Swine Flu Updates and Issues

Nurses COVID

Published

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/05/16/AR2009051601850.html?hpid=moreheadlines

The swine-origin influenza A (H1N1) virus that burst into public consciousness a month ago is starting to behave like a mixture of its infamous, pandemic-causing predecessors.

It seems to have a predilection for young adults, as did its notorious ancestor, the 1918 Spanish influenza. Many of the young victims who have become deathly ill turned out to have other medical problems -- a phenomenon first clearly seen with the 1957 Asian flu.

Pandemic flu strains -- and this new H1N1 strain is all but certain to cause the 21st century's first pandemic -- are unpredictable. Any contagious disease that most of the world's 6.8 billion people can catch is inherently dangerous.

"Our message to everybody is, of course, do not over-worry about these things, [but] it is important to know it is serious," the WHO's Keiji Fukuda said last week.

Perhaps the most worrisome features so far are the number and severity of cases in teenagers and young adults. This was noticed early, and the pattern has not changed much now that there are 5,000 laboratory-confirmed infections and probably more than 100,000 overall. The average age of the confirmed and probable cases is 15 years. Two-thirds are younger than 18.

Compared with seasonal outbreaks, all flu pandemics cause a higher percentage of severe cases and deaths in younger groups. Although the overall mortality rate from the current swine flu is low, this trend is already apparent.

Last Thursday, when Fukuda announced that the global death total was 65, he noted that "half of them are healthy people who have no predisposing conditions. This is a pattern different from what we see with normal influenza."

There have been too few deaths in the United States to draw any conclusions. But of the 173 people who have been sick enough to be hospitalized, more than half are in the 5-to-24 age group.

Specializes in Too many to list.

Hospitalized Patients with Novel Influenza A (H1N1) Virus Infection --- California, April--May, 2009

http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm58e0518a1.htm

Since April 15 and 17, 2009, when the first two cases of novel influenza A (H1N1) infection were identified from two southern California counties, novel influenza A (H1N1) cases have been documented throughout the world, with most cases occurring in the United States and Mexico (1--3). In the United States, early reports of illnesses associated with novel influenza A (H1N1) infection indicated the disease might be similar in severity to seasonal influenza, with the majority of patients not requiring hospitalization and only rare deaths reported, generally in persons with underlying medical conditions (2,3). As of May 17, 2009, 553 novel influenza A (H1N1) cases, including 333 confirmed and 220 probable cases, had been reported in 32 of 61 local health jurisdictions in California. Of the 553 patients, 30 have been hospitalized. No fatal cases associated with novel influenza A (H1N1) infection had been reported in California. This report summarizes the 30 hospitalized cases as of May 17, including a detailed description of four cases that illustrate the spectrum of illness severity and underlying risk factors. This preliminary overview indicates that, although the majority of hospitalized persons infected with novel influenza A (H1N1) recovered without complications, certain patients had severe and prolonged disease. All hospitalized patients with novel influenza A (H1N1) infection should be monitored carefully and treated with antiviral therapy, including patients who seek care >48 hours after illness onset (4,5).

Specializes in Too many to list.

Japan: Another Day, Another 2,000 School Closures

http://afludiary.blogspot.com/2009/05/japan-another-day-another-2000-school.html

Japan continues to try to slow down the spread of infection. Stopping it is not possible. Of course, the economy takes a hit with the closing of businesses, and parents are left struggling to provide care for the children kept out of school. I don't know if both parents work in Japan as most do here. When this is all over, who knows when, there will probably be studies done to determine which measures were the most helpful in slowing down the rate of infected cases. If H1N1 becomes more virulent, a big if right now, but if it does, this will be very useful information. Without a vaccine, with finite amounts of Tamiflu, and facing the very real possibity of Tamiflu resistance occurring as well, mitigation strategies become extremely important.

Yesterday morning the news was that Japan had confirmed 135 H1N1 `swine flu' cases, and had closed roughly 2,000 schools and day care operations in the Kobe/Osaka region in an attempt to contain the spread of the illness.

Twenty-four hours later, and the number of school closings has doubled - to 4,000 - along with a number of businesses, local festivals, and other venues.

The number of confirmed infections has jumped as well, with 173 cases.

The real number is probably a lot higher.

Specializes in Too many to list.

