Author Topic: All About the Swine Flu Virus  (Read 2942 times)

kiamoy

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All About the Swine Flu Virus
« on: April 27, 2009, 09:28:33 PM »
Some Facts About Swine Flu

Q. What is swine flu?

A. Swine flu is a highly contagious acute respiratory disease normally found in pigs. It spreads through tiny particles in the air or by direct contact. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), it tends to infect large numbers of a given pig population, killing between 1 and 4 percent of those affected. Not every animal infected displays symptoms.

Q. Where do outbreaks occur?

A. Swine flu is considered endemic in the United States, and outbreaks in pigs have also been reported elsewhere in North America, South America, Europe, Africa and parts of eastern Asia.

Q. How do humans contract the virus?

A. People usually become infected through contact with pigs, though some cases of limited human-to-human transmission have been reported.

Q. Is it safe to eat pork products?

A. The WHO says properly handled and prepared pork products are safe to eat. The swine flu virus dies when cooked at temperatures of 160ºF/70ºC higher.

Q. How high is the risk of a pandemic?

A. Since the swine flu outbreaks in Mexico and the United States were identified, the risk of a pandemic has increased. Health officials worry the swine flu might develop into a form easily spread among humans. To do this, it could combine with a human flu virus or mutate on its own into a transmissible form.

Experts worry that the more the virus circulates, the more likely a pandemic strain will emerge. But there is no way to predict when a pandemic strain will develop.

Q. Does a vaccine exist?

A. Pigs in North America are routinely vaccinated for swine flu, but no vaccine exists for humans. In any case, the flu virus evolves quickly, meaning that vaccines are soon obsolete.

Health officials say there is no suggestion that the vaccine prepared for seasonal flu will protect against swine flu.

While people who are given the seasonal flu vaccine will probably not be protected against swine flu, it may prevent them from getting the seasonal flu. If they are then infected with swine flu, that reduces the possibility of the two flus mixing in that person to create a potential pandemic strain.

Q. What other treatment is there?

A. The swine flu virus detected in Mexico and the United States appears to respond to treatment with oseltamivir (Tamiflu) and zanamivir (Relenza). In terms of prevention, maintaining good hygiene, for example, regular hand-washing and staying a safe distance from those infected, may help.

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Calif. Officials Confirm 8th Case Of Swine Flu
« Reply #1 on: April 28, 2009, 04:36:52 AM »
LOS ANGELES -- Public health officials say a seventh grader in Sacramento County is confirmed to have had the eighth case of swine flu in California.

California Department of Public Health spokesman Al Lundeen said Monday that the boy already has recovered from mild symptoms of the flu. Officials are not making public the town where the boy lives or the name of the private school he attends.

State health officials also say they are looking into another dozen possible cases.

California Department of Public Health spokesman Al Lundeen said Monday that the boy already has recovered from mild symptoms of the flu. Officials are not making public the town where the boy lives or the name of the private school he attends.

State health officials also say they are looking into another dozen possible cases.

The seven previously confirmed cases included four in San Diego County and three in Imperial County.

The governor told a Beverly Hills news conference that California has activated its joint emergency operations system -- a combination of the public health department and the state emergency management agency.


-10news.com


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Re: All About the Swine Flu Virus
« Reply #2 on: April 28, 2009, 05:39:30 AM »
There's a reported case of Swine Flu in a school within our city.  Ang report kay the kid just came back from Mexico for a vacation with her parents. Six more kids are affected that's why they closed the school until they can contain the situation.

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Re: All About the Swine Flu Virus
« Reply #3 on: April 28, 2009, 12:04:09 PM »
It is more safe from swine  flu if you stay in the Arab countries.

Sa atong mga OFW tua sa Arab countries, safe mo diha sa swine flu.



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Re: All About the Swine Flu Virus
« Reply #4 on: April 28, 2009, 02:12:53 PM »
It is more safe from swine  flu if you stay in the Arab countries.

Sa atong mga OFW tua sa Arab countries, safe mo diha sa swine flu.



