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.

Genome analysis sheds light on swine flu origins - and high-speed science

http://blogs.nature.com/news/thegreatbeyond/2009/05/genome_analysis_sheds_light_on.html

An unpredecented aspect of the reaction of the scientific community to the current pandemic threat is the sheer speed with which researchers are making data publicly available. Within hours of the genomes of virus isolates having been analyzed, researchers from every corner of the globe have uploaded their sequences to the GISAID flu database, or Genbank, for anyone to compute.

Meanwhile, some journals have moved to warp speed, getting papers peer reviewed and published in days instead of months. Neil Ferguson's group at Imperial College London, for example, published an initial report on the epidemiology of the outbreak in Science on 11 May (see 'Swine flu spread matches previous flu pandemics') . It used some sophisticated modelling to describe the evolution of the outbreak, even if the underlying epidemiological data available at that point to feed into the models was so scant that one leading public health blogger described the paper as "computer-aided tea-leaf reading".

The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) also published a somewhat meatier paper on 7 May by scientists at the US Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) providing a useful summary of the clinical symptons and age distributions of the earliest cases (see 'US swine flu cases dissected').

But another group of leading evolutionary biologists, including Oliver Pybus at the University of Oxford, and Andrew Rambaut at the University of Edinburgh, have taken a completely different tack. While preparing papers for peer-reviewed publication, they have put online on a public Wiki sophisticated analyses of the flu genome, including detailed phylogenetic trees, as soon as they got their results. They argue that it is in the interest of the public and the scientific community to make data relevant to the pandemic threat publicly available as fast as possible.

The posting of analyses of the flu genome is the very best thing to come out of the appearance of the novel swine flu virus. If only they would do this for the H5N1 bird flu virus as well. Having access to those hidden sequences would be very helpful in predicting what bird flu is doing, how it is changing, and what the future might hold for us from this very virulent virus.

Specializes in Too many to list.

Swine flu: planning for the bogeyman

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

It's a simple fact that the surge in demand by those not sick enough to warrant the use of scarce medical resources (the time of emergency room personnel) is unavoidable and has to be part of any planning. Hartocollis reports that visits to the Schneider Children's Hospital ER in Queens quadrupled since last Friday. Most city ERs are running at capacity during normal times and this constitutes an overwhelming demand. Because of this, the onerous trip to the emergency room brings nothing tangible. Unless the patient has an underlying medical condition and signs of an influenza-like illness, they aren't being tested nor usually given medication.

But medication and testing aren't the real objectives for most parents. The real objective is some peace of mind. That's not the same thing as panic and it won't be cured by trying to reassure the public with hopes of "avoiding panic." Instead we should look for better ways to allow people to meet the objective, for example, by temporary flu clinics to triage cases and reassure the non cases.

Hartocollis has it exactly right. A trip to the ER is the equivalent of checking under the bed for the bogeyman. It can't be prevented. It can only be planned for.

Specializes in Too many to list.

Update on the Novel Influenza A H1N1 Virus and New Findings

This is the transcript of the CDC update for Friday, May 22nd. There is quite a bit of information about the origins of the swine flu virus. Clearly there is a need for increased surveillance for viruses coming from the animal health sector. The cooperation of scientists from both human and animal health is necessary.

http://www.cdc.gov/media/transcripts/2009/t090522.htm

Is the goal here primarily to figure out where the virus emerged or is that the primary goal? Is the primary goal to determine, you know, our capability to combat it with a vaccine?

Anne Schuchat: ...our primary responsibility is to respond. And so, our analysis attempts to do two things, two inform our public health response, that is by helping us understand how we can make a vaccine and make the most effective vaccine possible, to inform our recommendations on use of antivirals for treatment and prophylaxis, but it's very important also to understand the origin of these viruses, because if we can determine the origin, we also then can take measures to make sure that the virus doesn't re-emerge in a slightly different form, and so, our first goal is to prepare for response, but understanding the origin is a part of that response, but it's a secondary part.

