through cooked meat or eggs.

Initially, the virus spread as a result of chickens mixing with domesticated and wild waterfowl that carried it and transmitted it through their sputum and excreta.

Scientists fear that the virus could mutate into a form that people could easily get and pass on to others, sparking a potential human pandemic.

Last November, President George W. Bush announced a $7.1 billion plan to stockpile enough vaccine against the current strain of bird flu to protect some 20 million Americans. The federal government also would store about $1 billion worth of anti-viral drugs that lessen the severity of flu symptoms.

The Bush plan drew buckshot from lawmakers and health and consumer advocates who said it was unrealistic, relied too heavily on the private sector, and placed too heavy a financial burden on states to pay for drugs from the national stockpile.

Additionally, groups including the Global AIDS Alliance and Health GAP warned that the U.S. stockpile would undermine poorer countries' efforts to contain the disease and treat their populations.

Health advocates acknowledged that Roche AG, which makes oseltamivir under the brand name Tamiflu, had offered to allow other companies to make generic versions of the drug. They nevertheless urged the United States and other countries confronting potential pandemics to suspend or override patents in order to access necessary supplies.

On Monday, the United Nations' top bird flu coordinator said the world body and African countries would have to scrape together money for emergency plans because wealthy governments had so far failed to make good on pledges of aid to help poor countries combat the virus and its lethal effects.

Donors had pledged $1.9 billion in January during a special conference in China called to help poor countries strengthen medical, veterinary, and laboratory systems and boost global surveillance measures to control the spread of the H5N1 virus.

Yet, ''there are insufficient resources available at the present time to put in place emergency plans and prepare a coordinated response,'' David Nabarro, the senior UN coordinator for avian influenza, was quoted as saying in news reports from bird flu crisis talks in Libreville.

''African countries and the United Nations system must contribute resources to make up for this, in the hope that development partners will react rapidly,'' Nabarro said. Exact figures on the funding shortfall were not immediately available.

Nabarro spoke after Egyptian authorities said over the weekend that they had found the virus in the blood of a dead woman--the first known human casualty in Africa, which scientists have warned may be the region of the world least prepared to handle a mass outbreak.

Nigeria, Niger, and Cameroon also have confirmed cases of the disease in poultry. A number of other African countries are testing dead birds--a process that has been slowed to an untenable extent by the need to send out to foreign laboratories, according to Nabarro.

Back in the United States, the Food and Drug Administration on Monday proposed banning the use of human flu drugs in poultry in order to preserve their effectiveness for people in case of a pandemic.

The drugs--including Tamiflu and GlaxoSmithKline PLC's Relenza--are not approved to treat or prevent flu in animals. Veterinarians can prescribe them legally, however, and the drugs as well as older ones are believed to be in use among chickens, turkeys, and ducks, regulators said.

Such use could make it easier for bird flu to mutate and resist treatment when people use the drugs, officials said.

U.S. poultry producers do not use the drugs, a spokesman for trade association the National Chicken Council, was quoted as saying in news reports.
 

Cascadians

Leska Emerald Adams
JPD, the 2-part article you posted on this thread, "This thing just continues to march" with Dr. Michael Osterholm is an excellent informative read: Thank you. Went to the site, clicked on the printer version, 8 pages, printed it and it will be stuffed in the internal mailboxes of all the dept heads and supervisors at a large continuing care retirement center. Surprisingly, there has not been much substantive informational outreach to the long-term care health community and this article should open a few eyes. If avian flu goes efficient H2H it would be irresponsible to pretend a huge eldercare complex could continue running, so it makes sense to mentally, emotionally prepare workers now for the fact that dependent seniors will have to go back to their families in time to flash-freeze-in-place in each family home unit as the world stops to safeguard the mass population (and who knows if this can work or is even remotely do-able).
 
=


<B><center>New Mexico

<font size=+1 color=brown>Bird flu on the move: Local health officials on alert</font>

By Diana M. Alba
SUN-NEWS REPORTER
Mar 23, 2006, 06:00 am
<A href="http://www.lcsun-news.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060323/NEWS01/603230337/1001">www.lcsun-news.com</a></center>
National health officials expect a deadly strain of bird flu to enter the country this year -- a threat local health authorities say they're taking seriously.

Though the H5N1 strain of bird flu, or avian flu, has leapt to humans in some instances in other countries, experts worry it could gain the ability to pass from human to human, evolving into a pandemic.</b>

"Locally, planning activities for avian flu and pandemic flu will be increasing in the next couple of months," said Eugene Marciniak, medical doctor and public health officer for the southwestern New Mexico region.


U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt announced last week he's expecting bird flu to reach the United States through wild birds as early as this fall. Jeanne Fair, a Los Alamos scientist studying the virus, has said she expects wild birds to carry the virus into New Mexico within the next two years.

Leavitt is planning to attend a statewide pandemic flu summit next week in Albuquerque. Part of the program will be dedicated to avian flu.

Marciniak said in addition to the state summit, the regional health office is planning table-top exercises, drills in which responders are given mock pandemic flu emergencies. A pandemic flu meeting for El Paso, Juárez and southern New Mexico is planned for June, he said.

Because the virus hasn't yet reached the area, Marciniak said the health department isn't asking the public to take in dead birds for testing, a move the department resorted to when West Nile virus hit the area a few years ago.

Keep feeding the birds?

Should bird enthusiasts take steps such as taking down feeders?

Not necessarily.

Marciniak said though wild birds carry the disease, there have been no known instances of people contracting the virus from wild birds; domestic birds have been the culprits so far.

At least 103 deaths worldwide have been attributed to the H5N1 virus. In most instances, people who died were known to have had direct contact with live or dead birds, or their feathers or manure.

