Riots, Shortages, Millions Die - Bush Plan Warns Dire Result

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尼古拉前执事
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Riots, Shortages, Millions Die - Bush Plan Warns Dire Result

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The New York Times
October 8, 2005
Bush Plan Shows U.S. Is Not Ready for Deadly Flu
By GARDINER HARRIS

WASHINGTON, Oct. 7 - A plan developed by the Bush administration to deal with any possible outbreak of pandemic flu shows that the United States is woefully unprepared for what could become the worst disaster in the nation's history.

A draft of the final plan, which has been years in the making and is expected to be released later this month, says that a large outbreak that began in Asia was likely, because of modern travel patterns, to reach the United States within "a few months or even weeks."

If such an outbreak occurred, hospitals would become overwhelmed; riots would engulf vaccination clinics; and even power and food would be in short supply, according to the plan, which was obtained by The New York Times.

The 381-page plan calls for quarantine and travel restrictions but concedes that such measures "are unlikely to delay introduction of pandemic disease into the U.S. by more than a month or two."

The plan's 10 supplements suggest specific ways that local and state governments should prepare now for an eventual pandemic by, for instance, drafting legal documents that would justify quarantines. Written by health officials, the plan does yet address responses by the military or other governmental departments.

The plan outlines a worst-case scenario in which more than 1.9 million Americans would die and 8.5 million would be hospitalized with costs exceeding $450 billion.

It also calls for a domestic vaccine production capacity of 600 million doses within six months, more than 10 times the present capacity.

On Friday, President Bush asked the leaders of the nation's top six vaccine producers to the White House to cajole them into increasing their domestic vaccine capacity, and the flu plan demonstrates just how monumental a task these companies have before them.

In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, the Bush administration's efforts to plan for a possible pandemic flu have become controversial, with many Democrats in Congress charging that the administration has not done enough. Many have pointed to the lengthy writing process of the flu plan as evidence of this.

But while the administration's flu plan, officially called the Pandemic Influenza Strategic Plan, closely outlines how the Health and Human Services Department may react during a pandemic, it skirts many essential decisions, like how the military may be deployed.

"The real shortcoming of the plan is that it doesn't say who's in charge," said a top health official who provided the plan to The Times. "We don't want to have a FEMA-like response, where it's not clear who's running what."

Still, the official, who asked for anonymity because the plan was not supposed to be distributed, called the plan a "major milestone" that was "very comprehensive" and sorely needed.

The draft provided to The Times is dated Sept. 30, and is stamped "for internal H.H.S. use only." The plan asks government officials to clear it by Oct. 6.

Christina Pearson, a spokeswoman for Health and Human Services Secretary Michael O. Leavitt, responded, "We recognize that the H.H.S. plan will be a foundation for a governmentwide plan, and that process has already begun."

Ms. Pearson said that Mr. Leavitt has already had one-on-one meetings with other cabinet secretaries to begin the coordination process across the federal government. But she emphasized that the plan given to The Times was a draft and had not been finalized.

Mr. Leavitt is leaving Saturday for a 10-day trip to at least four Asian nations, where he will meet with health and agriculture officials to discuss planning for a pandemic flu. He said at a briefing Friday that the administration's flu plan would be officially released soon. He was not aware at the briefing that The Times had a copy of the plan. And he emphasized that the chances that the virus now killing birds in Asia would become a human pandemic were unknown but probably low. A pandemic is global epidemic of disease.

"It may be a while longer, but pandemic will likely occur in the future," he said.

And he said that flu planning would soon become a national exercise.

"It will require school districts to have a plan on how they will deal with school opening and closing," he said. "It will require the mayor to have a plan on whether or not they're going to ask the theaters not to have a movie."

"Over the next couple of months you will see a great deal of activity asking metropolitan areas, 'Are you ready?' If not, here is what must be done," he said.

A key point of contention if an epidemic strikes is who will get vaccines first. The administration's plan suggests a triage distribution for these essential medicines. Groups like the military, national guard and other national security groups were left out.