You can also think about the new tools that we have at our disposal in the scientific community. With the type of genetic and antigenic characterization that the scientists did, they can look backwards in history and try to understand where these parts of the virus emerged from, and that can help us really try to prevent those types of reassortments or emergences in the future. And so, this is little bit like medical or sort of scientific detective work, understanding the sources of this virus through the genetic characterization but also looking forward, preventive, so that the more we understand how these new strains come into human populations, the easier it will be for us to counter them in the future.

Donald McNeil: Hi, thank you. This is in part a call for more surveillance of swine influenza. I know that the chicken industry stepped forward very quickly a couple of years ago when there was a need for more surveillance of Avian influenza. Does this mean that the pork industry needs to step forward and pig farmers around the world need to, or submit more samples, or what needs to be done now that this problem has emerged?

Anne Schuchat: Yeah, you know, I think that this really hits home how important it is for animal and human health to cooperate and collaborate. We're pleased with the improved collaboration of the two disciplines, but for many infectious diseases that have emerged over the past few decades, we see that what happens is that the animal-human interface is very important. And so, part of our strategies now involve joint investigations and shared information. And I think this does point to the need for that going forward.

...a triple reassortment virus that contained genes that had originated in -- of course, let me preface this remark by saying that all influenza viruses are present in the Avian reservoir. And so, the ultimate origin of all influenza viruses is from birds. And so, what had happened was in swine, there had been introduction of the 1918 virus, and that virus evolved and continued to circulate in pigs without interruption, as far as we can tell, between 1918 and the current time.In addition, human influenza viruses have been introduced into pigs because pigs are susceptible to human influenza viruses. In addition, another Avian influenza virus was introduced into pigs in North America. These viruses interacted in such a way as to reassort, essentially, swap genes, and thus, we had a triple reassortment virus that's been circulating fairly widely in pigs in the United States and occasionally causing human infections. So, we were very well aware of this triple reassortment, both because it caused infections in pigs and because it caused occasional sporadic infections in humans. This triple reassortant virus, which had originated in North America, was then later detected in pigs in Europe and Asia. And this triple reassortant virus that originated in North America co-circulated with Eurasian swine viruses. Now, those Eurasian swine viruses, as I mentioned, originated in birds, the ultimate source of all influenza viruses.But once they enter a new host, they evolve in a way that you can distinguish the genes from those from the original Avian source. So, the reassortant event that occurred was between this triple reassortant and the Eurasian swine influenza virus. Now, if you look very closely at the gene sequences that are present in the databases that exist, such as GenBank, you will see that reassortants between the North American viruses that have been very well described in the literature and the Eurasian swine lineage viruses have been detected in people and in pigs. However, the exact gene combination that we've seen for the viruses that are spreading in humans had not been detected previously either in North America or in Asia. So, we know that the reassortment had occurred and there were reassortants, but they didn't have exactly the same gene constellation. In the United States, surveillance in pigs for influenza viruses does occur when there is an outbreak that causes disease and it comes to the attention of veterinary authorities, but the surveillance is not very systemic. Sometimes farmers don't report that they have outbreaks in pigs. Often these outbreaks don't cause serious disease and so on. And while we have some surveillance in the United States, the surveillance in other parts of the world is much more limited than that that we have in the United States. And I think that's where we can see the greatest gaps in surveillance in pigs. I hope that's answered part of your question.

Specializes in Too many to list.

Swine Flu - Why Our Continued Concern Is Warranted

http://afludiary.blogspot.com/2009/05/fear-of-fluing.html

This essay from Avian Flu Diary very thoroughly sums up the reasons why.

... a disturbing percentage of younger victims - higher than we normally see with seasonal influenza - are sick enough to be hospitalized.

Hundreds have already been hospitalized here in the United States, and while nearly all survive, they owe that good outcome to modern medical care, antibiotics, antivirals, and in some cases ventilators.

