Do The Risk Of Bird Flu Outbreak Hover Over Australia Also?
The pattern of working of the avian influenza is like that of touring of a cricket/hockey team…one country after another. Everywhere it meets with success in some degrees. Avian influenza, popularly known as bird flu did not spare the vast continent of Australia either. Could it be the migratory birds that have done the trick? Migratory birds were held in awe and admiration by you, particularly by the bird-watchers all over the world. But, now you await them with suspicion. Does avian influenza in birds cause the disease to spread in human beings also? Luckily, not to a great extent so far. The deaths reported since 2003, with the arrival of the flagship bird flu virus, H5N1, are just 120 all over the world. Why then researchers and scientists are so much worried about the outbreak of the bird flu? Why the concerned authorities are culling birds in millions? The root cause of the worry is on account of the mutating capacity of the bird flu virus. It is likely to take the deadly shape anytime, if the past behavior of this type of virus is any indication. Whether the migratory birds will do it in Australia? Or the international [...]
In Brief: Avian flu outbreak prompts West Bank chicken cull
H1N1 to Be Included in Seasonal Flu Vaccine The H1N1 virus will be included in the 2010/2011 seasonal flu vaccine. Rambo Memorial Health Center already placed its order for next year’s vaccine back in November. It includes three strains of flu that the health community feels will impact the public most next flu season. Read more on WHIZ News Zanesville In Brief: Avian flu outbreak prompts West Bank chicken cull Source: IRIN Animal cases of avian flu in Bala village in the Tul Karem area of the West Bank, northeast of Tel Aviv, have been confirmed, and some 250,000 chickens culled, according to officials. Read more on AlertNet
Opinions: Preparing For Next Flu Outbreak; Elections In Zimbabwe; U.S. Response To Haiti
Arsenic used to treat leukemia (PhysOrg.com) — Arsenic, known in the West mainly as a poison, has been used in traditional Chinese medicine for around two thousand years for the treatment of conditions such as syphilis and psoriasis. It has also been shown to have a substantial anti-cancer effect for a type of leukemia, but until now no one has known the mechanism for this effect. Now scientists in China have discovered … Read more on PhysOrg Opinions: Preparing For Next Flu Outbreak; Elections In Zimbabwe; U.S. Response To Haiti Better Preparation Required For Next Flu Outbreak, Despite Mildness Of Swine Flu Now that concerns about swine flu have eased, “[o]ur fear is that the public and officials will get blase about the next flu outbreak,” according to a New York Times editorial. “Efforts to rush vaccine into production did not go well. This dry run should lead health officials to push the vaccine makers even harder … Read more on Medical News Today
NEWS SCAN: New botulism drug, avian flu outbreak in Nepal
Women with swine flu 13 times more likely to suffer critical illness if they are pregnant Pregnant women in Australia and New Zealand who had swine flu were 13 times more likely to be admitted to hospital with a critical illness, according to research published in the British Medical Journal today. Read more on PhysOrg NEWS SCAN: New botulism drug, avian flu outbreak in Nepal CDC announces new broad-spectrum treatment for botulism The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) today announced that it is making available a new heptavalent (effective against seven types) botulinum antitoxin made by Cangene Corp. (Winnipeg, Man.). The approval, reported today in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report ( MMWR ), is made possible through a CDC-sponsored Food and Drug … Read more on Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy