By Charles Recknagel, RFE/RL
Just about everybody knows the H1N1 virus --
popularly known as swine flu -- has spread around the globe since it was first
identified in Mexico in April.
But few people realize that the spread has been so thorough that doctors now
consider the H1N1 virus to be the dominant flu strain in the world today.
That means that doctors will assume that you have
swine flu if you fall ill with influenza this season.
"At the moment, within influenza activity, we are seeing that across the globe
the majority of influenza activity is caused by the H1N1 virus," says Gregory
Hartl, a spokesperson on epidemic and pandemic diseases at the Geneva-based
World Health Organization.
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2009 H1N1 Flu (Swine Flu)
Centers For Disease Control &
Prevention |
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What are "emergency
warning signs" that should signal anyone to seek medical care
urgently?
In children:
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Fast breathing or
trouble breathing
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Bluish skin color
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Not drinking enough
fluids
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Not waking up or not
interacting
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Being so irritable
that the child does not want to be held
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Flu-like symptoms
improve but then return with fever and worse cough
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Fever with a rash
In adults:
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Difficulty breathing
or shortness of breath
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Pain or pressure in
the chest or abdomen
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Sudden dizziness
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Confusion
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Severe or persistent
vomiting
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Maureen Baker, a doctor at the Royal College of
General Practitioners in London, says that in most countries, doctors diagnose
influenza by looking at the symptoms. But symptoms of all influenza, including
swine flu, are so similar that doctors currently assume the patient has
contracted H1N1.
The only way to know for sure, says Baker, is with a laboratory test. But he
says that is time-consuming.
"In terms of a definitive 'this is definitely swine flu' [diagnosis], that is
done by taking a [nose and throat] swab and then growing the virus, and that
will take several days," he says.
Growing Sense Of Panic
In countries like Ukraine, where medical facilities are too stretched to do
extensive lab work, the growing sense of public panic over H1N1 may be fueled by
uncertainty regarding the real extent of the disease.
Even lab confirmation in ordinary hospitals may not be enough to establish
precisely which cases are H1N1 infections. Absolute precision can only be
achieved by a handful of specialized centers in a few countries that work
closely with the WHO to identify and track epidemics.

Media activist Farvartish Rezvanieh
protested the
inactivity of the Iranian officials in fighting the spread of Swine Flu.
In a symbolic gesture, Farvartish wore an H1N1 bunny suite and walked in the
streets of Tehran in order to bring public awareness about this deadly virus.
In response, one of the officials of the Health Ministry called Farvartish's
move useless and said he should be sent to a mental hospital! |
As public fears of swine flu grow with the start
of the flu season, countries including Ukraine and Afghanistan have temporarily
closed schools, while others like Serbia have extended the autumn school
vacation. In all cases, the hope is to stop the virus from spreading more
quickly.
But doctors say the prospect of falling ill with H1N1 is not something that
should create panic. There are steps one can take to diminish the chances of
being infected and, in most cases, even when people fall ill with the virus, the
flu passes after a few days.
Still, one reason swine flu has received so much public attention is that it
targets segments of the population that are not usually particularly vulnerable
to influenza -- including the young and healthy.
And John Oxford, professor of virology at Barts and The London School of
Medicine and Dentistry, says H1N1 is more dangerous than ordinary flu because of
its ability to penetrate deeper into the lungs.
Also, he adds, the strain has a "sting in its tail."
"The sting in the tail is the way it is going for pregnant women. A pregnant
woman died yesterday [November 2] in England, for example. So this is rather
unprecedented, that it is targeting pregnant women -- that is a worrying
factor," Oxford says.
"And also the number of young children. Deaths are accumulating in young
children, particularly under the age of about 5."
Predictions Difficult
More than half of the hospitalizations and nearly one-quarter of deaths in the
United States from H1N1 have involved people under the age of 25 -- something
unusual with ordinary influenza.
But predicting actual death rates from swine flu is still an uncertain science,
with new studies emerging daily. Some of these show that, even if swine flu has
been dubbed a "young persons' disease," the group most likely to die from it are
people over the age of 50 who are hospitalized with severe cases.
U.S. researchers said on November 3 that around
11 percent of 1,088 cases of swine flu reported in California between August 17
and 22 were fatal.
But while 7 percent of the hospitalized children under the age of 18 died from
swine flu, the rate of deaths among hospitalized people aged 50 years or older
was 11 percent.
The WHO's global plan for confronting swine flu centers on encouraging countries
to take preventive measures emphasizing public hygiene and encouraging them to
stockpile antiviral drugs, like Tamiflu and Relenza, to treat the most severe
cases.
In the West, governments are also investing in quantities of new vaccines in
hopes of beginning to immunize the most at-risk groups this year so that there
will be fewer people vulnerable to the disease next flu season.
But in many countries, ordinary people are already trying to take their own
measures against the disease. Sales of gauze face masks have shot up. Television
news announcers have even urged the public to buy masks, fueling a sense of
desperation.
However, doctors say face masks provide little protection for healthy people.
That is because they soon get moist from exhaled air, and lose their ability to
act as filters.
"If you are the person who is ill and you sneeze and you have got a mask on,
then wearing the mask probably reduces the chance of other people nearby
catching it," Baker says. "But if you are [a healthy person] wearing a mask all
day, then the mask become ineffective, because masks get wet and because they
stop working in any case. There are only certain, very specialized masks that
effectively filter out the size of the virus."
Oxford agrees. He says that when a population is scrambling for gauze masks,
that is a sign that the government has not adequately prepared the public for
dealing with the pandemic.
"If you see an image of a lady sitting in a bus in the Ukraine with a mask on,
once you see that image you realize, you begin to suspect, that here is a
country that has not prepared itself and it is a last-minute scramble," Oxford
says.
Wash Your Hands
Doctors say that people can best protect themselves by washing their hands
frequently with soap and avoiding putting their unwashed hands to their face.
The H1N1 virus is passed by sneezing and from contact with infected surfaces and
enters the body through the nose and mouth.
Like any pandemic, swine flu is giving rise to a host of advice from both
medical and folk remedy specialists.
Some press attention has been given to suggestions that people born before 1957
may be immune to the disease because they would have already passed successfully
through a pandemic similar to H1N1 in that year.
Baker says that theory has yet to be proven, but at least provides one
explanation why fewer older people, proportional to their numbers in the
population, are getting infected than are other population segments.
But WHO spokesman Hartl says another theory -- that people who passed through
another pandemic in 1976 are also protected -- is wrong. The virus in that
pandemic bore little similarity to the H1N1 strain.
The WHO said on October 30 that more than 5,700 people have died worldwide since
the H1N1 virus was identified some six months ago. It has already claimed the
lives of more children than seasonal flu typically does during an entire flu
season.
Ordinary seasonal influenza claims the lives of 250,000 to 500,000 people around
the world every year. Usually, nine out of 10 of those victims are people over
65 who already have health problems that make the flu makes worse.
Related Article:
Swine Flu Fears Spread From Ukraine To Afghanistan
Copyright (c) 2009 RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036. www.rferl.org
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