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www.healthbr.com
We have the capability to supply 1.5 million dosages of the drug within four to six weeks,” he added. No approach had yet been made by either the World Health Organisation (WHO) or the Indian government, he added. WHO on Monday raised its flu pandemic alert level from three to four amid global concern over swine flu. Mexico, the outbreak’s epicentre, has raised its probable death toll to 152 and cases have been confirmed across the world.
tamiflu-online.stimulhosting.com
I did see the allergist and i am taking shots to stop the coughing, plus I made a big life change in my house to stop the coughing.
tamiflu-online.stimulhosting.com
Why did Tamiflu manufacturer predict a 531% increase in sales in 2009.
www.nytimes.com
Six years of worrying about bird flu did much to prepare the United States for the current swine flu outbreak, federal officials and an independent monitoring group said Thursday, but they cautioned that there were still gaps in planning. After the H5N1 avian flu emerged widely in Asia in 2003, killing about 60 percent of those infected by it, many countries took steps to head off the crisis that would emerge if that virus were to acquire the ability to jump easily from human to human. It has not, but a number of the measures were helpful. These are some of them:
¶The federal government stockpiled 50 million courses of Tamiflu.
¶New vaccine factories were opened.
¶Pandemic plans were written, and emergency drills were held.
www.rxhealthdrugs.com
Tamiflu (oseltamivir phosphate) is an antiviral. It works by stopping the flu virus from reproducing within the body. Buy dsicount drugs from online pharmacy www.rxhealthdrugs.com
Posted by selenamiler (who is an author) with 1 comment on Fri May 29 2009 at 13:43 UTC | info | related
stopandemic.com
All the information you need in order to protect yourself from the deadly influenza virus
www.nytimes.com
The swine flu virus did not result from a laboratory accident, the World Health Organization said Thursday, working to debunk rumors started by an Australian virologist and circulated by news outlets all over the world.
“We took this very seriously,” Dr. Keiji Fukuda, the agency’s deputy director general, said of the virologist’s assertion. “But the evidence suggests that this is a naturally occurring virus, not a laboratory-derived virus.”
In a telephone news conference, Dr. Fukuda also expressed support for drug companies’ making a generic version of the antiviral drug Tamiflu. Many poor countries have no stockpiles of the drug.
Almost 6,500 confirmed cases of the new H1N1 flu have been reported from 33 countries, and 65 people have died, the W.H.O. said. About 4,300 confirmed and probable cases, with 3 deaths, were reported in the United States.
The virus rumor was started by Adrian J. Gibbs, a retired plant virologist from the Australian National University, who previously published work in the journal Science questioning the idea, now accepted, that the 1918 pandemic started as a bird flu.
Dr. Gibbs, who had studied the gene sequences of the swine flu virus posted on public data banks, argued that it must have been grown in eggs, the medium used in vaccine laboratories. He reached that conclusion, he said, because the new virus was not closely related to known ones and because it had more of the amino acid lysine and more mutations than typical strains of swine flu.
His theory was reported by Bloomberg News on Tuesday. Even though scientists at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention were skeptical and some prominent virologists openly derisive, news outlets have repeated and magnified the theory, adding speculation about bioterrorism that even Dr. Gibbs repudiated. He was also interviewed Thursday on the ABC News program “Good Morning America.”
www.washingtonpost.com
The swine flu epidemic may seem mild now, with relatively few deaths even as the virus infects thousands in at least 33 countries. But experts worry it could mutate into something more dangerous _ making the question of who should get antiviral therapy ever more important.
The World Health Organization said Tuesday that countries should save antiviral drugs for those patients most at risk, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention added that pregnant women in particular should take the drugs if they are diagnosed with swine flu _ even though the effects on the fetus are not completely known.
European countries have been using antiviral drugs such as Tamiflu and Relenza much more aggressively than the United States and Mexico _ administering it whenever possible in an attempt to contain the virus before it spreads more widely. Instead, the WHO recommends that antivirals be targeted mainly at people already suffering from other diseases or complications _ such as pregnancy _ that can lower a body's defenses against flu, WHO medical expert Dr. Nikki Shindo said. Pregnant women are more likely to suffer pneumonia when they catch flu, and flu infections raised the risk of premature birth in past epidemics. A pregnant Texas woman who had swine flu died last week, and at least 20 other pregnant women have swine flu, including some with severe complications.
Science 324 (5928), 705 (08 May 2009)
When it comes to treatment, there's good news and bad news about the new H1N1 swine flu strain circling the globe. Two antiviral drugs can squelch it and are currently the best defense, given that a vaccine will not be ready for months. But stocks of Roche's Tamiflu (oseltamivir) and GlaxoSmithKline's Relenza (zanamivir) are too small to protect everyone in a worst-case scenario outbreak; health officials also worry that the virus could become resistant to the drugs.
tamiflu.pbworks.com
Tamiflu is used for preventing the flu. It is also used for treating the flu in patients within 2 days of the onset of flu symptoms.
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