04/24 | Daily Bird Flu Thread: Outbreak: Could it happen here?

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Link to yesterday's thread: http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?t=194647

Human Cases

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 Egypt
o Iraq

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

Updated April 3, 2006

Animal Cases

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

* Africa:
o Burkina Faso
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

* South Asia:
o Afghanistan
o India
o Kazakhstan
o Pakistan

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

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


For additional information about these reports, visit the
World Organization for Animal Health Web Site: http://www.oie.int/eng/en_index.htm

Updated April 7, 2006

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

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

:vik:
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Transcript of tonight's 'NBC Dateline'

Outbreak: Could it happen here?
An in-depth look at what would happen if the avian flu caused a pandemic
By Ann Curry
NBC News

Pick up a newspaper, turn on the TV and it’s there: the news about avian flu.

It can be alarming sometimes, often confusing. And nearly everyone has the same question: Could it happen here?

In a special Dateline, the world’s top flu experts helped us create a dramatic vision of how our world might change in the grip of a pandemic.

Some background
In 1996, a new and particularly deadly strain of avian flu was found in a goose in China. It was found a year later in Hong Kong and six people died from the virus. They were the first known human cases.

But in 2003, this same deadly strain of virus appeared again in bird populations and this time it spread rapidly—through China and into Southeast Asia.

It spread, according to experts, by migrating water fowl and by the legal and illegal trafficking of birds and bird parts.

From Southeast Asia, the virus moved into remote sections of Russia, then into Central Europe. In the last several months, it has spread to parts of Africa and Western Europe.

Almost 200 people are known to have been infected in 9 different countries. More than half of them have died.

As far as we know, the people infected with the current strain of avian flu did NOT get the virus from another person but after extremely close contact with sick birds—and even those cases are rare.

Experts say this deadly virus could infect birds here in the U.S. in a matter of months.

“People are concerned about poultry, but they don’t need to be if, in fact, they cook it. If it’s well cooked, it’s safe to eat and you’re not going get the avian flu,” says Dr. Sue Bailey, Former Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs.

But here’s the bigger worry: The avian flu virus is constantly mutating and what is keeping health experts up nights is the possibility that it might change into a virus that can be easily passed from human to human.

And that could trigger a pandemic, the uncontrollable global spread of a disease. No one knows when, how or even if it will happen. But the world’s top flu experts are telling us to prepare.

We’ve had three pandemics in the last century— including the big one: the so-called Spanish Flu of 1918 that killed up to 40 million people worldwide and more than 500,000 Americans. People were afraid to go outside. There were shortages of food and medical supplies.

Will history repeat itself?

Secretary of Health and Human Services Mike Leavitt is the man charged with preparing America for the next pandemic.

“Anything we say before a pandemic happens feels alarmist,” says Leavitt. “Anything that we have done once a pandemic starts seems inadequate. We’re at a greater risk of a pandemic than at any time in decades. We are overdue. And we’re under prepared.”

To prepare this report, we’ve consulted with the men and women who will be on the front lines of a pandemic if it were to happen—experts from international, federal, state, local agencies and many more.

They have given us their views, predictions and their guidance.

On Sunday night, Dateline took an unusual step to illustrate what the future might hold. Using doctors, medical students, actors and volunteers, we’ve produced a scenario based on what those experts say could happen in a world threatened by pandemic.

What you’re about to see is not intended to frighten or alarm—but simply to ask the question.... are we prepared?

“You and I are sitting on the crater of a volcano that’s pretty active, and the gas is coming out of little holes. It’s bubbling underneath our feet. ” Dr. David Nabarro, United Nations coordinator for Human and Avian Influenza. “We just don’t know when it’s gonna blow.”

Day one. This scenario starts on a Friday during flu season. It would be a busy night in the Emergency Department of a large hospital in New York City. A woman is brought in by her husband. He tells the triage nurse that his wife has been feeling ill for the past couple of days; a fever, cough, sore throat.

“Based on her symptoms alone—having the flu in the middle of flu season is not going to be unusual,” says New York City Department of Health’s Dr. Isaac Weisfuse.

“She will look like dozens of other patients, maybe hundreds of other patients that the triage nurse has seen that day,” says Dr. Eric Toner of the Center for Biosecurity, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, who has been involved in hospital disaster planning for more than 20 years.

It is so busy, the woman would be forced to wait for more than an hour before she is seen by a doctor. Though no one would know it, the woman is infected with a new flu virus that could change the lives of everyone—not just in New York City, but in the entire world.

As she coughs she would spread millions of copies of a newly-mutated virus that is deadly, and passes easily from one human to another.

“Everybody who walks by, everybody sitting next to her will be exposed to the virus. Now most of them won’t get sick, but some will.”

“They have a fever, a cough. They’ll feel achy. And they’ll experience shortness of breath,” describes Dr. Toner. “Probably, she’ll get a chest x-ray, which would likely show evidence of pneumonia.”

She could be one of thousands of cases of pneumonia in New York City every year.

“She would not stand out at this point,” Dr. Toner adds.

Day two. In this scenario, the patient suddenly stops breathing— another indication to doctors that she might have a severe case of pneumonia. A hospital team would try to revive her.

When they get her breathing again, she would be placed on a ventilator. Doctors might still believe she had pneumonia, and would try to learn more about their patient.

In this scenario, the patient’s husband tells the nurse his wife travels often for business and that she recently flew from Vietnam to Hong Kong, then to Los Angeles. She was in Seattle for more business meetings, and then home to New York.

But it’s that visit to Vietnam where, in recent years, some have fallen ill and died of the avian flu: that would be the most significant information for the doctors in New York.

“That, in an astute clinician, should trigger the thinking that maybe this is the beginning of something,” says Toner.

Given the woman’s steep decline, and the knowledge of her recent travel to an avian flu “hot zone,” they would call the New York City Health Department. Officials there would ask more questions.

“We’d start at the beginning: How many days did she spend in every country? Where did she spend her time? Was it in the big city? Was it in rural areas?” says Dr. Isaac Weisfuse of the questions they would ask.

The hospital would then send samples from the woman to a lab for testing. New York investigators would call their colleagues at the CDC in Atlanta, who would then shift into high gear.

“We would use our authority to request a manifest from the airline,” says Dr. Martin Cetron, director for Global Migration and Quarantine at the CDC. They would try to identify all the flights the businesswoman took, where she sat, and who she sat next to, to find out if anyone else is sick.

“These are exposures may have occurred in airports with thousands of people aggregating. You may be behind the eight ball right from the very beginning,” says Dr. Cetron.

In this scenario, the woman in New York, like a lot of international travelers, has been on four flights in less than a week.

“That’s an enormous challenge, in fact of getting accurate contact information to swiftly identify people. And so it’s a race against the clock, really,” he says.

Day three. The New York woman’s lab results would be back. By now, the CDC would confirm that she is infected with a virus similar to the avian flu. But even the lab wouldn’t be able to answer the most important question: Did she get it from a sick bird, or from another person?

New York City officials wouldn’t know either. But because reports of a bird flu case could cause panic, they would probably hold a news conference to tell the public there was no need for alarm at this point.

Day four. A worldwide effort would be launched to determine if the New York City case is evidence of human-to-human transmission.

Scientists at the CDC would have by now contacted their colleagues at the World Health Organization in Geneva, Switzerland.

There, Dr. Mike Ryan is the man in charge of monitoring infectious disease outbreaks around the world.

“We pick up information on suspect human cases of avian influenza every day. Any one of those cases could represent the emergence of a pandemic strain,” Dr. Michael Ryan, Dir. of Epidemic and Pandemic Alert and Response at WHO.

In our scenario, the World Health Organization is investigating a small number of cases of avian flu in Vietnam, but there is no confirmation of human to human transmission.

“If we found out that there was a cluster of cases in Vietnam, this would be an immediate red flag,” says Dr. Nancy Cox, the chief of the Influenza Branch of the CDC. “Our patient had traveled from Vietnam.”

With no way of knowing whether she caught the virus from a bird or a human, the CDC would issue a Health Alert to hospitals and health care workers around the country alerting them to the New York case.

Without knowing exactly what virus they are even dealing with, doctors can’t save the businesswoman.

But at this point in our scenario, no health official would know enough to declare a pandemic.

“There’s no documented evidence of sustained human-to-human transmission. That’s what you’re looking for in order to declare a pandemic,” says Dr. Cox.

All that would be about to change.

In Dateline's scenario, one fatally sick traveler has set off a chain reaction among medical investigators around the world. Have their worst fears come to pass? Did she have a mutant form of avian flu that could trigger a pandemic?

“An influenza pandemic is like a like a brush fire. It will not stop at a street. It will jump over a brook. It will travel globally. And its damages will travel globally,” says Dr. Klaus Stohr, senior advisor on influenza pandemic vaccine development.

In this scenario, a businesswoman in New York City has died from a strain of avian flu. But at first, no one would declare a pandemic because doctors would have no way of knowing the virus that killed her could pass easily from human to human.

Day five. CDC investigators would now be tracing the travel history of that New York patient to find everyone who came into contact with her.

“There’s a group of people that are clearly at risk,” says Dr. Martin Cetron, Director for Global Migrations and Quarantine at the CDC. “They need to be found quickly.”

Health officials would be holding their breath.

“We are all sitting around the table and saying, ‘Where is the next case going to be?’ and what’s the move on the chess table when the second case pops up?” he adds.

In the scenario it happens: That same day in Davenport, Iowa, a sick young man is taken to his local hospital emergency room. He’s weak and has a fever.

Because of the CDC’s alert, hospital workers would know to be cautious and wear masks & protective gowns.

“We’ll take them back to our treatment area and away from other patients, get them out of the waiting room as soon as possible to decrease the risk of exposure to other people,” says Lisa Caffery, Epidemiology Project Coordinator at Davenport’s Genesis Medical Center.

The triage nurse would know to ask him about his travel history.

The man in this scenario lives and works in Los Angeles. After flying to Seattle for business, he went on to Iowa to attend a reunion.

He hasn’t traveled outside the U.S. in years, but his symptoms and the fact that he was recently on a plane would be cause enough for local officials to call the CDC.

Investigators would also try to contact people who were at the reunion.

2,000 miles away from Iowa, in Seattle, Washington, a woman is waiting to see her doctor and she’s feeling sick. Because of the CDC’s warnings and the media coverage, the physician here would know about the woman in New York City.

“If someone is critically ill, they’d be referred to a hospital,” says Dr. Jeff Duchin, Chief of the Communicable Disease Control Epidemiology and Immunization Section at Public Health, Seattle-King County. “Hopefully, everybody will understand the precautions that need to be taken.”

