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    Google.org has found that certain search terms are good indicators of flu activity. Google Flu Trends uses aggregated Google search data to estimate flu activity.  Google’s estimates are amazingly consistent with World Health Organization data.

    To see an interactive map, and for more information about Google Flu Trends, click on the graphic below.

    map

    Also, Google has announced a new feature of Maps that will allow users in the United States to find flu vaccines near them. In partnership with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the American Lung Association, and Flu.gov, Google Maps is now helping users search for seasonal flu vaccination locations, H1N1 flu shots, or both together. See Flu Shot Finder.

    Project managers Roni Zeiger, M.D., and Jennifer Haroon wrote on the official Google blog,

    “Especially given slower than expected vaccine production, we think it’s important to bring together flu shot information in a coherent manner. We’ve been working with HHS, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and state and local health agencies to gather information on flu vaccine locations across the country, particularly for the H1N1 flu vaccine (both the nasal-spray vaccine and the shot).”

    Google has gathered information about locations of flu vaccine shots from 20 states in the U.S.  Google is also collecting information from chain pharmacies and other vaccine providers in all 50 states.  Currently, users can find vaccine shots available from retail chains such as Walgreen’s, CVS, Kmart, and WinnDixie.

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    April 30th, 2009EthelCurrent Affairs, Health and Wellness
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    WHOThe World Health Organization (“WHO”) today raised the flu pandemic alert from Phase 4 to Phase 5 – just one level below “full pandemic”.

    The WHO’s Director General, Dr. Margaret Chan explains in this statement:

    See also:pandemicflul.gov

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    April 29th, 2009EthelCosta Rica, Health and Wellness
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    María Luisa Ávila

    María Luisa Ávila

    María Luisa Ávila, the Costa Rican Minister of Health, has confirmed a second case of swine flu, this time a Costa Rican man, who is being treated at the San Vicente de Paul hospital in Heredia.

    Health officials have yet to provide information on the particulars of the case.

    As reported in an earlier post, a 21-year-old women, arriving from Mexico three days ago, was confirmed with the swine flu. She is being treated at the Calderon Guardia hospital in San Jose.

     

     

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    April 27th, 2009EthelHealth and Wellness
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    foxnews

    From FOXnews.com:

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    April 26th, 2009EthelHealth and Wellness
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    CNN.com

    CNN reports that the United States government declared a public health emergency Sunday as the number of identified cases of swine flu in the nation rose to 20.

    Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano

    U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano announces emergency today. (AFP/Getty Images)

    The Declaration is part of a “standard operating procedure” that will make available additional government resources to combat the virus, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said at the White House.

    Additional cases of swine flu are expected to be reported in the coming days, added Dr. Richard Besser, acting director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    No one has died in the U.S. from swine flu, officials said Sunday.

    In New York City, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said eight students at St. Francis Prepatory School in Queens have tested positive for swine flu. More than 100 students at the school were absent with flu-like symptoms last week, he said.

    State public health officials in Ohio confirmed one case of swine flu on Sunday. There have been seven confirmed cases in California, two in Kansas, and two in Texas, Besser said.

    The World Health Organization advised all countries to be on the lookout for “unusual” outbreaks of flu, after an emergency meeting Saturday as the seriousness of the outbreak became clear.

    By Sunday, 81 deaths in Mexico had been deemed “likely linked” to swine flu. Viral testing has confirmed 20 cases, said Dr. Jose A. Cordova Villalobos, Mexico’s health secretary.

    In Mexico City, the massive downtown Cathedral of Mexico City was open but Masses were not scheduled. Dozens of worshippers put on masks and went inside the church anyway to pray on their own.

    Canada confirmed its first cases of swine flu on Sunday, with four people said to have the virus in the eastern province of Nova Scotia, health officials said.

    Dr. Robert Strang, Nova Scotia’s chief public health officer, said the cases were among students who had recently traveled to Mexico.

    Strang said the people affected were only “mildly ill,” and all are recovering. He said people who had recently been traveling should call their doctor and stay home if they suffer flu-like symptoms.

