Newsletter 29 Januari 2010

New Issue

H1N1 boy, 10, died of organ failure

A 10-year-old boy died from organ failure after developing severe pneumonia as a result of swine flu, an inquest has heard.

Angus Hardie, from Hockley, Essex, was a "healthy, fit and well child" - one of twins - before being taken seriously ill last year, the hearing was told.

He was admitted to Southend Hospital on October 3 suffering from a headache, fever and diarrhoea and vomiting. His condition was so serious he was transferred to Great Ormond Street Hospital in London for specialist treatment, but he failed to improve and died on October 6.

Consultant paediatric pathologist Irene Scheimberg, who carried out a post-mortem examination, gave the cause of Angus's death as multiple organ failure, bronchopneumonia and influenza H1N1.

Source: Google news - The Press Association

Read more: http://www.google.com/hostednews/ukpress/article/ALeqM5hnieTISxmBIjTncFtYwkupOOFZZw


Research

Influenza and H1N1 Bad for Your Heart

Another reason to get a flu shot: The virus may cause heart damage.

Harvard Health Letters

If you haven't gotten your flu shot yet, what are you waiting for? The hour or so it would take is nothing compared with the time you might spend fighting the flu or something worse - like recovering from the heart attack it could trigger.

As of early October 2009, much of the focus has been on swine flu (more formally called H1N1 flu). That's understandable. H1N1 is new, and no one knows how much damage it will cause. But the "regular" flu isn't something to sneeze at. Seasonal flu kills about 36,000 people each year in the United States, hospitalizes more than 200,000, and costs us more than $10 billion in direct medical expenses and lost productivity.

Seasonal flu and H1N1 flu are different in some ways and similar in others. One of the similarities is that both may be hard on the heart. Getting vaccinated against seasonal flu and swine flu is good insurance for your health and heart.

Source: WHOTV

Read more: http://www.whotv.com/health/sns-health-swine-flu-heart,0,3895492.story


Comment

The Intellectual Property Fight That Could Kill Millions

The hothouse environment of Indonesia is ground zero for a potential bird flu pandemic. But a fight over ownership of flu genes is blocking the efforts to track deadly infections on the move.

by Delthia Ricks

Ngurah Rai International Airport in Bali is best known as a tourist hub, the bustling port of entry to a volcanic paradise. But when Indonesian authorities learned that a Mexican swine flu had gone global, that hub became a surreal microcosm of flu politics. Each arriving passenger was scanned for fever. A Dutch woman, apparently ill while in flight, was greeted by health workers in hazmat suits and whisked into quarantine while fellow passengers were spritzed with disinfectant. The woman was found to have nothing more than a bad sore throat, according to news reports, but that did not change a thing. The controversial head of the Indonesian Health Ministry, physician Siti Supari, quarantined sick foreigners at warp speed. Already embroiled in a battle royal with the world’s superpowers over another flu virus—the ultra-lethal bird flu—Supari did not have time to deal with a new enemy. She would do everything possible, she told her fellow citizens, to protect them from the new pathogen spawned by a pig.

The recent frenzy in Bali stood in notable contrast to the research paralysis that has gripped this tropical archipelago since late 2006, when Supari declared that flu viruses circulating in Indonesia belonged to her government alone. It was a bizarre, 21st-century twist on an age-old intellectual property argument. Developing nations had long fought passionately over plant and native human genes, but no one had ever before staked claim to microbes that birds could carry anywhere. Yet the 57-year-old health minister insisted she had cause: Rich Western nations were patenting the viral genomes, then using the information to create vaccines that were sold for profit to other Western powers while benefiting Indonesia not at all.

If Supari had stopped there, she might have garnered real support. But she ramped up the rhetoric, launching a barrage of fear bombs by accusing the United States of genetically engineering H1N1 (the swine flu virus) and H5N1 (the bird flu pathogen) as biological weapons. Wielding those charges, she flouted agreements with the World Health Organization (WHO), refusing to share samples from Indonesians infected with avian influenza—specimens the rest of the world desperately needs to track a virus on the move.

Source: Discover Magazine

Read more: http://discovermagazine.com/2009/dec/28-intellectual-property-fight-that-could-kill-millions


Photo

A vaccine against the A(H1N1) or swine flu is prepared at a hospital in Prague, Czech Republic in 2009. Canada announced Thursday it has donated five million swine flu vaccine doses and six million Canadian dollars (5.6 million US) to the World Health Organization for its pandemic relief efforts.

Source: AFP/File/Matej Divizna

Read more: http://news.yahoo.com/nphotos/H1N1-Virus/ss/events/hl/042409swineflu/im:/100128/photos_ca_afp/ec2dd78b483f11d53d61c5b6b6f64736


Quote

"But we do not wait until [these global virus outbreaks] have developed and we see that lots of people are dying. What we try and do is take preventive actions. If we are successful no-one will die, no-one will notice anything."
Swine Flu Warning Justified Says WHO
Source: Silobreaker - Medindia

Read more: http://www.medindia.net/news/Swine-Flu-Warning-Justified-Says-WHO-64269-1.htm


News Flash

1m doses of bird flu vaccine

The Straits Times

THE Health Ministry will be buying about one million doses of H5N1 avian flu pre-pandemic vaccine soon.

Health Minister Khaw Boon Wan revealed yesterday that his ministry is evaluating a tender to stock up on the vaccine.

A/H1N1 epidemic remains moderate in France

Xinhua

The spread of the A/H1N1 flu continues in France but at a moderate pace, the French health surveillance institute InVS said Thursday. ...

Canada to donate H1N1 vaccine to WHO

Globe and Mail

A registered nurse injects a dose of the H1N1 flu vaccine at a Toronto health clinic on Thursday, October 29, 2009. THE CANADIAN PRESS Globe and Mail Update ...


Newsletter 28 Januari 2010

New Issue

Native American x H1N1 = 4 Times Higher Risk of Death

The facts are in: For Native Americans, the risk of death from H1N1 is four times more likely than it is for other Americans. According to the Department of Health and Human Services and the CDC, more Native Americans die from H1N1 complications because of pre-existing health issues such as asthma, diabetes and heart disease.

National Relief Charities works on 75+ reservations year-round and is well aware of disease rates for Native Americans. Overall life expectancy for Native Americans has improved in recent decades but still trails that of other Americans by a few years. Diabetes has reached epidemic proportions for Native Americans, who are twice as likely to die from diabetes than other groups.

Diabetes and heart disease are also linked. In fact, the Indian Health Service cites that, for people with diabetes, the most common cause of death is cardiovascular disease. Forced changes in diet, economics, and lifestyle markedly increased the rates of diabetes, high blood pressure, kidney failure, and obesity for Native Americans – all of which contribute to heart attacks, heart disease, and cardiac deaths.

Heart disease is a 20% higher risk for Native Americans than for any other race in the U.S., and the Center for Disease Control reports that heart disease kills American Indians at younger ages. For the Navajo Nation, heart disease ranks second as the cause of death and it’s on the rise, according to HHS.