The doctor here does take precautions and get the woman to the hospital. The woman tells doctors she’s a flight attendant, working a commuter run between Seattle and Los Angeles, but hasn’t been out of the country in months.

But since she is a flight attendant, doctors would worry about a connection to the New York City case.

They would send samples to a lab, and call the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It would be the third report the CDC has received in less than a week. Officials would begin to fear the worst.

“That’s a bad sign. We’re gonna go back to get the itineraries of the Davenport case and the Seattle case. And it will not surprise anyone if there’s an overlapping leg somewhere, where two of those people are on the same flight manifest,” says Dr. Cetron.

Day six. In our scenario, both patients in Davenport, Iowa and in Seattle are infected with the same strain of virus that killed the business woman in New York.

Now health officials would have to figure out how the three cases, thousands of miles apart, could be related.

Doctors give the flight attendant in Seattle the anti-viral Tamiflu from the hospital’s limited supply.

Tamiflu has been effective in some cases of the avian flu, but has never been used against a pandemic strain.

Meanwhile, the patient in Davenport continues to decline.

Day seven. It could take this long for investigators at the CDC to confirm the worst: that the cases in New York, Davenport and Seattle are related.

In the scenario, all three were on the same flight from Los Angeles to Seattle. The Davenport patient sat next to the businesswoman from New York, who had just returned from a trip to Vietnam. The flight attendant was on that plane.

The CDC says this would be the critical piece of information they had been looking for, but hoped they’d never find—evidence of human-to-human transmission.

“Those are all the pieces of the puzzle that come together that make for a very worrisome scenario. We now have a cluster that really looks like human to human spread of a novel influenza virus— a worrisome finding,” says Cetron.

Health officials would now know, they are seeing the beginning of a pandemic.

Scientists at the World Health Organization would be seeing more human cases in Vietnam, where the New York woman had traveled.

The WHO would likely deploy a rapid response team to the region. The team would distribute anti-virals, and implement quarantine measures. To be effective, they would have to respond within just a few weeks of the first case.

“We do believe that if we were to react quickly enough to such a scenario, we could possibly slow down or stop the emergence of a pandemic strain,” says Dr. Mike Ryan.

“However, we say slow down and we say the chances of stopping it are unknown.”

By now, health officials in the U.S. would likely be informing the public that a pandemic had started. Since they would have identified and isolated the new virus, scientists could begin to take the first steps in the long process of developing a vaccine.

“It’s going to require at least six months before we get vaccine out the other end of the pipeline—any vaccine,” says Dr. D.A. Henderson, Center for BioSecurity, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

Investigators would also be engaged in an almost-impossible task: trying to find the thousands of people who may have had contact with the three patients.

Day 13. Anyone who came into close contact with any of the patients could now be infected. That’s because flu viruses can spread rapidly and easily from person to person.

“Influenza viruses are very successful viruses per se. They cause coughing and sneezing. And that allows a virus to be spread from person to person,” says Dr. Nancy Cox, Chief of Influenza Branch of the CDC.

A flu virus enters the body after being breathed in. It heads to the lungs, latching on to the cells inside, and then squirts genetic material into the cell, making copies of itself. That kills the cell, which then bursts open and spews millions of new viruses into the victim.

Some are coughed out, infecting others. The rest are attacked by the body’s immune system.

It’s the body’s efforts to fight off the virus that causes most of the symptoms that make us feel bad--- aches, fever, coughing. But there’s an irony sometimes associated with a pandemic flu virus: the healthier you are, the sicker you could become. During the 1918 pandemic, young adults were the hardest hit. Their dynamic immune systems often overreacted, and turned deadly.

“In a virus which is particularly virulent, this immune response can inflame the lungs to such an extent that the lung is filled with bloody fluid and basically the patient dies of drowning,” says Dr. Toner.

Back in our scenario, two people who came into contact with the businesswoman are now sick: a person who sat next to her in the waiting room and a nurse who tended to her.

“This is a bigger story than just our one case in New York City,” says Dr. Isaac Weisfuse. “I think it’s the warning flag to get ready.”

A hospital worker in Seattle is also sick, as is a person who attended the reunion in Davenport. Two restaurant workers at a truck stop just outside Davenport have also come down with the virus.

“We would expect that this virus would then result in many, many cases in multiple areas. There’s clusters in this country and that country,” Dr. Cetron.

In our scenario, the World Health Organization’s rapid response team, given the almost impossible odds, can’t contain the virus. Human cases would now be popping up in other Asian countries, beginning a march around the world.

Day 14. The flight attendant in Seattle is recovering, but the patient in Davenport has died.

Just two weeks after the woman in New York came to the hospital, the virus is spreading.

The virus now would be traveling from city to city and life for virtually all Americans would undergo a dramatic, and possibly devastating, change.

“People need to be prepared for the fact that, with a severe pandemic, there could be a lot of sick and dying people on top of our day to day demands placed on our health care system,” says medical anthropologist Dr. Monica Shoch-Spana.

Day 30. As the flu pandemic spreads. It would catch a lot of people by surprise.

“You might in the morning brush your teeth, listen to the radio and find out that the virus has hit your community. There will be no big changes for you in the first couple of days,” says Dr. Klaus Stohr is a senior advisor to the World Health Organization.

The virus begins to spread from the three cities first hit in our scenario: New York, Davenport, Seattle.

As it’s now passed from human to human, the virus would likely travel along interstate highways, and airline routes.

Scientists say each city and town would experience waves of infections that would peak after approximately five weeks. The virus would continue to spread randomly—across borders and time zones. And scientists say it could circle the globe as many as three times.

“So the first wave may come through and affect young families. The second wave may come through and affect the elderly, to a greater extent. And a third wave may come through and pick up those who haven’t been infected already,” says Dr. Nancy Cox.

Day 40. In many parts of the United States, this would now be the worst time— the peak of the pandemic.

Hospitals emergency rooms would be overwhelmed with patients.

“New York has a population of just under eight million,” says Dr. Martin Meltzer, a senior economist at the CDC, who helped design a computer program that predicts numbers of sick and dead during a pandemic.

Based on New York City’s numbers, here’s what might happen in that worst week: About 5,000 people arriving at New York City hospitals.

That’s 5,000 people in addition to other patients. He says the demand for ICU beds and ventilators in all three cities from our scenario would be impossible to meet.

“The scale of a severe flu pandemic will be so much greater than anything that you’ve ever seen before,” says Dr. Eric Toner, University of Pittsburgh’s Center for Biosecurity.

Today, many hospitals are economically strapped, and don’t have funds to stockpile medical supplies. So it would be no surprise, in a pandemic, if doctors run short.

“Hospital staff are stretched to the limit. And this has been going on for five weeks. This isn’t just a bad weekend,” says Martin Meltzer.

“We’ll have patients who are normally treated in an intensive care unit being treated in hallways,” says Dr. Toner. “There won’t be two nurses to one patient. Maybe there’ll be one nurse to five patients, if we’re lucky. And there will still be babies to be born. There will still be accidents. There will be cancer patients that are getting treated.”

Hospitals all around the world would be forced to cancel elective surgeries to make room for the influx of flu patients.

Regions hit with natural disasters would also be dealing with thousands of flu patients.

Countries struggling against AIDS would now be hit with another deadly virus.

Hospital workers would likely be affected more than anyone else. Many would be sick, and the others would be working around the clock in hospitals, and tending to their own sick families.

“Would I be afraid to go to work? You have to go through those questions individually. What about my kids?” says Dorothy Teeter, Director, Public Health, Seattle-King County, of the questions individuals have to ask of themselves.

“I have elderly parents and a son with diabetes. So, I have to be a little bit more concerned about that. Because I would be here. I have to learn to balance that,” says Lisa Caffery RN, and Epidemiology Project Coordinator, Davenport’s Genesis Medical Center.

Eventually, access to many hospitals might even be restricted.

Even for those who don’t get sick, life would change profoundly. Restaurants, bars, and stores would be empty.

“Entertainment, movie theaters and Broadway will close. They’ll have no business,” predicts Dr. Toner.

But despite the pressures to close, some places might stay open.

“There are some very famous photographs from 1918 where the authorities had banned church gatherings but people held an impromptu church service outside,” says Dr. Toner.

“You’ll have a disruption of things that we take for granted,” says Dr. Shoch-Spana. “Whether it’s trash pick up, mail delivery, or access to police officers.”

“Utilities break down, like electricity, or sanitation or water. There won’t be people to repair them. So there may be shortages of electricity,” says Dr. Nabarro.

Deliveries of goods to warehouses and grocery stores would slow down. It also takes people to drive the subways, buses and trucks. Service disruptions and spotty commuter service would be common all over the country.

Some experts estimate as much as 40 percent of the work force could be absent at any given time during the pandemic.

“Work places will become ghostly and companies won’t be able to function,” says Dr. Nabarro.

Health officials would recommend radical changes to try to control the spread of the virus and protect vulnerable populations like children.

“We’re talking about situations that increase social distancing. School closures, potentially workplace closures, and having families hunker down at home,” says Dr. Martin Cetron, Director For Global Migration And Quarantine at the CDC.

Public gatherings, like baseball games and concerts might be cancelled. There would be talk of quarantine, but not the kind many of us might envision.

“We’re not going to see this nightmare scenario of armed guards with ‘shoot to kill’ orders,” says Dr. Cetron. “A voluntary approach to staying at home, sheltering in place, taking care of yourself and your loved ones, leverages your instinct to do the right thing.”

“People need to be prepared for extraordinary events. But they also need to be prepared for a problem that takes a long time to unfold,” says Shoch-Spana.

In the end, how many would die? And how would we know when the pandemic is over?

The pandemic at its peak would devastate communities across America and the entire world.

It would touch virtually every one of us in some way. But how will we know that the worst is over — and what will the pandemic leave behind?

Day 75. The pandemic has passed its peak. The National Institutes of Health estimate that at this stage over one million Americans could be infected, and hundreds of thousands could be dying or already dead. But the country is learning to cope.

“The notion of a panicked public—it makes for a great story. It makes for great movies and books. But, in the end, most people are just trying to muddle through an extraordinary time.

“You’ll see people be a little bit more cautious,” Martin Meltzer, Sr. Health Economist, Office of Surveillance, National Center for Infectious Diseases, CDC. “People are unlikely to shake hands with strangers, or even people they know, unless they are fairly certain, for example, that that person isn’t infectious.”

Day 90. Three months into our scenario, people have been dealing with large numbers of sick and dead. Almost everyone would know someone who died.