Since it was first identified in 1997, the H5N1 virus has been confined mainly to birds in China and southeast Asia. In the last few months, it began spreading among birds in Europe, Africa and the Middle East.

Keel Price, with the Las Cruces office of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Wildlife Services, said bird flu is a threat because the Las Cruces is in a migration route, known as a flyway.

Price said his organization will help monitor for the virus in wild birds, though he doesn't yet have specific details about where that will take place.

"We'll be picking up carcasses of wild birds very soon and sending them in for testing," he said. The Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge near Socorro is a likely candidate, he said.

Gail Keirn, spokeswoman for a regional department of agriculture office based in Colorado, said she doesn't know when testing will begin in New Mexico, but several state and federal agencies will work together to carry it out. Sites on both public and private land could be monitored, she said, "wherever there might be large congregations of waterfowl and shorebirds."

The agriculture department plans to monitor migrating birds, such as ducks, geese and shorebirds, according to its Web site. Chickens, turkeys, pheasants, quail and guinea fowl can also carry the virus.

Alaska may be first hit

The U.S. Department of Agriculture is predicting the H5N1 strain to first reach Alaska, where Asian and North American birds will come into contact. Migrating infected birds are expected to then spread the virus along the Pacific coast and then to migration routes that include New Mexico.

The federal government is focusing monitoring efforts on Alaska.

Chad Smelser, medical epidemiologist with the New Mexico department, said the state's preparedness for pandemic is improving, partly because of federal money now available for planning.

"It's been something that's been on our radar screen for some time," he said, but media attention has boosted it into the spotlight of other agencies.

Smelser said the health department has had a basic flu outbreak plan since 1995 but is working on a more detailed version.

The state on March 10 released an interim version of the flu response plan, which outlines how agencies would react to an outbreak.

According to the document, an estimated 20,000 to 25,000 deaths would occur in New Mexico if a pandemic flu strain were severe enough to rival one that hit in 1918. A more moderate strain could result in 1,670 deaths.

New Mexico is set to receive $956,824 of $100 million the federal government is distributing to states for flu planning. President George Bush last year announced $7 billion would be dedicated to flu planning and speeding vaccine development.

New Mexico's risk

The introduction of the virus could impact the state's poultry industry, though some experts say New Mexico is less susceptible than other states.

Doña Ana County has at least one egg-production operation, McAnnally Enterprises in Berino. The company didn't return calls seeking comment.

Steven England, a veterinarian with the New Mexico Livestock Board, said only a handful of poultry and egg production facilities exist in the state, a factor that decreases New Mexico's susceptibility to the virus when compared to other states. States such as Arkansas that have higher densities of poultry facilities will be more vulnerable, he said.

"In that respect, we're in pretty good shape," he said.

England said the Livestock Board isn't taking any action now because the virus hasn't made an appearance, but it will be a player should an outbreak occur.
 
=




<B><center>North Carolina

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

<font size=+1 color=green>Health experts expect flu pandemic</font>

By Rochelle Williams
Staff writer
<A href="http://www.fayettevillenc.com/article?id=229076">www.fayettevillenc.com</a></center>
Communities and individuals need to prepare for a worldwide flu pandemic, state and federal officials said Tuesday.

Officials said there is a good chance that a strain of flu that has been passing among birds will mutate into a strain transmitted through people.

In 1918, 1957 and 1968 viruses containing a combination of genes from a human flu virus and a bird flu virus caused global outbreaks. The 1918 outbreak killed between 20 million and 50 million people, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.</b>

Dr. Bruce Gellen, director of the National Vaccine Program Office, said there is a good chance that a flu pandemic could happen again.

“It is inevitable that infected birds will make their way to America,” Gellen said.

He spoke to about 350 people at the North Carolina Pandemic Flu summit at the Museum of History in Raleigh. The meeting was carried on the Internet.

Last year, President Bush asked that every state hold such a meeting. Gov. Mike Easley, Michael Levitt, secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and other officials spoke at the event.

Gellen said health officials are monitoring bird flu cases in other countries and are stockpiling doses of bird flu vaccine. Eight million doses have been created so far, he said.

Since December 2003, infected birds have been reported in Europe, Asia, and Africa.

According to the World Health Organization, 103 people have died since 2003 after being in close contact with contagious birds. Devlin said none of those people had the type of bird flu that can be passed among people.

Gellen said a flu pandemic would quickly become a problem for all aspects of society. He said a pandemic probably would last from a year to a year and half and cause about 30 percent of people to get sick.

Easley said a pandemic would affect businesses, schools, health-care providers, churches and families. He urged people to start thinking about how they will respond.

“The state will provide the lead but others have to follow,” he said.

Dr. Jeff Runge, chief medical officer for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, said the federal government expects communities and individuals to create strategies to deal with a flu pandemic.

“The federal government can’t respond to all 50 states and territories,” Runge said. “We will not be plucking people off of their rooftops in the case of a pandemic flu.

“It is not just the job of the government, it is the job of the head of every family.”

County plan in works
In Cumberland County, health officials said they are working on a local response plan.

On April 28, the Cumberland County Public Health Department will hold a pandemic workshop for representatives from local government, health education and business communities.

Mike Williams, public health preparedness coordinator for the county department, said the purpose of the orientation is to talk about how groups can work together to distribute vaccine during a pandemic.

Wayne Raynor, the county’s public health director, said the group also will talk about how to educate the public about bird flu.

Raynor said he suspects many people do not believe a flu pandemic will happen.

“They think public health agencies have a plan,” he said. “And we do to some extent. But this is going be different. Public health will probably be quickly overwhelmed. We are going to need resources from the private sector. Everyone will need to help.”
 
