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Hybrid flu outbreak causes deaths in Mexico

and U.S. and triggers worldwide action


Posted in Longevity and Age Management, Death and Dying, Environment, Infectious Disease,
Respiratory, Travel on Tue April 28, 2009
Reported April 30, 2009:
Governments and health organizations around the world are ramping up efforts to prevent a
"hybrid" swine flu pandemic. As of 8:45 PM, Eastern Time (USA), April 29th, the World Health
Organization (WHO) was reporting on their website 148 officially reported cases of swine
influenza worldwide. The H1N1 virus, is a "hybrid" flu that comprises a previously unknown
combination of genetic material from swine (pig), bird and human viruses.

In the United States, the CDC reported 91 laboratory confirmed cases in 11 states, including one
death, a 23-month old boy. Many people who have confirmed cases - or are under suspicion -
reported recently having traveled to Mexico. Subsequently, an additional 30 cases were reported
on a US Marine base in California, and additional confirmed cases in Maine and Nevada and
suspected cases in Louisiana and Delaware.

Health officials have confirmed that a toddler visiting from Mexico died in a Houston, Texas
hospital this past Monday. According to the Texas Department of State Health Services, the
young boy had traveled with his family from Mexico City in early April to Matamoros, Mexico,
then crossed the border to Brownsville in south Texas. He developed a fever on April 8, and five
days later, he was admitted to a hospital in Brownville, then transferred to Texas Children's
Hospital in Houston, where he died on April 27. Dr. David E. Persse, director of emergency
medical services in Houston, and other city health officials tried to calm fears of an outbreak,
reporting that no other members of the boy's family had shown symptoms of the virus.

Mexico has reported 26 confirmed human cases of infection including seven deaths, a far lower
number that the 159 deaths unofficially attributed to the A/H1N1 virus and 2,498 believed to be
infected there.

The A/H1N1 infection has been reported in seven other countries worldwide: - Austria (1),
Canada (13), Germany (3), Israel (2), New Zealand (3), Spain (4) and the United Kingdom (5),
none of which report any deaths.

Dr. Margaret Chan, of WHO elevated the Influenza Pandemic Alert from phase 4 to 5. Phase 6
indicates a pandemic is underway. In her April 29th statement, Dr. Chan said, " All countries
should immediately activate their pandemic preparedness plans. Countries should remain on high
alert for unusual outbreaks of influenza-like illness and severe pneumonia.

At this stage, effective and essential measures include heightened surveillance, early detection
and treatment of cases, and infection control in all health facilities.

This change to a higher phase of alert is a signal to governments, to ministries of health and other
ministries, to the pharmaceutical industry and the business community that certain actions should
now be undertaken with increased urgency, and at an accelerated pace."

Reported Earlier:

According to Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, the U.S. government has declared a
"public health emergency" and decided to release approximately 12.5 million units - one quarter
of its 50-million-unit strategic reserve - of antiviral medications to states where the outbreak has
occurred. She says that U.S. public health officials have emphasized that a "nationwide public
health emergency" is no reason to panic, even though it may sound serious. "That sounds more
severe than it really is," Napolitano says. "This is standard operating procedure and allows us to
free up federal, state and local agencies and their resources." And she adds that it is "a routine
move to ensure that the government was prepared in an environment where we really don't know,
ultimately, what the size or seriousness of this outbreak is going to be."
White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs told Meet the Press on Sunday that the "swine flu
was serious enough to be a great concern to this White House and to this government. President
Obama is receiving frequent updates on the situation and we are taking the proper precautions to
address anything that happens." He echoed Napolitano's words, however, saying that "it is not
time to panic."
In addition to stockpiles of antiviral drugs being prepared for rapid distribution should the
transmission of the virus accelerate, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is preparing
yellow cards to give information to travelers about swine flu, which is not easy to distinguish
from seasonal flu. Many countries are calling for greater vigilance at border crossings, as well as
in airports. Should the World Health Organization (WHO) decide that the outbreak warrants
being elevated to the pandemic threat level, other restrictions could be involved, including travel
restrictions, more active screening of travelers and quarantining those with the illness, plus
closings of schools and prohibiting public gatherings. In fact, this weekend, Mexico City
resembled a "ghost town," reports the Wall Street Journal, with high-profile soccer games played
before empty stadiums, religious services cancelled, and many restaurants and movie theaters
closed. Officials in Poland and Venezuela have warned against traveling to the U.S. and Mexico.
Other countries, including Russia and Brazil, have already started screening some incoming
international air passengers for signs of high fever - and Russia, along with China, have made
plans to quarantine anyone with symptoms of the virus.
Baxter International announced this weekend that it is working with the World Health
Organization on a potential vaccine to stop the deadly virus. Baxter's cell-based technology
allows the company to produce vaccines more rapidly should there be a pandemic than a
decades-old method using eggs - in fact, production time can be cut in half. "Upon learning
about the swine flu outbreak in Mexico, Baxter requested a virus sample from WHO to do
laboratory testing for potentially developing an experimental vaccine," says company spokesman
Christopher Bona.
This hybrid flu is an influenza virus that comprises a previously unknown combination of genetic
material from swine (pig), bird and human viruses. Health officials do not yet know how the
disease is spread, although they do know it is able to move from one human being to another
through coughing, sneezing or touching infected people or surfaces, then touching one's mouth
or nose. Since symptoms appear just like the regular flu, health experts recommend that people
only seek medical attention if they're suffering from such extreme symptoms such as having
trouble breathing.
According to the Washington Post, it is clear that younger adults may be the most susceptible to
the disease, writing that "the question of who contracts and ultimately dies from this virus has
become a matter of central concern in Mexico. And the answers that are beginning to emerge as
the death toll rises have been ominous. Relatively young adults, presumably among the
population's most healthy, have been the first to succumb."
The hybrid flu outbreak raises a host of other critical healthcare issues. According to the New
York Times, the Obama Administration is alarmed at doctor shortages and is looking for ways to
increase the supply of physicians. In addition, in a speech to the National Academy of Sciences,
President Obama emphasized that "science is more essential than ever before" for the nation's
security, health and economy," and pointed out that the swine flu outbreak is clear proof. In his
speech, he also "announced a pledge to increase research and scientific funding to a level equal
to that during the space race to the moon, amounting to three percent of the gross domestic
product."

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