“For the funeral industry, the great challenge will be the number of bodies that are likely to occur in a short space of time,” says Dr. Martin Meltzer.

There would be shortages of things like coffins and headstones. Experts say people who handle the dead would also be getting sick— everyone from funeral directors to grave diggers.

Health departments would set up temporary morgues. And as in 1918, there might even be mass graves.

“We collectively have to set new standards of decency to be willing to say, I want to treat my family member with dignity. But I know that there are a whole lot of other people just like them, wanting to do the very same thing,” Dr. Monica Schoch-Spana.

Day 120. The question would be, how much more can people take?

“How resilient are our communities? How long can people hunker down and stay home? How do we support critical infrastructure in the face of what’s likely large-scale absenteeism?” asks Dr. Martin Cetron.

The philosopher Nietzche once said, “What doesn’t kill us makes us stronger.” Those words would ring true as the nation and the world started to turn the corner.

Most people who get sick, would survive, and would be crucial to our recovery.

“Now these recoverers are going to be very special people,” says Dr. David Nabarro, UN Coordinator for Human and Avian Influenza. “They’re gonna have the immunity against the pandemic virus. They will be able to work in the hospitals.”

“We need them to help out. We need them to help out with their neighbors, with their friends, with their relatives, who may be sick down the hall. Help get them some food,” says Dr. Isaac Weisfuse, Department Commissioner for NYC Dept. of Health.

Day 150. The death rate would now be starting to decline, in part because of the immunity people have built. And chances are, as the virus circles the globe, it would continue to mutate — into a less dangerous form.

“It’s sort of the nature of evolution that for the virus to survive, it can’t kill off so many of its victims, or else it’ll just burn out,” explains Dr. Eric Toner, of the Center for Biosecurity.

And eventually that pandemic virus will then become the normal flu.

Day 180. The vaccine scientists have been developing for the past six months would now be available. But there still would not be enough for everyone.

So the question would be: who gets it first?

Health care workers would probably be among the first in line— along with police officers, firefighters, military personnel, and some political leaders. But the vaccine shortage would raise a moral dilemma over who should get vaccinated and who should not.

“Can you imagine the political consequences and the problems that are there with people dying lets say in Latin America, in Africa, begging for vaccine and we’re saying, ‘We don’t have any vaccine to spare?’” asks D.A. Henderson.

And now grim totals could be determined: Though experts say up to 40 percent of the world’s population could become infected with the pandemic virus, past pandemics indicate that only a small percentage would die. Still, the numbers of dead would be staggering.

“Worldwide, we could see 'as few deaths,' if that’s the correct term, of 7 million excess deaths. And all the way up to 100 million or even more,” says Martin Meltzer, Sr. Health Economist, Office of Surveillance, National Center for Infectious Diseases, CDC. “It is absolutely frightening.”

In the United States the numbers would be just as frightening. The Department of Health and Human Services estimates that in a severe pandemic, up to 90 million Americans — almost one third of the population — would get sick. Half of those 45 million would need medical care.

And almost 2 million people in the United States could die.

Day 365. The pandemic is over in most of the country, and the world. In our scenario, the stock market is beginning to recover after a steep drop, but thousands of workers who’ve lost their jobs during the pandemic are now looking for work.

Many hospitals would be financially devastated and near bankruptcy.

“Hospitals will lose money on every single one of those flu patients. So every hospital will be facing huge financial losses,” says Dr. Toner.

And it wouldn’t be just hospitals. Airlines, restaurants, tourist attractions would all be struggling to make up for lost business.

“And when the pandemic is over, and the realize their financial situation’s again stabilized their jobs are okay, they’re working again. And they need a new car, they are quite likely to go back down to the dealership and purchase it. So it will be a gentle recovery,” says Dr. Martin Meltzer.

Life would go on. Just as it has after past pandemics.

“The majority of us are going to survive. The majority of us are going to be around to tell the before and after story about when pandemic flu hit,” says medical anthropologist Monica Schoch-Spana.

But is everything that unfolded in this scenario inevitable? The shortages of supplies? Vaccines? The number of deaths?

Not necessarily.

The scenario we’re just shown you is based on a pandemic that would occur within the next few years. But if there is more time, there is more hope.

“We are pre-event right now. So, if we want to be able to say we acted decently in our neighborhood and our community and in our nation, we could actually take steps right now to do something about it,” says Dr. Schoch-Spana.

We’ve shown you what might happen if a pandemic were to occur soon. But does it have to be that way? Could a vaccine be produced sooner?

Could hospitals be better prepared?

We spoke to the Secretary of Health and Human Services, Mike Leavitt, the man charged with preparing the U.S. for the next pandemic.

Secretary Leavitt showed me the Command Center at the Health and Human Services Headquarters in Washington, DC.

Sec. Mike Leavitt: This we use this far more than we wish we did. This is where we’re tracking flu, it’s where we’re tracking storms, it’s where we’re tracking anything that could have an adverse effect on the people of United States, or our humanitarian interests around the world.

These days, Secretary Leavitt and his team have been watching as the avian flu— the H5N1 virus— spreads around the world.

Sec. Mike Leavitt: We’re watching the virus, literally, everyday. We know its mutating. All viruses do.

Like everyone we spoke to for this program, Secretary Leavitt says he hopes the virus never mutates to a form that can pass easily from human to human, causing a pandemic like the one we depicted in our scenario.

But the secretary is unsure anyone is ready as they could be.

Sec. Mike Leavitt: No one in the world is prepared for a pandemic. The nature of the event is unlike any natural disaster that humans deal with otherwise. We’ve been going through Katrina and analyzing what we learn from Katrina. Katrina was three or four hellish days and then on to recovery. A pandemic is a year or a year and a half...

Secretary Leavitt has been barn-storming the country, speaking to state and local health officials preaching preparedness. He argues it’s up to local governments to get ready.

Sec. Mike Leavitt: Any community that fails to prepare with the expectation that the federal government will be able to come in, rescue them at the last moment, will be sadly disappointed. Not because the federal government isn’t prepared. It’s because when it’s occurring in 5,000 communities at the same time, it’s local preparedness that will ultimately spell the difference.

Ann Curry, Dateline correspondent: President Bush asked for more than 7 billion dollars for pandemic preparedness. So far, Congress has authorized $3.8 billion—half of what he requested. $250 million of that is earmarked for State and local governments to prepare for a pandemic.

And to those people who say, our local and state governments, just simply cannot afford to prepare us, to protect us.” You say what?

Sec. Mike Leavitt: I say there are many things that your national government will be doing: developing vaccines, helping to develop stock piles, protecting our borders, monitoring the disease outside the country and inside the country. Those are things the federal government can do.

Curry: How long is it going to take before we in the United States feels ready?

Sec. Mike Leavitt: It will take three to five years for us to develop the manufacturing capability to produce the 300 million courses of a vaccine necessary to treat the entire American public.

President Bush’s plan does call for billions of dollars to streamline and increase vaccine production.

And the Bush plan calls for a national stockpile of the anti-viral Tamiflu—which may or may not help in a pandemic.

The U.S. is now in a long line with other countries to get an adequate supply from the one Swiss manufacturer. If a pandemic happens soon, officials say we won’t have enough.

Curry: Do you wish the United States government had made this a priority sooner?

Sec. Mike Leavitt: It would it have been better if we had started two years ago? Of course it would. Looking back is of no consequence at this moment. Looking forward is what we have to do.

In a world threatened by the possibility of a flu pandemic, what can we do now to protect ourselves and our families?

Some communities and many individuals are already taking action.

Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt has thought about what he and his family would do during a pandemic.

Ann Curry, Dateline correspondent: Among the most vulnerable are children. You have five of them. What are you going to do?

Sec. Mike Leavitt: Well I’m going to do what every parent will do during that period. I’m going to do all I can to protect them. It’s quite possible that I’ll keep them home from school during a period of time. I hope that my children will find themselves in an atmosphere where they have food and water that has been sorted and prepared for just such an occasion.

Secretary Leavitt and his team have come up with a Pandemic Flu checklist that would prove useful in any emergency. It recommends that American store a supply of water and non-perishable food that could last a couple of weeks. Include any medicine—especially vitamins or prescription medications your family might need.

Make sure you have a flashlight, batteries, and a portable radio, as well as tissues, toilet paper and diapers if needed. Keep a supply of extra cash on hand.

And come up with a plan for how your family could ride out a pandemic at home.

Dr. Peter Duchin, Chief of Communicable Disease for Seattle-King County talks about his family is preparing. “We’ve talked about the need to home school our kids if school’s closed. We’ve talked about how we would work from home and how I can get my work done while minimizing my interactions with other people and the public.”

Seattle, where Dr. Duchin works, is considered one of the best prepared cities in the nation. Officials there have already begun a public health education campaign.

“In the case of a worst case scenario, no matter how you look at it it’s ugly and the healthcare system is going to be overwhelmed,” says Dr. Duchin.

His goal is to inform people now, so they would be prepared— an enormous challenge.

Secretary Mike Leavitt, the man in charge of preparing America, is hoping for more time, and is dreading the call that tells him a pandemic has begun.

Sec. Mike Leavitt: If that call comes, we’ll do all that’s possible to assure that the lives of Americans are protected. But there’s no doubt if a pandemic occurs that people will become sick. Some will die. But our nation will continue. And we’ll find a way to become stronger and prosperous as people.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12451621/from/RSS/

:vik:
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Watching the Dateline show (Post #2) I kept thinking of Post #14 from yesterday's Daily BF: http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?p=1836316

JPD said:
History on the side of bird flu


Mutating virus likely to become pandemic if past is indication


http://www.chronicle-tribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060423/NEWS01/604230343/1002

BY DAVID PENTICUFF
penticuff@marion.gannett.com

It would be a marker in time.

There would be the way life was before and the way it became afterward. Such times - the Civil War, the Great Depression, World War I and II, Sept. 11, 2001 - make up the longer chapters in history books and leave few in society untouched by the experience.

Interesting article... yes, it will be a 'marker in time' JPD, thanks for the post.

:vik:
 

New Freedom

Veteran Member
http://www.gwinnettdailyonline.com/GDP/archive/article0427B815A307481B8DE619C6578C9A99.asp


US Gears Up For Bird Flu Pandemic

GDO Report

President Bush is expected to sign off on a plan on how the United States would handle bird flu pandemic if Americans contract the disease. VOA's Carol Pearson has details.

The first cases of bird flu in the United States could show up in the next few weeks with the spring bird migration.

In preparation the Bush administration has drafted a plan that spells out in detail how the government would respond to a pandemic that could claim close to two million American lives and possibly overwhelm the U.S. health care system.

