Our local Hillary Clinton is now Mrs. Survival Woman
12/11/2007 10:20:36 AM
12/11/2007 1:53:00 PM
12/11/2007 2:01:41 PM
12/11/2007 2:13:40 PM
I've never had the flu or a flu shot, either. Main reason I don't get the shot is because I'm young and otherwise healthy, and there's a limited number of shots -- go ahead and take mine and give it to someone for whom the bug poses more of a threat.And, again, when the next flu pandemic comes, in all likelihood it will be because the guys who develop it every year guessed wrong, which means the initial round of flu shots will be useless anyway.
12/11/2007 2:25:47 PM
^^ My point isn't that they're ultimately useless... though I did catch that tone from some others.My point is:1. I don't know of (offhand) a Government agency that has a spotless record when it comes to overstating foreign threats and understating internal threats. (side effects of the vaccine here being labeled an 'internal threat' and the virus itself being the 'foreign threat')2. It's kind of two sided to completely disregard the CDC's recommendations for who needs a flu shot, and then turn around and assume they're giving 100% disclosure on risks & the frequency of those side effects.The greater evil in all this discussion is the scaremongering by Govt agencies... and we don't even need to get into the massive profits to be made by the drug companies manufacturing the vaccine.
12/11/2007 2:27:55 PM
12/11/2007 2:57:50 PM
^ I'm still confused as to why you think I think it's useless. I don't fit the parameters to being high risk, I'm in reasonably good health, and the last time I was diagnosed with the flu it was bearable. That's why I don't do it personally.I don't have a problem with it being offered, I have a problem with it being pushed & the scare tactics.
12/11/2007 3:01:05 PM
oh, whoops. I read and responded to your quote as:
12/11/2007 3:06:33 PM
wait, maybe I missed something with the whole flu shot thingif the flu shot is either a based off the previous year's strain or a shot in the dark prediction, isn't it still going to be useless in preventing a pandemic?i guess what I'm getting at, is wouldn't a pandemic require the mutation of a viral strain into something way more contagious and/or deadly than what has been seen before? A flu vaccine based off an older strain wouldn't do anything, would it? All it would do is keep you from getting the old version of the virus.
12/11/2007 5:45:45 PM
a vaccine for pandemic flu cannot be formulated until 4-6 months AFTER the pandemic has begun.Aventis is working on an H5N1 vaccine currently.It may or may not work, and certainly the virus is mutating faster than scientists can tweak the "old" vaccine.if pandemic flu is made up of mostly avian influenza, we will have no natural immunity to its receptors.Part of the reason H5N1 isnt easily transmissible from person to person is its receptor site. Apparently it needs to get deep into lung tissue to "take hold" if it mutates and adapts it could then attach itself higher up in our respiratory tracts. If that happens then casual encounters can expose you to the virus.most people that get H5N1 first get it from being in very close proximity to infected birds, if they pass it to another person- its usually to a family member
12/11/2007 10:16:56 PM
i'm thinking it might not be a bad idea to invest in a nice respirator and a shit-ton of freeze-dried food and bottled water.
12/11/2007 10:34:03 PM
good thing I built that bunker
12/11/2007 11:51:43 PM
MRE's to the rescue!
12/11/2007 11:51:55 PM
I'm not skerd. I think i'm more likely to die in the aftermath of a nuclear holocaust with Iran thanks to George W's diplomacy skills then of avain bird flu[Edited on December 12, 2007 at 12:25 AM. Reason : l]
12/12/2007 12:24:21 AM
^Well, you're not.
12/12/2007 12:32:24 AM
12/12/2007 8:41:43 AM
12/16/2007 12:18:01 PM
INFLUENZA A (H2N3) VIRUS, SWINE - USA*************************************A ProMED-mail post<http://www.promedmail.org>ProMED-mail is a program of theInternational Society for Infectious Diseases<http://www.isid.org>Date: 17-18 Dec 2007Source: Proc Natl Acad Science USA Early Edition [edited]<http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abstract/0710286104v1?etoc>[Below is the abstract of a paper in the online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA (PNAS), which describes the characterization of an influenza virus with potential to become the precursor of a human pandemic virus.]Identification of H2N3 influenza A viruses from swine in the United States- --------------------------------------------------------------------------By Wenjun Ma, Amy L Vincent, Marie R Gramer, Christy B Brockwell, Kelly M Lager, Bruce H Janke, et al. At the Department of Veterinary Diagnostic and Production Animal Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50011; Virus and Prion Diseases of Livestock Research Unit, National Animal Disease Center, Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, Ames, IA 50010; Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55108; St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, TN 38018; and Interdisciplinary Program, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN 38163Abstract- --------Although viruses of each of the 16 influenza A HA subtypes are potential human pathogens, only viruses of the H1, H2, and H3 subtype are known to have been successfully established in humans. H2 influenza viruses have been absent from human circulation since 1968, and as such they pose a substantial human pandemic risk. In this report, we isolate and characterize genetically similar avian/swine virus reassortant H2N3 influenza A viruses isolated from diseased swine from 2 farms in the United States. These viruses contained leucine at position 226 of the H2 protein, which has been associated with increased binding affinity to the mammalian alpha-2,6Gal-linked sialic acid virus receptor. Correspondingly, the H2N3 viruses were able to cause disease in experimentally infected swine and mice without prior adaptation. In addition, the swine H2N3 virus was infectious and highly transmissible in swine and ferrets. Taken together, these findings suggest that the H2N3 virus has undergone some adaptation to the mammalian host and that their spread should be very closely monitored.- -- communicated by:ProMED-mail <promed@promedmail.org>[The current concentration of attention on the potential of avian influenza A/H5N1 virus to evolve into a human pandemic pathogen should not divert attention from the presence in the environment of other potential precursors of influenza viruses with equal or perhaps greater potential to become human pandemic pathogens. - Mod.CP]
12/19/2007 2:45:57 PM
I heard that if you never get a flu shot, then youll be able to take medicine for this thing when it does finally come, and youll be ok ...Everyone else will die
12/19/2007 9:36:05 PM