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Bird flu nightmare needs wake-up call
Scotsman.com ^ | January 28th, 2006 | Al Avlicino

Posted on 01/28/2006 1:29:23 PM PST by Termite_Commander

YEARS ago when I first started studying the avian influenza virus H5N1, it seemed highly unlikely that it would ever develop into pandemic status. I believed it might eventually trigger a conventional bout of flu, but certainly nothing to the degree of its H1N1 ancestor, the 1918 Spanish Flu that killed 50 to 100 million people.

I have followed this virus in its inexorable march towards a pandemic, seen how it kept surprising the experts by picking up more and more human-infectious traits, until now there is virtually no doubt that there will be a worldwide avian flu pandemic and that H5N1 will be responsible for it.

We have all heard the projections from avian influenza experts like Dr Michael Osterholm that in a single flu season as many as 360 million people could die. That figure is unimaginable. It's the total number of dead from the Boxing Day Tsunami every two hours, or a fully loaded 747 crashing every 13 seconds, around the clock for months on end. Three million dead in the UK alone or the equivalent of six Edinburghs.

The global integrated economy cannot survive a pandemic of this magnitude. Absenteeism rates of upwards of 75 per cent caused by illness and panic would cripple food distribution, utility access and virtually all other commerce. The bleak vision of surviving on canned food and bottled water in cold, dark homes, fearful of stepping outdoors for months on end, could happen right here in Scotland and around the world.

Do not make the error of assuming this cannot happen here. Migratory birds from Western China brought H5N1 to Turkey in early October where it lay undetected until people started dying a couple of weeks ago. Those migratory patterns continue into North Africa and Western Europe. When will H5N1 arrive in Scotland? Judging by the Turkish model, it may already be here. Let's not even consider what can happen when an infected individual arrives at Edinburgh Airport.

The 1918 pandemic started in an Army barracks in Kansas. Within one week the virus was present in all 48 contiguous United States in an era where the only modes of transport were trains and horses. The spread of this virus in the jet age is unimaginable. There likely would not be a corner of the Earth where this modern plague would not be present within weeks, maybe days.

The virus needs to pick up another trait or two to become as easily transmitted between humans as a common cold. That could happen at any time or it may already have begun.

Developing a vaccine against H5N1 is like targeting a clay pigeon. You have to shoot ahead of the target to allow the bullet and clay to intersect. Unfortunately H5N1 is a pigeon that does random, sudden 90 degree turns. It is the ultimate moving target. The time to develop and manufacture a global vaccine is six to eight months. By that time, the avian flu virus will likely have mutated into a form that is immune to the vaccine.

Current flu vaccines have no effect on H5N1, and although it is recommended that everyone be vaccinated, we should be clear in the knowledge that should a pandemic start, there is no protection from current vaccines or certainly from antiviral drugs. The antivirals of choice right now are Roche's Tamiflu and Glaxo's Relenza. The UK has ordered more than £200 million of Tamiflu, believing that it could help fend off the pandemic. Unfortunately, Tamiflu is fairly useless as an avian flu pandemic fighter.

In a recent Asian study Tamiflu was proven as ineffective as sugar pills against some H5N1 strains. The best use for these drugs is as a preventative, taking at least two doses per day from the moment the first virus arrives in your area and throughout all the months of the flu wave.

To provide everyone in the world with this albeit minor preventative measure would require, in a conservative calculation, 650 billion pills or the equivalent to the total weight of the Queen Elizabeth II fully loaded with passengers and cargo just in pure Tamiflu! All we have to do is write a cheque to Roche for one trillion pounds. And it still wouldn't stop the pandemic.

Thorough hygiene and other common-sense precautions are the only ways to blunt the impact of this pandemic. Raw poultry must be considered as a biohazard. Surfaces and clothing must be disinfected with bleach. It's time to rediscover the "disinfect everything" policy of the NHS matrons of the 1950s.

H5N1 could surprise us all and evolve into a squirrel or koala virus, sparing humanity. However, the chances of that occurring are next to zero. The world is fully unprepared. The onus must shift from wasting billions on "magic bullet" drugs that don't work to preparation and survivability.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: avianflu; avianinfluenza; birdflu; h5n1; influenza; osterholm; pandemic
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Well, Mr. Avlicino's comments are sure to "rustle some feathers" around here.

Let the debate begin, I suppose.

1 posted on 01/28/2006 1:29:25 PM PST by Termite_Commander
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To: Termite_Commander

Y2K redux?

Guess it is time to stock up on more cases of MREs.


2 posted on 01/28/2006 1:33:14 PM PST by BenLurkin (O beautiful for patriot dream - that sees beyond the years)
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To: Termite_Commander

Buffalo Wings!


3 posted on 01/28/2006 1:37:03 PM PST by mtbopfuyn (Legality does not dictate morality... Lavin)
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To: BenLurkin
Similar in that in both cases, people are trying to forecast what will happen in the future, but dissimilar in that pandemics have happened with regularity in the past, whilst Y2K's have not.

Where does one even get MRE's anyway? EBay?
4 posted on 01/28/2006 1:37:15 PM PST by Termite_Commander (Warning: Cynical Right-winger Ahead)
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To: Termite_Commander

Well, I hope he is wrong, but it is not looking good. Those kids who died in Turkey, not good. Like the 1918 flu this one seems to be able to kill young healthy people. NOT GOOD. Whether or not it is transmissable between persons is not clear at this point, but again, the Turkish children cause some alarm. I know in my own family about 4 people died in the 1918 epidemic.


5 posted on 01/28/2006 1:37:37 PM PST by jocon307 (The Silent Majority - silent no longer)
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mark


6 posted on 01/28/2006 1:40:23 PM PST by TheBrotherhood
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To: Termite_Commander
TC...