Asthma rates are also high and on the rise, especially for Native American children. The American Academy of Pediatrics reports that the asthma rate for American youth under age 20 is 9%, compared to 13% for Native youth.

These combined factors all put Native Americans at higher risk of H1N1:

o Twice as likely to die from diabetes as other Americans

o 20% more likely to have heart disease

o More likely to die from heart disease

o More likely to have heart complications from diabetes

o Children one-third more likely to have asthma

o Children more likely to have diabetes and associated heart disease

Source: PR - National Relief Charities

Read more: http://www.pr.com/press-release/208126

Research

New Zealand: Use of hand sanitizer drops after pandemic

Via Eurosurveillance: Update: Follow-up study showing post-pandemic decline in hand sanitiser use, New Zealand, December 2009. Abstract:

This study aimed to measure rates of hand sanitiser use in a hospital entrance foyer four months after a baseline study during New Zealand’s influenza pandemic.

Of the 743 people observed over one (summer) day in December 2009, 8.2% used the hand sanitiser, which was significantly lower (p<0.0001)>

Source: H5N1 Crofsblog

Read more: http://crofsblogs.typepad.com/h5n1/2010/01/new-zealand-use-of-hand-sanitizer-drops-after-pandemic.html

Comment

Women Wash Their Hands More Often Than Men

Koreans wash their hands more than they used to, whether in response to the bird or swine flu scares or for other health reasons. On average last year, they washed their hands 8.5 times, and women more often than men, at 9.9 times to 7.
The Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention commissioned Korea Research to conduct a phone survey of 1,500 people over 14 across the country. In 2006, the average was 7.6 times a day and in 2008 7.1 times.
Those over 50 washed their hands most frequently at 9.7 times, and teenagers and those in their 20s below average with 5.5 and 7 times. The duration of hand washing was similar as in the past, with 36.7 percent saying it takes 6 to 10 seconds. One out of seven people, or 16.6 percent, said they wash their hands in 1 to 5 seconds.
Source: Chosun
Read more: http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2010/01/28/2010012800625.html

Agenda

ASEAN Meeting on Promoting Access to Antiviral Drugs and Pandemic Influenza Vaccines on 27-29 January 2010 in Singapore

The ASEAN Secretariat, in collaboration with the Ministry of Health of Singapore, is convening the ASEAN Meeting on Promoting Access to Antiviral Drugs and Pandemic Influenza Vaccines on 27 to 29 January 2010 in Singapore.
The Meeting is supported by the ASEAN Plus Three Emerging Infectious Diseases (EID) Programme which is funded by the Australian Agency for International Development (AusAID). It aims to:
  • provide an update on status of supply and availability of pandemic influenza vaccine and antiviral drugs at the global, regional (ASEAN) and national levels;
  • share information among ASEAN Member States on the approaches, strategies and issues related to production, distribution, access and transfer of technology of pandemic influenza vaccine and antiviral agents within the region;
  • discuss on how to share resources among the Member States, as follow-up to the Joint Statement of the ASEAN Plus Three Health Ministers Special Meeting on Influenza A (H1N1) held on 8 May 2009 in Bangkok, Thailand; and
  • provide recommendations on ways to promote increased availability of and access to pandemic influenza vaccines and antiviral agents within the region.
Source: ASEAN
Read more: http://www.aseanplus3-eid.info/newsread.php?nid=1415&gid=8

Photo

Reuters Pictures

A woman receives a H1N1 influenza vaccine shot from a medical staff at a hospital in Nonthaburi province, on the outskirts of Bangkok January 25, 2010.

Source: Daylife

Read more: http://www.daylife.com/photo/0c921XwbEQgIx?q=H1N1

Quote

"In the new year, we have not used the breath analyser so far due to swine flu threat, but looking at the situation, we might soon start using them again after consulting experts "

Source: Times of India

Read more: http://www.daylife.com/topic/Swine_Flu/quotes

News Flash

China reports smaller proportion of A/H1N1 in all flu cases

Xinhua

A/H1N1 flu cases in the Chinese mainland last week took up 26.8 percent of all flu cases, down from 39.1 percent the previous week. ...

Disease severity in H1N1 patients (Science Daily)

A new study concerning the severity of H1N1 influenza has found that admissions to an intensive care unit were associated with a longer interval between symptom onset and treatment with antivirals and with presence of an underlying medical condition. People of First Nations ethnicity were also found to be at higher risk of severe H1N1 infection compared to people of other ethnic origins.

Masks, hand sanitizer help halt flu spread

Reuters

During the current H1N1 epidemic, they note, vaccines were slow to arrive and use of antiviral drugs was "limited." To investigate what measures might be ...

Nigeria: Swine Flu Not From Pigs, Says Expert

AllAfrica.com
The chief veterinary officer in the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Water Resources, Dr. Joseph Nyager, told THISDAY, that the so-called swine flu is a ...

Disclaimer: Newsletter ini hanya merupakan kumpulan dari artikel/liputan/tulisan yang diambil dari berbagai sumber mengenai situasi terkini pandemi influenza di seluruh dunia termasuk Indonesia. Namun demikian isi/ilustrasi/foto tidak mewakili kepentingan atau kebijakan KOMNAS FBPI secara langsung

Kalimantan Barat Dinyatakan Bebas Flu Burung



Pada tanggal 25 Januari 2010, di Hotel Kapuas Palace, Menteri Pertanian memberikan Surat Keputusan Menteri Pertanian Nomor: 316/Kpts/PD.630/1/2010 tentang Pernyataan Kalimantan Barat Bebas dari Penyakit Hewan Menular Influenza pada Unggas (Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza/HPAI) kepada Gubernur Kalimantan Barat.

Pertimbangan bahwa di Provinsi Kalimantan Barat telah dilaksanakan pemberantasan penyakit hewan menular influenza pada unggas (HPAI) dan dilakukan tindakan biosecurity/desinfeksi dan sanitasi, depopulasi, desposal dan pengawasan lalu lintas unggas/produknya serta public awareness secara intensif dan sistematik sejak tahun 2005 sampai dengan tahun 2009.

Selain itu, bahwa berdasarkan hasil pengamatan (Active Surveillance) yang dilaksanakan Balai Penyidikan dan Pengujian Veteriner (BPPV) Regional V Banjarbaru dalam jangka waktu 4 tahun terakhir tidak ditemukan lagi penyakit hewan menular influenza pada unggas (HPAI) di seluruh wilayah Kalbar.