=



<B><font size=+1 color=blue><center>Bird flu hits small farms, paves way to new disease</font>

Thu Mar 23, 2006 9:29 AM ET
By Elizabeth Piper
<A href="http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=topNews&storyID=2006-03-23T142925Z_01_L23790643_RTRUKOC_0_US-BIRDFLU-FARMING.xml&archived=False">otday.reuters.com</a></center>
LONDON (Reuters) - Bird flu could spell the end for small poultry farmers and open the door to more diseases at intensive farms, campaigners said on Thursday.

Conservation, farming and agriculture campaigners said governments were responding poorly to the outbreak of the deadly H5N1 virus that has killed over 100 people so far because they had yet to accept that the outbreak started at intensive farms.</b>

It was then spread by the trade of poultry, poultry products and poultry manure more so than by wild birds and chickens in backyard farms, which have become the focus for many governments' campaigns to fight the virus' advance.

"I don't think you would have seen this spread if it wasn't for the industrial type of farming that has been developed over decades and exported itself and its products," said Devlin Kuyek, a researcher at GRAIN, an international group campaigning for sustainable management and agricultural biodiversity.

"To make matters worse, governments ... are pursuing measures to force poultry indoors and further industrialize the poultry sector. In practice this means the end of the small-scale poultry farming that provides food and livelihoods to hundreds of millions of families across the world."

Campaigners said the current outbreak of bird flu was sparked at factory farms in China and Southeast Asia and then sent round the world mostly in products and waste.

Bird flu has now been detected in the Middle East, Africa and Europe, prompting the killing of millions of birds.

"Globally, the most important route of spread remains unrestricted poultry movements. Recent outbreaks in India, Nigeria and Egypt originated within the poultry industry," Birdlife International, a global partnership of conservation organizations, said in a report.

"Here, as in most other H5N1 outbreaks, there is strong circumstantial evidence that movements of poultry and poultry products are responsible."

TRADE FUELS SPREAD

Some countries have banned imports of poultry and products, but campaigners say trade in hatching eggs and manure among other potentially contaminated goods was continuing. Continued ...
 
=



<B><center>Thursday 23rd March, 2006

<font size-=+1 color=purple>Bird flu turns up on our doorstep</font>

<A href="http://www.postcourier.com.pg/20060323/view01.htm">www.postcourier.com.pg</a></center>
HEALTHY living is very much on our minds these days, with reports of new deadly diseases cropping up around the world. First it was the deadly HIV/AIDS, which we are still staggering to cope with. Then the mysterious ebola plague, which appears to have been confined. More recently, avian or bird flu has caught the international imagination. Bird flu has been creeping closer and now, it is confirmed to be within striking distance of our land. The national quarantine officers at Kiunga say the disease has been found at Timika, the town that services the huge American-owned copper mine at Freeport.</b>

This calls for a fresh resolve by our health and quarantine staff to be vigilant. If the illness gets into our village poultry stocks and spreads rapidly, it could have a devastating effect on the rural lifestyle. Pigs are an occasional treat. Village chickens are a much more frequent part of the diet, so too the frozen poultry pieces bought in town stores. Also to be considered is the wild bird population in our country. Imagine what our beautiful valleys and islands would be like with a decimated bird population?

Hospital waste scandal

The burgeoning scandal of the disposal of medical wastes from the Port Moresby General Hospital appears to have taken a turn for the worse. Our reporters were shown dumping sites on rural land, not far from where people gather, where the wastes were dumped this week. You will recall the Post-Courier broke the story about the hospital wastes piling up outside wards because the last remaining medical incinerator had broken down. Then the government-owned “white elephant’’ hospital nearby offered to let the wastes be destroyed at its unused incinerator. Nearby residents complained.

Now we see the wastes are being dumped in the Baruni area, on vacant land that is claimed by people as their traditional land. Those wastes include some unhygienic materials, the sorts of things none of us would like to have at our back doorstep. Who decided to take this way of handling the matter?

Did anybody think to find out if it involved a health risk to people? Did they check the ownership of the dumping site. Surely our administrators and politicians realise that there is no ownerless land in Papua New Guinea. Are they so desperate for a stop-gap remedy? And when are they going to talk about the sensible long-term solution, new medical incinerators? The silence from Waigani is deafening.
 
=




<B><font size=+1 color=red><center>Bird flu forces Israeli-Palestinian cooperation </font>

Mehdi Lebouachera
Gaza City, Gaza Strip
23 March 2006 03:05
<A href="http://www.mg.co.za/articlepage.aspx?area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__international_news&articleid=267491">www.mg.co.za</a></center>
The discovery of deadly bird flu in both Israel and the Palestinian territories is pushing the two sides to work together despite plummeting relations as Hamas prepares for government.

Israel confirmed on Thursday that the H5N1 strain that is dangerous to humans had been found in poultry in a Jewish settlement in the West Bank, hot on the heels of its detection in both the Gaza Strip and six farms inside Israel.</b>

Israeli officials said cooperation with the Palestinians on bird flu so far had been "strong and tight" and said a way needed to be found for that to continue, even after a Hamas-dominated government takes power on Monday, because of the threat to human health.

"The moment they had suspicions, they gave us the samples," said the spokesperson for the Israeli coordination team, Shlomo Dror, referring to specimens of dead poultry from Gaza which tested positive in Israeli laboratories on Wednesday.

"We told them: 'Everything you need, tell us and we will give you'."

Asked whether cooperation would end when the new Hamas-led government is sworn in, Dror replied: "We are not speaking with Hamas, as long as they are committed to the destruction of Israel.

"We will have to find a way to deal with the bird-flu issue, maybe through international organisations. But we will find a way to speak to the Palestinians -- there are things you have to coordinate, this flu can kill people."

Dror acknowledged that the radical Islamists of Hamas could block coordination through third parties, particularly as Israel no longer had any presence inside Gaza since last year's withdrawal of troops and settlers.