The World Health Organization says, in a worst-case scenario, 90 million Americans could contract the disease, as many as 10 million would need hospitalization.

Late last month at the U.S. Senate, United Nations bird flu planner David Nabarro stressed the danger of the current strain of bird flu. "The extraordinary thing about H5N1 is it is a very virulent and horrible virus. It has also moved into 20 countries during the last six weeks."

The U.S. plan is still evolving but it will include directives on who will be the first to be vaccinated and where U.S. currency could be printed if U.S. mints could not do the job. It also includes a plan for drive-through medical exams to check for signs of the disease and expanding Internet capability so more people could work from home and avoid contact with others.

U.S. scientists are still debating such things as how much vaccine would be needed and who would have priority in receiving it.

American poultry growers already have tightened security measures. Poultry farms severely restrict visitors, and chickens and other poultry do not mix with other livestock.

President Bush is expected to sign off on the plan soon.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Posted April 22, 2006

Bird flu still confounds scientists

For the Marshfield News-Herald

STEVENS POINT -- Pandemics have occurred regularly throughout history, and it's just a matter of time before the world experiences its next, said Dr. Edward Belongia, director of the Epidemiology Research Center at the Marshfield Clinic.

In his presentation, "Influenza in the 21st Century: Back to the Future," Belongia said when it comes to avian flu and how it spreads, there are more questions than answers.

"To be perfectly honest, we really don't know what's going on here," the former epidemic intelligence officer for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said to those in attendance at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point earlier this week.

The virus kills by overstimulating a person's immune system, causing that person to drown in his secretions when large amounts of fluids collect in the lungs.

As of this week, there have been 196 cases of human infection in nine countries. Of those who have contracted the virus, 110 have died. The cases have spread from Southeast Asia to Turkey, Azerbaijan, Egypt and Iraq, and scientists don't know how. They do know most cases were from humans who had contact with a dead or dying infected bird, but it's not known whether it was because of airborne infection or direct contact.

"We know very little about how it moves in birds and why," Belongia said.

The avian flu is similar to the influenza pandemic that killed millions in 1918. It attacks those between the ages of 14 and 22, the age group with the strongest immune systems. This is unlike the 36,000 deaths caused every year in the United States by common influenza, which tends to target the very young and the very old.

"In 1918, people didn't know what hit them," Belongia said. "For the first time in history, we can predict this might happen and we can get ready for it."

The U.S. Senate recently allocated $3.8 billion for pandemic influenza preparedness, but Belongia said that's not enough.

"We need something like a Manhattan Project for vaccine technology," he said. "And it needs to be a global effort, not country by country."

Belongia said the next pandemic will not likely be caused by the avian flu that's spreading now. He said a more deadly strain could evolve through "gene shuffling" between two different virus strains.

The scary thought, Belongia said, is if a human with the common flu also gets avian flu and the genes of the viruses reshuffle to create a deadly new disease.

Rachel Koehler, a UWSP senior traveling to China this summer, said she was somewhat reassured by Belongia's assertion that it's safe to travel to the country, provided you use common sense and avoid live animal markets.

"Some of the things seemed pretty disturbing," Koehler said of what she heard during the lecture.

http://www.marshfieldnewsherald.com...?AID=/20060422/MNH0101/604220463/1732/MNHnews

:vik:
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Switzerland

Switzerland Logs Five More H5N1 Cases in Wild Birds

SWITZERLAND: April 24, 2006

GENEVA - Switzerland confirmed on Friday five new cases of H5N1 avian flu virus in wild birds near Lake Constance, which borders Germany, bringing its total number of infections to nine.

"These are all cases from the Lake Constance area,"
Swiss Federal Veterinary Office spokesman Marcel Falk said, adding that protective measures are in place to prevent the virus from spreading.

Two or three more samples from dead wild birds found with the H5 virus were undergoing tests to see whether it was the highly pathogenic H5N1, but the spokesman did not say when the results would be released.

Switzerland has ordered that all poultry be kept indoors to lessen the risk from the fast-spreading H5N1 virus, which has killed over 100 people worldwide and led to the preventive culling of millions of birds.

http://www.planetark.com/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/36096/story.htm

:vik:
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Pakistan

Bird flu cases multiply around Pakistani capital
Mon Apr 24, 2006 3:38 PM IST

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Pakistan reported mounting cases of the deadly H5NI bird flu virus on Monday after discovering more infected farms close to Islamabad.

"Now, we have total nine poultry farms (near Islamabad) where H5N1 virus has been confirmed,"
Mohammad Afzal, the ministry's livestock commissioner, told Reuters.

He said more than 40,000 chickens had been culled after new outbreaks were discovered in the past week at eight farms located in Tarlai and Sihala, two areas near Islamabad where poultry farms are concentrated.

Pakistan's first reported cases were found in February at two farms in North West Frontier Province, but a third was discovered close to the capital earlier this month.

None of the workers at the farms have contracted the disease.

"We have tested samples of blood and nasal and throat swabs of 33 workers but their tests were negative," Afzal said.

Shamsul Hasan, director at the state-run Poultry Development Centre, said scientists had detected a mild strain of bird flu, H5, in flocks at five another farms near Islamabad.

"We have confirmed H5 strain and for N1, tests are being carried out in another laboratory," Hasan said.

H5 and other low-pathogenic forms of bird flu cause mild sympthoms such as ruffled feathers and a drop in egg production.

The H5N1 strain has spread across Asia and into parts of the Middle East, Africa and Europe. Since 2003, 110 people have died from bird flu, but Pakistan has not reported any cases in people.

Scientists are concerned the virus could mutate into a form that can pass easily between people and precipitate a pandemic some fear might kill millions.

http://in.today.reuters.com/news/ne...R_RTRJONC_0_India-246166-1.xml&archived=False

:vik:
 

JPD

Inactive
Insurers look to shift costs of a bird flu crisis


http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/04/23/bloomberg/bxflu.php

NEW YORK Insurers are gearing up to sell bonds that transfer to investors some of the expenses they would face if bird flu were to cause a pandemic.

Moody's Investors Service is rating several potential offerings modeled on $762 million of so-called extreme mortality catastrophe bonds sold by Swiss Reinsurance since 2003, said Rodrigo Araya, a senior credit officer at Moody's. He declined to identify the companies seeking ratings.

"Bird flu is the kind of scenario these catastrophe bonds anticipate," he said.

A severe pandemic, defined as 1.9 million bird flu-related deaths in the United States, might result in $133 billion in additional life insurance claims, according to the Insurance Information Institute in New York. About $50 billion in claims were paid in 2004 for all deaths, according to the American Council of Life Insurers, a Washington- based trade group.

A strain of flu called H5N1 is spreading through birds from Asia to Africa, the Middle East and Europe. The virus has infected 196 people, mainly through close contact with domestic poultry, and killed 110 of them, according to the World Health Organization. At least 33 countries have reported initial outbreaks in animals since February.

Insurance companies sell catastrophe bonds to reduce the risk of claims from extraordinary events like back-to- back category-five hurricanes, floods or multiple tornadoes. They are mainly sold privately to institutions and trade infrequently.

The bonds allow insurers to skip interest and principal payments, and use proceeds from the sale, which are held in trust, to meet claims in disasters.

Besides the Zurich-based Swiss Re, companies likely to issue the bonds include the reinsurers Munich Re and Hannover Re, said John DeCaro, a portfolio manager in Chicago with Stark Investments, a hedge fund that buys junk- rated catastrophe bonds. Reinsurers share the risks and premiums of insurers. Spokeswomen for the German companies said there were no plans to sell the bonds.

"It's only logical that reinsurers would look to the capital markets to transfer life insurance risk," DeCaro said. Reinsurers want to replenish capital after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita and other disasters caused billions of dollars in losses, he said.

A record $1.99 billion worth of the bonds were sold last year, and about $5 billion was outstanding, said Christopher McGhee, head of Guy Carpenter's investment banking specialty practice in New York. Carpenter is a reinsurance broker that is owned by Marsh & McLennan, the world's largest insurance brokerage.

Swiss Re sold its debt through a Cayman Island-based unit called Vita Capital. The bonds were issued as a hedge against a rapid rise in mortality rates for any reason.

"When the Vita I and Vita II transactions were done, there was some interest but not significant interest," said Dan Ozizmir, head of insurance-linked securities for Swiss Re's capital markets group in New York. They are now "a guidepost for regulators and insurance companies for the pricing of risk."

The premium the bonds yield above government debt widened in the past nine months because of expectations that similar debt would be issued by insurers and on concern about bird flu, Ozizmir said. He declined to say by how much the spreads had expanded, citing rules that prohibit such disclosures. One investor familiar with the bonds said the premium has gained by between 0.5 and 1 percentage point.
 

JPD

Inactive
Business group braces for avian flu


http://atlanta.bizjournals.com/atlanta/stories/2006/04/24/story6.html

Atlanta Business Chronicle - April 21, 2006by Erin Moriarty Staff Writer

If an avian flu pandemic occurs, BellSouth has a certified team of employees who would go to work in Hazmat suits to keep critical operations going, while the company would communicate with employees through a special Web site and use software to monitor employee absences.

BellSouth Corp. (NYSE: BLS) is one of many Atlanta companies urgently planning for the possibility of an outbreak of deadly flu.

In fact, a group of more than 35 local businesses has been quietly working together for months through a new group called the Business Operations Center. The group is laying out strategies on how to keep their businesses running during a crisis, how to communicate with their employees and how to best protect their work force from the deadly virus.

"This is a deal where we all have to pull on the oars together or it could cripple our socioeconomic fabric," said Anthony Begando, CEO of Tenon Consulting Solutions, who is leading the development of the Business Operations Center. The effort was organized by the national association known as Business Executives for National Security.

Formation of the Business Operations Center began about six months ago in response to the growing threat of avian flu and will officially launch May 1. The goal is to help businesses coordinate with each other to manage a major disease outbreak like avian flu or cope with another major disaster like a hurricane.

"The business community is going to be absolutely essential," said Dr. J. Patrick O'Neal, medical director for the Georgia Division of Public Health.

O'Neal spoke on a special avian flu panel held in Atlanta April 18. The panel was sponsored by the Nuclear Threat Initiative and both Ted Turner and former U.S. Sen. Sam Nunn, who are co-chairs of the Initiative, were on hand for the event.

Experts say businesses will play a crucial role if an avian flu outbreak occurs because they would need to communicate important information with all employees, while also working to maintain the basic infrastructure that keeps the economy humming.

Atlanta-based United Parcel Service Inc. (NYSE: UPS) isn't taking that responsibility lightly.