Namun tetapi, untuk menjaga dan mempertahankan agar Kalbar tetap bebas dari penyakit hewan menular influenza pada unggas (HPAI) diharapkan:
  1. Meningkatkan kewaspadaan terhadap kemungkinan penularan baru flu burung dengan sistem pengamatan dan pengidentifikasian yang teratur dan berkesinambungan, serta dilaksanakan tindak pencegahan dan penolakan penyakit yang ketat dan tegas sesuai dengan peraturan perundang-undangan;
  2. Melaksanakan kegiatan pengendalian lain terhadap penyakit hewan menular influenza pada unggas sesuai dengan petunjuk teknis yang berlaku di bidang pemberantasan penyakit hewan menular influenza pada unggas (HPAI).

Newsletter 27 Januari 2010

New Issue

U.S. gets 'F' on bioterror response

The delayed response to the H1N1 influenza outbreak demonstrated the United States was "woefully behind" in its ability to produce needed vaccinations and treatments rapidly, the commission said.

"H1N1 came with months of warning," the commission's report said. "But even with time to prepare, the epidemic peaked before most Americans had access to vaccine. A bioattack will come with no such warning."

Source: CNN

Read more: http://www.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/01/26/security.report.card/?hpt=T2

Research

Expectant women warned over swine flu

Expectant women are being warned to protect themselves against a second wave of swine flu expected in coming months after research confirmed they were more prone to serious illness compared with other healthy people.

The first major review of 112 people admitted to seven Melbourne hospitals with the virus last year found that 13 per cent of the patients were pregnant or had just given birth.

The research published in the Medical Journal of Australia also found that two patients had suffered rare complications of influenza including Guillain-Barre syndrome, a debilitating form of paralysis, and rhabdomyolysis, a muscle-melting condition.

Source: The Age Australia

Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/national/expectant-women-warned-over-swine-flu-20100126-mwdx.html

Comment

While world focused on swine flu, bird flu just kept on trucking in 2009

by Scott McPherson

I just got a news story in my Google Alerts folder. Opening it and clicking on the accompanying link, I was shown something I had not seen in ages and ages -- namely, the WHO statistics for H5N1 bird flu for 2009.

Now, you know how fond I am of saying that influenza plays "King of the Mountain." That image of children trying to topple the reigning King at the top of the dirt pile (growing up in southern Florida, with all its construction and fill dirt, that game was enormously popular) is exactly what I try to convey with regards to flu strains.

Pandemic viruses play that game quite well. In fact, I have not bothered to even get my seasonal flu shot yet, because I believed that there would be no seasonal flu until very late in the season. based on the stats I have been getting from various flu sources, I was right on the money.

So there is virtually no seasonal flu, anywhere in the world, save for some Influenza B that I recently read was either in China or Japan.

But there is one flu strain that keeps on trucking, unabated by events that combine to make seasonal flu virtually nonexistent. And that is H5N1 bird flu.

It can be argued, possibly successfully, that H5N1 isn't seen in people enough for swine flu to even care about it. H1N1v just casts a look over its shoulder at H5N1 and ignores it.

Source: Blog

Read more: http://www.scottmcpherson.net/journal/2010/1/26/while-world-focused-on-swine-flu-bird-flu-just-kept-on-truck.html

Risk Communication

Maybe a major step forward in web research

Just moments ago I discovered the Guardian's new data bank, World Government Data. I haven't had a chance to explore it yet, but it could be a remarkable resource for flu and other health issues. Explore it and let me know what you think.

Source: H5N1 Crofsblog

Read more: http://crofsblogs.typepad.com/h5n1/2010/01/maybe-a-major-step-forward-in-web-research.html

Photo

A woman reacts while receiving a vaccination against the H1N1 virus at a park in Cancun January 19, 2010.

Source: REUTERS/Stringer

Read more: http://news.yahoo.com/nphotos/H1N1-Virus/ss/events/hl/042409swineflu/im:/100126/ids_photos_wl/r2386896759.jpg#photoViewer=/100126/ids_photos_india_wl/ra3779240339.jpg

Quote

"We feel we should move quickly. Our purpose is to try to provide guidance, to try to reduce harm" Keiji Fukuda, WHO flu expert.

Source: WHO defends its swine flu warning - BBC

Read more: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/8481211.stm

News Flash

WHO denies drugs firms swayed its flu decisions

Reuters
Although many millions around the world have been infected with H1N1, and many thousands have died, the pandemic proved milder than health experts had ...

Shionogi to release new H1N1 treatment Rapiacta

Japan Today
Shionogi & Co said Tuesday it will market a new drug for treatment of the H1N1 strain of influenza, starting Wednesday. The drug is named Rapiacta (generic ...

67.78 million people receive A/H1N1 flu vaccinations (People’s Daily)

People's Daily
By 12:00 pm January 24, the State Food and Drug Administration have distributed 553 batches of A/H1N1 flu vaccinations sufficient for 102.27 million people. China’s 31 provinces as well as Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps have received vaccinations sufficient for 88.03 million people, and 67.78 million people have received shots against the swine flu, said a report from the the …
Disclaimer: Newsletter ini hanya merupakan kumpulan dari artikel/liputan/tulisan yang diambil dari berbagai sumber mengenai situasi terkini pandemi influenza di seluruh dunia termasuk Indonesia. Namun demikian isi/ilustrasi/foto tidak mewakili kepentingan atau kebijakan KOMNAS FBPI secara langsung
#NB: Maaf 2 hari kemarin tidak bisa update newsletter karena sedang dinas ke Pontianak :)

Newsletter 22 Januari 2010

New Issue
Serologic study finds H1N1 infections surged past official estimates
In one of the first large serologic studies of pandemic H1N1 infection, British researchers found that in areas hit hard during the first wave, one in three children were infected by the virus, ten times higher than surveillance estimates.
Serologic studies, such as this report by scientists from England's Health Protection Agency (HPA) published today in The Lancet, are needed to help public health officials gauge the true burden of disease. Flu surveillance captures only the number of people who seek medical care for illnesses, missing asymptomatic or mild infections.
Public health officials also use serologic studies to assess the effectiveness of vaccination and other strategies and to fine-tune their modeling assumptions for future flu outbreaks.
Source: CIDRAP
Read more: http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidrap/content/influenza/swineflu/news/jan2110serology-jw.html