"Of course Hamas can interfere and object. If they decide tomorrow to cut the coordination they can do it."

But he stressed that the bird-flu virus, which has so far been found only in poultry, posed a more serious threat to human health among the Palestinians than among Israelis.

"The situation in Gaza is more delicate than in Israel because of the economic situation and also the fact that people are living with chickens."

The deputy agriculture minister in the outgoing Palestinian government, Azzam Tbeileh, said Israel had an obligation to help under international law because the territories remained under its occupation.

"It's the occupation's responsibility. We don't have vaccines and protective suits," Tbeileh said.

"We are going to maintain the highest degree of coordination and cooperation with the Israelis, but there are huge difficulties. We live under occupation and there are roadblocks. Even I have to go through the roadblocks.

"We're going to take some samples in other areas and send [them] to laboratories in Israel. We lack the laboratories and equipment ourselves. We have no other choice."

The official stressed that it was in Israel's interest to cooperate.

"This virus knows no boundaries, nor is it kept out by the separation wall" that Israel is building the length of the West Bank, he said.

Western donors, who have threatened to withhold financial assistance from a Hamas-led government unless it renounces violence and signs up to the peace process with Israel, have a similar problem in helping fight the outbreak.

Aid organization CARE International has been working with both the Palestinian authorities and foreign governments and agencies.

"There was a meeting with donors," said Ayman Shwaibi, the group's bird flu coordinator.

"I know that most of them, like the European Union, the World Bank and the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation are interested in helping the Palestinians to fight the virus," he said.

"We are doing our best to support the Palestinian ministries of health and agriculture to have the minimum requested for diagnosing and protecting the staff." -- AFP
 

JPD

Inactive
Cascadians said:
JPD, the 2-part article you posted on this thread, "This thing just continues to march" with Dr. Michael Osterholm is an excellent informative read: Thank you. Went to the site, clicked on the printer version, 8 pages, printed it and it will be stuffed in the internal mailboxes of all the dept heads and supervisors at a large continuing care retirement center. Surprisingly, there has not been much substantive informational outreach to the long-term care health community and this article should open a few eyes. If avian flu goes efficient H2H it would be irresponsible to pretend a huge eldercare complex could continue running, so it makes sense to mentally, emotionally prepare workers now for the fact that dependent seniors will have to go back to their families in time to flash-freeze-in-place in each family home unit as the world stops to safeguard the mass population (and who knows if this can work or is even remotely do-able).


It is a good one. We have been printing these out for many people here. My wife is a LPN and has been a Home Health Aide. Mainly in home care. She has many agency and public health connections that are interested in H5N1. Mostly they are in the dark regarding this, even though our state has a 406-page plan in place. This plan has not yet been trickled down to them yet. This information is valuable for these places.
 

Kim99

Veteran Member
Mexico's denying the story from yesterday:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060323...flu_mexico_dc_1

7 minutes ago

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Mexico's agriculture ministry denied rumors in U.S. commodities markets on Thursday that a case of H5N1 bird flu had been found near the U.S. border.

"We are free of highly-pathogenic bird flu," Jose Angel del Valle, the ministry's animal health director, told Reuters.

U.S. grain prices were lower early on Thursday amid talk of the deadly bird flu in neighboring Mexico, but livestock markets -- which stand to benefit -- were treating it as a hoax, traders said.

The rumors apparently began on a Brazilian web site which reported that a duck found dead in the town of Nogales, near Arizona, had died of bird flu.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Israel: Bird Flu used for political/religious purposes

Israel has been a place of firsts this week... The spread of H5N1 by human carriers and now Bird Fly used for political/religious capitol... I'm tempted to post this article (I found in a search engine) on the main board, but starting a debate on 'God's Wrath' would be a distraction from what we're all facing with BF... and this thread is about Bird Flu Awareness, in all it's aspects... this is jsut another social aspect.

______________________________________________________


Kabbalah Preacher Blames Gay Marriage for Bird Flu

Thurs 23rd March 2006

Written By Danny McCoy
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel

(Jerusalem, Israel) – A prominent Kabbalah preacher has blamed a push in upcoming elections to legalize gay marriage on an outbreak of the deadly bird flu in Israel.

With less than a week to go before polls open, the remarks from Rabbi David Basri have done little to dissuade liberal campaigners. According to Reuters, Mertez party member Yossi Beilin is seeking liberal votes with a pro gay marriage stance through stickers that read, “voice of the groom and groom” and “voice of the bride and bride.”

Though Israel has recognized the common law marriage of same sex couples since 1994, this is the first time the issue of legal civil partnerships has played out so heatedly in the political arena.

It was Basri’s son who quoted his father, saying “God punishes depravity first through plagues against animals and then in people.” It should be obvious, he concluded, that bird flu is caused by political parties “strengthening and encouraging homosexuality.”

Rabbi Danny Rich, the Head of British Liberal Judaism, responded by saying: “This is so stupid it’s hardly worth responding to. Even scientists are not sure why bird flu has occurred, so I suppose this man is entitled to his flight of fancy. As far as I’m aware birds are not categorized by their sexuality, so what they have to do with gay marriage I don’t know.

“This Kabbalist seems to be muddled by his own mysticism and mystery. He must be a confused, sad man.”

http://www.queernetwork.co.uk/gaymarriage.htm

:vik:
 

JPD

Inactive
First word at flu conference: Don't wait to plan

http://www.jconline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060323/NEWS09/603230342/1152

By Tanya Brown
tbrown@journalandcourier.com

Indiana Prepares, the Pandemic Influenza State Summit organized by Gov. Mitch Daniels' office and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, kicked off this morning at Purdue University.

A welcome from Lt. Gov. Becky Skillman and a short presentation on pandemic avian flu was followed by short sessions aimed at helping families, individuals, schools and businesses prepare for the disease.