Dr Mike Osterholm is a friend of mine. He has been trying to raise awareness on Avian Influenza for quite a while. Despite the deniers on FR this is going to really take its toll on the planet. When I posted earlier that Tamiflu was ineffective against H5N1, there were the usual suspects comparing AI to SARS and such.

This is going to be REAL as opposed to Y2K that was a farce.

Semper Serious

7 posted on 01/28/2006 1:41:03 PM PST by Trident/Delta (Chaos, Panic and Disorder.....My work here is done!)
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To: Termite_Commander

I will not sit here and wring my hands and go "woe is me". We can only hope that this will be dealt with. I know it has the worlds attention!!! Viruses can mutate in many ways. It could become stronger and it could become weaker. Ebola has been around for some time but it has not hit Eastern CO yet. That was a major scare for quite some time. You know what? Sooner or later something is going to get each of us. Out of the blue and into the black!!!


8 posted on 01/28/2006 1:43:34 PM PST by Sterco
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To: Trident/Delta

I saw him on Oprah.

It was definitely a wakeup call.

This countries emergency rooms are overwhelmed as it is. It will be worse than anyone can imagine.


9 posted on 01/28/2006 1:46:33 PM PST by WestCoastGal (-Flank2 - Wake up guys!! Jack is back!)
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To: Termite_Commander

Here's one place: http://www.cheaperthandirt.com/MRE125-1299-639.html

Note that these are NOT genuine MRES.


10 posted on 01/28/2006 1:46:44 PM PST by BenLurkin (O beautiful for patriot dream - that sees beyond the years)
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To: Termite_Commander

http://www.mrefoods.com/


11 posted on 01/28/2006 1:48:03 PM PST by BenLurkin (O beautiful for patriot dream - that sees beyond the years)
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Comment #12 Removed by Moderator

To: BenLurkin

Oh, excellent. I shall order several thousand. =)


13 posted on 01/28/2006 2:14:50 PM PST by Termite_Commander (Warning: Cynical Right-winger Ahead)
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To: Trident/Delta
Well, please tell Dr. Osterholm to keep up the good work. He, among others, is making a difference in raising public awareness.
14 posted on 01/28/2006 2:16:38 PM PST by Termite_Commander (Warning: Cynical Right-winger Ahead)
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To: Termite_Commander
"H5N1 could surprise us all and evolve into a squirrel or koala virus, sparing humanity."

Why assume it will be a deadly virus once it changes into a human form? If it’s going to have to change into something else to really get at us, why assume the new version will be so lethal?

Why just the avian flue? There must be a thousand deadly viruses that kill animals with genetics closer to our own. Why not worry that they’ll kill us.

I think this whole thing is generated from administrators and government doctors who are afraid to be unprepared, media looking for a story, and much of the publics nature to panic.

15 posted on 01/28/2006 2:16:51 PM PST by elfman2
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To: Termite_Commander

You left the last line out of the article:

"• Al Avlicino is the author of Beat the Flu: How to Stay Healthy Through the Coming Bird Flu Pandemic, published by Fusion Press, priced £9.99"


16 posted on 01/28/2006 2:37:12 PM PST by tatown (Better to Burn Up than Fade Away...)
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To: elfman2
Why assume it will be a deadly virus once it changes into a human form?

Because there would not be a shift from a virus that kills 20% or so of people who get it, to a virus that kills nobody. It becoming a squirrel virus would be more likely.

If it’s going to have to change into something else to really get at us, why assume the new version will be so lethal?

Actually, most "experts" I've heard speak about this think that it will become somewhat less lethal when it does mutate, but even a mortality rate of 5% would be worse than the 1918 pandemic's case fatality rate (or CFR). Also, the presence of a virus to which the host has no immunity opens up the possibility of dangerous secondary infections taking place whilst the body's immune system is busy trying to defend itself.

Why just the avian flue?

Because the three pandemics in the 20th century were all caused by avian influenza strains. Influenza has caused pandemics quite often throughout time.

There must be a thousand deadly viruses that kill animals with genetics closer to our own.

Not really, no.

Why not worry that they’ll kill us.

If you want to, be my guest.

I think this whole thing is generated from administrators and government doctors who are afraid to be unprepared, media looking for a story, and much of the publics nature to panic.

Then you fit the mold of the typical skeptic.
17 posted on 01/28/2006 2:42:19 PM PST by Termite_Commander (Warning: Cynical Right-winger Ahead)
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To: tatown; All
Oh, you're right. My apologies. Thank you for the correction, tatown.
18 posted on 01/28/2006 2:43:43 PM PST by Termite_Commander (Warning: Cynical Right-winger Ahead)
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To: Termite_Commander

I just read the book about the 1918 flu epidemic with a similar virus. It was terrible. My grandfather died in that epidemic. He was well in the morning and dead by nightfall. My father who was 14 rode his horse around the parish for several months burying the dead, at 14. He never got it nor did my Mother.

But what is interesting is that the virulence of the 1918 virus varied over time. It was more killing early, then got less, then reemerged to be more killing later. And people died either very early or weeks later. Some pretty famous people died of this and the toll on health care workers was horrendous.

My guess is the contingency plans for this include forcing medical care people into service. That was on rec of the aftermath of 1918,,to commandeer all docs and nurses into national service. The dead in Phily were buried by priests.

The book is worth reading for a preview, it is not a pretty pic.


19 posted on 01/28/2006 2:59:33 PM PST by cajungirl (no)
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To: cajungirl

You know, I need to study up on the "Spanish Flu" a bit. What's the book called? I'll see if I can pick it up from the library.


20 posted on 01/28/2006 3:01:53 PM PST by Termite_Commander (Warning: Cynical Right-winger Ahead)
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