Research
Correlates of severe disease in patients with 2009 pandemic influenza (H1N1) virus infection
Abstract
Background: In the context of 2009 pandemic influenza (H1N1) virus infection (pandemic H1N1 influenza), identifying correlates of the severity of disease is critical to guiding the implementation of antiviral strategies, prioritization of vaccination efforts and planning of health infrastructure. The objective of this study was to identify factors correlated with severity of disease in confirmed cases of pandemic H1N1 influenza.
Methods:This cumulative case–control study included all laboratory-confirmed cases of pandemic H1N1 influenza among residents of the province of Manitoba, Canada, for whom the final location of treatment was known. Severe cases were defined by admission to a provincial intensive care unit (ICU). Factors associated with severe disease necessitating admission to the ICU were determined by comparing ICU cases with two control groups: patients who were admitted to hospital but not to an ICU and those who remained in the community.
Results: As of Sept. 5, 2009, there had been 795 confirmed cases of pandemic H1N1 influenza in Manitoba for which the final treatment location could be determined. The mean age of individuals with laboratory-confirmed infection was 25.3 (standard deviation 18.8) years. More than half of the patients (417 or 52%) were female, and 215 (37%) of 588 confirmed infections for which ethnicity was known occurred in First Nations residents. The proportion of First Nations residents increased with increasing severity of disease (116 [28%] of 410 community cases, 74 [54%] of 136 admitted to hospital and 25 [60%] of 42 admitted to an ICU; p < 0.001), as did the presence of an underlying comorbidity (201 [35%] of 569 community cases, 103 [57%] of 181 admitted to hospital and 34 [76%] of 45 admitted to an ICU; p < 0.001). The median interval from onset of symptoms to initiation of antiviral therapy was 2 days (interquartile range, IQR 1–3) for community cases, 4 days (IQR 2–6) for patients admitted to hospital and 6 days (IQR 4–9) for those admitted to an ICU (p < 0.001). In a multivariable logistic model, the interval from onset of symptoms to initiation of antiviral therapy (odds ratio [OR] 8.24, 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.82–24.1), First Nations ethnicity (OR 6.52, 95% CI 2.04–20.8) and presence of an underlying comorbidity (OR 3.19, 95% CI 1.07–9.52) were associated with increased odds of admission to the ICU Abstract (i.e., severe disease) relative to community cases. In an analysis of ICU cases compared with patients admitted to hospital, First Nations ethnicity (OR 3.23, 95% CI 1.04–10.1) was associated with increased severity of disease.
Interpretation: Severe pandemic H1N1 influenza necessitating admission to the ICU was associated with a longer interval from onset of symptoms to treatment with antiviral therapy and with the presence of an underlying comorbidity. First Nations ethnicity appeared to be an independent determinant of severe infection. Despite these associations, the cause and outcomes of pandemic HINI influenza may involve many complex and interrelated factors, all of which require further research and analysis.
Source: Canadian Medical Association
Read more: http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/content/abstract/cmaj.091884v1

Mask Use, Hand Hygiene, and Seasonal Influenza‐Like Illness among Young Adults: A Randomized Intervention Trial
Abstract
Background: During the influenza A(H1N1) pandemic, antiviral prescribing was limited, vaccines were not available early, and the effectiveness of nonpharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) was uncertain. Our study examined whether use of face masks and hand hygiene reduced the incidence of influenza‐like illness (ILI).
Methods: A randomized intervention trial involving 1437 young adults living in university residence halls during the 2006–2007 influenza season was designed. Residence halls were randomly assigned to 1 of 3 groups—face mask use, face masks with hand hygiene, or control— for 6 weeks. Generalized models estimated rate ratios for clinically diagnosed or survey‐reported ILI weekly and cumulatively.
Results: We observed significant reductions in ILI during weeks 4–6 in the mask and hand hygiene group, compared with the control group, ranging from 35% (confidence interval [CI], 9%–53%) to 51% (CI, 13%–73%), after adjusting for vaccination and other covariates. Face mask use alone showed a similar reduction in ILI compared with the control group, but adjusted estimates were not statistically significant. Neither face mask use and hand hygiene nor face mask use alone was associated with a significant reduction in the rate of ILI cumulatively.
Conclusions: These findings suggest that face masks and hand hygiene may reduce respiratory illnesses in shared living settings and mitigate the impact of the influenza A(H1N1) pandemic.
Source: University of Chicago Press
Read more: http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/650396

Comment
Swine flu wasn't overhyped – research meant we had to play it safe
Simon Jenkins's distaste for scientists leads him to declare that they deliberately overstate risks, and make panic predictions (Swine flu was as elusive as WMD. The real threat is mad scientist syndrome, 15 January). In reality, scientists worked calmly – not "frantically" as Jenkins asserts – to predict the progress of the disease and to understand risk.
Jenkins says of the initial predictions about the spread of swine flu: "The chief medical officer, Sir Liam Donaldson, bandied about any figure that came into his head, settling on '65,000 could die', peaking at 350 corpses a day."
Worst-case predictions are not figures plucked out the air "to convey plausibility", but result from well-researched computer simulations. Margins of error are high; no one pretends otherwise. Yet Jenkins is delighted when a worst-case scenario isn't met, as though he were right and everyone else wrong.
Source: Guardian
Read more: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2010/jan/21/swine-flu-panic-health-tamiflu?

Risk Communication
Parents and Children Can Take Steps to Avoid H1N1
Ways to make the swine flu less fearsome for your family.
Your child has symptoms that used to just upset you: runny nose, sore throat, cough.
Now those same symptoms terrify you.
You know they may be signs of the H1N1 "swine flu" influenza strain.
That flu has already swept through many parts of the country and experts fear a resurgence this fall.
Parents now have to sift through a swirling mass of information about this new health threat. Younger children may be even more confused.
"What I'm hearing is that parents are fearful because of the unknown, because it's something new. People get the feeling that it's a changing playing field where recommendations are changing, which is true," says David Ulery, pediatrician at Aurora Wilkinson Medical Clinic in Oconomowoc, Wisconsin.
Kids cope with flu fears in their own way.
"Kids are fearful of the shots. But some of our children say, 'I'm not afraid of the shot, so can I get one for my sister because she's afraid and then she doesn't have to get one?' " says John R. Meurer, associate professor of pediatrics and chief of general pediatrics at the Medical College of Wisconsin, and medical director of Milwaukee's Downtown Health Center.
There are ways to make the swine flu less fearsome for both parents and children. Here are some ideas.
FLU-FIGHTING TIPS FOR PARENTS
  • Raise your family's general health level. Make sure everyone gets enough sleep, eats right and exercises to improve immunity.
  • Know the contagion timetable. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, people with H1N1 virus may infect people from one day before getting sick to five to seven days after. This "infection window" may be longer for children.
  • Remember the swine flu's method of operation to outfox it. The swine flu spreads through the same viral techniques as seasonal flu: through the coughs and sneezes of flu sufferers and by touching something with flu viruses on it and then touching your mouth or nose.
  • Stay informed on swine flu vaccination techniques. Current data suggests that people ages 10 and older will need one injection; ages 9 and younger might need two. You may also be given the option of getting your child vaccinated with a nasal spray, usually recommended for children older than 2 who do not have chronic health problems. "We feel the spray is better," Ulery says.
And the old saying about sugar making "the medicine go down" holds with shots, too. "Tell your child he or she will be rewarded after getting the shot, maybe with a sticker or a little book or treat," Meurer says.
  • Focus on prevention. "Avoid people who are sick," Meurer says. The CDC recommends staying at least 6 feet away from flu sufferers. Keep surfaces such as kitchen counters and toys clean by wiping them down with household disinfectant according to product directions. Avoid touching your eyes, nose or mouth with unwashed hands. Wash your hands frequently or use a hand sanitizer that contains alcohol.
  • Know the swine flu symptoms. The H1N1 virus symptoms are mainly the same as the seasonal flu: fever, cough, sore throat, runny nose, body aches, headaches, chills and fatigue. However, health experts say that H1N1 sufferers also often experience vomiting and diarrhea.
  • Recognize signs of an emergency. Call the doctor immediately if your child has fast or troubled breathing, bluish or gray skin color, won't drink fluids, has severe or persistent vomiting, or will not wake up or interact.
  • Make sure young flu victims drink plenty of fluids.
  • Talk to your kids about the swine flu. "Let them know the risk is low and prevention works," Meurer says.
WHAT TO TELL YOUR KIDS
  • Avoid touching your eyes, nose and mouth without washing your hands first. Germs spread this way.
  • Stop a germ. Cough into your inner elbow sleeve or into a tissue to prevent spreading the virus on your hands.
  • Learn the best - and most fun - way to wash your hands. The trick is to wash them for at least 20 seconds. How long is that? "Sing 'Happy Birthday to You' to yourself twice while washing," Ulery says.
  • For more fun, you can wash your hands to a new song by Grammy-winner Bill Harley that just happens to be called - what else? - "Wash Your Hands." Download a free copy at www.billharley.com.
  • Flu shots aren't so bad. "When you get an injection, hold still and look away," Meurer says.
Sources: Daily Press - Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Journal Sentinel files
Read more: http://www.dailypress.com/health/sns-health-avoid-h1n1-flu,0,6217957.story

