Bird Flu

Started by French Tip4 pages

Bird Flu

Anyone else preparing for it?

Introduction

The rapid spread of bird flu, which is not uncommon among chickens and other fowl, has caught the attention of global health authorities.

What is it?

avian influenza that routinely infect birds around the world. The current outbreak is caused by a strain known as H5N1, which is highly contagious among birds and rapidly fatal. Unlike many other strains of avian influenza, it can be transmitted to humans, causing severe illness and death.
Bird flu is not the same as SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome). Although their symptoms are similar, SARS is caused by completely different viruses. Influenza viruses also are more contagious and cannot be as readily contained as SARS by isolating people who have the infection.

Why the concern?

Influenza viruses are highly unstable and have the ability to mutate rapidly, potentially jumping from one animal species to another. Scientists fear the bird flu virus could evolve into a form that is easily spread between people, resulting in an extremely contagious and lethal disease. This could happen if someone already infected with the human flu virus catches the bird flu. The two viruses could recombine inside the victim’s body, producing a hybrid that could readily spread from person to person.
The resulting virus likely would be something humans have never been exposed to before. With no immune defenses, the infection could cause devastating illness, such as occurred in the 1918-19 Spanish flu pandemic, which killed an estimated 40 million to 50 million worldwide.

Transmission
In rural areas, the H5N1 virus is easily spread from farm to farm among domestic poultry through the feces of wild birds. The virus can survive for up to four days at 71 F (22 C) and more than 30 days at 32 F (0 C). If frozen, it can survive indefinitely.
So far in this outbreak, human cases have been blamed on direct contact with infected chickens and their droppings. People who catch the virus from birds can pass it on to other humans, although the disease is generally milder in those who caught it from an infected person rather than from birds.

If the virus mutates and combines with a human influenza virus, it could be spread through person-to-person transmission in the same way the ordinary human flu virus is spread.

History

The current outbreak of bird flu is different from earlier ones in that officials have been unable to contain its spread. An outbreak in 1997 in Hong Kong was the first time the virus had spread to people, but it was much more quickly contained. A total of 18 people were hospitalized with six reported deaths. About 1.5 million chickens were killed in an effort to remove the source of the virus.
Unlike the 1997 scare, this outbreak has spread more rapidly to other countries, increasing its exposure to people in varied locations and raising the likelihood that the strain will combine with a human influenza virus.

Symptoms

Bird flu can cause a range of symptoms in humans. Some patients report fever, cough, sore throat and muscle aches. Others suffer from eye infections, pneumonia, acute respiratory distress and other severe and life-threatening complications.

Treatment

Flu drugs exist that may be used both to prevent people from catching bird flu and to treat those who have it. The virus appears to be resistant to two older generic flu drugs, amantadine and rimantadine. However, the newer flu drugs Tamiflu and Relenza are expected to work – though supplies could run out quickly if an outbreak occurs.
Currently there is no vaccine

Prevention

Rapid elimination of the H5N1 virus among infected birds and other animals is essential to preventing a major outbreak. The World Health Organization recommends that infected or exposed flocks of chickens and other birds be killed in order to help prevent further spread of the virus and reduce opportunities for human infection. However, the agency warns that safety measures must be taken to prevent exposure to the virus among workers involved in culling.

My fathers' are stocking up on canned foods and water.

I would, but I frankly don't care. Pretty sure we have enough food anyway.

Big on the news here....Ahhhhh...so we die...First it was the volcano, now this.....Hey, take your echanasia (sp?)...helps boots your immune system..

Had a bad case of pneumonia before...So guess, I'll be the first to go.......I'll stop in before I go and say hi.

It's just another scaremonger tactic.

"Look at what it did in 1918!!!"

Yes, that's 1918. Not 2005.

-AC

Originally posted by Alpha Centauri
It's just another scaremonger tactic.

"Look at what it did in 1918!!!"

Yes, that's 1918. Not 2005.

-AC

Yes it was 1918; but what if what happened in 1918 happens again? I'm preparing.

I don't really think anything is going to happen, but it's better to be safe than sorry.

There's no vaccine, but unless we've all been taking a bit of a nap, it would be wise to assume we're medically better off now than we were then.

Let's just take time to realise that. Let's also look at all the other fake "We're dying" scenarios:

/How many times have there been asteroids coming to destroy us that now aren't? A few.

/Ebola virus. "Gonna wreck havoc on the world." Yeah.

/SARS. Same deal.

/CJD-BSE. Same deal.

The only problem would be if this actually was serious and it turned out to be a boy crying wolf scenario. How likely is that? Not that likely.

Our doctors, nurses, governments are all on the case of preparing for it now. Don't see any worry.

-AC

Killer Bees, anyone?

What killer bees?

Oh...hahaha oh I see.

-AC

Originally posted by Alpha Centauri
There's no vaccine, but unless we've all been taking a bit of a nap, it would be wise to assume we're medically better off now than we were then.

Let's just take time to realise that. Let's also look at all the other fake "We're dying" scenarios:

/How many times have there been asteroids coming to destroy us that now aren't? A few.

/Ebola virus. "Gonna wreck havoc on the world." Yeah.

/SARS. Same deal.

/CJD-BSE. Same deal.

The only problem would be if this actually was serious and it turned out to be a boy crying wolf scenario. How likely is that? Not that likely.

Our doctors, nurses, governments are all on the case of preparing for it now. Don't see any worry.

-AC

Well that's just your opinion. Unless you can foresee the future and can tell me that you are 100% sure that nothing will happen. I'm going to stock up.

There are alot of things that were "unlikely to happen" that happened.

I'm not a bird, so I don't care...

Feds Prepare For Super-Flu Disaster

2000 Turkeys Die In Turkey

Hang on...stock up?

Why?

Is that so you don't have to leave the house, or do you perceive a food shortage?

Originally posted by French Tip
Well that's just your opinion. Unless you can foresee the future and can tell me that you are 100% sure that nothing will happen. I'm going to stock up.

There are alot of things that were "unlikely to happen" that happened.

And there are even more that were likely that haven't. Considering that is the more likely in this situation.

-AC

Pandemics are bound to happen every so many decades so i dont know why you think its a scare tactic AC

I hope this won't affect the poultry population.

I can't picture in my mind all the KFC's of the world going out of business. 🙁

😛

Because being realistic, look at the example used to show it as a threat.

"It killed *insert amount* in 1918."

1918, not 2003. To even believe we're as unprepared and incapable of dealing with this as we were then is stupid. They tried it with ebola, SARS, CJD/BSE.

-AC

How can WHO be prepared if its a new mutation of the virus ?

They dont know its composition, so they cannot know its remedy.

Originally posted by BackFire
Killer Bees, anyone?

lol good point

Originally posted by GCG
How can WHO be prepared if its a new mutation of the virus ?

They dont know its composition, so they cannot know its remedy.

There are lots of things without cures that are rapidly treatable. There's no cure for cancer but people survive it and live after.

-AC

Originally posted by Alpha Centauri
There are lots of things without cures that are rapidly treatable. There's no cure for cancer but people survive it and live after.

-AC

That we, this generartion, have been taking innoculations from a young age against the various viruses around is already a good start. If the virus were to infect a pig, the jump (mutation) from pig to human would be much more likely.

As you said, there is no cure to cancer, but a lot of people die from it, and correct me if im wrong most of those effected die as a result.