When is a pandemic not a pandemic?

http://scienceblogs.com/effectmeasure/2009/05/when_is_a_pandemic_not_a_pande.php

Kudos to risk communicators, Sandman and Laynard for pointing out the absurdity of this debate. We appear to be in a pandemic even if the definition keeps changing so let's get on with what we have to do to safeguard as many people as we can. Denial prevents people from taking protective measures. It does not matter how severe this disease is. It will still kill some of us. We don't get to know in advance who those people will be.

Is it a pandemic or is it not a pandemic? Since the world has never had a chance to make a call like this at the outset of a pandemic, nobody is quite sure how to handle it. The usual definition -- an epidemic (an increase in cases beyond what is expected) of global dimension -- has a lot of wiggle room and WHO and everyone else is busy wiggling. One reason is not whether this meets the definition or not but what the consequences might be of calling this "a pandemic"...

The reticence is not mainly at the WHO level but at the level of its member states. There is also suspicion this reluctance is affecting how thoroughly or honestly some countries are reporting cases of infection with the novel swine flu virus within their borders. The idea that severity should be an additional criterion is (sensibly) being resisted by WHO...

The argument boils down to this. We shouldn't call a pandemic a pandemic, because people might misunderstand that this means it's a pandemic. And then they would do things like panic, like UK officials are doing now when the prospect is broached we are having a pandemic. And since even the considerable wiggle room of the current definition of a pandemic is insufficient to avoid calling this one a pandemic, please provide us with some more wiggle room by adding severity to the mix, so we can then argue about whether the pandemic is severe enough to be a pandemic.

Two of the US's premier risk communicators have wryly taken note (via a commenter at The Flu Wiki):

In response, here is another modest proposal from Jody Lanard and Peter Sandman:

If WHO decides not to call a widespread "mild" swine-origin Influenza A/H1N1 pandemic a pandemic, then we believe they are obliged to announce that the H2N2 event of 1957 and the H3N2 event of 1968 were also not pandemics.

They should then announce that the last influenza pandemic occurred in 1918, and there have been no flu pandemics since that time.

WHO should also review the list of pre-1918 "pandemics" and decide which of those events were also not really pandemics, so we can re-calculate how many times per century, on average, a pandemic can be expected.

That way, we can be doubly relieved: Not only that swine flu H1N1 isn't a pandemic, but also that pandemics are very much rarer than previously thought.

Specializes in Too many to list.

More US School Closings

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=a1VVMTGBF9NU&refer=worldwide

This has got to be very difficult for working parents. I cannot imagine how some people are going to make it financially if this keeps up for long.

Of the 24 schools closed in the U.S., 15 are in New York City, said Massie Ritsch, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Department of Education, in an e-mail. At the peak of the swine flu outbreak two weeks ago, more than 725 schools in 30 states closed. At least 9,830 people worldwide have been infected in laboratory-confirmed cases, and 79 died, according to a World Health Organization report today.

Specializes in Too many to list.

CDC finds patterns in novel flu hospitalizations

http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidrap/content/influenza/swineflu/news/may1909hospital-jw.html

In a first early look at trends in patients who have been hospitalized with novel influenza H1N1 infections, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said today that all but one of a group of 30 patients presented with fever and that about two thirds of them had an underlying medical condition.

The CDC's review, based on California patients who were hospitalized from Apr 20 through May 17, appeared yesterday in an early online version of Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR). Anne Schuchat, MD, interim deputy director CDC's science and public health program, said during a media briefing today that the majority of patients recovered without problems after short hospitalizations, though some had severe illness with prolonged complications and remain hospitalized.

The most common diagnoses at admission were pneumonia and dehydration. Of the 19 patients who had underlying health conditions, the most common were chronic lung disease, immunosuppression, cardiac disease, diabetes, and obesity. The most common symptoms were fever, cough, vomiting, and shortness of breath. "That's unusual for seasonal flu," Schuchat said.

Five of the patients were pregnant. Two of the women miscarried--one at 13 weeks and the other at 35 weeks. CDC officials emphasized last week that pregnancy is a known influenza risk factor and that pregnant women who have suspected, probable, or confirmed novel flu cases should receive oseltamivir (Tamiflu) for 5 days.

None of the patients had microbiological evidence of a secondary bacterial infection. Schuchat said that mirrors what CDC officials are seeing elsewhere, but she added that researchers are monitoring the situation closely. A previous report on Mexican patients who died from novel influenza infections also indicated that many had viral, not bacterial, pneumonia.