Photo

Six-year-old Michael Gray spent six days in a Manitoba hospital with the H1N1 flu.
Source: CTV News
Read more: http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20100121/aboriginal_h1n1_100121/20100121?hub=Health&s_name=

Quote
"Predicting disease and mitigating hazard in at-risk populations is an important aim of public health epidemiology, and in preparation for future waves of H1N1, determining the correlates of disease severity is incredibly important".
Source: Science Daily
Read more: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/01/100121140326.htm

News Flash
'Two thirds' of London nurses without swine flu jab
BBC News
A BBC London Freedom of Information request has shown the majority of medical staff remain unprotected against the virus.
Read more: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/london/8471304.stm

Vaccine additive broadens flu protection
Emerging Health Threats Forum
An adjuvant currently used in European pandemic flu vaccines elicits a greater variety as well as a greater number of antibodies than non-adjuvanted vaccines, according to a study published this week in Science Translational Medicine.
Read more: http://www.eht-forum.org/news.html?fileId=news100121041342&from=home&id=0

It's official: You can't get swine flu from barbecue, feds say
Ledger Enquirer
You can't get the novel virus commonly called "swine flu" by pigging out on barbecue, even if the boar or sow you used for chow had the disease, the federal government has confirmed.
Read more: http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/news/breaking_news/story/984195.html

Awareness programme on A(H1N1) held
The Hindu
An awareness programme on A (H1N1) influenza was organised by the District Field Publicity Office at Darbar High School here on Thursday.
Read more: http://www.thehindu.com/2010/01/22/stories/2010012256690300.htm

High H1N1 rates in aboriginals not caused by genetics
CTV News
A new study says genetic susceptibility is unlikely to be responsible for increased rates of severe H1N1 cases in aboriginal people.
Read more: http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20100121/aboriginal_h1n1_100121/20100121?hub=Health&s_name=

Disclaimer: Newsletter ini hanya merupakan kumpulan dari artikel/liputan/tulisan yang diambil dari berbagai sumber mengenai situasi terkini pandemi influenza di seluruh dunia termasuk Indonesia. Namun demikian isi/ilustrasi/foto tidak mewakili kepentingan atau kebijakan KOMNAS FBPI secara langsung

Newsletter 21 Januari 2009

New Issue
Response: Swine flu wasn't overhyped – research meant we had to play it safe
by Tom Sheldon
There was no conspiracy or panic. Scientists were right to prepare us for a major crisis
Simon Jenkins's distaste for scientists leads him to declare that they deliberately overstate risks, and make panic predictions (Swine flu was as elusive as WMD. The real threat is mad scientist syndrome, 15 January). In reality, scientists worked calmly – not "frantically" as Jenkins asserts – to predict the progress of the disease and to understand risk.
Jenkins says of the initial predictions about the spread of swine flu: "The chief medical officer, Sir Liam Donaldson, bandied about any figure that came into his head, settling on '65,000 could die', peaking at 350 corpses a day."[...]
Source: Guardian
Read more: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2010/jan/21/swine-flu-panic-health-tamiflu

Research
UK child H1N1 flu rate was much higher than thought
One child in three caught the pandemic H1N1 flu in the first wave of infection in hard-hit areas of England in 2009 -- up to 10 times more than originally thought, scientists said on Thursday.
Blood samples suggest children are central to flu's spread and should be a key target group for vaccination, experts from Britain's Health Protection Agency (HPA) wrote in the study in The Lancet medical journal.
"This...study shows the true extent of H1N1 infection in the initial wave of the pandemic in England in 2009. Its findings should be applicable to other countries that have experienced a similar first wave," they said.
For their study, the scientists used around 1,400 blood serum samples taken in 2008 as a base line and compared them with more than 1,900 serum samples taken in August and September 2009, after the first British wave of H1N1 infection.
They found that rates of infection in the first wave were greatest in children under 15, with an estimated 42 percent of schoolchildren aged 5 to 14 years infected in high incidence areas like London and parts of central England.
The blood sample data also showed the child infection rate for the British capital, where 32 percent of under 15s were infected, was 10 times higher than original HPA estimates.
Elizabeth Miller, who led the study with HPA colleagues, said children "have an important role in transmission of influenza and would be a key target group for vaccination, both for their protection and for the protection of others through herd immunity." [...]
Source: Reuters
Read more: http://uk.news.yahoo.com/22/20100121/tsc-uk-flu-britain-011ccfa.html?printer=1 Comment

Comment
Infectious Disease Events, Crises, and Disasters: An Operational Definition
by James M. Wilson V, MD
O’Neil and Naumova recently highlighted the controversy of imprecise public health definitions of outbreak, epidemic, and pandemic. They observed, “the public health community has not settled on a solid definition of ‘outbreak’ except in a very broad sense”. 1 While neither the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s public website, nor the American Public Health Association (APHA)’s Control of Communicable Diseases Manual, provide a definition for the term outbreak, APHA defines epidemic as “the occurrence in a community or region of cases of an illness (or an outbreak) with a frequency clearly in excess of normal expectancy”. 2 Merriam-Webster defines outbreak as “a sudden rise in the incidence of a disease” and defines the term epidemic as “affecting or tending to affect a disproportionately large number of individuals within a population, community, or region at the same time”. 3 The terms outbreak and epidemic are often used interchangeably in the literature, by practitioners, and especially by the media. The term pandemic is generally reserved for epidemics that span multiple continents.
Stallings suggested that disasters should be considered as disruptions to daily-expected routines to the point where social functioning is threatened without action. He posits that a disaster should not be considered as such if it does not affect all facets of society. 13This confounds an attempt to categorize patient- or hospital-level infectious disease events as disasters. Stallings’ viewpoint drew upon Coleman’s original theory of community integration, which proposed “vital processes” of a community “keep it alive as a community and prevent its disorganization”. These processes included:
- work
- education of children
- religiously related activities
- organized leisure activities
- unorganized social play of children and adults
- voluntary activities for charitable or other purposes
- treatment of sickness, birth, death (healthcare)
- buying and selling of property
- buying consumable goods (food, etc.)
- saving and borrowing money
- maintenance of physical facilities (roads, sewers, water, light)
- protection from fire
- protection from criminal acts [...]
Source: Biosurveillance blog
Read more: http://biosurveillance.typepad.com/biosurveillance/2010/01/infectious-disease-events-crises-and-disasters-an-operational-definition.html

