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To: appleseed; nw_arizona_granny; DvdMom

Have you guys seen this thread?

DvdMom has been doing a great job of keeping everyone updated with articles from different sources for this thread.

It looks like the swine flu is getting ready to hit hard this fall and winter. It might be good for people to keep in mind as they’re making their survival preparations.

If this is as bad as it has the potential to be, it would be good to be able to hole up at home and be able to not have to go ANYWHERE for an extended period of time.


295 posted on 07/12/2009 8:12:37 PM PDT by metmom (Welfare was never meant to be a career choice.)
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To: metmom

OHIO

‘Good chance’ H1N1 will be part of flu season

http://www.the-daily-record.com/news/article/4627251
By CHRISTINE L. PRATT
Staff Writer

MILLERSBURG — Who would care for your children if schools closed?

How would you respond to an inability to report to work?

Are you prepared to be isolated for up to two weeks?

Recognizing a lull in media coverage of the H1N1 pandemic, but not intent on inducing undue panic, Holmes County’s health commissioner is encouraging residents to take advantage of a window of opportunity to prepare for a likely resurgence of the virus as part of the regular flu season.

“Because we’re not hearing about H1N1 in the news, the misconception is it’s gone,” said Dr. D.J. McFadden.

snip

“If H1N1 is the dominant flu strain this winter, we could see a much different picture,” said McFadden, adding he expects to see a vaccine for it no earlier than the start of 2010. “It could (continue to) act like the normal flu, and that would be great, but it might not.”

Besides having no vaccine for the strain or a relative thereof, McFadden said, people will be more susceptible to H1N1 because it is new and there is no natural immunity to it.

Already the virus has become part of the seasonal flu outbreak in the southern hemisphere, he said, noting “the concern is, as it circulates and drifts (from its original makeup) a bit, it will cause a more aggressive immune response.” That’s what could cause morbidity and mortality rates to climb at an accelerated rate.

“Let’s not count on a vaccine and use basic public health we’ve used for centuries before then,” he said. “We have a unique opportunity right now. We see where we were in the spring. Now, we’ve had the first death in Ohio. There’s a relatively good chance H1N1 will be a major player in this fall’s flu season. We have no vaccine. So we need to start planning in our family.”

There is no better time than the present to make healthy lifestyle changes — shedding extra pounds, eating right, stopping smoking, getting proper sleep. All can be factors in building a healthy immune system that is better prepared to serve as the first line of defense.

“These are things we don’t think about every year, but this year we don’t have the luxury to rely on a vaccine for H1N1,” he said, anticipating vaccines for other flu strains will be available and should be employed as in the past.

It also will be “even more important to practice social distancing” throughout the flu season. “Don’t go to work or school if you’re sick and practice basic hygiene — wash hands, cover coughs,” McFadden said.

To that end, families can anticipate the best, but should be prepared for the worst — the need to be isolated from others and the possibility spread of the virus could interrupt and shut down services on which people rely daily.

He suggests families have stores of food and necessary supplies to last a full two weeks, if necessary. These include water, batteries, a flashlight, medications, pet food, extra clothing and bedding, diapers and formula, a can opener, entertainment for children and spare cash.

It also is a good time to revise a list of essential contacts, allergies and medications and devise backup plans for who would be available to care for children and elderly members of the family should daily routines be interrupted by the virus. Employees should also talk with their employers to discuss the possibility of working from home in the event an H1N1 infection prevents them from leaving the house.

Additional tips on planning and preparing for an H1N1 epidemic are available online at www.pandemicflu.gov.

Reporter Christine L. Pratt can be reached at 330-674-1811 or e-mail cpratt@the-daily-record.com.


298 posted on 07/13/2009 8:38:55 AM PDT by DvdMom
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To: metmom

Did you read post 300 yet ?


301 posted on 07/13/2009 8:45:42 AM PDT by DvdMom
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To: metmom

UK:

GP suffering from swine flu dies

Page last updated at 13:48 GMT, Monday, 13 July 2009 14:48 UK
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/8148162.stm

A Bedfordshire GP who died had the swine flu virus, according to NHS East of England.

Dr Michael Day died on Saturday in the Luton and Dunstable Hospital, but the NHS said the exact cause of death in the case is still unknown.

A swab test taken from Dr Day at the hospital has been confirmed as being positive for the H1N1 swine flu virus.

A six-year-old girl, Chloe Buckley, from north west London died on Thursday after contracting swine flu.


302 posted on 07/13/2009 9:04:15 AM PDT by DvdMom
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