https://umconnect.umn.edu/chanpresentation is around 15 minutes long but is chillingsearched for related threads, but they are too old to bumpthe only thing that that keeps H5N1 from becoming a pandemic is that its not easily transmissible from person to person, yet.current H5N1 case mortality rate is 70% it was only 33% in 1997 when it first made international newsDr Margaret Chan tells it exactly like it is... the stark reality of the situation[Edited on December 10, 2007 at 12:07 AM. Reason : The great influenza is a good read for those interested in the 1918 flu]
12/10/2007 12:07:06 AM
There's nothing I hate more than webpages that autoresize with your permission.
12/10/2007 2:04:59 AM
you can disable that in Firefox, IIRC>
12/10/2007 2:06:08 AM
I'm not afraid of no stinkin bird flu.Quit with your fearmongering.
12/10/2007 2:17:48 AM
This was more interesting when the topic was Ebola and the actor was Dustin Hoffman.
12/10/2007 2:59:25 AM
yeah, it was a good movie, but influenza will happen.it happens on average 3 times per century, we are due.some people will be the walking dead when they get to the hospital(they will already be blue) nothing can be done for themsome will be sick as shit and may or may not live even if they have access to and oscillator(high frequency ventilator used for acute respiratory distress syndrome) btw Duke only has about 8 oscillators for the entire hospital.the third group will be the people who will be sick for weeks but will get better and be immune.Skilled NURSING will save these people.AND its pretty much a crap shoot as to who will be in each group.I will say that in 1918 the case fatality rate was highest among our age groupthe nursing shortage will become even worse becaus most of the nurses aren't going to show up to work, and a large percentage of nurses and doctors are going to die at work[Edited on December 10, 2007 at 4:52 AM. Reason : .]http://www.youtube.com/v/3K8KvHxh1VI&rel=1[Edited on December 10, 2007 at 5:03 AM. Reason : .]
12/10/2007 4:49:50 AM
12/10/2007 5:46:56 AM
12/10/2007 6:06:26 AM
12/10/2007 6:47:54 AM
^ yes, haven't you heard vaccines are almost never harmful to your health. Don't question it. The government says so. And even if they're not, its for the greater good so you should feel ashamed...[\sarcasm]
12/10/2007 7:22:03 AM
We're due for a population correction anyway. If a few of the genetically less desireable elements die off, so be it; and I say this will full acceptance that I could be one of those who die. *shrug*]
12/10/2007 7:40:27 AM
oh right, i forgot. the government is just trying to control us all with vaccines and spread their own infectious diseases throughout the population seriously - find me a credible study or case where modern vaccines have caused more harm then they've prevented, or where the flu vaccine has, i don't know, killed more than the 30,000 Americans who die from the flue each year.
12/10/2007 8:21:48 AM
death is underrated
12/10/2007 8:43:47 AM
buy stock on coffin manufacturers, got it.
12/10/2007 9:03:55 AM
^^^There is some speculation and have been some studies that suggest that the much higher rates of autism today could be due, in part, to child vaccinations. Nothing conclusive, though.I was looking for some links to back that up and all I could find were studies that said although early signs of autism show up around the time children are given the MMR vaccination, there have been no links found. Nothing to see here.[Edited on December 10, 2007 at 9:59 AM. Reason : d]
12/10/2007 9:49:32 AM
12/10/2007 12:05:39 PM
12/10/2007 12:19:51 PM
12/10/2007 12:46:48 PM
12/10/2007 1:15:03 PM
Things we have going for us:-Hygiene difference (we got showers, soap, and we know how to use them regularly)-Safer food (wait, the FDA does something good?)-Geographic Isolation (Atlantic & Pacific ftw)-High Quality Medical Care (paging Dr. IWentToMedSchoolInTheUS)-Leading Parmacutical Companies (Never thought I'd be happy to have GSK down the road)-Comparatively Low Population Density (Goto Asia and you too can be a Sardine!)I think that we, as US citizens, will likely not feel the immediate brunt of whatever the next outbreak will be. One would think that the most probable scenario would involve a highly dense populated area of the globe with poor sanitation, little to no available medical care, horrible food and water quality, and no access to drugs and vaccinations. China and India spring to mind as extremely dense populations. Africa, China and SE Asia qualify for the sanitation and medical care parts of the equation.Island countries, and those that are isolated from the rest of the world (the Americas) will quarantine themselves as soon as something vastly threatening starts to appear. It may suck, but its the responsible thing to do for the population.The downstream effects would be felt worldwide. Huge loss of life, interruption of production and agriculture, a whole new slew of regulations, restrictions, vaccinations and research. Just don't forget that thinning out the population is a part of the natural cycle of life as its been observed.