"We are a very critical supplier of a lot of critical things that will need to be sent all over the world if there is an outbreak of avian flu," said Jack McKlveen, a UPS corporate crisis manager. "We have to look at our supply chain and the impact on all of our businesses, as well as the customer and employee impact."

The company began working heavily on avian flu planning last summer, and recently created a "special project team" of 12 employees who have been removed from their regular jobs to focus solely on avian flu planing.

"Our radar screen has been up for a long time on this," said McKlveen, who has spent 80 percent of his time over the past two months working on avian flu planning.

Since the company has a major presence in Asia, global efforts have been a major part of the strategy. In November, employees in Asia got training on hygiene and food handling, and later they were sent home with free hand sanitizer and urged to teach family members about the importance of preventing the spread of germs.

Pilots who fly international routes were also schooled in what to watch for overseas and how to protect themselves against the deadly disease.

There have been 193 documented human cases of avian flu in nine countries and 109 of those people have died, said Dr. James LeDuc, influenza coordinator for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. No human cases have yet occurred in the United States, LeDuc said during the panel discussion.

"That's a 56 percent mortality rate, which is certainly disconcerting," said LeDuc, who is known as the CDC's "flu czar."

Faced with those grim statistics, companies are searching for ways to communicate health information with employees before, during and after an outbreak.

UPS has a special Web site set up to communicate with employees in the United States, and is in the process of rolling it out worldwide.

"Being able to communicate during chaos is very difficult," McKlveen said. "Luckily we have very good systems in place to deal with that."

Employee communication is also a major part of BellSouth's strategy, which involves a two-part approach, said Charles Lathram, vice president for security and business control at BellSouth. One part focuses on internal corporate issues such as employee health and safety, while the other part focuses on external issues of how to keep the business going and how to work with the community during a crisis.

But the company is also planning for the possibility that many employees would not be working if there were an avian flu outbreak. Federal officials have urged companies to plan for 40 percent absenteeism in the event of a pandemic.

"We're making sure that everywhere that our business depends on a human resource, we've thought through how we would continue that business if the human resource were disrupted," Lathram said.

The Coca-Cola Co. (NYSE: KO) also has an avian flu task force and is working with external consultants to get help developing their comprehensive flu plan, said spokesperson Kirsten Witt. The global giant is developing ways to maintain business continuity and protect their supply chain, as well as working with human resources professionals on issues such as employee travel.

Organizers say it's impressive that Atlanta businesses are taking an active role in pandemic planning.

"Georgia is very much forward-looking -- much more than some other states," said John H.H. Turner III, director and program manager for the Georgia office of Business Executives for National Security.

But they caution that much more needs to be done.
 

New Freedom

Veteran Member
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2006\04\24\story_24-4-2006_pg7_10


Monday, April 24, 2006

‘Modern poultry farming responsible for bird flu

Daily Times Monitor

LAHORE: The rise of the highly virulent form of avian flu (H5N1) is down to the industrial animal production around the world, reported The Network For Consumer Protection in Pakistan (website: thenetwork.org.pk).

The non-government organisation said the mechanical mode of production led to adverse genetic changes due to a smaller gene pool, which had caused the immune level of poultry to drop. “Chickens are crammed in small coops and cages in modern poultry farms or in long sheds housing thousands of birds - therefore outbreaks of infections can easily spread,” it said. These rearing methods weaken the birds’ natural immune system making them highly susceptible to diseases, it added.

Intensive farming methods advocate the use of high doses of antibiotics in chicken feed to solve this problem, said the NGO’s website, adding that growth hormones were also used to increase the speed of the chickens’ growth. It cited a report by the Union of Concerned Scientists that showed livestock consuming eight times more antibiotics by volume than humans.

“The use of the growth-promoting hormones may also affect the birds,” said the NGO. Some scientists believe that growth promoters affect immunity and the effect of vaccines by diverting energy. Energy that could have been used for enhancing immunity levels is diverted to promote growth.

Experts think that backyard chicken and other birds are falsely referred as the disease’s carriers and attention is being diverted from commercial poultry methods - the main culprit because of the way it reared the hens and actually helped the outbreak spread globally.

The NGO said the deadly H5N1 strain’s epicentre were factory farms in China and Southeast Asia and - while wild birds can carry the disease for short distances - its main vector had been the self-regulated transnational poultry industry. “Governments and international agencies are following mistaken assumptions about how the disease spreads and amplifies,” it said. Authorities are pursuing measures to force poultry indoors and further industrialise the poultry sector, it added. “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.”
 

Brooks

Membership Revoked
The Department of Health and Human Services estimates that in a severe pandemic, up to 90 million Americans — almost one third of the population — would get sick. Half of those 45 million would need medical care. And almost 2 million people in the United States could die.
If 45 million require medical care, they sure as H won't be getting it. It's obcene to suggest the mortality would only be 2 million. It could be much closer to 45 million.
 

JPD

Inactive
Are We Ready?


A large-scale disaster like a pandemic flu
or terrorist attack could overwhelm
the nation's healthcare providers


http://www.usnews.com/usnews/health/articles/060501/1disaster.htm

By Katherine Hobson

5/1/06

Brian O'Neill is paid to worry. As vice president of emergency services for the North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System, he is charged with making sure his organization's 15 hospitals are prepared for a nightmarish list of naturally occurring and man-made threats. What would happen if there were a repeat of the Long Island Express, the 1938 hurricane with 121-mph winds that destroyed 4,500 homes and killed 700 people? What if healthcare workers battling infectious disease in protective gear got overheated and exhausted? What if staffers were stranded in their homes by the weather? If any of these situations became a reality, the system's emergency preparedness center, located in an inconspicuous, low-slung building in the Long Island town of Syosset, would spring to life. Emergency workers would don the reflective vests now draped over chairs, consult binders filled with contingency plans, and examine chain-of-command charts. "We plan for everything," O'Neill says, "and hope for the best."

Some hospitals in big cities and high-risk areas are well prepared to cope with individual disasters like, say, a plane crash. But overall, the nation's healthcare system is not yet ready to handle a large-scale emergency like pandemic flu or another major hurricane. That was the consensus of experts assembled at last week's U.S.News & World Report Health Summit on emergency preparedness. "The problem is, we are just good enough for what happens now," said panelist W. Frank Peacock, chairman of emergency preparedness for the Cleveland Clinic. "We have trouble now managing flu in February across the country." Added summit panelist Arthur Kellerman, chairman of emergency medicine at Emory University Hospital in Atlanta: "Our trauma and emergency care system in this country is absolutely stretched like a piano wire."

Contingency plans. In fact, the Trust for America's Health, a nonprofit group focused on public health and disease prevention, recently gave the federal government a D+ for emergency preparedness. Almost 60 percent of states failed to meet more than half of the group's requirements, which include things like having the lab capacity to quickly test thousands of samples for anthrax or smallpox. Meanwhile, hospitals nationwide say U.S. funding woes and lack of guidance make it hard to enact contingency plans. Over the past few years, Johns Hopkins Medicine has spent $10 million on emergency preparedness, said summit panelist CEO Edward Miller. "And it comes out of other programs we are not funding," says Miller. "This is not a sustainable business plan."

The best preparedness approach, most experts say, is to plan for "all hazards," concentrating on the common elements shared by most disasters, rather than planning separately for an individual event. It doesn't matter whether it's a hurricane, terrorist attack, or pandemic. "You have a certain number of trauma patients, a certain number of infections, a certain number of respirator requirements," says James James, director of disaster preparedness for the American Medical Association. And all catastrophes require sufficient surge capacity--enough staff, supplies, and space to treat patients--and a coordinated response by healthcare providers in monitoring potential outbreaks and managing the influx of injured.

Surge capacity is the biggest concern. Hospitals can handle some overflow within their walls. Rooms can be reconfigured, elective surgeries canceled, and extra staff called in. But most hospitals simply can't absorb the huge influx of patients that might result from a pandemic or biological attack. So hospitals must plan to use other facilities, such as healthcare clinics or dialysis centers, or malls, stadiums, and schools. Thanks to preplanning by the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals, the Pete Maravich arena at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, for example, was quickly turned into a field hospital during Hurricane Katrina. The Trust for America's Health says hospitals in almost a third of states haven't sufficiently prepared to handle a surge.

Arranging for temporary space is just the beginning, as field hospitals must be manned. A study released last week found that nearly half of local public-health department staffers would not report to work if there were a pandemic. "When people are worried about their families, they'll put family before work," says Richard Bradley, an emergency medicine physician at the University of Texas Health Science Center in Houston, who noted that a number of his staffers were no-shows two days before Hurricane Rita's projected landfall last year. That's why Kaiser Permanente's Walnut Creek Medical Center, for example, is urging its staffers to make personal preparedness plans--like arranging meeting areas--for their own families, in the hopes they'll breathe easier and report to work if they know their kids are safe. Other hospitals are considering whether to provide child care or offer incentives, like vaccinations that may be in short supply, for employees and their families. And it's not just physicians and nurses who need attention; a hospital can't run without kitchen staff, janitors, and other support workers.

Volunteers. Hospitals also need to ramp up employee preparedness training. "The average physician is very familiar with his or her role as a clinician, but not in terms of his or her role in a public-health response," says James of the AMA, which has developed a standardized curriculum for disaster preparedness training. An example: how to decontaminate a patient exposed to a biological agent.

Conscripting other hands should also be part of any disaster plan. Some experts recommend more active recruitment of volunteer medical personnel for the federal disaster response system (box, Page 62). States and localities need to develop their own volunteer registries, too. Veterinarians, dentists, and out-of-state physicians could be on standby, as well as patients who have recovered from the flu and could perform basic tasks like organizing supplies. One obstacle that emerged during Katrina: finding a way to quickly credential out-of-state medical professionals.

In addition to staff and space, surge capacity includes having enough supplies--from protective masks to medications to disinfectants--to handle a disaster. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Strategic National Stockpile plans to deliver to communities "push packages" of essential drugs and supplies within 12 hours in case local supplies run low, but hospitals and communities still need to be prepared to sustain themselves. That's expensive. It also takes precious space: Kaiser's Walnut Creek facility is exploring whether it can position containers outside; in an area already short on parking, it's hard to find the room. Supplies become more crucial the longer the disaster persists. If a hurricane wipes out access for days--as Katrina did--hospitals need to worry about food, water, and generator capacity.