Risk Communication
Facebook Flu Fighters

Screenshot of some of the Flu Fighter characters [Facebook]
Children’s Hospital Boston and Health and Human Services have developed together a Facebook application called “I’m a Flu Fighter!”
The app is part of a project designed “to empower individuals to promote positive health behaviors amongst their friends and family through the use of social networks.”
It has several elements: you can pick a flu-fighter character for your profile, advertiseyour vaccination status, and “challenge” your FB friends to “join you in the fight against flu.” It also includes info on flu vaccines.
Source:
Read more: http://www.fluportal.org/2010/01/facebook-flu-fighters/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Fluportalorg+%28FluPortal.org%29&utm_content=Google+Reader

Photo
AP Photo
A man wearing a mask looks on while people wait in line to get a vaccine against swine flu in Bucharest, Romania, Saturday, Jan. 9, 2010. Thousands turned up to get a flu vaccine following a sharp rise in fatalities over the past days according to health officials.
Source: Daylife
Read more: http://www.daylife.com/photo/08op0dvd8O7qq?q=swine+flu

Quote
"In response to this intervention by India, it was agreed that WHO would formally write to national focal points in all countries clarifying the factual position about the H1N1 pandemic to quell all doubts that had been created".
Source: Business Week
Read more: http://rss.businessweek.com/%7Er/bw_rss/asiaindex/%7E3/qiXmXi6s_6E/who-to-clarify-h1n1-data-after-false-pandemic-claim-india-says.html

News Flash
Swine Flu Still a Threat for West Africa
Though the threat of the H1N1 pandemic appears to be waning in the United States and other parts of the Northern Hemisphere, the World Health Organization is still concerned about potential outbreaks of swine flu in West Africa.
This week, health officials in the West African country of Nigeria reported its first swine flu-related death and said the country has 11 confirmed cases of the virus. Last week, Mali's Health Ministry reported six confirmed H1N1 cases in Bamako, the country's capital.
Source: VOA News
Read more: http://www1.voanews.com/english/news/africa/Swine-flu-Still-a-Threat-for-West-Africa-82170742.html

1918 And 2009 H1N1 Flu Probably Not Spread By Birds
Medical News Today
The two strains of the H1N1 influenza virus responsible for the 1918 and 2009 global flu pandemics do not cause disease in birds. The results of the study, published in the February issue of the Journal of General Virology, also show it is unlikely that birds played a role in the spread of the H1N1 virus in these pandemics.
Read more: http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/176578.php

Swiss warn on flu vaccine with autoimmune disease
Reuters
Switzerland's medical regulator recommended patients with serious autoimmune diseases should not use an H1N1 flu vaccine from Novartis, saying there were no studies assessing the innoculation in that population.
Read more: http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE60J1X120100120

Estée Lauder Companies Says Second Quarter Results Will Exceed Earlier Expectations Financial Results to be Reported on January 28, 2010
PR Inside
[...] The lower spending versus plan, which continued from the fiscal first quarter, reflected the Company’s measured approach to investing, particularly in advertising and promotion, in light of the global economic downturn, and several external potential risks, such as the H1N1 pandemic, which have not materialized in the quarter. [...]
Read more: http://www.pr-inside.com/est-e-lauder-companies-says-second-quarter-r1679318.htm

Disclaimer: Newsletter ini hanya merupakan kumpulan dari artikel/liputan/tulisan yang diambil dari berbagai sumber mengenai situasi terkini pandemi influenza di seluruh dunia termasuk Indonesia. Namun demikian isi/ilustrasi/foto tidak mewakili kepentingan atau kebijakan KOMNAS FBPI secara langsung

Newsletter 20 Januari 2010

New Issue
ECDC DAILY UPDATE 2009 influenza A (H1N1) pandemic
19 January 2010, The last Daily Update
The ECDC Public Health Event Strategy Team (PST) decided yesterday to downgrade our crisis management activities to Public Health Event level 0 (PHE 0). ECDC has been operating its pandemic response in under a crisis management plan since April 2009, diverting significant resources from other parts of the organisation to respond in a robust and coheren way. Although the pandemic is far from over and considerable uncertainties on developments in the coming months exist, currently the workload related to pandemic response has clearly decreased. The ECDC activities related to the pandemic will continue under a reinforced influenza programme.
Source: ECDC
Read more: http://ecdc.europa.eu/en/healthtopics/h1n1/pages/home.aspx

Research
Public health management of pandemic (H1N1) 2009 infection in Australia: A failure!
Grant W. WATERER, 1,2,3 David S. HUI 4 * AND Christine R. JENKINS 5,6
ABSTRACT
In April 2009, severe cases of pneumonia preceded by influenza-like illness were noted to occur in Mexico and North America. A novel influenza A (H1N1) virus was identified as the cause and it rapidly evolved into a pandemic, leading to a large number of cases in Australia despite implementation of public health control measures. In this paper, two senior academics discuss the management of pandemic (H1N1) 2009 infection in Australia from the public health perspective.
CONCLUSION
It is important to note that geographically targeted non-pharmacological measures such as early case isolation, household quarantine, school/workplace closure and restrictions on travel are useful measures in controlling an influenza pandemic only at its early phase.42 As pointed out by both authors, these measures and their goals can only be achieved effectively through international collaboration, faster and more efficient coordination across the various national and interstate health planning bodies, with more surge capacity in clinical service, laboratory testing and more support for the general practitioners.24
Source: Interscience
Read more: http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/fulltext/123226687/HTMLSTART?CRETRY=1&SRETRY=0