Beyond the military, however, the first in line for essential medicines are workers in plants making the vaccines and drugs as well as medical personnel working directly with those sickened by the disease. Next are the elderly and severely ill. Then come pregnant women, transplant and AIDS patients, and parents of infants. Finally, the police, firefighters and government leaders are next.

The plan also calls for a national stockpile of 133 million courses of antiviral treatment. Presently the administration has bought 4.3 million.

The plan details the responsibilities of top health officials in each phase of a spreading pandemic, starting with planning and surveillance efforts and ending with coordination with the Department of Defense.

Much of the plan is a dry recitation of the science and basic bureaucratic steps that must be followed as a virus races around the globe. But the plan has the feel of a television move-of-the-week when it describes a possible pandemic situation that begins, "In April of the current year, an outbreak of severe respiratory illness is identified in a small village."

"Twenty patients have required hospitalization at the local provincial hospital, five of whom have died from pneumonia and respiratory failure," the plan states.

The flu spreads and begins to make headlines around the world. Top health officials swing into action and isolate the new viral strain in laboratories. The scientists discover that "the vaccine developed previously for the avian strain will only provide partial protection," the plan states.

In June, federal health officials find airline passengers infected with the virus "arriving in four major U.S. cities," the plan states. By July, small outbreaks are being reported around the nation. It spreads.

As the outbreak peaks, about a quarter of workers stay home because they are sick or afraid to become sick. Hospitals are overwhelmed.

"Social unrest occurs," the plan states. "Public anxiety heightens mistrust of government, diminishing compliance with public health advisories." Mortuaries and funeral homes are overwhelmed.

Presently, an avian virus has decimated chicken and other bird flocks in 11 countries. It has infected more than 100 people, about 60 of whom have died, but nearly all of these victims got the disease directly from birds. An epidemic is only possible when a virus begins to pass easily among humans.

Lawrence K. Altman contributed reporting for this article.

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pjhatala
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Post by pjhatala »

wow :(

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Post by StephenG »

The thought of such a pandemic anywhere is simply awful to comtemplate. The thought of such a pandemic in a society with such a high level of gun ownership and with numbers of armed 'militias' simply adds to a scenario one would prefer not to comtemplate.

The 1918 'flu pandemic caused 40 million deaths. So such things do happen and are not simply possible 'might happens'.

A wanderer, trying to discern truth from falsehood

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Nikodemus
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Post by Nikodemus »

The Culture of Fear

It reminds me a little bit of the panic that aroused concerning what happened in Columbine.

Exact science must presently fall upon its own keen sword...from Skepsis there is a path to "second religiousness," which is the sequel and not the preface of the Culture.

Oswald Spengler

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Nikodemus
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Post by Nikodemus »

One thing that I think is more alarming is what I see as a pathological need for many americans to find something or someone to be afraid of. Someone would call it realism, but is not if you see how the media, politicians and corporations try their best to scare the public into believing almost everything as long as they can make them vote for them in elections, read their papers on headlines or buy their security stuff on the market. It is sensationalism and a worldly thinking. It has lead to enormous suffering around the world.

Exact science must presently fall upon its own keen sword...from Skepsis there is a path to "second religiousness," which is the sequel and not the preface of the Culture.

Oswald Spengler

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PREPARE Your Loved Ones For Avian Flu

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http://english.pravda.ru/science/19/94/ ... 2_flu.html

Current avian flu is even more dangerous than 1918 Spanish flu pandemic
10/19/2005 19:02
The H5N1 subtype flu virus can affect not only lungs but also other organs

Last week, two scientific editions, Science and Nature, reported about the successful achievement of American researchers who reconstructed the Spanish flu virus that caused the massive 1918 pandemic. The researchers made a sensational statement that the 1918 virus that killed as many as 50 million people was actually avian flu.