Some threats are scary because of their sheer scope, straining resources for an extended period. A severe flu pandemic would demand thousands of beds, not to mention the 740,000-plus ventilators estimated by the Bush administration's preliminary flu strategy. (Currently, there are only about 105,000.) In a just-in-time global economy, goods aren't stacked in warehouses but arrive only when needed. With a pandemic, that delivery system would grind to a halt if enough people were sick and unable to manufacture or transport goods, says Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota. Hospitals could run out of oxygen, spare parts, medical devices, masks, food, and medications--pretty much everything that can't be produced locally.

Even the thought of an outbreak could tax the system. "Much likelier than a bird flu epidemic is a concern about a bird flu epidemic," says Kent Sepkowitz, director of infection control and an infectious disease specialist at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York. In 2001, 15 anthrax cases prompted thousands of people, worried that they had been contaminated, to flood emergency rooms in the New York City area. A more likely scenario for a bird flu outbreak, says Sepkowitz: "a case or two of avian flu in humans and a crush of snifflers and people who have flulike symptoms."

Hospitals are trying to identify infections early on, when they can be more readily contained. Some promising technologies include syndromic surveillance, which would allow healthcare providers to identify patterns that could signal bioterrorism or an outbreak--such as an unusually high number of patients reporting flulike symptoms. In Texas, nine hospitals in the Memorial Hermann Hospital system now pool symptom data from their nearly 340,000 emergency room visits annually, says Bradley. The technology has potential, says Richard Platt, chair of ambulatory care and prevention at Harvard Medical School, who is testing such a system. It's expensive, though, and needs further study to determine how--or whether--it will actually help.

As with the Texas hospitals, institutions need to coordinate both before and during disasters--something they haven't always done. "There are 67 acute-care hospitals in New York City; each one, though it may have a network, operates independently," says Isaac Weisfuse, deputy commissioner of disease control in the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. His department is working to improve ties between those entities with, say, more frequent forums. The New York State Department of Health, meanwhile, set up a program after 9/11 that allows hospitals to share capacity information to see where beds are available in case of an emergency.

Rebuild it. The city of Seattle, experts say, is on the right track. A coalition of 200 people, including CEOs of medical centers, physicians from private group practices, pharmacists, and nurses, is rethinking emergency care there. "We wanted it to be like Apollo 13: Dump all the pieces on the table and rebuild it," says Dorothy Teeter, interim director and health officer in Seattle and King County's health department. The team's task: deciding who would do what if a disaster occurred--not hospital by hospital, but on a regional basis.

Despite such efforts, many hospital executives say the lack of accountability standards from the feds remains a big problem. "What is missing in action is a definition for what we mean by 'prepared' for hospitals or communities," says Irwin Redlener, director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health.

In the end, it comes down to money. "To ask any industry to double its productive capacity with no funding is really a hard row," said the Cleveland Clinic's Peacock. Just adding decontamination showers at his hospital, Peacock noted, cost an estimated $1 million. Dan Hanfling, an emergency room physician with Inova Health System in Northern Virginia, told Congress last month that the $2.1 billion appropriated over the past five years to give hospitals a basic level of preparedness isn't nearly enough. The American Hospital Association estimates that stockpiles of pharmaceutical supplies and medical equipment, plus personal protective equipment, decontamination facilities, computer systems, and training, would cost about $11 billion.

Public-health facilities need help, too: Labs in more than a quarter of the states don't have the equipment or staff to respond to a bioterrorist attack. After 9/11, more federal funds were directed to shore up the system. But it had been neglected for so long that much of that money went toward basic upgrades, and local funding was often cut in light of the federal increases, says Nicole Lurie, codirector for public health at Rand's Center for Domestic and International Health Security.

It's not just healthcare providers who must gear up for disaster. "It's critically important that individuals in the private sector take responsible steps to prepare themselves," Department of Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff told summit participants. A personal preparedness plan, plenty of canned food, and avoiding shaking hands during an epidemic can go only so far, though. "You need to be asking state and local governments what they will do," says Minnesota's Osterholm. "Demand answers beyond 'We've got it covered.'"

On Long Island, Brian O'Neill believes his hospital system can handle all but a major pandemic. But as proud as he is to show off his stockpiles of antidotes, masks, and portable ventilators, he'd be just as happy never to have to use them.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Young People's Plague
By Bernadine Healy

5/1/06


The difference between avian flu and human flu that should be commanding our rapt attention today is that avian influenza, specifically the H5N1 strain known as bird flu, threatens to become the young people's plague. And it is a growing contender to cause a devastating worldwide pandemic in the next few years.

We are too used to thinking of flu as an annual annoyance that kills only the frail and elderly. But that just isn't the case for H5N1. With a mortality rate of over 50 percent, this bird flu has killed over 110 people, striking the young and able-bodied the hardest. Its victims cluster predominantly among 5-to-30-year-olds, a pattern that has held up in the 34 known to have died from bird flu so far this year.

This vulnerability may stem from the robust and fast-responding immune systems of the young. The victims overreact to the alien virus, triggering a massive immune response called a cytokine storm, turning healthy lungs into a sodden mass of dying tissues congested with blood, toxic fluid, and rampaging inflammatory cells. As air spaces choke off, the body loses oxygen and other organs fail.

Scientists have recently shown that H5N1 has ominous parallels with the devastating 1918 flu pandemic, which also jumped directly to humans from birds and disproportionately attacked the young and the strong. With a pattern highly suggestive of a cytokine storm, death sometimes came within just hours, turning many World War I troop ships into death ships.

Now imagine hundreds of thousands of young people laboring on respirators, or lying alone in corridors and makeshift hospital rooms, too sick to be helped when the supply of beds, equipment, and trained staff run out. Seem like hype? Not to the medical experts who discussed these scenarios during last week's U.S. News Health Summit on emergency preparedness.


This picture puts a face on the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' projections that, if H5N1 mutates into a readily human-transmissible form, 209,000 to 1.9 million Americans could die. We're talking about our little-leaguers; soccer buddies; schoolmates; someone's aspiring detective, doctor, or engineer. Perhaps your own son or daughter, or your grandchild. One of our most primal human urges is to protect the young, and it may be the very thing we need to tap into if we are to take the pandemic-flu threat seriously.

Close contact. Part of our readiness thinking should be to heed the blunt words of HHS Secretary Michael Leavitt at the summit: Any family or community that fails to prepare for the worst, with the expectation that the federal or state government will come to the rescue, will be "tragically wrong." In a pandemic, the government's medical resources will be stretched thin, and it won't be able to guarantee first-line help to any hometown, local hospital, or college campus. Even the national stockpile of Tamiflu, the antiviral that is the best we have to prevent or lessen the impact of the illness, has its limits. If a college student is hospitalized with a possible H5N1 infection, the feds will provide drugs. But they will not make it available to fend off the virus in the many others who may have come in close contact with the infected student. In the existing federal guidance on H5N1, the young and healthy fall into the lowest-priority group for antiviral drugs and vaccines. Student health centers or other providers had better scrounge up their own stockpiles.

Containing possible outbreaks on college campuses may be all but impossible. Social distancing--avoiding close contact with other people with air kisses instead of smooches, or even by donning masks and gloves--will be tough to enforce. As panelist Georges Benjamin, physician and executive director of the American Public Health Association, said, students "eat after each other; they drink after each other; and they share lots of things." No surprise, then, that prevailing thinking among college administrators is to close dorms and send students home. But what's the trigger point, or the signal for an all-clear?

The threat poses a uniquely difficult challenge. In the best of all scenarios, the virus will lose its fury and leave in its wake a new culture of individual and community preparedness. But we need to get ready now, and not for the best scenario but for the worst.

http://www.usnews.com/usnews/health/articles/060501/1healy.htm

:vik:
 

Bill P

Inactive
what's the trigger point, or the signal for an all-clear?


I believe many of the Contingency Plans like shutting down a school are triggered by the offical WHO threat level.

My daughter will be at Ohio State and will be coming home for an extended shelter in place as soon as H2H H5N1 is occuring near Ohio.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Bill P said:
what's the trigger point, or the signal for an all-clear?


I believe many of the Contingency Plans like shutting down a school are triggered by the offical WHO threat level.

My daughter will be at Ohio State and will be coming home for an extended shelter in place as soon as H2H H5N1 is occuring near Ohio.

BP, that's a very generous lag time...

Did you see the dateline special last night (transcript in Post #2)? They said once it happens, it'll blow up all over the place almost simultaneously.

You might want to consider the trigger being the first or second H2H confirmed case in USA... that's IF they let that get into the news?

:vik:
 

Cascadians

Leska Emerald Adams
It may be that TPTB will be far more concerned with economic interests and secrecy than warning Joe Average that H2H has hit. That's why we all need to stay alert and notice what is happening around us. TPTB would rather wait and get their own skins safe and their plans together while the first wave begins to take its toll than be concise and upfront and clear and tell Mr & Mrs Citizen what exactly they must do immediately to "hunker in place." Follow history's lessons: in 1917, 1918, 1919 TPTB downplayed that flu pandemic. You can see that attitude starting to dominate now -- retract, downplay, obfuscate, don't report, don't share, veil of secrecy and silence and sugar-coated false assurances.
 

JPD

Inactive
AFGHANISTAN: Deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu hits fourth province


http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/IRIN/71fd643b9b4568b3c19366aa375f7a2e.htm

KABUL, 24 April (IRIN) - The deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu has been detected in a fourth province of Afghanistan amid fears of further possible outbreaks of the virus among the country's destitute communities, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)confirmed on Monday.

"According to the test results, the H5N1 strain of bird flu has been detected in the eastern Kapisa province," Assadullah Azhari, FAO's public information officer, said in the Afghan capital, Kabul.

Avian influenza, otherwise known as bird flu, was first confirmed in March from six samples of birds in the capital and the eastern province of Nangarhar. The virus was also detected in central Logar province on 13 April.

No human cases have been reported in the impoverished Central Asian state thus far.

The FAO has received the results of tests on 103 samples, which were sent to the FAO reference laboratory in Padova, Italy, on 6 April 2006.

Eastern Laghman and central Parwan provinces are temporarily classified as highly suspected; although consolidated conclusions on the status of these two provinces cannot be confirmed until further analyses and tests have been performed, according to Azhari.

The FAO has called for strengthening surveillance capacities in the country and well-equipped emergency response teams to collect samples on the ground.

"We are supporting initiatives to strengthen active surveillance to make sure that new outbreaks are identified promptly across the country," Azhari noted.

The government had earlier ordered an immediate culling of all chickens in the affected areas to prevent the deadly disease from spreading.

"Our veterinary workers have culled about 15,000 fowl in 10 provinces of the country to control the spread of the disease," said Azizullah Usmani, head of the agriculture ministry's veterinary department.