    The H1N1 strain of swine flu is usually associated with pigs. When the flu spreads person-to-person, instead of from animals to humans, it can continue to mutate, making it a tougher strain that is harder to treat or fight off.

    Symptoms of swine flu include fever, lethargy, lack of appetite, coughing, runny nose, sore throat, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea, according to the CDC. Learn more about swine flu and how to treat it »

    President Obama recently returned from a trip to Mexico, but has not shown any signs of flu-like symptoms, the White House said.

    White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said the outbreak “is of great concern to the White House,” and Obama is receiving regular briefings on the issue.

    “I would tell people it’s certainly not a time to panic,” Gibbs told reporters. “If you’re sick, stay home, get treatment, go see a doctor.” But he added, “The government is taking all the steps it needs to and must do to take the precautions to deal with whatever size and scope we may be facing.”

    In New Zealand, officials said 22 students and three teachers back from a three-week-long language trip to Mexico may have been infected with the swine flu virus.

    The 25 students and teachers at Auckland’s Rangitoto College returned to New Zealand via Los Angeles on Saturday.

    Fourteen have shown flu-like symptoms, with four “more unwell than others,” said Dr. Julia Peters, clinical director of Auckland Regional Public Health Service. It is not clear whether anyone else who was on the plane with them has shown signs of the disease.

    Health Minister Tony Ryall said 10 students tested positive for influenza A. The specimens will be sent to WHO to determine whether it is H1N1 swine influenza.

    H1N1 influenza is a subset of influenza A. The WHO results are expected back by midweek. The group remains quarantined at home. Video Watch how public health officials grade phases of pandemic alerts »

    “It certainly has not been confirmed that they have swine flu,” said Dr. Craig Thornley of Auckland Regional Public Health Service. “We already have provisional information that some of the group have influenza A. We won’t know if they have the type of influenza A that is swine flu.”

    A British Airways crew member developed flu-like symptoms during a flight from Mexico City to London and was tested for swine flu, but the results came back negative. Video Watch CBC report on Canadian microbiologists’ concerns »

    “I can confirm that the patient doesn’t have swine flu,” said Jonathan Street, a spokesman for Northwick Park Hospital in north London. “We have done all tests, and they all came back negative.”

    The flight attendant is back at work, British Airways told CNN.

    Britain is not putting travel restrictions in place, according to British Airways and Heathrow airport operator BAA, and the country’s Port Health Authority has no reason for concern over swine flu, BAA said.

    The Mexico Tourist Board said Saturday there are no restrictions on travel to the country. Video Watch efforts in Mexico to prevent spread of the virus »

    In Israel, doctors are running tests on a man who recently returned from Mexico with light flu symptoms.

    U.S. health officials said Friday that some cases of the virus in the United States matched samples of the deadly Mexican virus.

    All the patients have recovered or are expected to.

    The panic over the virus prompted Canada to issue a travel health notice, saying the public health agency was “tracking clusters of severe respiratory illness with deaths in Mexico.”

    South Korea said it will test airline passengers arriving from the United States. Japan will convene a Cabinet meeting Monday to develop measures to block entry of the virus into the country.

    The United States has not issued any travel warnings or quarantines.

    But US Airways said Saturday it would allow passengers to change plans if they wanted to because of the outbreak.

    Airline spokeswoman Michelle Mohr said it was not asking people not to travel to Mexico, but wanted to “give them that flexibility” if “they don’t feel comfortable.”

    Gregory Hartl of the World Health Organization said the strain of the virus seen in Mexico is worrisome because it has mutated from older strains.
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    “Any time that there is a virus which changes … it means perhaps the immunities the human body has built up to deal with influenza might not be adjusted well enough to deal with this new virus,” Hartl said.

    Mexico City has closed all of its schools and universities until further notice because of the virus.

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    April 25th, 2009EthelHealth and Wellness
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    New cases of swine flu were confirmed in Kansas and California and suspected in New York City in an outbreak that world health officials warned could become a global epidemic.

    FOXNews.com reports:

    FOXNewsNEW YORK  —  Mexico’s president assumed new powers Saturday to isolate people infected with a deadly swine flu strain as authorities struggled to contain an outbreak that world health officials warned could become a global epidemic.

