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Friday, May 01, 2009
Michael Fumento :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Price of a Porcine Panic
by Michael Fumento
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There's absolute panic over an outbreak of swine flu. "Projections are that this virus will kill 1 million Americans," the nation's top health official has warned. But the date is 1976. And the projection proves off by 999,999 deaths. However, a hastily-developed vaccine went on to kill or crippled hundreds. Sadly, the current hysteria outbreak threatens devastation on a worldwide scale.

A calm perspective of the current outbreak of the virus now known as influenza A (H1N1) would compare it to seasonal flu. According to the CDC, the seasonal flu infects between 15 to 60 million Americans each year (5% to 20%), hospitalizes about 200,000 and kills about 36,000. That comes out to over 800 hospitalizations and over 250 deaths each day during flu season.

Worldwide deaths are 250,000 to 500,000, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), or about 700 to 1,400 per day spread out over the year.

No matter that few bothered to make this comparison during the 2003 SARS hysteria, which caused only 8,096 cases and 774 deaths worldwide with no U.S. deaths.

There's no hint that influenza A (H1N1) is either easier to transmit than seasonal flu or more lethal. The symptoms are the same, and swine flu cases so far have generally been quite mild.

As of this writing 13 countries have officially reported 365 cases of influenza A(H1N1), yet the only deaths have been Mexican. It’s not a “puzzle” as to why. All infectious diseases strike much harder in underdeveloped countries, partly because of poorer health care but primarily because the people are less healthy to begin with. Only 322 of those 8,096 SARS cases were in developed nations.

The moniker "swine flu" clearly spooks many. But pigs, with the help of birds, routinely transmit seasonal flu to humans. "Swine flu" simply means it contains some pig flu genetic material. If this eccentricity made it that inherently more dangerous than a pure human flu, the 1976 strain wouldn't have caused merely 500 infections with a 0.02% death rate.

No, influenza A (H1N1) won’t become "another Spanish Flu of 1918-19," as pig flu panic purveyors claim. Nothing will. It’s been 90 years. Back then we were hobbled by a world war, general health in developed nations was much poorer than in Mexico today, and we’ve since developed things called "antibiotics" – as well as antivirals, pneumonia vaccines and other medical tools. In all flu outbreaks, including the Spanish one, the vast majority of deaths come from secondary bacterial infections.

Not coincidentally, one of the "worrisome" similarities between Spanish flu and swine flu is that both strains are of the H1N1 subtype. But--ahem!--So is one of the major subtypes of the latest seasonal flu.

Another panic prompter is that so far influenza A (H1N1) appears to disproportionately affect younger people. Assuming this holds up, one explanation would be that older persons have received some immunity from previous exposure to a similar strain. Alarming? In any case, the stronger immune systems of younger people could explain the apparent mildness of symptoms outside of Mexico.

It's true we have no vaccine for this flu. But two years ago, the seasonal flu shot proved ineffective against the primary strain and one of the two secondary strains. There was no appreciable increase in cases or deaths. That said, it would make sense to include swine flu as one of the three strains in this fall's seasonal flu vaccine. Continued...

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About The Author

Michael Fumento is a, journalist, and attorney specializing in science and health issues as well as author of BioEvolution: How Biotechnology is Changing Our World .

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Oh Relax...It's Nothing...REALLY!
Yes and we shouldn't worry in the slightest that the fraudulent, two-faced SAPPY NAPPY and her CDC cohorts refuse to close down the border. Cuz hey...It's only the Mexicans who have died from this flu! They can come here and infect us with their pig disease! Not a problem for the crowd who waddles in the mud in D.C. The filthy, diseased people won't be touching them, so what do they care! There are only emergency rooms of the infected in California...but hey, we needn't worry!

And IT WILL make the people in the United States more susceptible to this, next go around. CDC just wants to find out who it is that knows what kind of crap they are pulling. But hey, let's keep applauding articles like this that tells us not to worry-it is all for naught. And just go on and ignore the simple fact that the CDC is being derelict of duty. And I don't give a rip who tells them not to do their job! It is their job to close the source of infection, which is MEXICO, and tell Obabba and his filthy POS to go straight to hell!!!

To Jimbo
The problem is that people have used, overused, and misused antibiotics so much that the bad bugs have developed resistance to them. People have pressured doctors to give them antibiotics for the common cold, which they don't help, and for minor infections that would have run their course without treatment. I've also read that eating meat from animals that have been dosed with antibiotics can help us build up resistance to antibiotics but I don't know whether that is true---maybe somebody reading this will know and inform us. Sounds reasonable.

I'm with you, it's hard to imagine that a person in modern times would be antibiotic-proof but, sadly, it does happen. I knew a woman only about 42 who died of meningitis---no antibiotic would help. This was about ten years ago. And I also remember when our neighbor died of strep throat in the days before antibiotics were available, that would have been about 1938. So it's dramatic to see what's happened so fast, from no antibiotics to antibiotics rendered useless.
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