Advantages that simply won't be available in many developing countries around the globe. A virus that might kill 1 in 1000 in a developed country could kill 1 in 50 (or more) in an undeveloped region.

Unknown, also, is how big of burden this virus will place on our own healthcare system next fall and winter.

Since most people appear to have little or no immunity to this virus, there is a high likelihood that a greater percentage of the population will fall ill next winter with influenza.

HCWs (Health Care Workers) are likely to be particularly hard hit until an effective vaccine is made available, which could further degrade the ability of hospitals to deliver care.

Instead of 7% to 10% of the population sickened, as we see in a normal flu year, we could see 20% fall ill . . .or more.

Right there, that could double the impact of a `normal' influenza year, even if the virus remains mild.

But of course, we don't know if this virus will remain mild.

The virus may also lose its sensitivity to oseltamivir (Tamiflu) over time, which could in turn increase its impact, even in developed countries.

Scientists will be watching the southern hemisphere, which is just now entering their flu season, to see how this virus evolves and impacts their societies. A bad flu season there could be a harbinger of things to come next fall north of the equator.

I'm just a lowly student, so I'm not knowledgeable enough to give an educated guess about where this is going. But my gut feeling - and people all my life have always said to trust your gut first - is that this will be hitting us harder soon (ie, 2nd wave).

And yes, the 1918 flu had some nasty symptoms. I remember my grandmother telling me that people who had blue lips were ill. My great grandma (her mother), became deathly ill with pneumonia. Her father, who was a country doctor in Eastern Oklahoma at the time, cared for her and the rest of his family and everybody else. But she was vomiting blood, so the story goes. I don't have any of his medical records or his journal or anything. But his family survived because of him, and because of him I'm here today.

There are some stories about the 1918 flu in this article, if anyone's interested in reading what it was like: http://www.timescall.com/Health-Story.asp?id=14663

Specializes in Too many to list.

Hong Kong and Mainland China

As Japan did before them, the Chinese are trying to stop H1N1 at the airport. However, once they begin to see domestic cases that are not arriving on airplanes, we might see them instead going to mitigation strategies to slow the spread. It will be interesting to see if the disease gains a foothold in China. It may not arrive by plane. China has many borders with other countries.

http://crofsblogs.typepad.com/h5n1/2009/05/china-two-year-old-latest-h1n1-suspect.html

The patient was a two-year-old girl.

The KA 662 flight had 160 passengers and eight crew members. The provincial health department has found 29 of the 38 close contacts of the patient and put them under quarantine. Seven others had left Fujian while local health authorities are trying to find the rest two in the province.

http://crofsblogs.typepad.com/h5n1/2009/05/hong-kong-two-more-imported-h1n1-cases-confirmed.html

The 20-year-old woman, who studies in New York, developed symptoms on May 19. She sat in seat 31K of flight CX831 and failed the temperature check upon arrival at the Hong Kong airport. She was sent to Princess Margaret Hospital by ambulance and is now stable.

The Mainland man sat in seat 50H of flight UA869 and developed symptoms when he was on the flight. He did not pass the temperature check and was sent to Princess Margaret Hospital immediately. He is in stable condition.

The centre will trace passengers who sat in the nearest seven rows to the two patients. Passengers who had been on the same flights with the patients should call 2125 1111.

Specializes in Too many to list.

Australia raises swine flu alert level

http://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/1018743/Australia-upgrades-swine-flu-alert

Australia's swine flu alert has been raised to containment level after confirmation of the first victims who had not travelled overseas recently.

Health authorities are concerned that neither a 17-year-old Victorian boy nor a 15-year-old South Australian girl with the H1N1 virus has travelled recently or been in contact with anyone carrying the disease.

"We are concerned about those cases so we want to jump on them and we want to make sure their contacts are given tamiflu so that we contain that particular opportunity," he told reporters on Friday. There are now 11 cases of the virus in Australia.