    New cases of swine flu were confirmed in Kansas and California and suspected in New York City. But officials said they didn’t know whether the New York cases were the strain that now has killed up to 81 people in Mexico and likely sickened 1,324 since April 13, according to figures updated late Saturday by Mexico’s health secretary.

    Tests have confirmed swine flu as the cause of death in 20 of the cases.

    Mexican soldiers and health workers patrolled airports and bus stations as they tried to corral people who may be infected with the swine flu, as it became clearer that the government may have been slow to respond to the outbreak in March and early April.

    Now, even detaining the ill may not keep the strain — a combination of swine, bird and human influenza that people may have no natural immunity to — from spreading, epidemiologists say.

    The World Health Organization on Saturday asked countries around the world to step up reporting and surveillance of the disease and implement a coordinated response to contain it.

    Two dozen new suspected cases were reported in Mexico City alone, where authorities suspended schools and all public events until further notice. More than 500 events, including concerts and sports games, were canceled in the metropolis of 20 million.

    Mexican authorities ordered schools closed in the capital and the states of Mexico and San Luis Potosi until May 6, and the Roman Catholic Church announced the cancellation of Sunday masses in the capital.

    The Mexican government issued a decree authorizing President Felipe Calderon to invoke special powers letting the Health Department isolate patients and inspect homes, incoming travelers and baggage. But officials said it was designed to free health workers from possible legal reprisals and to speed disease control efforts.

    A team from the Centers for Disease Control had arrived in Mexico to help set up detection testing for the swine flu strain, something Mexico previously lacked.

    The U.S. Embassy said the U.S. has not imposed travel constraints to and from Mexico but is suspending the processing of visas and other services through Wednesday to avoid creating crowds.

    It issued an earlier message advising U.S. citizens to avoid large crowds, shaking hands, greeting people with a kiss or using the subway.

    While suspected swine flu cases have been reported in about 16 Mexican states, Health Secretary Jose Cordova said “it has not spread to the entire country.”

    WHO Director-General Margaret Chan said the outbreak of the never-before-seen virus has “pandemic potential.” But she said it is still too early to tell if it would become a pandemic.

    WHO lays out three criteria necessary for a global epidemic: The virus is able to infect people, can readily spread person-to-person and the global population has no immunity to it.

    Early detection and treatment are key to stopping any outbreak. WHO guidance calls for isolating the sick and blanketing everyone around them with anti-viral drugs such as Tamiflu.

    Now, with patients showing up all across Mexico and its teeming capital, simple math suggests that kind of response is impossible.

    Mexico appears to have lost valuable days or weeks in detecting the new virus.

    Health authorities started noticing a threefold spike in flu cases in late March and early April, but they thought it was a late rebound in the December-February flu season.

    Testing at domestic labs did not alert doctors to the new strain, and Cordova acknowledged Mexican labs lacked the necessary profiling data to detect the previously unknown strain.

    The first death occurred in southern Oaxaca state on April 13, but Mexico didn’t send the first of 14 mucous samples to the CDC until April 18, around the same time it dispatched health teams to hospitals looking for patients with severe flu or pnuemonia-like symptoms.

    Those teams noticed something strange: The flu was killing people aged 20 to 40. Flu victims are usually either infants or the elderly. The Spanish flu pandemic, which killed at least 40 million people worldwide in 1918-19, also first struck otherwise healthy young adults.

    Even though U.S. labs detected the swine flu in California and Texas before last weekend, Mexican authorities as recently as Wednesday were referring to it as a late-season flu.

    But mid-afternoon Thursday, Mexico City Health Secretary Dr. Armando Ahued said, officials got a call “from the United States and Canada, the most important laboratories in the field, telling us this was a new virus.”

    “That was what led us to realize it wasn’t a seasonal virus … and take more serious preventative measures,” Cordova said.

    Asked why there were so many deaths in Mexico, and none so far among the 11 cases in the United States, Cordova noted that the U.S. cases involved children — who haven’t been among the fatal cases in Mexico, either.