JACR: H1N1 outbreak yields low imaging utilization rates
In an evaluation of the utilization of radiology resources among individuals diagnosed with H1N1, 70 percent of patients were found to have received no imaging studies and patients sufficiently ill to require imaging underwent an average of 1.4 chest radiographic studies, said a recent study that appeared in the January issue of the Journal of the American College of Radiology. [...] The authors said that the result of the study “reveals both reassuring and troubling information. Of the 222 patients with documented H1N1 infection seen within our health system, only 30 percent received any kind of related diagnostic radiology exam, with all 66 receiving at least one chest radiograph. Resource use was highest in the ICU population, with a mean of 33.5 chest radiographs, 5.1 abdominal radiographs, 1.1 thoracic CT exams and 4.2 nonthoracic CT exams [per patient]."
During the length of the study, the authors found that 71 percent of all radiographic exams were obtained during one month in the ICU population, while the non-ICU populations’ imaging studies were spread out relatively evenly over the course of the study period. [...]
Source: healthimaging.com
Read more: http://www.healthimaging.com/index.php?option=com_articles&view=article&id=20248:jacr-h1n1-outbreak-yields-low-imaging-utilization-rates

Comment
Fear, for all the wrong reasons
Logic and fact have been replaced by self-serving spin. We need not live in this culture of dread.
Iwasn't born when President Franklin Delano Roosevelt said in his 1933 inaugural address that "the only thing we have to fear is fear itself," but I have finally gotten the message.
In an individual or in a society, fear instills a kind of depression that bogs us down. At its worst, it makes us passive, drives us to lose heart, quit making informed decisions, quit voting or caring. Today we have a culture of fear created by political, corporate and media hucksters cynically selling their ideas, their products, themselves.
Source: USA Today Blog
Read more: http://blogs.usatoday.com/oped/2010/01/column-fear-for-all-the-wrong-reasons-.html

Risk Communication
Panic and Flight Behavior Reporting During Infectious Disease Events, Crises, and Disasters
The idea of people “panicking” due to disaster is a misnomer. The literature repeatedly shows the normal response is to bond and protect loved ones- to the point of even placing individuals in greater harm.
Assertions of the sociological and anthropological community are this phenomenon is universal for disasters of any etiology- including epidemics. However, a literature review of studies supporting the assertion that social behavior in the context of epidemic-caused disasters is similar to that seen in natural disasters is limited.
We undertook a review of ProMED reports for the ten-year period January 1, 1998 to December 31, 2007. Known biases in ProMED during this period included a bias towards English language reporting on human health events. The results were interesting. Only 1.7% of the reports in this period covering infectious disease events affecting humans or animals contained the word “panic”. Of these “panic” reports, we noted the following:
  1. Concern about the potential for “panic” (61%)
  2. “Panic” reported with no behavioral evidence (27%)
  3. “Panic” reported with behavioral evidence (12%) Bottom line, when “panic” was reported in association with an infectious disease event, it was a rare phenomenon. Evidence of actual anxiety behavior associated with the word “panic” was even more rare: 0.2% of all reports during a ten-year period.
To dive even deeper into this, we explored the number of times flight behavior was reported in ProMED during the same ten-year period. By “flight” we were specifically looking for public-initiated evacuation or abandonment of their community or family members.
In total, only 0.1% of all reports contained mention of flight behavior where public-initiated abandonment of a community or family members due to an epidemic was reported.
Family member abandonment was documented in one instance: Marburg hemorrhagic fever in Uige, Angola. On the date of this particular report, May 4, 2005, there were 313 cases and 280 deaths (89% fatalities) reported the prior day. This was more than six weeks after the discovery of the first outbreak of Marburg hemorrhagic fever ever reported in Angola. A family reportedly abandoned a one-month-old baby whose mother had died of Marburg infection and fled the village. There was no indication the family abandoned any other family member. Neighbors feared contact with the baby and allowed the child to starve to death. The context of this report was one of epidemic resurgence involving substantial struggle with effective containment. Fatalities were reported on a daily basis.
In summary, The majority of “panic” and flight behavior reporting involved zoonotic diseases associated with causing active serious illness in humans at the time of reporting. Specifically, provocation of community and family abandonment involved diseases that, at the time of reporting, caused serious and lethal human disease. All reporting of community or familial abandonment occurred in undeveloped or developing countries. Of note, no reporting of “panic” or flight behavior was documented for Haiti in this ten-year period.
Despite the known biases in ProMED during the period of study and the fact all global infectious disease events during the time period studied were not reported in ProMED, we have found it to be highly analogous to our operational experience.
When considering the current critical information requirements for the Haiti disaster, it is our hope this information places “panic” and flight behavior reporting in perspective- it is a very rare phenomenon, but when documented usually represents a situation worthy of time-sensitive awareness and scrutiny.
Source: Biosurveillance blog
Read more: http://biosurveillance.typepad.com/biosurveillance/2010/01/panic-and-flight-behavior-reporting-during-infectious-disease-events-crises-and-disasters.html#

Photo
A child receives a vaccination against the H1N1 virus at a subway station in Mexico January 19, 2010. The service, provided by the Ministry of Health, is a government initiative offering free vaccinations against swine flu at all subway stations.
Source: REUTERS/Henry Romero (MEXICO - Tags: HEALTH SOCIETY) Yahoo news - Reuters
Read more: http://news.yahoo.com/nphotos/H1N1-Virus/ss/events/hl/042409swineflu/im:/100119/ids_photos_wl/r1356911557.jpg

Quote
"The government should put in place a special policy to provide support and help to serious H1N1 flu patients, because there are cases in a number of provinces in which patients have faced difficulty getting treatment due to financial strain"
Source: China Daily
Read more: http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2010-01/20/content_9345534.htm

News Flash
INDONESIA: Bird flu cases down but risk remains high
IRIN News
Indonesia reported fewer deaths from bird flu in 2009, but health specialists warn that the risk to humans remains high.
Read more: http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=87771

Chan: Lack of H1N1 vaccine demand surprising
CIDRAP
The H1N1 influenza pandemic brought no "devastating surprises," but what has surprised public health agencies is the public's lack of interest in getting vaccinated, Margaret Chan, director-general of the World Health Organization (WHO), said yesterday.
Read more: http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidrap/content/influenza/swineflu/news/jan1910chan.html

UPDATE 1-HK Disneyland lifts lid on financial losses
Reuters
[...] A paper by Hong Kong's Tourism Commission for local lawmakers, however, said Hong Kong Disneyland made the net loss in 2009 partly because of the "unfavourable impact" of the H1N1 swine flu outbreak and the global financial crisis. [...]
Read more: http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTOE60I0AK20100119?type=marketsNews

Q&A: Dean Michael Klag of The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
The JHU Gazette
I think we were very fortunate that we did not have an H5NI pandemic. Rather, it was anH1N1 pandemic. We knew we were going to have a pandemic of some sort ...
Read more: http://gazette.jhu.edu/2010/01/19/qa-with-the-deans-and-directors/

Mexican scientists reflect on swine flu lessons
Alert Net
Mexico's deadly swine flu outbreak exposed tensions between the country's academic scientists, on the one hand, and its government laboratories, on the other -- as well as its failure to invest enough in science and technology, say analysts.
Read more: http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/scidev/126381240726.htm