Most were domestic chickens and turkeys being kept in backyards, he clarified.

"We have already given some US $30,000 in compensation to the owners of birds culled by our vets in 10 provinces," Usmani explained.

The FAO had earlier warned that dealing with bird flu could be particularly difficult for destitute Afghanistan, as its public veterinary services remain weak, despite the fact that about 85 percent of its population lives in close contact with poultry, with most rural families having several chickens in their backyard.

Since 2003, the H5N1 strain of bird flu virus has been detected in Europe, Africa and resurfaced in Asia. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), 176 cases of human bird flu have been registered to date, of whom some 100 cases have died.
 

JPD

Inactive
Poultry stockpiled as consumption plummets


http://www.nutraingredients-usa.com/news/ng.asp?n=67250-bird-flu-poultry-influenza

By Ahmed ElAmin

4/24/2006 - Consumption of poultry meat has dropped by more than half in some EU states, with 300,000 tonnes now in storage across the bloc, according to EU estimates.

While the glut pushes down the price of poultry for processors, it is also a sign that the public continues to stay away from the meat with the continuing advancement of avian influenza in Europe. So far 13 EU member states have report bird flu in the wild. This includes France and Germany, where infections in domesticated poultry occurred.

Since the beginning of the recent avian flu crisis, consumption of poultry and eggs has fallen dramatically in some member states, leading to a sharp reduction in prices.

In a bid to hold up falling prices for poultry in the EU, the European Commission has proposed additional aid for chicken producers.

At the EU Agriculture Council meeting on 25 April in Luxembourg, a proposal for a regulation on exceptional market support measures tabled on 29 March will be adopted, stated the Internet site of the Austrian EU presidency.

The is planning measures to reduce production and to make payment for stocks. There are no plans concerning private stocks or food aid.

The European Parliament already gave an assurance of its support on 8 April, subject to certain amendments. The main differences of opinion concern whether the EU should fund only 50 per cent of the compensation, as the Commission proposes.

The European Parliament, some countries in the south of the EU and some new members states want 100 per cent compensation.

Josef Pröll, Austria's minister for agriculture and current president of the council, declared at the previous meeting in March that Europe's poultry farmers would not be left in the lurch. Austria is in charge of the EU's presidency for the six month period to the end of June.

"Farmers should not only get compensation when infected stock are slaughtered, but also for other economic losses," the bulletin quotes him as stating.

In addition, the European Commission will give a written update on the situation regarding avian influenza.

Under current arrangements the EU could only give aid to farmers with an actual outbreak of avian influenza on their own property, or who are restriced from sending their poultry to market because of veterinary controls.

In early April the UK became the 13th EU member to report the presence of the H5N1 form of the avian influenza virus, or bird flu, in wild birds. Of more concern to consumers, Germany also reported an outbreak in domestic poultry at a farm.

With the recent spread of avian influenza throughout the European Union, consumer demand for eggs and poultry meat has declined sharply. In some countries, such as Italy, demand has fallen by up to 70 per cent, drastically lowering poultry farmers' incomes.

The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) reported that recent avian influenza outbreaks in Europe, the Middle East and Africa have caused dramatic swings in poultry consumption, increased trade bans and sharp price declines. The UN agency expects poultry consumption shocks this year in many countries.

“A steady erosion of previously expected gains in per caput poultry consumption will likely push down global poultry consumption in 2006, currently estimated at 81.8 million tonnes, nearly three million tonnes lower than the previous 2006 estimate of 84.6 million tonnes,” stated FAO commodity specialist Nancy Morgan.

According to the FAO report consumption shocks are ranging from a dramatic 70 per cent decline in Italy in mid-February to 20 per cent in France and 10 per cent in northern Europe.

The crisis has also affected the $42 billion dollar feed sector in Europe, with demand losses estimated at up to 40 per cent in some countries, the FAO stated.

Around 200 million chickens have been culled or have died of the disease worldwide since the onset of the crisis in late 2003.
 

JPD

Inactive
Tyson Foods Reports Weakened Performance Due To Slack Demand


http://www.amonline.com/article/article.jsp?id=15999&siteSection=1

Tyson Foods revealed recently that plummeting demand for beef and chicken has impacted sales, as international BSE, arsenic and avian flu scares dent consumer confidence.

America's largest meat producer has reduced its yearly profit forecast, indicating weaker than expected operating performance and sluggish earnings.

"While we expected tough and uncertain conditions...it has been far more difficult than we previously projected," CEO John Tyson said Wednesday in a statement.

"Protein supplies have remained more burdensome than anticipated and will continue to put pressure on product price recovery.

"We still expect an improved performance in the last half of fiscal 2006; however it will not be of the magnitude originally projected." Many analysts are now forecasting year-end losses for the firm struggling to maintain margins as domestic oversupply of meat, export restrictions and lowered consumer confidence create difficult market conditions.

With sales of over $26 billion, Tyson is the world's largest protein processor with operations in beef, chicken and pork, as well as branded packaged foods.

But while U.S. beef exports to Japan and South Korea remain restricted due to fears of BSE contamination, and domestic consumers are shying away from chicken following bird flu media hype, the outlook remains bleak for the food processor.

Moody's ratings firm has put the company in review for a possible downgrade, concerned that the company's "weak operating performance will impact its debt protection measures and financial flexibility."

The review will also assess whether the manufacturer will "require additional financial covenant relief from its bank group [which could] impact on the company's liquidity," and "the likelihood that Tyson will be able to restore its debt protection measures and overall financial profile to levels appropriate for its current rating."

And Fitch Ratings has branded Tyson's outlook as negative, predicting a net loss in earnings for the company in 2006.

Fitch claims the manufacturer is experiencing severe margin compression in its largest division, chicken, and the current "glut in the protein market" will slow down any possible recovery.

A study earlier this month by the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy (IATP) revealed that arsenic has been found in chicken meat on sale in US supermarkets -- further impacting Tyson's fortunes.

At least 70 per cent of American broiler chickens have been fed arsenic, according to their estimates.

And though plenty of the raw chicken tested had either none or nearly no detectable arsenic, including most chicken tested from the world's largest producer Tyson, sales have been impacted as consumers lose faith in modern meat-rearing practices.
 

JPD

Inactive
Media campaign to ease panic over bird flu ready to air


http://www.capitalnews9.com/content/headlines/?ArID=176815&SecID=33

4/24/2006 12:01 PM
By: Associated Press


State health officials are ready to air a media campaign upon the first reports of avian flu in New York to extinguish any flare-up of public panic.

Officials said the ads stress that the appearance of a bird infected with the H5N1 virus does not mean an outbreak in humans is looming.

The campaign, which includes print, radio and TV spots, will run in the late summer or early fall as a precursor to the regular flu season regardless of whether avian flu surfaces in the state. The ads will run sooner if reports of avian flu surface before then.
 

JPD

Inactive
India...

3 more suspected bird flu cases


http://www.newindpress.com/NewsItem...age=K&Title=Southern+News+-+Karnataka&Topic=0

Monday April 24 2006 10:47 IST

ATHANI: Three more cases of suspected bird flu were reported at Telsang village recently.

Villagers were gripped with tension. The health department and other departments concerned were not handling the matter satisfactorily, they said. APCC member, Mahesh Kumtalli said the District Health Department should take the matter seriously and immediately send specialists to the village.

Taluk medical officer, Kulkarni advised the villagers to drink boiled or filtered water.

He asked them to keep their personal and surrounding premises clean.

Interestingly, no district authorities have visited the place yet, suspected to be in the grip of the dicey bird flu.

It may be recalled that 25 people suffering from fever were reported to have symptoms of bird flu and were rushed to the Primary Health Centre in Telsang village on Thursday.
 

Bill P

Inactive
Re: Trigger Point

I suppose TPTB would like to remain PTB after any pandemic so I dont see that a veil of silence can be thrown over H2H in the USA anymore than it could in China. Even China's veil has been pierced internationally although we outsiders may have a btter view (obscured by clouds as it is) of what is happening in China vs the domestic Chinese.

I also suspect there will be at least 4 waves of HPAI H5N1 in humans maybe more, not less, as there are already four distinct strains of H5N1 spreading around the globe.

Today, H5N1 is confined mostly to migratory birds and poultry. I suppose it will achieve H2H epidemic status over there before arriving here.

So as I write this I admit I may pull DD home before it breaks here.....
 

Hermit

Inactive
I just read a headline that pigeons aren't a concern for bird flu, that should be a relief for city dwellers and presumably for those who hunt and eat doves, which are related. I haven't read the article yet, just wanted to post it in case I forget later.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Hermit said:
I just read a headline that pigeons aren't a concern for bird flu, that should be a relief for city dwellers and presumably for those who hunt and eat doves, which are related. I haven't read the article yet, just wanted to post it in case I forget later.

I saw the article too...

There was also a series of articles a couple of months ago... that dried pigeon droppings blown around like dust, were particularly lethal for city dwellers. If I remember tonight I'll dig it out...

:vik:
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
UK

Government warning of massive flu death toll

Apr 23 2006

By Caroline Smith, The Sunday Sun


Almost 25,000 people across the North could be killed by a bird flu pandemic, a confidential Government document warns.

The report, seen by the Sunday Sun, predicts region by region the number of fatalities if the virus mutates into a form that can be passed between humans.

Entitled: Pandemic Influenza and Managing Excess Deaths, the document warns that "many people" would die.

It is to be sent to local authorities across the country instructing them on how to cope with an outbreak.


The guidelines, drawn up by the Home Office, advises councils that their contingency plans need to be in place by September this year.

Pandemic

The report says: "It may be inevitable that many lives will be lost.

"Local authorities will need to work across all their local services and businesses to create options for responding locally to the challenge of managing excess deaths in an influenza pandemic.

"Framework plans should be in place by 2006."

Working on a "worst case scenario" the report predicts around 24,500 deaths in our region.

The figures - calculated for every Strategic Health Authority across the country - are based on a 2.5 per cent case fatality rate, meaning 2.5pc of all those who contracted the flu would die.

Worst hit in the North would be Northumberland and Tyne and Wear, where 8703 would be killed by the virus, and County Durham and Tees Valley, where 7169 fatalities are anticipated.

Across the UK as a whole the document says it is "prudent" to predict that as many as 350,000 people could die from the H5N1 strain of the virus if it mutates into a form that can readily be transmitted from human to human.

David Chappel, assistant director of the North East Public Health Observatory at the University of Durham, said: "All organisations have emergency plans in place for massive incidents, such as an air crash, which would involve mass casualties and fatalities all at once.