Not really, Sir.  Kon naay makasulod sa Arab countries na infected na ana unya maka spread dayon, mao di gihapon safe.  Nobody's safe.  Basta extra careful lang ta.

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Swine flu symptoms, diagnosis, prevention
« Reply #5 on: April 28, 2009, 11:00:57 PM »

In response to the swine flu outbreak that has left dozens dead in Mexico and spread to other countries, officials here launched a campaign to inform the public on virus symptoms, prevention and treatment.

The following information was provided by the Mexican Ministry of Health.

SYMPTOMS: Sudden fever above 38 degrees (100.4 degrees Fahrenheit), cough, headache, aching joints, nasal congestion and general fatigue.

DIAGNOSIS: Clinical examination of secretions from the nose and mouth in the first 24-72 hours after presenting symptoms, and a study of blood samples to detect existence of influenza virus.

TREATMENT: In confirmed cases, Mexican authorities have provided patients with flu drugs Seltamivir or Zanamivir under strict medical supervision, and warn against side effects in misuse.

The Mexican government said that the antiviral drugs would only be administered if infection is confirmed.

Authorities have reportedly some million doses on hand, although local media warn that pharmacies have run out of treatments.

PREVENTATIVE MEASURES: Wear a mask. Do not greet someone with a kiss or handshake; do not share food, cutlery or glasses. Ventilate homes and offices, keep clean common items such as telephones.

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Re: Swine flu symptoms, diagnosis, prevention
« Reply #6 on: April 28, 2009, 11:02:29 PM »
sus! ampo nalang gyud ta ani na dili unta maka lusot ang swine flu diri sa pinas. kay kung maka lusot unsaon nalang gyud? Daghan naman gani nanga matay sa mexico na mas advance sila didto kay duol ra sila sa US.

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kiamoy

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Re: All About the Swine Flu Virus
« Reply #7 on: April 28, 2009, 11:50:07 PM »
the effect is like a scare of the influenza pandemic back in the 1800s.  ayaw intawn :(

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What you need to know about swine flu
« Reply #8 on: April 29, 2009, 12:50:50 AM »
WASHINGTON – A never-before-seen strain of swine flu has turned killer in Mexico and is causing milder illness in the United States and elsewhere. While authorities say it's not time to panic, they are taking steps to stem the spread and also urging people to pay close attention to the latest health warnings and take their own precautions.

"Individuals have a key role to play," Dr. Richard Besser, acting chief of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said Monday.

Here's what you need to know:

Q: How do I protect myself and my family?

A: For now, take commonsense precautions. Cover your coughs and sneezes, with a tissue that you throw away or by sneezing into your elbow rather than your hand. Wash hands frequently; if soap and water aren't available, hand gels can substitute. Stay home if you're sick and keep children home from school if they are.

Q: How easy is it to catch this virus?

A: Scientists don't yet know if it takes fairly close or prolonged contact with someone who's sick, or if it's more easily spread. But in general, flu viruses spread through uncovered coughs and sneezes or — and this is important — by touching your mouth or nose with unwashed hands. Flu viruses can live on surfaces for several hours, like a doorknob just touched by someone who sneezed into his hand.

Q: In Mexico, officials are handing out face masks. Do I need one?

A: The CDC says there's not good evidence that masks really help outside of health care settings. It's safer just to avoid close contact with someone who's sick and avoid crowded gatherings in places where swine flu is known to be spreading. But if you can't do that, CDC guidelines say it's OK to consider a mask — just don't let it substitute for good precautions.

Q: Is swine flu treatable?

A: Yes, with the flu drugs Tamiflu or Relenza, but not with two older flu medications.

Q: Is there enough?

A: Yes. The federal government has stockpiled enough of the drugs to treat 50 million people, and many states have additional stocks. As a precaution, the CDC has shipped a quarter of that supply to the states to keep on hand just in case the virus starts spreading more than it has so far.

Q: Should I take Tamiflu as a precaution if I'm not sick yet?

A: No. "What are you going to do with it, use it when you get a sniffle?" asks Dr. Marc Siegel of New York University Langone Medical Center and author of "Bird Flu: Everything you Need To Know About The Next Pandemic." Overusing antiviral drugs can help germs become resistant to them.

