• scissors
    Listen with webreader

    The World Health Organization (“WHO”) reports as follows:

    who6 May 2009 — As of 06:00 GMT, 6 May 2009, 22 countries have officially reported 1,516 cases of influenza A (H1N1) infection.

    Mexico has reported 822 laboratory confirmed human cases of infection, including 29 deaths. The United States has reported 403 laboratory confirmed human cases, including one death.

    The following countries have reported laboratory confirmed cases with no deaths – Austria (1), Canada (165), China, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (1), Colombia (1), Costa Rica (1), Denmark (1), El Salvador (2), France (4), Germany (9), Guatemala (1), Ireland (1), Israel (4), Italy (5), Netherlands (1), New Zealand (6), Portugal (1), Republic of Korea (2), Spain (57), Switzerland (1) and the United Kingdom (27).

    It is considered prudent for people who are ill to delay international travel and for people developing symptoms following international travel to seek medical attention, in line with guidance from national authorities. Individuals are advised to wash hands thoroughly with soap and water on a regular basis and should seek medical attention if they develop any symptoms of influenza-like illness.

    WHO advises no restriction of regular travel or closure of borders.

    There is no risk of infection from this virus from consumption of well-cooked pork and pork products.

    Further information on the situation will be available on the WHO website on a regular basis.

    For a map showing the confirmed cases of the illness around the world, click HERE.

    Based on this new information, I guess I need to rethink my hypothesis presented in my prior posting, entitled “Some Thoughts On My Last Two Posts“, where I pondered why a country like Costa Rica with such a small popluation appeared to have many more swine flu cases that a country like Canada, with a much larger population.  Well, it seems that I was comparing “apples to oranges” . . . the number of Costa Rican cases that I mentioned were “suspected”;  whereas the Canadian cases were confirmed.

    If you look at the most recent WHO figures, you’ll see that Costa Rica has only one confirmed case; whereas Canada now has 165 cases. (There have been no deaths from the disease in either country).  So my previously concocted theory is, apparently, without merit.

    Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

    Tags: , , , ,
  • scissors
    Listen with webreader

     

     

    Notwithstanding my prior post, suggesting that there is an over-reaction to the swine flu pandemic, I have to report that the World Health Organization is still concerned that the outbreak could “gain momentum”.

    According to CNNHealth.com:

    cnnhealthcom(CNN) – The World Health Organization cautioned that the swine flu outbreak could gain momentum in the months ahead, despite claims by the health secretary of Mexico — the epicenter of the outbreak — that the virus “is in its declining phase.”

    The number of confimed cases of the H1N1 virus continue to multiply.

    The number of confimed cases of the H1N1 virus continue to multiply.

    The outbreak is only about 10 days old, and even if the illness is declining, it could return, said Gregory Hartl, the WHO spokesman for epidemic and pandemic diseases, at a briefing Sunday.

    “I … would like to remind people that in 1918 the Spanish flu showed a surge in the spring, and then disappeared in the summer months, only to return in the autumn of 1918 with a vengeance,” Hartl said. “And we know that that eventually killed 40 million to 50 million people.”

    Mexican authorities believe the virus’s most active period in Mexico was between April 23 and April 28, and Mexican Health Secretary Jose Cordova described the outbreak as being in decline in his country.

    As of late Sunday, Mexican health officials reported 568 cases and 22 fatalities linked to the flu. WHO says it has confirmed 506 cases and 19 deaths in Mexico.

    The world has 898 confirmed cases of the virus, known to scientists H1N1 virus, in a total of 18 countries, WHO said Sunday.

    The United States has reported 226 confirmed cases in 30 states. The U.S. cases include one death — a Mexican toddler visiting relatives in the United States.

    According to WHO, Canada has 70 confirmed cases; the United Kingdom has 15; Spain has 13; Germany has 6; New Zealand has 4; Israel has 3; France has 2; and Austria, China, South Korea, Denmark, Netherlands, Switzerland, Costa Rica and Ireland each have one.

    In China, officials have quarantined 68 people, including 13 crew members, who were passengers of a Mexico City to Shanghai flight, which carried a passenger who tested positive for the virus, China’s state-run Xinhua news agency reported Sunday. None of the other passengers has exhibited any flu-like symptoms, one health official said.

    About another 110 people who were on the Aeromexico plane went on to other destinations, and may face quarantines elsewhere, the news agency said. Fifteen have been quarantined at a Beijing hotel.

    Shanghai’s airport is now barring other Aeromexico planes from landing there, a representative of the airline told CNN. Aeromexico is suspending flights to Shanghai until May 15, the representative said. The airline does not fly to Hong Kong or Beijing.