Half of the patients received oseltamivir, and five were treated within 48 hours of symptom onset. Of the 15 who didn't receive antiviral treatment, 6 sought medical care more than 48 hours after they got sick.

Though the patients who needed prolonged intensive care were more likely to be very young, very old, or have a debilitating underlying medical condition, the CDC emphasized that one 18-year-old patient who was relatively healthy and had only mild chronic lung condition required ICU treatment and a ventilator.

Specializes in Too many to list.

Husband of South Texas schoolteacher who died with swine flu says she was healthy before virus

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/sns-ap-us-swine-flu-texas,0,7610385.story

The husband of the first American with swine flu to die denies reports that she had a pre-existing medical condition.

Steven Trunnell told CNN's "Larry King Live" Monday night that Judy Trunnell was "a healthy pregnant woman" who had never been diagnosed with "major medical complications of any kind."

A state health department spokeswoman said after her death that the South Texas schoolteacher had "chronic underlying health conditions" but wouldn't give details. Steven Trunnell calls that "absolutely false."

http://www.flutrackers.com/forum/showpost.php?p=235701&postcount=7

In today's conference call, the CDC acknowledged that the underlying condition for Judy Trunnel was PREGNANCY!

Specializes in Too many to list.

second wave of h1n1 flu feared in the fall

http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/703113

i do not understand the part about no antibodies. how can that be? oh, wait one, she means that we as novel hosts do not have antibodies until we become infected, right? then we have some...

the novel influenza a (h1n1) virus "sneaked in the door while health authorities who should have known better were busy closing windows," said carol j. cardona, dvm, phd, acpv, from the department of population health and reproduction, and professor in the school of veterinary medicine, university of california, davis, to an overflow crowd of thoracic and critical-care physicians.

"this virus has followed the pattern of all historic pandemics, and we've missed some precursors out there and we've missed some signals," dr. cardona said. she is a virologist and an expert in determining how disease-causing agents damage their hosts.

dr. cardona said she anticipates mutations in the virus. "expect to see stepwise changes over time and incremental changes over time in influenza a viruses." she pointed out that there is opportunity for reassortment between and among viruses that will result in the generation of new antigenically novel strains filtered through poultry and pigs to humans.

"we're providing ample opportunity with animals being raised quickly in large groups, where you have many, many generations. it's an efficient way to raise food and an effective way to spread viruses," dr. cardona said.

dr. cardona explained that there are no antibodies to h1n1 influenza, [????]which is why it has spread so rapidly. "and that's the unusual thing about this virus: we failed to detect precursors and we failed to find it in swine."

also on the panel was rear admiral kenneth g. castro, md, acting chief/science officer of the centers for disease control and prevention emergency operation center, who told attendees that because this h1n1 influenza is spread from person to person, it's beginning to prepare for a pandemic.

he predicted that we have not seen the last of this h1n1 influenza: "clearly, this virus has readily spread across the [united states] at a time we're no longer experiencing influenza. the criteria for this virus have nothing to do with the severity problem in pandemic planning. this is very likely to be circulating and you can expect to see it again when our virus season occurs."

dr. castro pegged the number of confirmed or probable cases in the united states at 5469, with 6 deaths (as of may 20, 7 deaths; a 44 year-old man in st. louis who had visited mexico died) in 48 states and the district of columbia. only wyoming and west virginia have had no confirmed cases. the median age is 17 years (range, 1 month - 87 years); 63% of those afflicted had an underlying medical condition at the time of illness onset. the average stay in a hospital is 4 days, with a median stay of 5 days (range, 2 - 31 days); 24% were admitted to the hospital's intensive care unit (icu).

he described the clinical presenting characteristics as fever, cough, shortness of breath, and sore throat, with 52% of presentations having abnormal findings of bilateral infiltrates consistent with pneumonia; 31% also had asthma or diabetes. of the population presenting to hospitals, 66% were treated with antivirals and 85% were treated with 1 to 7 antibiotics (overlapping), with a median of 3. "everything has been thrown into the equation to try to treat these hospitalized patients," dr. castro said.

he recommended that patients with any early signs of influenza stay home, and he pointed out that closing schools was no guarantee that students wouldn't assemble at local malls.

also on the panel was christian e. sandrock, md, mph, deputy health officer of yolo county in sacramento, california, and assistant clinical professor, division of pulmonary and critical care medicine, university of california, davis, school of medicine. he told the audience: "with regard to what may happen in the southern hemisphere in the next few months, i get to be intensely prophetic or the village fool." his presentation was entitled "h1n1 2009: should we be concerned about a second 'wave'?"

