Guest guest Posted September 29, 2005 Report Share Posted September 29, 2005 http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,170728,00.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 29, 2005 Report Share Posted September 29, 2005 Scientists in Desperate Race With Bird Flu Bird flu has scientists on the edge of their seats about when and if it will become a human pandemic, a sobering report shows. More than half of the people who got bird flu have died. The true death rate for human cases of bird flu is not known. Mild cases don't show up in hospitals and don't get counted. But a new report on human bird flu infection shows that this is a very bad bug indeed. The report comes from a May 2005 meeting of doctors and researchers held in Hanoi, Vietnam, by the World Health Organization. Among them is Frederick G. Hayden, MD, professor of clinical virology and internal medicine at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville. " The news is concerning, " Hayden tells WebMD. " Most cases are in apparently healthy adults and children. About half of them die from what appears to be a viral pneumonia, sometimes with secondary bacterial infections. Some suggest this virus behaves differently from human flu. " The disease has been particularly deadly for children. In Thailand, 89% of patients under the age of 15 years died an average of nine or 10 days after illness onset. " All of us virologists and infectious disease epidemiologists who worry about flu for a living, we all feel a pandemic is virtually inevitable -- as inevitable as any unpredictable event can be, " Morse tells WebMD. " We don't know if it will be a 1918-like epidemic, which is what we all fear -- the worst natural disaster we know of in history -- or whether it will be more of a standard pandemic like 1957 or 1968, where we have 4 million deaths rather than 100 million. " But if the next pandemic is bird flu, there really is no precedent. The terrible 1918 flu had a mortality [death] rate of only 2%, Morse says. " The extra charge on that bomb is that H5N1 bird flu has a high mortality rate, " he says. " That is one of the things that is very worrisome about this virus: A pandemic would mean a lot of people who are very sick. An H5 pandemic would be something very serious to contemplate. " > http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,170728,00.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 29, 2005 Report Share Posted September 29, 2005 I'm not a doctor and won't even pretend to know, but another thing that's been frightening me lately is this new " Canine Flu. " It went from pigs to dogs this summer, I believe. How did that happen? Tuscon's Humane Society reported that ten of its dogs have died from the canine flu this month, for which there is no antibodies. Symptoms are similiar to kennel cough. Which has me wondering what would happen--if this is possible--if Dog Flu mutates with Bird Flu and strikes Humans with even stronger force? Different strains, different species, but is this a possibility? __________________________________ - PC Magazine Editors' Choice 2005 http://mail. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 29, 2005 Report Share Posted September 29, 2005 Canine Flu isn’t even listed at the Centers for Disease Control website. http://www.cdc.gov/healthypets/browse_by_diseases.htm Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 29, 2005 Report Share Posted September 29, 2005 So does that mean Canine Flu is not transmittable to humans? Or that canine flu is so new (I've never hear of it till this week) that medical officials know so little about it? --- Coy <catherinecoy@...> wrote: > Canine Flu isn't even listed at the Centers for > Disease Control website. __________________________________ - PC Magazine Editors' Choice 2005 http://mail. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.