    In the United States, New York has the most confirmed cases, with 63, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Texas has 40; California has 26; Arizona 18; South Carolina 15; Delaware 10; Massachusetts and New Jersey each have seven; Colorado has four; Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Virginia, Wisconsin each have three; Connecticut, Kansas and Michigan each have two; Alabama, Iowa, Kentucky, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Rhode Island, Tennessee and Utah each have one.

    California officials suspended visitation and other “nonessential activities” at Centinela State Prison in Imperial County after an inmate was suspected of having swine flu. The case has yet to be confirmed with lab testing.

    On Sunday, health officials in North Carolina and Pennsylvania announced the first confirmed cases in those states, and Louisiana’s governor said his state had seven confirmed cases. The cases from those three states were not immediately included in the CDC tally.

    In Washington, U.S. Secretary of Health Kathleen Sebelius, appearing on CNN’s “State of the Union,” warned that even if the flu outbreak wanes, “it could come back with greater force in the winter and fall, when we get into flu season.”

    “So, this is no time for complacency,” she said. “We want to stay out ahead of this.”

    Dr. Anne Schuchat, the CDC’s interim deputy director for public health, told reporters Sunday that she was “heartened” by Mexican authorities’ reports but still is “very cautious.”

    “I know that influenza can be surprising, and the time course here in the United States is later. We believe we’re just on the upswing here, and in several parts of Mexico, cases began quite a while ago,” Schuchat said.

    “From what I know about influenza, I do expect more cases, more severe cases and I do expect more deaths,” she added. “And I’m particularly concerned about what will happen in the fall.”

    Acting CDC Director Richard Besser, also speaking on “State of the Union,” said U.S. health officials are examining whether people who received flu shots for the swine flu in 1976 may have some level of protection from the current swine flu.

    “That’s going to play in very, very big as we move forward with our plans around vaccines, because that may help guide some of the issues around who is most at risk at getting this in the future,” Besser said.

    Offering a general picture of the state of U.S. efforts to combat the virus, Besser said “there are encouraging signs.”

    “We’re not out of the woods yet,” he said. “But what we’ve learned about the virus itself — it doesn’t contain the factors that we know are seen in much more severe flu strains.”

    While the new virus strain in the recent outbreak has affected humans, Canadian officials said it has shown up at a pig farm in Alberta, Canada.

    Officials said the pigs may have been infected by a Canadian farmer who recently returned from a trip to Mexico, the epicenter of the outbreak. The pigs have since been quarantined.

    “We have determined that the virus H1N1, found in these pigs, is the virus which is being tracked in the human population,” said Dr. Brian Evans of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency. iReport.com: How should H1N1 be handled?

    Evans and other officials said it is not uncommon for flu viruses to jump from humans to animals, and that it does not pose a risk for consuming pork. The number of pigs infected was not disclosed.

    The infected farmer had flu-like symptoms, but he is recovering, Evans said.

     

     

    Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

    Tags: ,
  • scissors
    Listen with webreader

    From WebMD:


    WebMD7 Reasons Not to Over Worry

    After a solid week of scary headlines about swine flu, it’s time to take a step back, take a deep breath, and regain perspective. Here are seven points to consider:

    1. Most swine flu cases have been mild, so far. Severe cases have been seen mainly in Mexico, for reasons that aren’t yet clear. But most swine flu patients have recovered without being hospitalized.
    2. You’re not defenseless against swine flu. Simple things — washing your hands, not touching your mouth, eyes, or nose, and trying to avoid close contact with sick people — can go a long way toward reducing your risk.
    3. Most swine flu cases so far have been pretty much like normal, seasonal flu. Swine flu and seasonal flu share symptoms, and spread the same way.
    4. How much do you worry about seasonal flu? Maybe you should give garden-variety flu a little more respect. In a typical U.S. flu season, an average of 36,000 people die of flu or flu complications, and about 200,000 people are hospitalized. Swine flu hasn’t come anywhere close to that.
    5. Swine flu’s future is unknown. No one knows where swine flu is headed — for better or for worse. “You don’t know if it’s going to fizzle out in a couple weeks or become more or less virulent or severe in the diseases it causes,” CDC Acting Director Richard Besser, MD, said on April 29. “If we could see into the future [that] would be absolutely wonderful, but that’s not the case. That’s why we’re being aggressive” in seeking to limit swine flu’s impact on human health.
    6. The world is more prepared than ever. Remember bird flu? When that was the “it” virus several years ago, the global health community ramped up its pandemic preparations. As a result of that work, “the world is better prepared for an influenza pandemic than at any time in history,” WHO Director-General Margaret Chan said on April 29.
    7. Pandemics aren’t all deadly.” If the World Health Organization declares swine flu a pandemic, that’s all about the spread of the virus — not the severity of the illness. In the past, some pandemics have been mild, while others have been severe, notes WHO spokesman Gregory Hartl, adding that “people should act with common sense, not with panic.”
    Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

    Tags: ,
  • scissors
    May 2nd, 2009EthelCosta Rica, Health and Wellness
    Listen with webreader

    Elizabeth Ann South

    Elizabeth Ann South

    Blogger Elizabeth Ann South has decided to flee Costa Rica and head back to the USA.  Here’s what she said on her blog:

    I respect Elizabeth Ann’s opinions and her decision to return to the United States; however, I have to wonder if it is the right decision.