The invitation-only conference is aimed at educating key personnel on bird flu so that they can go back to their communities and set up in-depth preparedness plans.

Pam Pontones, director of surveillance and investigations the Indiana State Department of Health, urged people to be smart about health practices if avian flu begins transmitting human to human.

She suggested storing a supply of water and food, as well as prescription drugs and other needed health supplies.

She also urged parents to limit sick children's contact with others.

"Sometimes kids find it hard to understand that they can't go to the birthday party because they're sick," she said. "But you don't want to spread the germs, and they can understand that."

Frequent hand washing, by all family members is also important.

Michael MacLean, a partner at Baker and Daniels, urged businesses and all members of the private sector to think about bird flu in advance of an epidemic.

"Plan now. Don't say, 'I'll figure out what to do when my employees start missing work,'" he said.

The conference continues this afternoon in the Purdue Memorial Union's North and South Ballrooms.

Both Daniels and Michael Leavitt, U.S. secretary of Health and Human Services, are scheduled to speak.

The summit is being streamed live by the health department and can be viewed at www.statehealth.in.gov.

Individuals may also view the Web cast at their local health department or local Purdue Extension office and are invited to call those offices to check.

All materials distributed during the event will also be posted on the state health department Web site.

http://www.in.gov/isdh/
 

Nuthatch

Inactive
Re: post #29

Thanks for not separating it and running it on a new thread. As it is, it gets distracting seeing articles we've read through the daily threads appear separately on the main board.
 

Kim99

Veteran Member
Bird Flu Virus is One Mutation Away from Airborne; Time to Stockpile Supplies to Prepare for Major Global Catastrophe

Download this press release as an Adobe PDF document.

http://www.prweb.com/releases/2006/3/prweb362651.htm


An airborne strain of the H5N1 virus would have the ability to spread across the globe in mere days.

(PRWEB) March 23, 2006 -- Leading researchers have indicated that the bird flu virus is now just one mutation away from changing into a form that can be easily transmitted among humans. Once the virus mutates into an airborne form, there may be very little warning that a pandemic has begun. An airborne strain of the H5N1 virus would have the ability to spread across the globe in mere days.

Some experts feel that this new super-influenza strain could transform the world into a situation resembling the New Orleans catastrophe after the Katrina hurricane. All deliveries to stores, restaurants and gas stations would immediately cease because people would either be too sick or too scared to attend their jobs. This would cause huge shortages in a matter of days.

The best way to survive a Bird Flu pandemic would be to minimize contact with other people. This would require people to stay in their homes for an extended period of time. Without adequate food and water, this can not be accomplished. In addition, if people wait too long before they begin buying extra supplies they may find that there are no supplies left once the pandemic begins.

If you would like more information on how to immediately prepare, there is a pandemic flu website that provides live help in answering your questions. This website has various different discussion forums designed to provide real time answers to your questions. Whether you would like the latest news on the quickly unfolding developments, or if you would like help in preparing, we recommend that you immediately visit this site at: www.Avianflutalk.com.
 

JPD

Inactive
State's pandemic summit looks at local response

http://www.thetimesonline.com/artic...nd_state/94b6572ed8bf51868625713a0066fa3c.txt

BY RICK CALLAHAN
Associated Press Writer

WEST LAFAYETTE (AP) -- Indiana health commissioner Judith Monroe told about 400 people attending the Indiana Prepares conference today that during the last 300 years there have been about 10 pandemics worldwide.

She displayed maps of the rapid day-by-day spread of the 1918 Spanish flu outbreak, and warned that today's air travel will quickly spread the bird flu if it mutates into a form that spreads among humans.

State officials were holding the conference at Purdue University to plan for the day when the next influenza epidemic sweeps across the nation. They are focusing on the emergency responders, doctors, nurses and others who would be on an outbreak's front-lines.

Eric Dietz, executive director of the Indiana Department of Homeland Security, said that in a pandemic, about a third of the work force could fall ill, so businesses and governments need a plan to keep functioning.

"By definition, a pandemic means you are on your own," Dietz said.

Preparing local entities for a widespread flu outbreak is the focus the daylong summit detailing Indiana's plans for an outbreak that experts believe is inevitable.

Dietz said last week that "it's not if, but when" the next global flu pandemic arrives.

U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Michael Leavitt and Gov. Mitch Daniels were expected to join participants for the summit's afternoon portion to discuss federal and state plans to respond to an outbreak and minimize its impact.

During the summit's breakout sessions, representatives of law enforcement, the business community, health care providers, universities and others will be briefed on pandemic preparations.

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has drafted guidelines to help all of those local entities create their own plans.

"This summit brings all of those people together," TJ Lightle, a spokeswoman for the Indiana State Department of Health, which is co-hosting the summit with the state's Department of Homeland Security.

The federal government has asked all states to prepare for the possibility the avian flu could mutate and become easily transmitted from human to human, causing a global outbreak, or pandemic.

Pandemics occur when a powerful new virus that people lack an immunity to mutates in such as way that it is spread easily between humans.

Lightle said a key element of the state's pandemic planning is the role individuals will play in helping combat the disease's spread if an outbreak surfaces. That includes improving personal hygiene, such as frequent hand-washing, she said.

"It's going to fall on every individual and every Hoosier needs to be prepared, at home and in their professional lives," Lightle said. "Everyone needs to have a plan in mind."

Whether the next pandemic will be caused by some new form of flu virus, or the avian flu that cannot yet be spread from human to human, remains unclear.

But the impact of a flu pandemic would be substantial, both in the loss of human life and economic impact. The 1918 Spanish flu pandemic, for example, killed about 11,000 Hoosiers, 500,000 Americans and 50 million people worldwide.

Indiana cities and towns were forced to cancel all public gatherings, schools and religious services for weeks at a time to control that outbreak.