Q: How big is my risk?

A: For most people, very low. Outside of Mexico, so far clusters of illnesses seem related to Mexican travel. New York City's cluster, for instance, consists of students and family members at one school where some students came back ill from spring break in Mexico.

Q: Why are people dying in Mexico and not here?

A: That's a mystery. First, understand that no one really knows just how many people in Mexico are dying of this flu strain, or how many have it. Only a fraction of the suspected deaths have been tested and confirmed as swine flu, and some initially suspected cases were caused by something else.

Q: Should I cancel my planned trip to Mexico?

A: The U.S. did issue a travel advisory Monday discouraging nonessential travel there.

Q: What else is the U.S., or anyone else, doing to try to stop this virus?

A: The U.S. is beginning limited screening of travelers from Mexico, so that the obviously sick can be sent for treatment. Other governments have issued their own travel warnings and restrictions. Mexico is taking the biggest steps, closings that limit most crowded gatherings. In the U.S., communities with clusters of illness also may limit contact — New York closed the affected school for a few days, for example — so stay tuned to hear if your area eventually is affected.

Q: What are the symptoms?

A: They're similar to regular human flu — a fever, cough, sore throat, body aches, headache, chills and fatigue. Some people also have diarrhea and vomiting.

Q: How do I know if I should see a doctor? Maybe my symptoms are from something else — like pollen?

A: Health authorities say if you live in places where swine flu cases have been confirmed, or you recently traveled to Mexico, and you have flulike symptoms, ask your doctor if you need treatment or to be tested. Allergies won't cause a fever. And run-of-the-mill stomach bugs won't be accompanied by respiratory symptoms, notes Dr. Wayne Reynolds of Newport News, Va., spokesman for the American Academy of Family Physicians.

Q: Is there a vaccine to prevent this new infection?

A: No. And CDC's initial testing suggests that last winter's flu shot didn't offer any cross-protection.

Q: How long would it take to produce a vaccine?

A: A few months. The CDC has created what's called "seed stock" of the new virus that manufacturers would need to start production. But the government hasn't yet decided if the outbreak is bad enough to order that.

Q: What is swine flu?

A: Pigs spread their own strains of influenza and every so often people catch one, usually after contact with the animals. This new strain is a mix of pig viruses with some human and bird viruses. Unlike more typical swine flu, it is spreading person-to-person. A 1976 outbreak of another unusual swine flu at Fort Dix, N.J., prompted a problematic mass vaccination campaign, but that time the flu fizzled out.

Q: So is it safe to eat pork?

A: Yes. Swine influenza viruses don't spread through food.

Q: And whatever happened to bird flu? Wasn't that supposed to be the next pandemic?

A: Specialists have long warned that the issue is a never-before-seen strain that people have little if any natural immunity to, regardless of whether it seems to originate from a bird or a pig. Bird flu hasn't gone away; scientists are tracking it, too.

-yahoo

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kiamoy

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Re: All About the Swine Flu Virus
« Reply #9 on: April 29, 2009, 04:19:21 AM »
may untag dili na maka survive dinhi.. parehas adtong sa una nga mga virus.. i forgot the name.. kay init ra daw kaayu dre. dili sila mabuhi

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Re: All About the Swine Flu Virus
« Reply #10 on: April 29, 2009, 06:17:37 AM »
Makahadlok bitaw ni karon oi kay naa nay na biktima ani na flu within our city.  Mao jud, sige lang jud bitbit ug hand sanitizer.  Simbako lang, di na unta dugangan kay naa na ra ba koy swine reflex aka sakit sa baboy kay lami ikatulog human kaon.

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Re: All About the Swine Flu Virus
« Reply #11 on: April 30, 2009, 01:35:11 AM »
may untag dili na maka survive dinhi.. parehas adtong sa una nga mga virus.. i forgot the name.. kay init ra daw kaayu dre. dili sila mabuhi

Maayo lagi untag dili maka survive diri kung maka lusot man. Pero diba init man gihapon sa mexico?