The priority now was containing how many people were infected with swine flu. The contain phase means the government is ready to distribute as many of the 8.7 million cases of tamiflu and relenza medicine it needs, Federal Health Minister Nicola Roxon told reporters.

"We've already taken precautionary steps to ensure the stockpile is being stored in Commonwealth facilities across the country and can be moved to particular states without any delay," she said.

The phase also deals with tracing contacts of people with the disease and working out how they got it, a public health advertising campaign advising people what to do and border protection to stop people with the disease getting in.

If the disease spreads further the alert level could be upgraded again, which would involve social distancing measures such as cancelling mass gatherings, school and childcare centre closures, workers in certain workplaces being ordered to stay home and public transport re-scheduling.

"It is important to emphasise that all of the cases we've had to date have been experiencing fairly mild symptoms so we do encourage the public to remember there is no cause for alarm," she said.

She said the disease was most likely to affect children and young people, pregnant women, asthmatics, diabetics and "the grossly obese".

She said people should not go to work or school or attend other public gatherings if they have the flu, practice good personal hygiene, regularly wash their hands, cover their mouth and nose when coughing or sneezing and stay at least one metre from anyone who is unwell.

Those diagnosed with the virus have been given anti-viral medication and quarantined. Of the 12 cases confirmed, seven are in Victoria, two in New South Wales, two in South Australia and one in Queensland. Another 28 people have been tested and some of those results are expected on Friday.

Specializes in Too many to list.

WHO will redefine pandemic

http://www.virology.ws/2009/05/23/who-will-redefine-pandemic/

Apparently members of the United Nations don’t like the fact that WHO has been using ‘pandemic’ to describe the global spread of the new H1N1 influenza strains. They feel that the word pandemic implies that the virus is lethal and capable of causing many deaths - like the 1918 strain of influenza. Problem is, the new H1N1 strain isn’t any more lethal than seasonal strains of the virus. Apparently using the p-word gets everyone frightened as pandemic preparedness plans shift into gear.

According to the virology textbooks (one of which I wrote), the word pandemic means ‘global epidemic’. Even wikipedia has a benign definition: “A pandemic (from Greek παν pan all + δήμος demos people) is an epidemic of infectious disease that spreads through populations across a large region; for instance a continent, or even worldwide.”

WHO redefining pandemic is absurd. Pandemic is an epidemiological definition that has nothing to do with virulence. A pandemic of influenza occurs when a new viral strain emerges to which the population has little or no immunity. Although pandemic is most frequently associated with influenza virus, other infectious agents may cause worldwide epidemics. The world is currently in the midst of an AIDS pandemic, one of the worst in history.

(hat tip crofsblog)

Swine Flu - Why Our Continued Concern Is Warranted

http://afludiary.blogspot.com/2009/05/fear-of-fluing.html

This essay from Avian Flu Diary very thoroughly sums up the reasons why.

I have said it before and I will say it again. All this is coming after years of downsizing, downsizing, downsizing by the health care community in the US. Another round of downsizing just occurred when this recent economic downturn came upon us quite suddenly. The last bad year for flu in my memory was 1999/2000. The health care systems in US and Europe were pushed to the brink. I don't know about Europe but in USA we lost about 25% of our hospitals since 2000. IF they could get a vaccine up and running by late fall it will help a lot but I don't think there is anyway of dealing with the crush. I am glad I am no longer on the front lines.

Specializes in Too many to list.

Iceland

http://www.icenews.is/index.php/2009/05/23/swine-flu-in-iceland/

I am not sure that this epidemiologist is correct in some of what he saying. Unlike SARS, influenza is supposed to be contagious even before you start showing symptoms. And the swine flu virus is very transmissible...

I am thinking that by immunisation medicine that they are talking about Tamiflu.

Swine flu came to Iceland from New York; the infected person arrived before the weekend and became ill shortly after. Briem says that the person was not showing any symptoms on arrival and would therefore not have infected anybody else onboard the flight to Iceland.