"A large number of deaths is a possibility with a pandemic but it would be a different scenario in that the deaths would be over a prolonged period. You would have to consider the logistical problems in dealing with that kind of situation.

Bodies

"It would be impossible to be so prepared that it would be plain sailing, but the aim of these kind of plans is to think about issues, such as where bodies are going to be stored, in advance.

"Then if the worst case scenario is realised the contingency plans can be escalated and we can be more resilient."

But Shadow Health Secretary Andrew Lansley said although plans had been made, few practical measures have actually been put in place.

He said: "Conservatives have repeatedly stressed the need for advance preparations for pandemic flu and highlighted the Government's lack of urgency.

"Sadly, although a number of well-developed, top-level plans have been produced by various Government departments, the work needed on the ground to prepare the country for an outbreak is still yet to be done.

"A poll for the Health Service Journal on 20 April 2006 revealed not a single respondent felt the NHS was prepared for a flu pandemic.

"It is vital that the Government acts on the valid concerns repeatedly expressed by us and others over the security of the food and drug supply chain and the lack of critical care bed availability, and that it supports the pharmaceutical industry in developing vaccines and other treatments which could be of potentially life-saving benefit in the event of an outbreak."

Following arrival of the pandemic in the UK experts believe that it would then take two to three weeks for it to spread throughout the country, when local authorities would be expected to activate their emergency plans.

Deaths

The report states: "In asking planners across England and Wales to focus on a range of excess deaths between 48,000 and 320,000 we are seeking to ensure that local preparedness arrangements could cope with the anticipated worst 15 weeks of activity.

"As a very worst case scenario it is envisaged that there will be a minimum of two weeks for emergency arrangements to be put in place."

But it warns that even with contingency plans in operation, the number of bodies may mean that mass burial, or "plague pits", would have to be enforced, and families may have to wait months for the bodies of their loved ones to be buried or cremated.

Funeral and cremation authorities have been consulted over how best to cope with the large volume of corpses, including upping the capacity of hospital mortuaries.

The document says: "Common burial stirs up images of the burial pits used in the great plague of 1665.

"If the rate of deaths peaks at 2.5pc the message is simple . . . no matter what emergency arrangements are put in place there are likely to be substantially more deaths than can be managed within current timescales.

"Even with ramping local management capacity by 100pc, the prudent worst case of 320,000 deaths is projected to lead to a delay of some 17 weeks from death to burial or cremation."

http://icnewcastle.icnetwork.co.uk/...ning-of-massive-flu-death-toll-name_page.html

:vik:
 

JPD

Inactive
Uganda: Govt Probes Bird Deaths

http://allafrica.com/stories/200604241251.html

New Vision (Kampala)

April 24, 2006
Posted to the web April 24, 2006

Cyprian Musoke
Kampala

THE Government is probing reports of dead poultry and other animals in some parts of the country in it s bid to guard against the deadly bird flu virus, general duties minister Mondo Kagonyera has said.

Kagonyera, a veterinary doctor who heads the cabinet committee on surveillance of the bird flu, told Parliament on Friday that the Government was concerned about the possibility of the disease breaking out in Uganda.

This followed concerns raised by the chairman of the agriculture, animal industry and fisheries committee, John Odit, that he had received reports of death of chicken and other domestic animals in several parts of the country.

Kagonyera said he would immediately ascertain that the deaths were not related to bird flu.

"I was not aware of the mortalities. The ministry of agriculture has been duly notified to make sure they find out what disease it is," Kagonyera said.

He said bird flu had come as near as Nigeria, Niger and Egypt, but Uganda was lucky not to have detected any cases. He said east coast fever, swine fever, foot and mouth diseases can break out in new territories when it rains.

He asked all leaders and the public to contact the nearest veterinary officers or ministry of health officials, if they get reports of massive animal deaths.
 

Seabird

Veteran Member
Got something in the mail today...

I totally realize that we are all on top of things on TB with the BF threat. And with the TV covering so much (like Dateline last night, and the upcoming movie...) it's really not surprising that more folks are paying attention. But it really hit home today when I got my mail this morning.

It was from the CDC...

(You know when they actually start filtering down information to the "little guys" it's becoming more serious ;) )

I received a checklist to prepare my four preschool/ child care centers for the Avian Flu. They are saying that the first line of defense will be closing preschools and child care centers. They want us to put together a plan to be able to pay staff, provide educational activities for parents to do with their kids while at home, etc. I'd post the whole checklist, but I can't seem to copy it to TB. If there is anyone who could post it, I can email a copy to you to post for me.

I don't know about anyone else, but this is a big :dot5: for me. My sweet boss--who is a professed sheeple--is actually paying attention to info from me now about all of this.


Seabird
 

Bill P

Inactive
I think the part about pigeons being no threat is dangerous BS.

The H5N1 is infecting all types of birds and many types of mammals.

Even without H5N1, OSHA considers bird dropping a hazardous condition; in many states, those that operate large warehouses are supposed to don special PPE to clean pallets covered by pigeon droppings.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Hermit said:
I just read a headline that pigeons aren't a concern for bird flu, that should be a relief for city dwellers and presumably for those who hunt and eat doves, which are related. I haven't read the article yet, just wanted to post it in case I forget later.

Hermit, I dug a little and found the article I was thinking about... it is a good example of how the news says one thing, then another... The current news is that Pigeons are not a concern with respect to H5N1. But, just 7 weeks ago, the news said Pigeons were a big threat.

This article is from the Daily BF 03/03: http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?t=188277

Post #23 said:
Friday, March 3, 2006

Pigeons are big flu threat

By SUN ONLINE REPORTER

PIGEONS could carry deadly bird flu into city centres, it was revealed today.

The feral birds, already considered a health hazard in urban areas, are
capable of being infected and killed by the H5N1 strain,
scientists have learned.

To what extent pigeons are able to carry and spread the virus is not known.

But an expert today warned that if H5N1 was confirmed in British wild birds, all species should be considered at risk.

Dr Bob McCracken, former president of the British Veterinary Association, said: "In the event of the infection being present in our wild bird population there is a danger to all avian species, wild, feral and domestic - and that includes pigeons.

"We have at this stage to assume that all avian species are capable of being infected with this virus unless we know otherwise."

Asked what could be done about pigeons with the virus infesting London’s Trafalgar Square or other city centre sites he said: "That would be very difficult to control."

Inhaling faecal dust from infected pigeons could potentially present a serious health risk to humans.

People who have died after catching bird flu from chickens are thought to have inhaled dried discharges or faeces, or had the particles come into contact with their eyes.

Pigeons are already known to spread psittacosis in their faeces - a flu-like illness that can lead to pneumonia, liver disease and death.


Since the present bird flu epidemic emerged in 2003 there have been a total of 173 cases of human infection, and 93 deaths.

Experts believe the chances of wild birds spreading the virus to humans are extremely low, but cannot be ignored.

The main known carriers of H5N1 are waterfowl such as ducks and geese and poultry.

Deaths due to the virus have also been reported in a wide range of other wild birds, including crows, thrushes, starlings, pigeons and doves, hawks and owls.

However, little known about the extent to which such birds can remain alive after infection, shedding the virus and presenting a potential danger to other animals and humans.

Even less is known about what future forms the virus might mutate into, and what kind of threat this may pose.

The big fear is that the virus will become capable of human-to-human
transmission, triggering a worldwide pandemic which could claim millions of lives.

Speaking at a briefing in London today, Dr McCracken said he was confident UK poultry farmers would respond quickly and contain any outbreak among their flocks.

"The encouraging factor is that our poultry industry is so geared up to
looking for this disease,"
he said.

But he stressed that nothing like the present H5N1 strain had ever been encountered before, especially with regard to wild birds.

Previously only mild forms of avian virus had been seen in wild bird
populations. The current strain started off as a relatively harmless virus in water fowl, before mutating into a deadly form in poultry and then moving back to wild birds.

The British Association for Shooting and Conservation (BASC) yesterday said it was setting up a monitoring programme to test shot crows, magpies and other wild birds for avian flu.

Mark Cokayne, BASC wildfowling and wetlands officer, said: "There is a possibility that corvids (members of the crow family) which feed on carrion - including dead birds - could be a factor in spreading avian influenza."

The scheme will be run on selected sites, initially in southern England and on the east coast, and in mid and north Wales.

Avian flu emerged in eastern Asia but is now rapidly becoming established in Europe.

Infected birds have been found in at least 10 European Union countries, including France, where the disease was confirmed at a turkey farm last month.

So far there has been no sign of the virus in the UK, but experts are poised for its arrival in Britain.

The Government strategy is not to resort to vaccines, which may mask the disease, but to set up exclusion zones and cull birds.

Dr McCracken said if these measures did not prove sufficient and the virus looked like persisting for years, vaccines might be necessary.

"Now is the time when Defra should be considering what kind of vaccines may be needed in the future, so when the time comes the button can be pressed," he said.

Another expert warned that the risk of catching bird flu from eating meat and eggs from infected birds, though incredibly low, could not be completely ruled out.

Dr Judith Hilton, head of microbiological safety at the Food Standards Agency, said as a precaution the same safety measures should be taken as those used to guard against salmonella food poisoning.

Meat should be cooked so that juices run clear and there are no pink areas, and raw eggs should be avoided. In a healthy person, cooked eggs with runny yolks were safe - the H5N1 virus was easily destroyed by heat.

Washing hands after handling meat or eggs would eliminate the risk of picking up the virus on the fingers, said Dr Hilton.

"The way people get flu is through the respiratory route, and not through what they eat," she said. "However we have to set that advice against what theoretical risk there might be from eating poultry meat and eggs. We can't entirely exclude that possibility, on the basis of science. However, it’s a very, very remote possibility."

http://www.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,2-2006100391,00.html

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Taz

Deceased
They say that it will last 18 months and then tell you to have food, water, meds for two weeks. Then make plans as to how you are going to hunker down for 18 months. Why can't our gov't just come out and tell people to prepare? When I was a kid, the gov't had the Civil Defense and preparation of families was part of it. Nobody has the balls to stand up and give people directions and recommendations. Walmart has the student needs printed for each school in their stores for the beginning of school each year. People should be able to pick up a list for X number of people and what basics they should buy. Just the basics, even if its beans, rice, water, powdered milk and p-nut butter and a couple of bottles of multi vitamins and vit C. It would get them started. Give them a goal and get them to really begin thinking about prepping. I get so disgusted. It would be sooooo simple. The gov't could give special food stamps, in addition, for those who are getting them. The special stamps would be for certain prep articles only. How difficult is it to get them prepped to at least save their lives. I am not asking for a picnic, just preventing unnecessary deaths.

Judith
 
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