"the 1 difference in pattern is that this current virus is widespread, around the world to multiple continents, and we're heading toward a second wave. we're moving in that direction," he said, "and the second wave is very likely."

dr. sandrock said there is no vaccine that will protect against the virus, but he said that if populations are old enough to have experienced the 1968 strain, for instance, they may have a host-adapted mhc i primed t-cell response with epitopes, [which] is appropriate for viral clearance [and] may confer some protection and result in a mild to moderate disease, where the host would just "feel crummy." dr. sandrock added that patients who present with asthma and a fever should not be written off but should be screened for influenza.

when asked how quickly he thought the current virus would mutate, he called that the "million-dollar question." dr. sandrock noted that "it takes a while for the virus to mutate and spread, but once it's up and going, we'll see a surge in the numbers and deaths."

...the goals of the icu in this era of phase 5 are to keep the hospital staff safe.

"maybe we should start thinking about risk stratification and prophylaxis at this point in time-the key interventions should take place in cases where patients might not survive if we do not provide them."

he suggested that hospitals start looking around at items most frequently used in their icus and get stocked up now.

he said it might get to the point that entire hospitals will be converted to icu care, because institutions cannot care for ill patients in tents that are not equipped with liquid oxygen systems. he suggested that acute respiratory distress syndrome and asthma would be the predominant conditions of presenting patients. "despite excellent care, people are still dying and until recently there were no good data to predict just how sick people would be; these are sick people who will require a full-court press of what we can provide."

staffing in mexico's hospitals had been an issue, with some employees refusing to come to work, final-year nursing students were being used to staff icus, and they were recruiting physicians from other departments, such as anesthesia and surgery, to help care for the influenza patients, dr. dominguez-cherit said.

he added that at least half of all hospitalized patients had 2 or more comorbidities, and 78% had bilateral infiltrates on presentation. other symptoms were respiratory distress, fever (100%), diarrhea, conjunctivitis, vomiting, coryza, weakness, and myalgias. the time from the first symptom to admittance to a medical facility was 6 days, and once in the hospital, the time to icu admittance was 1.6 days, with an average hospital stay of 9.5 days. the locations of deaths within medical facilities were the icu and the emergency department.

dr. dominguez-cherit suggested that a global plan be in place so that action could be quickly taken to combat the anticipated influx of disease.

Specializes in Too many to list.

Getting Better in New YorK?

http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2009/05/20/2009-05-20_what_will_it_take_to_close_the_schools_bloomy_officials_making_it_up_as_they_go_.html

They sound kind of annoyed and upset, don't they? Don't think that I would want his job. No sir!

What will it take for Hizzoner and the Health Department to shutter at least those buildings in the Queens school districts that have become the epicenter of this new epidemic?

At Public School 21 in Flushing, where the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed one swine flu case earlier this month, 164 of the school's 800 students were absent Tuesday. An additional 20 were sent home by the school nurse with flulike symptoms, PTA President Lorraine Kosnar said. Meanwhile, 17 teachers - nearly 25% of the staff - are out sick. Several of those teachers are said to have reported high fevers.

At Intermediate School 227 in East Elmhurst, 60 students were sent home with flulike symptoms Monday, two school system sources said.More than 460 pupils - a third of the entire student body - didn't show up for class yesterday.

Yet both schools remain open for business.

So are dozens of other Queens schools that have witnessed huge spikes in student absences from flulike symptoms

Local ERs Serving As Barometers For Public's Fear

http://wcbstv.com/cbs2crew/nyc.swine.flu.2.1013966.html

I don't know about that toddler. Those rapid tests can give false negatives, and the siblings had flu s/s. Let's test the family as well.

I guess hizzoner also does not know that the warm weather may make no difference at all as this is not a seasonal flu.

Bloomberg meanwhile remains optimistic, especially given this weekend's holiday weather forecast.

"If you get through the next couple days, the warm weather, typically seems to inhibit the spread of it," said Bloomberg on Tuesday. "The good news is we're coming up to a warm weather period, according to the forecasters, and also we're going to have a three day weekend, which may or may not help."