    “There are immune factors that are giving children some sort of defense, that is the only explanation we have,” he said.

    Another factor may be that some Mexican patients may have delayed seeking medical help too long, Cordova said.

    Some Mexicans suspected the government had been less than forthcoming. “They always make a big deal about good things that happen, but they really try to hide anything bad,” Mexico City paralegal Gilberto Martinez said.

    Airports around the world were screening travelers from Mexico for flu symptoms. But containing the disease may not be an option.

    “Anything that would be about containing it right now would purely be a political move,” said Michael Osterholm, a University of Minnesota pandemic expert.

    Scientists have warned for years about the potential for a pandemic from viruses that mix genetic material from humans and animals.

    This swine flu and regular flu can have similar symptoms — mostly fever, cough and sore throat, though some of the U.S. victims who recovered also experienced vomiting and diarrhea. But unlike with regular flu, humans don’t have natural immunity to a virus that includes animal genes — and new vaccines can take months to bring into use.

    A “seed stock” genetically matched to the new swine flu virus has been created by the CDC, said Dr. Richard Besser, the agency’s acting director. If the government decides vaccine production is necessary, manufacturers would need that stock to get started.

    Mexican authorities did lay to rest one persistent doubt, after Mexican museum director Felipe Solis died this week, just days after accompanying U.S. President Barack Obama on a tour of National Anthropology Museum on April 16. Cordova said Solis had a pre-existing illness and died of pneumonia unrelated to influenza.

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    (NaturalNews)  A virulent new strain combining elements of swine flu, human flu and avian Natural Newsflu has leapfrogged past containment measures and is now circulating “in the wild” in Mexico, California and Texas. Up to 60 deaths may have already occurred from the new viral strain called H1N1. Over 1,000 people may have been infected. The CDC does not really know how many are infected, as it’s still very early in the spread of the viral strain and reliable data isn’t yet available.

    Importantly, just as I warned NaturalNews readers many times over the last several years, there is no vaccine for this swine flu. Vaccines are virtually useless in any pandemic outbreak because in-the-wild viral strains mutate and become immune to vaccines very quickly. Subscribers who listened to my preparedness audio course released in late 2008 are already prepared with herbal anti-viral medicines, well ahead of the rush: http://www.truthpublishing.com/Heal…

    Is this viral outbreak the “big one” that will become a global pandemic? No one knows for sure, but important clues are found in the geographic locations of the current infections: Mexico City, San Diego and San Antonio, Texas. This indicates the virus is already beyond containment and is likely to spread even further. “There are things that we see that suggest that containment is not very likely,” said Dr. Richard Besser from the CDC, in a Reuters report (source below).

    The World Health Organization, meanwhile, issued a statement saying “Because there are human cases associated with an animal influenza virus, and because of the geographical spread of multiple community outbreaks, plus the somewhat unusual age groups affected, these events are of high concern.”

    The WHO admits the new virus is already resistant to amantadine and rimantadine (two popular anti-viral drugs), but appears to be sensitive to Tamiflu (at least for the moment). Health care workers in Mexico have already been infected by the H1N1 virus, reports the CBC (Canada).

    “We have determined that this virus is contagious and is spreading from human to human,” says the CDC on their web site (http://www.cdc.gov/flu/swine/invest…) . But they don’t know exactly how contagious the disease really is, or what the fatality rate might be. U.S. residents who were infected have recovered, while many infected people in Mexico have died. It is not yet clear why there is a difference in the survival rate across these two countries.

    Notably, the CDC website does NOT report infections unless they are confirmed by CDC laboratories. Thus, the infection numbers on their website (currently showing only 8 cases in the U.S. and 7 in Mexico) are extremely low and do not accurately reflect the real number of infections occurring on the streets. (See link below.)

    Symptoms of H1N1 infection include fever, sore throat, muscle pain, coughing and shortness of breath. This can escalate into serious respiratory illness with difficulty breathing and, ultimately, death.

    None of the people infected have had contact with swine or birds, according to news reports. This is a clear indication that the disease is being transmitted from human to human.

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