    To begin with, I think (hope) that everyone is over-reacting to this swine flu situation – I don’t doubt that a “species threatening” virus is an eventuallity; however, I don’t think that this current situation is “the big one”.  (Every few years, we have an avian flu or a SARS or some other scare, and it runs it’s course and life goes on.  When some airborne strain of Ebola or Marbury breaks loose, then it’s time to get worried).

    Moreover, I’d be more inclined to get out of the metro-San Jose area and take a little vacation to a sparsely populated part of Costa Rica.  If you’re really worried about the virus, I’m not sure that sitting at the crowded San Jose airport and then boarding an airplane crammed full of people heading for the crowds of a big USA city airport is a better decision.

    I don’t know where in the USA Elizabeth Ann is headed . . . but, if it’s New York or Houston or Los Angeles as opposed to Gopher Muscle, North Dakota, I doubt that she’ll be safer than if she headed for Guanacaste (where only 7% of the Costa Rican population reside).  You could find a small hotel on a beach south of Nicoya and you might not come into contact with a dozen other people.

    As for Elizabeth Ann’s  fear that the USA might close it’s borders . . . I’ll eat my Guanacaste cowboy hat if the USA ever closes it’s borders, preventing US citizens from repatriating.  If things get that bad, the US government will send airplanes to Costa Rica to evacuate you back to the homeland.

    Elizabeth Ann . . . I wish you the best and, as I said, I certainly respect your decision, but . . . if you read this, please share your comments with us.  I’ll be following your blog to see how things go for you.  (I hope you’re back in CR, very soon).

    Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

    Tags: , , ,
  • scissors
    May 1st, 2009EthelCosta Rica, Health and Wellness
    Listen with webreader

    Canada

    The population of Canada is approximately 33,634,956, whereas Costa Rica has a population of only about 4,195,914.

    Yet, there are 129 suspected cases of swine flu in Costa Rica . . . and only 51 cases in Canada.Costa Rica

    Why do you think that is?  Closer proximity to Mexico? Much more kissing in Costa Rica?

    I suspect that the answer is tMaphat Costa Ricans live in a “more confined area” than Canadians, and there is therefore more opportunity for a virus to spread.

    The area of Canada (the second largest country in the world) is 9,093,507 square kilometers; whereas the area of Costa Rica is only 50,660 square kilometers (an area slightly smaller than that of West Virginia).

    If my math is correct, that means there are 3.6 people per square kilometer in Canada, but more than 82.8 people per square kilometer in Costa Rica.

    Actually, when I look at a map and see how minuscule Costa Rica is compared to giant Canada, I guess my question was a bit naïve.  (Sorry if I wasted your time).

    Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

    Tags: , , ,
  • scissors
    May 1st, 2009EthelHealth and Wellness
    Listen with webreader

    From AFP:

    AFPVANCOUVER, Canada (AFP) — Canada raised its number of swine flu cases to 51 on Friday with patients being treated from coast to coast of this vast country.

    A total of 17 new cases were reported in five provinces throughout the day.

    Gordon Campbell, premier of westernmost British Columbia province, said 15 cases had been identified in the province, four more than previously announced.

    “All of them are relatively mild (cases),” he said, adding that the infected people were recovering or had already recovered.

    But Campbell warned: “Unfortunately we may see some deaths. It’s important for us to recognize that.”

    Two cases were also detected in neighboring Alberta province, the hub of Canada’s oil industry, said local authorities. Public broadcaster CBC said one of the two newly infected Alberta women had traveled to Mexico.

    Six new mild cases of H1N1 human swine influenza were also reported in easternmost Nova Scotia province. All of them were connected to an outbreak at a local school that recently welcomed back students from a Mexican vacation.

    “These new numbers are what we expected,” said Robert Strang, chief public health officer for Nova Scotia.

    As well, Ontario reported four additional cases, bringing its total number of confirmed infections to 12.

    Earlier, eastern New Brunswick province reported its first case of swine flu.

    Canada has now recorded the third highest number of cases of swine flu after the epicenter Mexico, and the United States.

    Canada’s breakdown of cases is: 14 in Nova Scotia, 12 in Ontario, one in New Brunswick and one in Quebec in the east of the country, eight in Alberta and 15 in British Columbia to the west.

    Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

    Tags: , ,