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Re: All About the Swine Flu Virus
« Reply #12 on: April 30, 2009, 01:42:45 AM »
WHO says moving closer to swine flu alert phase 5
Wed Apr 29, 2009 12:00pm EDT

GENEVA (Reuters) - The World Health Organization said on Wednesday it was moving closer to declaring a pandemic alert phase 5 for swine flu, which is spreading with no sign of slowing down.

No meeting has been set for the WHO's emergency committee, which could recommend an increase of the alert level to the second-highest level of the 1-to-6 scale.

"It appears we are moving closer to that, but we are not there yet," Keiji Fukuda, WHO acting assistant director-general, told a news conference.

Moving to phase 5 from the current phase 4 would be a significant step, he said.

WHO experts are examining the transmission patterns of swine flu for signs the disease is spreading among people who have not been to Mexico, or had close contact with those who had.

The United Nations agency has previously said it might raise its pandemic alert level to phase 5 if it were confirmed that infected people in at least two countries were spreading the disease to other people in a sustained way.

Fukuda said the WHO has confirmed 114 swine flu cases in Mexico, the United States, Canada, Israel, Spain, Britain, and New Zealand, with seven deaths in Mexico and one in the United States -- which U.S. authorities have said was a Mexican baby who traveled there for medical assistance.

"It is clear that the virus is spreading and we don't see any evidence of this slowing down at this point," he said.

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Re: All About the Swine Flu Virus
« Reply #13 on: April 30, 2009, 01:59:37 AM »



from time.com as to why the virus is deadlier at Mexico..

"The Mexican deaths may also be attributable to some underlying coinfection or health problem that is simply not present in the U.S. cases — but that will require more investigation to uncover.

It's also possible that A/H1N1 began life in Mexico especially virulent — that country has apparently been grappling with the virus for weeks longer than the U.S. has — and evolved to become less dangerous by the time it crossed the border. That would not be an unusual evolutionary device, since viruses that are too deadly cannot survive if they kill off their host before being given a chance to spread. "It's fairly common in epidemics to see a trade-off between the ability to cause severe death and transmissibility," says Steven Kleiboeker, a virologist and the chief scientific officer for ViraCor Laboratories. The A/H1N1 virus may be attenuating itself as it spreads from person to person, becoming easier to catch but less dangerous.

The WHO, however, says that so far the virus appears to have stayed relatively stable during the chains of transmission, so it may not be mutating much. Still, the virus's current relatively weak state does not guarantee that it won't return later, much more virulent — which is exactly what happened in the 1918 flu pandemic that killed at least 50 million people worldwide. As the flu season comes to an end in the northern hemisphere, it may lead to a natural petering out of new swine-flu cases in the U.S. But the strain may continue to circulate aggressively in the southern hemisphere, which is just now entering its flu season, and then return to the north next winter.

Any conclusions now will be premature, because we still don't know what we're looking at. Experts predict we'll eventually begin to see fewer new cases in Mexico, as lab results separate real swine-flu infections from normal respiratory disease. Meanwhile, the anticipation of more cases and deaths in the U.S. has already been begun to be borne out. As the CDC's Besser himself has pointed out, swine flu is going to be a marathon, not a sprint — and we've only just gotten started."

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Re: All About the Swine Flu Virus
« Reply #14 on: April 30, 2009, 02:06:23 AM »
A/H1N1 virus virulence wanes over time, the reason for the partiality towards the Mexican population is simply medical presentation.

The level of medical care and health system in Mexico, is that of a 3rd world nation, with a population of over 110 Million and a medical work force that is insufficient to handle cases prior to the outbreak of A/H1N1, it is a strategic manifest of the high fatalities after the metastasis of the said virus.

Hygenics and waste disposal is also a problem in Mexico, one that has been a problem for decades now.

Fortunately for us, in medical hindsight, the first wave will be deadly, but as the virus infects hosts, the body's natural immune system develops antibodies and reverse reverse transcripterase capability that can counter further viral replication.

This has been the case regarding the SARS outbreak some 1 decade ago.