UPDATE: 2009 H1N1 Flu International Situation Update
CDC
This report provides an update to the international situation as of January 15, 2010. The World Health Organization (WHO) continues to report updated 2009 H1N1 flu-associated laboratory-confirmed cases and deaths on its Web page.
Read more: http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/updates/international/

Microtest launches automated swine flu reporting service The Birchley Hall Press
Microtest, the UK’s fourth largest primary care clinical system supplier, has launched an automated swine flu reporting service to help its users meet primary care trust and Department of Health requirements quickly and easily.
Read more: http://www.bjhcim.co.uk/news/2010/n1001021.htm

WHO Dukung Inisiatif RI Dirikan "Collaborating Centre Influenza"
TV One
Direktur Jenderal Organisasi Kesehatan Sedunia (World Health Organization/WHO) DR Margaret Chan mendukung inisiatif RI mendirikan WHO Collaborating Centre Influenza di Indonesia.
Read more: http://www.tvone.co.id/berita/view/31843/2010/01/20/who_dukung_inisiatif_ri_dirikan_collaborating_centre_influenza

Disclaimer: Newsletter ini hanya merupakan kumpulan dari artikel/liputan/tulisan yang diambil dari berbagai sumber mengenai situasi terkini pandemi influenza di seluruh dunia termasuk Indonesia. Namun demikian isi/ilustrasi/foto tidak mewakili kepentingan atau kebijakan KOMNAS FBPI secara langsung

Newsletter 19 Januari 2010

New Issue

Nigeria Records First Swine Flu Death
From Kingsley Nwezeh in Abuja and Steve Dada in Lagos, 01.19.2010
The Federal Ministry of Health yesterday warned the public to beware of the deadly HINI Influenza virus, commonly known as Swine flu, as Nigeria has officially recorded its first death from the pandemic.
Before the latest case, there was a suspected Swine Flu death in December last year but the victim had died before samples could be collected, according to the ministry.
Source: THISDAY People - African News on Global News
Korean scientists have identified a substance commonly used in traditional Oriental medicine that can destroy the A(H1N1) flu virus responsible for thousands of deaths worldwide last year, a local research institute said yesterday.
The Korea Institute of Oriental Medicine (KIOM) said the team led by Ma Jin-yeul, head of KIOM’s Oriental medicine convergence research center, extracted the material from natural substances widely used in traditional remedies.
The drug, known by its scientific name KIOM-C, was given to mice infected with the new flu virus, all traces of which vanished from the lungs of the test animals after nine days of treatment. Animals that received other drugs during the tests died.
Source: JoongAng Daily
Read more: http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2915485

Comment

Swine flu: the real threat is mad scientist syndrome
Remember the warnings of 65,000 dead? Health chiefs should admit they were wrong yet again about a global pandemic
By Simon Jenkins/London
The “Andromeda strain” was stalking the earth, and its first victims were clearly scientists. Drugs were frantically stockpiled and key workers identified as vital to be saved for humanity’s future. Cobra alerted the army. Morgues were told to stand ready. The Green party blamed intensive pig farming. The Guardian listed “the top 10 plague books”.
If anyone dared question this drivel, they were dismissed by Donaldson as “extremists”. When people started reporting swine flu to be even milder than ordinary flu, he accused them of complacency and told them to “wait for next winter”. He was already buying 32mn masks and spending more than 1bn on Tamiflu and vaccines. Surgeries refused entry to those with flu symptoms, referring them to a government “hotline” where prescription drugs were ordered to be made available without examination or doctor’s note. Who knows how many died of undiagnosed illness as a result? Lines were instantly jammed. It was pure, systematic government-induced panic in which I accept that the media played its joyful part.
This week the authorities admitted that, far from a winter upturn in swine flu, there has been a slump. From 100,000 a week at the peak, there were just 12,000 last week. After the coldest winter for decades, when deaths might be expected to rise, the rate is below that of seasonal flu. In the UK, 360 people have died under its influence, most with prior “non-flu” conditions. Swine flu is not nice. I have had it but bears no relation to the government hysteria.
Source: Gulf Times

Read more: http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/article.asp?cu_no=2&item_no=337821&version=1&template_id=46&parent_id=26


Risk Communication

China issues swine flu travel warning for Lunar New Year
BEIJING – China's health ministry has urged vulnerable groups to get swine flu vaccinations or limit travel during the upcoming Chinese Lunar New Year holiday due to the spread of the A (H1N1) virus.
"Pregnant women, children, the elderly, obese people and those with chronic diseases should avoid public travel during the peak period of Spring Festival travel," the ministry said in a statement posted on its website late Wednesday.
Source: AFP
Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/health/China+issues+swine+travel+warning+Lunar+Year/2441695/story.html


Photo

Two women wear face masks as they queue with other people outside Matei Bals hospital to take shots against the H1N1 flu virus in Bucharest, in this January 9, 2010 file photo.
Source: REUTERS/Radu Sigheti


Quote

"We are not out of the woods yet with this virus and it will be rather foolish for everyone to say 'That's it,' " said John Oxford, professor of virology at Queen Mary's School of Medicine and Dentistry in London. (Fading H1N1 scare leaves vaccine surplus).
Source: Seattle Times


News Flash

Flu pandemic remains moderate, easing in areas: WHO
Margaret Chan, WHO director-general, also said the H1N1 pandemic appeared to be easing in the northern hemisphere but could still cause infections until ...
Source: Reuters
Read more: http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE5BL2ZT20100118

World tourism to rebound from crisis in 2010: UN
He cited the global economic crisis "aggravated by the uncertainty around the A(H1N1)pandemic." But he said "the trend is bottoming out. ...
Source: AFP
Read more: http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5hsW-an_364vBjgVuNY93LF-21Xmw

New outbreak of H1N1 could occur in February (AsiaOne)
TAIPEI, Taiwan — Expressing worry about a sharp decline in the number of Taiwanese residents receiving H1N1 vaccinations, former Department of Health (DOH) Minister Yeh Chin-chuan warned Sunday that a new wave of outbreak of H1N1 flu could hit Taiwan in February.
Source: AsiaOne
Read more: http://www.asiaone.com/Health/News/Story/A1Story20100118-192553.html

Influenza Vaccines - Pipeline Analysis and Market Forecasts to 2016
It is forecast to grow at a CAGR of 12.7% to reach $6.4 billion by 2016. This high growth forecast is primarily attributed to the increase in patient population, a result of increasing world population, and the need to get vaccinated each year.
Source: PR-inside.com
Read more: http://www.pr-inside.com/influenza-vaccines-pipeline-analysis-and-r1672218.htm

Taiwan records 10th H1N1 fatality involving pregnant woman
19 (CNA) Another pregnant woman in Taiwan has died of influenza A (H1N1) , bringing the total to 10 since the flu outbreak began, the Central Epidemic ...
Source: eTaiwan News
Read more: http://www.etaiwannews.com/etn/news_content.php?id=1159034〈=eng_news