According to information from epidemiologists, it seems likely four other people are also infected in the capital region and South Iceland. All are believed to be members of the same family.

Iceland has enough immunisation medicine for a third of all inhabitants and it is being left to doctors' discretion who, if anybody, needs to be immunised.

(hat tip crofsblog)

http://www.dhmh.state.md.us/swineflu/faq.html

Q. How long is someone with H1N1 influenza contagious to others?

A: This is not known for sure, but CDC guidance is that an infected person should be assumed to be contagious (capable of infecting others) from one day before symptoms start until they are symptom-free. In general, even if symptoms improve rapidly, someone with H1N1 influenza virus infection should be considered potentially contagious for up to 7 days after the start of symptoms. Someone who is ill longer than 7 days after symptoms start should be considered potentially contagious until symptoms have resolved. Children, especially younger children, might be contagious for longer periods.

Kuwait

http://crofsblogs.typepad.com/h5n1/2009/05/us-soldiers-confirmed-as-first-h1n1-cases-in-kuwait.html

U.S. soldiers have been confirmed as the first cases in Kuwait with the new H1N1 flu, the state news agency KUNA reported on Saturday, citing a government official.

The swine flu virus was detected in an unspecified number of soldiers transiting through Kuwait. Some remained quarantined in their military base in Kuwait for treatment and some had left the country, KUNA said.

(hat tip crofsblog)

Iceland

http://www.icenews.is/index.php/2009/05/23/swine-flu-in-iceland/

I am not sure that this epidemiologist is correct in some of what he saying. Unlike SARS, influenza is supposed to be contagious even before you start showing symptoms. And the swine flu virus is very transmissible...

I am thinking that by immunisation medicine that they are talking about Tamiflu.

(hat tip crofsblog)

http://www.dhmh.state.md.us/swineflu/faq.html

KuwaitSomething that all these post point to is that it is on it's way and running. There is very little chance of containing it now. Not that there was ever much chance of containing influenza. Maybe closing school and wearing mask will slow it a bit but stop it, I doubt it.

Specializes in Too many to list.

Japan

Although the title of this news article contains the word "panic," this sounds like the Japanese are simply being practical, carrying out essential functions, and delaying others to slow the spread of the flu. If they can do that effectively, it will help relieve some stress on the health care system that would come with many people getting sick at once. Because even though this flu is mostly mild, some of the cases are going to be more severe as the experience in the the US and Mexico indicates.

http://english.donga.com/srv/service.php3?bicode=060000&biid=2009052372388

Japan is taking major precautions against the outbreak of a new type of swine flu, which has spread to Osaka and Kobe and threatens to hit Tokyo and its population of more than 10 million. Japan's government, schools and companies are on high alert over the flu. Prime Minister Taro Aso even appeared on a television program Thursday to ask his people to stay calm.

According to the Tourism Ryokan Association of Osaka and Kyoto, reservations amounting to 360,000 nights at hotels or other lodging facilities were canceled from Saturday through Thursday.

Travel agencies and hotels in the two cities are expected to suffer losses of 4.3 billion yen (45.7 million U.S. dollars), so they asked for financial support from the government.

Most Japanese schools canceled field trips usually scheduled this month and the next. Around 4,000 schools in the regions affected by the virus were also closed.

Tens of thousands of masked spectators visited the Expo '70 Stadium to watch the Asian Football Confederation Champions League match late Wednesday. Unmasked spectators were banned from entering the stadium.

Schools and companies asked students and employees to wear masks but the masks were sold out.

In an Osaka court, the judge, prosecutors, lawyers and defendants appeared with masks on their faces a few days ago, along with the audience. Most daycare centers, kindergartens and nursing homes were closed in and around Japan`s second-largest city.

More female workers also took a leave of absence to care for their babies and parents.

+ Add a Comment