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Re: All About the Swine Flu Virus
« Reply #15 on: April 30, 2009, 02:32:14 AM »
Masks keep you from spreading illness
April 29, 2009 -- Updated 1110 GMT (1910 HKT)



(CNN) -- In Mexico City, the government ran out of surgical masks after handing them out to one of every five residents.
A mother and son wear face masks as protection from swine flu at Sydney international Airport in Australia.

A mother and son wear face masks as protection from swine flu at Sydney international Airport in Australia.
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Manufacturers and pharmacies in Europe are also reporting a surge in demand for face masks. And a Texas-based surgical mask producer says it's ramping up to meet demand and expects a shortage of masks.

But their real value seems to be in keeping people who are already ill from spreading the virus, rather than protecting healthy people, experts said.

Dr. Richard Besser, acting director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said Monday in a press briefing that the "evidence is not very strong" for masks' value outside of health care settings, and outside of settings in which people come into face-to-face contact with a person with an infectious disease.

"We would not recommend that people generally wear masks in their workplace as a precautionary measure," he said. Video Watch for more on staying safe from swine flu »

The World Health Organization (WHO) also warns against relying on face masks, especially for those not infected with the virus.

"They are mainly useful for people who are already sick, to prevent spreading. Not so much to stop people from catching the virus," Sarah Cumberland of the WHO told CNN.
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    * Mexico City at epicenter of swine flu fears

The United Kingdom's Health Protection Agency also told CNN that the use of face masks was not necessary or recommended for protection against the swine flu virus.

Although it's not known for sure how much benefit a surgical mask has in preventing the transmission of swine flu, people who have the illness may consider wearing one as a way to reduce the amount they cough and sneeze onto others, said Dr. Arthur Reingold, head of the epidemiology division at the University of California, Berkeley, School of Public Health.

"I think that this is a perfectly reasonable thing for someone with a respiratory illness to do," he said.

More effective than soft surgical masks is the N95, which is an example of a "respirator." This kind of tight-fitting face covering protects people against breathing very small particles, which may contain viruses. The downside is that it's more expensive, uncomfortable to wear for long periods of time and has to be custom fit, Reingold said, so it's suited for people working in high-risk laboratories.

Masks carry both physical and psychological benefits, said Dr. Julio Frenk, former health minister of Mexico and current dean of the Harvard School of Public Health.

Masks are a "reminder to people that they should avoid close contact with other persons," he said. "They also have this effect of isolating people and reminding them that they should not be kissing people, shaking hands, things like that."

For health care workers, it's important to have high-efficiency masks, which protect better against infectious diseases, he said.

But people in the United States should generally not have to wear masks because the cases are localized, he said. By contrast, it is more of a widespread problem in Mexico, especially in the capital city, a "huge urban conglomeration."

Measures such as closing schools are the most effective in stopping the spread of the disease, he said. Mexico's schools are closed until at least May 6.

By early Tuesday, the swine flu outbreak in Mexico was suspected in 152 deaths and more than 1,600 illnesses, the country's health minister said.

Swine flu has reached phase 4 (out of 6) on the pandemic scale, according to the WHO guidelines, but has not yet attained the status of global pandemic.

During a flu pandemic, people should consider wearing a face mask if they are sick with the flu, live with someone who has the flu or need to be in a crowded place, the CDC Web site says.

If you are caring for a person thought to have pandemic flu or will be close to someone who may have it, consider a respirator, for example an N95 or high-filtering face piece respirator, the CDC Web site says. Some health care workers, such as nurses and doctors, use respirators when dealing with patients who have airborne diseases, the CDC said. iReport.com: Worried about swine flu?
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In the current swine flu situation, rather than masks, the CDC is pushing hand-washing, covering coughs and refraining from "giving somebody that little kiss of greeting," Besser said.

"If you're in an infected area or if you have the swine flu, it's probably best not to, to not give a kiss, but we're not recommending an end of affection during the period. It's a period of time when we need a little more affection, but doing it in a way that isn't going to transmit a respiratory disease would be a CDC approach," he said.

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