12/10/2007 1:24:39 PM
12/10/2007 1:33:05 PM
12/10/2007 1:54:40 PM
HUR, I understand that you're saying people from the US freely work/visit the areas that I listed, however I'm not sure you're looking at this from the right perspective. It's a lot easier for a disease to transcend national borders when the countries in question share proximity. Birds (the current example is an avian flu, right?) can fly b/t Mongolia, China, Russia, etc a lot easier than they can from China to California. Masses of people can traverse the same examples with the same level of ease. In your mind, would it be easier to completely stop all travel across a land border, or say "Ok, no one flies to/from that country anymore."? I'd point to the effectiveness in controlling our own southern border as a good example. If you got the impression I was implying our geographic isolation = being completely safe, that's not the way it was intended, nor is it what I said. And yes, geographic isolation DOES exist in the modern world, and rather effectively I might add. Do you have a cat or dog? Tried taking it to Australia, Japan, Great Britain, etc? All are perfect examples of geographically isolated quarantine procedures for biological reasons.
12/10/2007 2:03:02 PM
12/10/2007 2:38:59 PM
anyone here work for a large drug company?
12/10/2007 5:02:13 PM
no, but i work for a company that designs a very large percentage of all the plants that research and mass produce new drugs
12/10/2007 5:04:07 PM
Look.. we're all busy being scared over Global Warming and Terrorists.... this will just have to wait.
12/10/2007 7:52:01 PM
12/10/2007 8:57:26 PM
Duke has around 100 regular vents availableand the population of the triangle is?get the point now?
12/10/2007 9:01:06 PM
12/10/2007 9:16:18 PM
12/10/2007 9:21:39 PM
I actually worked on the flu threat fairly extensively in Boettcher's National Security class.
12/10/2007 9:30:30 PM
Any banter on pandemics is fear mongering. Go ahead and spread the FEAR. When people start selling of their stocks during doomsday; I'll gobble them up and be rich when 2 months later everyone realizes it was a hoax.
12/10/2007 9:46:37 PM
Any discussion of pandemics is fearmongering?
12/10/2007 9:51:52 PM
12/10/2007 10:45:51 PM
my main point is to prepare for it as if it were a natural disasteronly prepare for 3 months, the first wave will last about that long. The second wave will be worse from a pathological standpoint but whatever.im saying avoid the hospitals, the people who survived the 1918 flu did so because of good supportive nursing care, mainly keeping them hydrated, ANYONE can do this if they take the time to educate themselves on how to do it properly. You can take care of your sick family members with mostly OTC medication.state of the art med care wont save flu victims this time... and most nurses will choose to stay home and care for their loved ones rather than risk exposure at work because we dont have enough personal protective equipment to keep ourselves safe.As in most situations people with common sense, a plan, and actually take the threat seriously will inherit the earth(after the flu is done with it)
12/10/2007 11:20:21 PM
12/10/2007 11:27:24 PM
12/10/2007 11:38:25 PM
Where's that thread about what your plan is when shit hits the fan?
12/10/2007 11:50:20 PM
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22192270/Fearmongering alarmism or genuine threat? Not sure this illness really deserves an article on the front page of MSNBC.
12/11/2007 2:51:46 AM
12/11/2007 2:58:44 AM
Thankfully my family has a nice little farm we can retreat to. Complete with land, guns, plenty of wildlife to shoot, place to grow crops...etc.
12/11/2007 3:02:37 AM
Wouldn't happen to have any chickens there, would ya?
12/11/2007 3:03:51 AM
Nope. Plenty of deer to shoot, too. Even saw a bear once.
12/11/2007 3:05:12 AM
No, because of the bird.... nevermind.
12/11/2007 3:06:31 AM
12/11/2007 3:09:46 AM
^^ What happens then if we're attacked with bird flu, foot and mouth disease, AND mad cow/wasting at the same time?your farm does you no good. Plus, it just makes you a bigger target for the looting/pillaging
12/11/2007 3:11:00 AM
12/11/2007 3:13:33 AM
the FDA has asked N95 respirator manufacturers like 3M to make an N95 for the general public, these will be available next year.they will have instructions on how to fit them properly.so its a step in the right direction
12/11/2007 4:43:03 AM
^^^Having a place to escape to, a way to sustain yourself, and plenty of options for self-defense is important.This ain't no joke, dude.I've got a place to go where food practically grows naturally, access to self-defense materials, and a ton of those simple how-to survival books from the '70s. Even if my city ass is stuck up in the mountains alone, I can read my way through surviving.
12/11/2007 5:37:04 AM