Researchers took serious efforts to understand the mystery of the 1918 pandemic within the past several years. The pandemic was really mysterious: the virus speedily traveled about the world, the clinical course was fulminant when people died of it within 1-2 days and it had an incredibly high death toll.

In 1998, researchers from different countries started an unusual international project aimed to exhume remains of people killed by the Spanish flu virus and reconstruct the genetic material of the virus. It took researchers a long period to get ready for secure opening of burial places of settlers on the Spizberegn Island and those of villagers of one Alaska settlement that became absolutely depopulated at that period because of the sweeping virus. Besides, the researchers also had a pathologist archive of US soldiers who died because of the Spanish flu virus.

When the eight genes of the virus were reconstructed, the researchers decided to venture and apply the reverse genetics methods to reconstruct the Spanish flu virus itself. A group of researchers headed by Ann Raid and Jeffery Taubenberger from the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology and Southeast Poultry managed to reconstruct the virus in a special laboratory that guaranteed secure performance of the experiment. It turned out that the virus belonged to the H1N1 subtype that appeared as a result of a series of mutations in the genes of the avian flu. The mutations made the virus adapt to the human organism (unlike the agents of the 1957 Asian and 1968 Hong Kong pandemics that were reassortants of avian and human viruses).

Researchers obtained reassortants of the Spanish flu virus and the current virus of the same type and compared both with the H5N1 avian flu virus, the one which experts currently fear may cause a new dangerous pandemic.

Doctor of Medicine Anna Sominina from Russia's St.Petersburg National Flu Center told the Izvestia newspaper that researchers first of all want to understand why the Spanish flu virus was so sweepingly lethal. They arrived at a conclusion that the virus contained an optimum set of genes that made for its quick reproduction in the pulmonary tissue. This is the reason why many people died of pulmonary edema, hemorrhages, bronchial pneumonia and so on.

But the researches also revealed that the Spanish flu virus was less dangerous than the avian flu virus killing people today. The H5N1 subtype flu virus can affect not only lungs but also other organs. It cannot be destroyed with interferon, the compound helping the human immunity fight viruses. What is more, it is also stable against the popular flu medications used in Russia and other countries within many years. The Spanish flu lethality made up about 1 percent while the lethality of the new avian flu fluctuates from 50 to 100 percent in different countries.

It is important that the avian flu, the predecessor of the Spanish flu virus, became lethal after 10 important mutations of its genes as a result of which the virus easily adapted to the human organism. As of today, researchers have already determined 5 important mutations in the genes of the H5N1 avian flu.

Anna Sominina says that research works conducted by American experts are particularly important as they may help mankind get ready for the coming pandemic, have reserve vaccine cultures and test systems allowing to detect new viruses quickly.

Virologists pin great hopes on the national activities in flu inspection. Little finance was appropriated for such activities within the past several years. About 400 viruses are defined on Russia's vast territory in a year while the US defines about 300,000 viruses a year. This problem is actually burning for the world community because Russia has already been attacked by avian flu. If the plan of national activities is adopted on the governmental level, regional laboratories will have an opportunity to track new viruses and get ready for coming pandemics.

Experts recommend people take more care of their health: go in for sports, walk a lot, take vitamins. They say it is important to wear clothes fitting the weather, have flu vaccinations and stay away from office or school when feeling a respiratory infection is beginning.

You can discuss this article on Pravda.Ru FORUM

Read the original in Russian: (Translated by: Maria Gousseva)

Pravda.Ru

Related links:
Izvestia Nauki
PRAVDA.Ru Plague and flu change history of the world
PRAVDA.Ru Dangerous bird flu epidemic hits Russia
PRAVDA.Ru Love for pets can be life-threatening

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Kollyvas
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"Out OF Control" In A Chinese Province

Post by Kollyvas »

http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn8306

The Chinese government says the spread of the deadly H5N1 bird flu in one of its provinces is not under control and has warned of a potential disaster there. There have been three fresh outbreaks of the avian virus in the north-eastern province of Liaoning in 24 hours, and a new suspected human infection...

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