M
Mary
It takes a given amount of days to receive confirmation that it's swine flu. They sent a culture off from one of the local hospitals on Saturday and are still waiting to hear if it is, or isn't, the real deal.
My own father was a chil din the 1918 influenza outbreak, and he had stories of neighbors that died from it. So yes, things can get bad. But it seems that every year there is some health concern that is going to spread and kill zillions, and I am getting kind of tired of this annual scare. Heck, I ever remember the panic over the comet Kohoutek, how it was going to threaten all life on earth.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comet_Kohoutek
As for me I am going to go out and have a Margarita !
I certainly think that ALL OF THE SUGGESTIONS ARE WISE, but how about doing something about our open Mexican border, and illegal immigration. Americans have been demanding it for years, especially our border states. It certainly wouldn't hurt.
Christina - I like that guy! We have a guy who writes a blog for the Houston Chronicle and calls himself the SciGuy. I think his real name is Eric Berger. He has the same kind of common sense as Michael Fumento. He's not saying that it's no big deal, but that it has yet to show that it's going to be.
Below is Michael Fumento's latest blog. Michael Fumento is the scientist I was talking about in my previous post.
I think this says it all.
Pondering Pig Flu Panic By: Michael Fumento
Tweeters have jumped out of the gates with all their sagacious advice, such as to not eat pork products, while I go the old-fashioned route and actually research the swine flu outbreak for an article. Remember articles? But since I know some people are interested in what I'm going to say, here's a preview:
As the outbreak develops, keep in mind that seasonal flu, according to the CDC, infects between 28 and 56 million Americans each year, hospitalizes over 100,000, and kills about 36,000. (The death figure is probably on the high side.) Did you bother to get vaccinated?
At this point there's no evidence swine flu is easier to transmit than seasonal flu or that it's more lethal. There have been no deaths yet outside of Mexico. All infectious diseases strike much harder in underdeveloped countries because the people are less healthy to begin with.
"Swine flu" simply means it has pig RNA mixed in. There's nothing inherent to it that would make it worse than seasonal flu. We've had a previous outbreak of swine flu; it killed one person.
True, we have no vaccine for this flu; but two years ago it turned out that the seasonal flu shot was ineffective - the equivalent of no vaccine. We're still here.
No, swine flu doesn't threaten to become "another Spanish Flu of 1918-19." Nothing does. Check your calendar; that was 90 years ago. Since then we've developed things called "antibiotics" as well as antivirals and other anti-flu medicines. In all flu outbreaks, including the Spanish one, the vast majority of deaths come from secondary bacterial infections.
Still scared? Wash your hands several times a day, keep away from coughers, and stay tuned.
April 27, 2009 08:50 PM · Diseases (other than AIDS and cancer) ~ Media
I also heard today that Mexico is blaming the US for the outbreak.
Thanks Christina. I think it's important that people don't get all crazy about this. Be safe, take precautions as you normally would with any flu outbreak and live your life.
I also read that none of the cases reported in the US were even close to being life-threatening. Let's not forget that with the poverty in Mexico, it's no surprise that people have died from it. My guess is that they didn't have access to good medical care.
I also heard today that Mexico is blaming the US for the outbreak.
Thanks Christina. I think it's important that people don't get all crazy about this. Be safe, take precautions as you normally would with any flu outbreak and live your life.
I also read that none of the cases reported in the US were even close to being life-threatening. Let's not forget that with the poverty in Mexico, it's no surprise that people have died from it. My guess is that they didn't have access to good medical care.
I also heard today that Mexico is blaming the US for the outbreak.
In our community, if the case sent off for confirmation is indeed swine flu, then it will be considered life threatening.
Doesn't anyone care about those poor, sick pigs?
I agree with the confusion. Giving something a name shouldn't make it life threatening. Life threatening means exactly that - you are at a higher than normal risk of dying from it. It's kind of like what we all know about valve disease. Some is life threatening, some is not. The same can be said for all kinds of flu.
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