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/05150901/Swine_H1N1_Queens.html

Closing schools and limiting contact between young people would slow down spread. That helps the health care system to cope better.

The swine H1N1 has an avian PB2, which favors growth at high temperatures (41 C), which will offer a distinct advantage over the summer. As seen in the above numbers, the virus spreads easily, especially among students.

Specializes in Too many to list.

Defining a Pandemic

http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Politics/2009/05/20/9518076-cp.html

Will WHO revise their own definition of what a pandemic is, yet again? Their first definition likely had more to do with facing the threat of H5N1 bird flu, a much more virulent disease than the current swine flu. There is much political pressure on WHO not to increase that threat level to a 6.

Since when do politicians get to define what a disease is or is not? I guess they can if WHO lets them.

Some argued at the World Health Assembly in Geneva over whether the World Health Organization should rewrite the definition of a pandemic in ways that would exclude this virus. A number - among them several affluent countries with antiviral stockpiles and pandemic vaccine contracts - insisted the lack of severity associated with this new strain of flu means it doesn't merit the name.

The job of defining what constitutes a pandemic belongs to scientists, not politicians. But even scientists have divergent views about what is unfolding with the new H1N1 virus.

It's an H1N1 virus, meaning it bears hemagglutinin (H) and neuraminidase (N) proteins on its surface that are distant relatives of those found on a human flu strain - also called H1N1 - that has been circulating for most of the last century.

It used to be thought that to cause a pandemic, a virus with a new hemagglutinin had to break out of nature.

This virus's hemagglutinin is not brand new - but it is new enough to a wide segment of society to be able to infect a lot of people, especially young people, quite easily. But there are hints that exposure to H1N1s that circulated before 1957 may have given people in their 60s and older some protection against this new virus.

By the WHO's definition, a virus crosses the pandemic threshold when there is evidence of spread in the community in two WHO regions. With the virus galloping through schools in Japan, many observers believe the call is imminent - if the WHO does not bow to pressure to change the rules.

Infectious diseases expert Dr. Michael Osterholm says the agency will hurt its own credibility if it bends scientific reality to political will.

Getting Better in New YorK?

http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2009/05/20/2009-05-20_what_will_it_take_to_close_the_schools_bloomy_officials_making_it_up_as_they_go_.html

They sound kind of annoyed and upset, don't they? Don't think that I would want his job. No sir!

Local ERs Serving As Barometers For Public's Fear

http://wcbstv.com/cbs2crew/nyc.swine.flu.2.1013966.html

I don't know about that toddler. Those rapid tests can give false negatives, and the siblings had flu s/s. Let's test the family as well.

I guess hizzoner also does not know that the warm weather may make no difference at all as this is not a seasonal flu.

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/05150901/Swine_H1N1_Queens.html

Closing schools and limiting contact between young people would slow down spread. That helps the health care system to cope better.

We have had one case in a school in Pittsburgh. The thing is the word of mouth says lot more kids sick than you are hearing on the news. My sisters boys brought it home to her and she is not feeling well. HOWEVER, that is a big however, I am perfectly aware it could be a number of other things.

Defining a Pandemic

http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Politics/2009/05/20/9518076-cp.html

Will WHO revise their own definition of what a pandemic is, yet again? Their first definition likely had more to do with facing the threat of H5N1 bird flu, a much more virulent disease than the current swine flu. There is much political pressure on WHO not to increase that threat level to a 6.

Since when do politicians get to define what a disease is or is not? I guess they can if WHO lets them.

My thoughts are that I actually understand it is difficult if not impossible for the politicians to guess right all the time in these situations. However, my advice would be to make your decisions based on best advice and info from the medical people. Never, never refuse to shut down schools because the business community say it might affect the tourist dollar. Also, parents will complain about lack of child care. Once again, best medical advice is the way to go. They will complain even louder when their kids are on vents.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/21/health/21diagnosis.html?ref=health

You have to wonder how many people have had swine flu and were never tested. If the test is only 70% right, would we have more deaths attributed to swine flu. I live in a rural area with only 1 hospital in the county. They are not testing anyone for swine flu because its not in our county but its in all the county's surrounding us. So if your not testing for it then your not going to find it.

Whats frightening is that cities and politicians are trying to downplay the numbers and severeness and that's what they did in 1918 and then it exploded.

Also see link below for synopsis of 1918 flu:

http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/worst_case_scenarios/4219884.html

+ Add a Comment