The state has formed statewide and county-level emergency plans to deal with a possible pandemic. Under certain worst-case scenarios, affected people could be quarantined.

If the avian flu does lead to a pandemic, state officials estimate nearly 6,000 Hoosiers would die if the virus were to spread to 35 percent of the population. Federal officials have estimated that 1.8 million Americans could die.
 

JPD

Inactive
HHS secretary warns: states unprepared to handle flu pandemic

http://www.dailypress.com/news/loca...23,0,1693912.story?coll=dp-headlines-virginia

By KRISTEN GELINEAU
Associated Press Writer
March 23, 2006

RICHMOND, Va. -- The federal government cannot be relied upon to protect Virginia from a potential flu pandemic, and no state is fully prepared to handle such an outbreak, Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt said Thursday.

Leavitt issued the warning to around 900 officials from local governments, schools, businesses, and health and emergency services. Similar summits are being held in each state to raise awareness of a possible flu pandemic.

"If there's a pandemic in the 21st century, it's going to reach Virginia," Leavitt said. "Any community that fails to prepare, with the expectation that somehow the federal government will come to the rescue, will be tragically wrong. Not because the federal government lacks a will ... but because there is no way to respond to 5,000 communities at the same time."

Leavitt's concerns were echoed by Gov. Timothy M. Kaine, who also addressed the crowd and reiterated that local preparedness is key.

"No federal resources are sufficient to handle all the problems we have," Kaine said. "We need to make sure at the state level that the resources are available."

On Tuesday, the World Health Organization announced that 103 people have died from the H5N1 strain of bird flu. Although no cases in the United States have been reported, health officials fear the virus could mutate into a version that could easily be transmitted between people, potentially triggering a global pandemic.

The virus has genetic characteristics that are very similar to those of the virus of 1918, which was also a bird flu that mutated into one that spread easily among humans, Leavitt said.

The 1918 virus was the most lethal flu germ of the 20th Century, killing 20 million to 50 million worldwide and leaving more than 500,000 people dead in the United States alone.

A flu pandemic today could sicken 90 million people in one year and leave 2 million dead, Leavitt said.

Whether or not this particular strain of flu leads to a pandemic, future pandemics are inevitable--and nobody is well-prepared to handle one, Leavitt said.

"Pandemics happen," he said. "The reality is, in the construct of history, we are overdue and we're underprepared."

Virginia's plan will focus on better communication between health officials and the public and will address the needs of the state's most vulnerable residents, including the elderly and the poor, Kaine said. Hospitals must also ensure they have enough supplies on hand to handle an onslaught of flu-sickened patients, he said.

Leavitt suggested residents keep a two-week supply of food and adequate medical supplies at home in the event of a massive outbreak.

The federal government has already given Virginia $2.2 million in funding to help with preparedness and the state will receive 1 million treatment courses of Tamiflu and other antiviral drugs by 2007, Leavitt said.

Kaine did not respond when asked if he thought the federal government's funding for Virginia was adequate.

A milder form of avian flu in 2002 led to an outbreak in the Shenandoah Valley that quickly spread out of control, infecting nearly 200 farms and forcing the slaughter of 5 million birds.

"Just that indication in our recent history certainly should make us sort of sit on the edge of our chairs and be particularly alert," Kaine said.



P>
 

pandora

Membership Revoked
One mutation away!! :shkr: This is the most frightening thread I've read to date on this subject. Time to tie a few loose ends up on my preps.
 

Knoxville's Joker

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Planet of the Apes

I read all thise and I keep on having flashbacks to conquest of the planet of the apes. Totalitarian regime. Deadly virus that causes us to kill all our pets. Then we get to adopt monkeys for pets. Fictional, but it could happen.
 

JPD

Inactive
S227N H5N1 In Human Upper and Lower Respiratory Tract

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/03220602/H5N1_S227N_Upper_Lower.html

Recombinomics Commentary
March 22, 2006

It is interesting that the A/Hong Kong/213/03 (H5N1) virus, which was isolated from a human and recognizes both SA2,3Gal and SA2,6Gal (ref. 6), bound extensively to both bronchial and alveolar cells.

The above comments in tomorrow’s Nature may explain the large cluster in Turkey associated with S227N detected in the index case. S227N had previously been shown to have reduced affinity for avian receptors (SA2,3Gal) and increased affinity for human receptors (SA2.6Gal). Although the recent paper in Science failed to find increased affinity for SA2,6Gal, the S227N was on a genetic background from an isolate in Vietnam which was distinct from the Hong Kong isolate listed above. In Turkey, the S227N was on a Qinghai strain background, which is different than both the Vietnam or Hong Kong strains used in the lab experiments.

However, the size of the cluster in Turkey suggests that H5N1 was more efficiently transmitted human-to-human, which would be consistent with increased affinity for SA2.6Gal receptors. The H5N1 from the index case was said to be a mixture of S227N and wild type S227. Only wild type was detected in the sister of the index case, in contrast to the Hong Kong isolates which had S227N from both the father and son. However, the Hong Kong isolates were grown on a canine cell line, MDCK, as was the H5N1 used in the Nature paper. It is unclear what was used to isolate H5N1 from the index case and his sister. Isolation of H5N1 on chicken eggs can reduce or eliminate S227N.

However, changes in the levels of S227N and wild type could have been modulated in the patients. H5N1 was isolated from lung tissue, which may have selected against S227N in vivo, since the above data suggests the wild type would grow more efficiently in lung tissue.

Thus, the S227N could have facilitated growth in the upper respiratory tract, while S227 could have been more involved in growth in the lower respiratory tract. Genes encoding S227 could have entered the upper respiratory tract in a pseudo-typed H5N1.

These data could also explain the cluster of cases in Azerbaijan which were fatal, yet efficient transmitted between the index case, her two cousins, and a close friend.

