Firstly,
Source: wikipedia
Influenza B is swine flu, Influenza A is bird flu. They are considered different enough to be two different "genera". It should now be abundantly clear to people that swine flu won't be mutating into bird flu, so stop making wild hand waving declarations of it mutating in such a way everyone.
Chris, are you honestly reading what you are writing down?
Okay, acute viral infections don't respond well to generic antivirals. That's exactly why innoculation is a far better option.
Okay, that's a pretty ignorant comparison to make and here's why:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_flu
I honestly don't think driver negligence and stupidity in poor weather should be compared in such a cavalier way with a group of viruses that really does have a history of killing en mass in a short period of time.
yes, but in one week it's already killed 150 people and the 'maximum virulence' isn't yet known. I'm an advocate of non panic as I'm sure you are, but I'm also a fan of actually knowing what is going on. Those 36 000 people that die from the flu every year are also those that don't/can't innoculate as a general rule, so if something is hypervirulent, you can imagine it being alot more hideous if there is no innoculation available.
Because there is no 'cure', there are no preventative measures right now and this thing can kill in a real hurry. Educate yourself a little more about pandemics and how they work and you'll understand why some people are concerned (though alot of people are flipping out too early!)
And you base this on an extensive knowledge of this brand new strain of influenza?
Source please. I dislike how you're just waving the term antivirals around like some miracle cure without some kind of reference.
Of the three genera of human flu, two are endemic also in swine: Influenzavirus A is common and Influenzavirus C is rare.[2] Influenzavirus B has not been reported in swine. Within Influenzavirus A and Influenzavirus C, the strains endemic to swine and humans are largely distinct
Source: wikipedia
Influenza B is swine flu, Influenza A is bird flu. They are considered different enough to be two different "genera". It should now be abundantly clear to people that swine flu won't be mutating into bird flu, so stop making wild hand waving declarations of it mutating in such a way everyone.
Chris, are you honestly reading what you are writing down?
What about antivirals?
Okay, acute viral infections don't respond well to generic antivirals. That's exactly why innoculation is a far better option.
Proactiveness is also the only way to combat car accidents; we should close the roads when it is raining.
Okay, that's a pretty ignorant comparison to make and here's why:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_flu
I honestly don't think driver negligence and stupidity in poor weather should be compared in such a cavalier way with a group of viruses that really does have a history of killing en mass in a short period of time.
That's roughly as fast as the normal flu spreads, which kills 36,000 people a year
yes, but in one week it's already killed 150 people and the 'maximum virulence' isn't yet known. I'm an advocate of non panic as I'm sure you are, but I'm also a fan of actually knowing what is going on. Those 36 000 people that die from the flu every year are also those that don't/can't innoculate as a general rule, so if something is hypervirulent, you can imagine it being alot more hideous if there is no innoculation available.
I don't understand why people are such a ridiculous amount more cautious than they are during flu season
Because there is no 'cure', there are no preventative measures right now and this thing can kill in a real hurry. Educate yourself a little more about pandemics and how they work and you'll understand why some people are concerned (though alot of people are flipping out too early!)
If you don't feel the symptoms that early, you don't have a bad enough case of swine flu that it matters.
And you base this on an extensive knowledge of this brand new strain of influenza?
Antivirals don't just shorten the length, they significantly reduce the symptoms. Swine flu is the variant of flu most susceptible to antivirals, and we have plenty to go around.
Source please. I dislike how you're just waving the term antivirals around like some miracle cure without some kind of reference.