More sequence information on the Azerbaijan cluster would be useful.
 

New Freedom

Veteran Member
http://www.hindustantimes.com/news/181_1657436,0012.htm

At home in the lungs

Hindustan Times

New Delhi, March 24, 2006




Latest research on the bird flu virus, H5N1 will give an important leg-up to global efforts to check the spread of the disease. Two independent groups of researchers from the Erasmus University in Rotterdam, and the Universities of Tokyo and Wisconsin at Madison, US, have reportedly discovered why the H5N1 causes lethal pneumonia in people, but stays — as yet — out of the human-to-human loop. The H5N1 currently poses a limited threat to humans as it cannot spread easily from person to person. But once it acquires this ability, it would spread rapidly.

The latest findings apparently indicate that the H5N1 prefers the surface of human pulmonary (lung) cells — where it binds to sugars — to cells lining the nose and throat. This validates what scientists have found in autopsies performed on H5N1 victims that show damage to the alveoli — delicate sacs deep in the lungs, where oxygen enters the blood. Since people usually ‘catch’ the flu through sneezing and inhalation from the nose and throat, it stands to reason that poor binding of the H5N1 in the respiratory tract probably keeps it from spreading easily among people.

The next step for researchers will be to work out possible mutations of the H5N1 that may allow it to bind in the upper respiratory tract. This will help identify new strains of the virus and predict how they could affect human tissues other than the gut and the brain as is happening now. Also, it will complement the focus of scientists on ascertaining virus components that help the H5N1 adapt to humans, as they make a list of molecules to look for in emerging bird flu strains that threaten people and develop new therapies to target those molecules.
 

New Freedom

Veteran Member
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2006/03/0322_060322_bird_flu_2.html

Bird Flu: Frequently Asked Questions
Brian Handwerk
for National Geographic News
March 22, 2006

Bird flu is spreading steadily westward from its Asian source and raising anxiety in its wake.

In February alone the deadly H5N1 strain of avian flu affected birds in Italy, Greece, Bulgaria, Germany, Austria, France, Slovenia, India, Iran, and Egypt.

Image: H5N1 avian flu strain

Enlarge Photo

Email to a Friend
RELATED

* Bird Flu Will Reach U.S. and Canada This Fall, Experts Predict
* Bird Flu Basics: What It Is and How It Could Explode
* Multimedia feature: "The Next Killer Flu"

To date the World Health Organization (WHO) has confirmed 184 cases of H5N1 in humans and 103 deaths.

Just how dangerous is the disease? Our frequently asked questions separate bird flu fact from fiction:

What is bird flu?

Avian influenza (bird flu) is an infection caused by contagious viruses that are common among birds. Wild birds may carry these infections, but they typically prove most harmful to domestic fowl like chickens, ducks, and turkeys.

Highly potent forms of the virus can quickly kill 90 to 100 percent of infected birds.

The best known strain of bird flu is a variation of H5N1, a highly contagious and deadly bird virus. This virus has also infected people. The first known human case of bird flu appeared in Hong Kong in 1997. Recently humans have become infected in Indonesia, Vietnam, Thailand, Cambodia, China, Turkey, and Iraq.

(Read Geographic magazine's "Tracking the Next Killer Flu.")

How do humans get bird flu?

Nearly all humans who have been diagnosed with bird flu had close contact with infected domestic birds (chickens, ducks, or turkeys), or areas contaminated with their excrement and secretions.

It's important to remember that this poultry-based virus is not easily transmitted to humans. Frequently, even people who come into contact with infected birds do not acquire the virus.
Can bird flu be passed from person to person?

To date, spread of the H5N1 virus between people has been extremely limited.

Image: H5N1 avian flu strain

Enlarge Photo

Email to a Friend
RELATED

* Bird Flu Will Reach U.S. and Canada This Fall, Experts Predict
* Bird Flu Basics: What It Is and How It Could Explode
* Multimedia feature: "The Next Killer Flu"

Flu viruses undergo regular genetic mutations. Experts warn that if H5N1, or another strain of avian influenza, mutates to become easily transferable from person to person, a global pandemic could occur with catastrophic results. Humans would have no immunity for such a new virus.

So far there is no evidence that such a mutation has occurred or that it is imminent. However, most experts agree that the next global influenza pandemic is on the horizon. The only question is, How soon?

Why doesn't bird flu spread easily from human to human?

Both bird and human flu viruses infect people by attaching themselves to cells in the respiratory tract. Currently, bird and human strains do this in two different locations.

Bird viruses prefer to bind with molecules located deep within the lungs. This remote location inside the body makes it more difficult to spread the bird flu virus by coughing or sneezing.

But scientists warn that the H5N1 virus could adapt and affect cells much higher up in the airway, where human flu viruses typically bind. If that occurs, the chances of a pandemic could be greatly increased.

Can you get bird flu from eating poultry products?

There is no evidence that avian influenza can be transmitted through cooked food—even if the poultry or poultry products were contaminated with the virus.

In areas currently free of the virus, such as the United States, poultry products can be safely prepared and eaten. Since 2004 the U.S. government has prohibited the importation of poultry from countries affected by avian influenza.

Poultry can also be consumed in countries where avian influenza is present, but precautions should be followed.

Normal cooking temperatures (70ºC/158ºF or higher) are fatal to the virus—but all parts of the bird or egg must be fully cooked at this temperature. People handling or preparing raw poultry must also ensure that juices or blood do not contaminate other food or drink.

What are the symptoms of bird flu?

Many symptoms reported by avian influenza victims are similar to those of seasonal flu: aches, fever, cough, and sore throat.

Additional and more serious symptoms include eye infections, acute respiratory distress, and pneumonia.

A laboratory test is the only way to determine if a human has contracted bird flu.

Is there a bird flu vaccine?

At present, there is no vaccine available to protect against H5N1, though clinical trials are currently testing several prototype vaccines. Seasonal flu vaccines are not effective against bird flu. Vaccine production is complicated by the virus's ability to change forms through genetic mutation, which could compromise previously effective vaccines.

What is my prognosis if I do get bird flu?

Currently the mortality rate is a bit higher than 50 percent of all confirmed cases. But experts suggest that the mortality rate could decline if the virus mutates and begins infecting more people who have ready access to health care.

Health care facilities are a significant factor in bird flu mortality. So far, many infections have taken place in rural regions of nations where health care is not readily accessible. If the virus were to spread to industrialized nations, the fatality rate might well be lower.

How can bird flu be treated?

Laboratory studies suggest that some antiviral medicines are effective at treating the H5N1 virus in humans.

Antivirals can limit the virus's symptoms and help prevent its spread. The medicines oseltamavir and zanamavir have shown promising results in laboratory tests. But additional research is needed to determine which medications could be the most effective.

Influenza viruses can become resistant to drugs, too, so there is no guarantee that any particular medication could remain effective in the event of a pandemic.

Should I avoid travel to nations affected by bird flu?

Currently, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) does not believe that travelers must avoid countries affected by bird flu.

The CDC does recommend that travelers visiting such countries avoid poultry farms, as well as contact with animals in live food markets and areas contaminated by those animals or their feces. Travelers should also see the CDC's guidelines for eating poultry products in other countries. (See the CDC's Travelers' Health Advisory.)

What other human diseases are known to have stemmed from avian flu?

Recent genetic studies show that the deadly 1918 "Spanish flu," which circled the globe and killed an estimated 20 to 40 million people, developed in birds and was similar to the current strains of bird flu. Both viruses jumped directly from animals to humans.

The 20th century's other major pandemics, in 1957 and 1968, had different origins—hybrid flu viruses. They were predominantly human viruses that acquired some genes from an avian source.

Should I worry about my cat or dog catching wild birds?

Cats can and have become infected with bird flu. They may acquire the virus by eating the carcasses of infected birds. Birdbaths and other backyard areas could also become contaminated with the virus by bird droppings, which could be ingested in water or inhaled as airborne dust.

Fewer than a dozen cats are known to have become infected with avian influenza. (Read "Bird Flu Kills Domestic Cat in Germany.") Nonetheless in nations were bird flu is present there is a small risk of pets becoming infected and a similarly small risk that they could infect their human owners.

How can I protect my pet birds?

The U.S. government has instituted a ban on the importation of birds and bird products (such as eggs) from Asian nations affected by the H5N1 strain of bird flu: Cambodia, Indonesia, Japan, Laos, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, China, Romania, Russia, South Korea, Thailand, Turkey, Ukraine, and Vietnam. (As of December 29, 2005).

If avian influenza reaches your area, bringing pet birds inside and out of contact with wild animals should offer protection from the disease.

Do wild birds carry bird flu?

Scientists aren't certain what role migratory birds play in the spread of avian influenza. Waterfowl naturally carry such viruses, often with no ill effects to themselves. However, wild birds can introduce flu viruses into domestic bird populations.

Experts are monitoring migratory flyways in an attempt to chart the spread of the H5N1 strain of bird flu. (Read "Alaskan Ducks Tested for Bird Flu.")

What do I do if I come across a dead bird in my yard?

The CDC suggests observing wild birds from a distance. If you encounter a diseased or dead bird, do not pick it up. The safest course would be to contact your state, local, or federal natural resource agency. If you do make physical contact with wild birds do not eat, drink, smoke, or rub your eyes before cleaning your hands with soap and water.

Is it safe to feed the birds in my yard?

Experts recommend avoiding physical contact with wild birds, but the level of risk may depend on the types of birds in your yard.

Most feeders attract perching birds. Although there have been documented cases of these birds dying from H5N1, they are far less likely to be affected than waterfowl and shorebirds, which are traditional carriers of the virus.

Free Email News Updates
Sign up for our Inside National Geographic newsletter. Every two weeks we'll send you our top stories and pictures (see sample).
 

New Freedom

Veteran Member
This is posted for my Swedish friend.........:D


http://www.thelocal.se/article.php?ID=3357&date=20060323

Three more cases of bird flu found in Stockholm

Published: 23rd March 2006 17:59 CET

Three new cases of the highly pathogenic strain of H5 bird flu were confirmed in central Stockholm on Thursday and the wild birds probably carried the H5N1 strain that can kill humans, officials said.

"Three more birds in Stockholm, two swans and a goose, have been found to carry the aggressive strain of bird flu," Sweden's National Veterinary Institute said in a statement on Thursday.

"We believe that it is in all likelihood H5N1," Ulla Carlsson, epizootic disease expert at the institute, told AFP.

So far Sweden has confirmed two cases of the H5N1 strain, in two wild ducks found dead on the country's southeastern coast in late February.

Earlier this week, Swedish officials confirmed that two wild swans found in the capital last week had died of the highly pathogenic strain of H5.

Samples from those swans were sent on for further testing to determine whether they carried the H5N1 strain. As the three new birds reported on Thursday were found in the same area as the two swans, the three would not undergo further testing.

In total, the Veterinary Institute has confirmed 41 cases of H5 subtype bird flu in Sweden, of which 26 have been found to have died of the highly pathogenic strain of H5.

But so far only the two ducks have been confirmed carriers of the H5N1 strain.

Security measures have been implemented in six areas in Sweden to prevent the spread of the disease, including protection and surveillance zones, though Stockholm residents are largely unaffected by the measures.

The H5N1 strain, in its most aggressive form, has killed more than 100 people worldwide, according to the World Health Organisation.
 
Top