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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

UN agency warns of new global bird flu threat


FAO warns risk of a new outbreak of H5N1 bird flu
Tuesday January 29, 2013 
There is a risk of new outbreaks of bird flu if it strengthens the monitoring and control of the disease worldwide, in Rome on Tuesday warned the United Nations Organization for Food and Agriculture (FAO).
"The extension of the global economic crisis means there is less money available for the prevention of avian influenza H5N1 or other animal," he said in a statement FAO chief veterinary officer, the Spanish Juan Lubroth.
According to the organization imposes strict surveillance, as there are ample reserves of H5N1 virus in some countries in Asia and the Middle East, where the disease is endemic.
If no suitable controls could easily spread the virus worldwide, as happened in 2006 when 63 countries that were affected.
Between 2003 and 2011, 400 million chickens and ducks poultry died or were culled due to bird flu, representing losses of about $ 20,000 million. http://www.biobiochile.cl/2013/01/29/fao-advierte-riesgo-de-un-nuevo-brote-de-gripe-aviar-h5n1.shtml

UN agency warns of new global bird flu threat

"The continuous international economic downturn means less money is available for prevention of H5N1 bird flu and other threats of animal origin," Juan Lubroth, chief veterinary officer at the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), said in a statement.
"Even though everyone knows that prevention is better than cure, I am worried because in the current climate governments are unable to keep up their guard," he was quoted as saying.
The Rome-based agency warned large reservoirs of the H5N1 virus still exist in parts of Asia and the Middle East where the disease has become endemic.
"Without adequate controls, it could easily spread globally as it did at its peak in 2006, when 63 countries were affected," the agency said.
The virus killed more than 300 people between 2003 and 2011, as well as forcing the culling of 400 million domestic chickens and ducks and causing an estimated $20 billion (15 billion euros) in damages.
The FAO also cautioned of the growing threat from Peste des Petits Ruminants, or PPR, a highly contagious disease that affects sheep and goats.
FAO said the virus, for which a vaccine exists, had wrought havoc in the Democratic Republic of Congo and was spilling over into southern Africa.
Among the prevention measures against animal diseases recommended by FAO are improved general hygiene, market and border controls and health inspections in farms and markets, as well as equipment and training for laboratories.  http://www.thesundaily.my/news/600959?utm_medium=twitter&utm_source=twitterfeed

Fourth and fifth new human cases of avian influenza H5N1 in Cambodia in 2013



Joint news release of the Ministry of Health of the Kingdom of Cambodia and World Health Organization
 The Ministry of Health (MoH) of the Kingdom of Cambodia wishes to advise members of the public that two new more cases of avian influenza has been confirmed positive for the H5N1 virus.
The fourth case is a 17-month-old girl from Prey Nheat village, Prey Nheat commune, Kong Pisey district in Kampong Speu province has been diagnosed with H5N1 influenza on 26th January 2013 by Institut Pasteur du Cambodge. She developed symptoms on 13th January 2013 with fever, cough, runny nose, and vomiting. She was initially treated by local private practitioners. Her condition worsened and she was admitted to Kantha Bopha Hospital on 17th January with fever, cough, somnolence, and dyspnoea. Unfortunately, despite intensive medical care, she died on 28th January. There is evidence of recent deaths among poultry in the village and the girl had history of coming into contact with poultry prior to becoming sick.
In the fifth case, a 9-year-old girl from Thmei village, Thmei commune, Toeuk Chhou district, Kampot province has been diagnosed with H5N1 influenza on 28th January 2013 by Institut Pasteur du Cambodge. She became sick on 19th January, 2013 suffering with fever and cough. She was initially treated by local private practitioners. Her condition worsened and she was admitted to Kantha Bopha Hospital with fever cough, somnolence and dyspnoea on 27th January. Despite intensive medical care, the patient died on 28th January. There is evidence of recent deaths among poultry in the village. This girl is the twenty-six person in Cambodia to become infected with H5N1 virus, and the fifth person this year and the twenty-three person to die from complications of the disease. Of all the twenty six cases, 17 were children under 14, and seventeen of the twenty six confirmed cases occurred in females.
"Avian influenza H5N1 is still a threat to the health of Cambodians. This is the fourth and the fifth cases of H5N1 infection in human in early this year, and children still seem to be most vulnerable. I urge parents and guardians to keep children away from sick or dead poultry, discourage them from playing in areas where poultry stay and wash their hands often. If they have fast or difficulty breathing, they should be brought to medical attention at the nearest health facilities and attending physicians be made aware of any exposure to sick or dead poultry." said HE Mam Bunheng, Minister of Health.
The Ministry of Health's Rapid Response Teams (RRT) have gone to the hospitals and the field to identify the patient’s close contacts, any epidemiological linkage among the three cases and initiate preventive treatment as required. In addition, public health education campaigns are being conducted in the villages to inform families on how to protect themselves from contracting avian influenza. The government's message is - wash hands often; keep children away from poultry; keep poultry away from living areas; do not eat sick poultry; and all poultry eaten should be well cooked.
H5N1 influenza is a flu that normally spreads between sick poultry, but it can sometimes spread from poultry to humans. Human H5N1 Avian Influenza is a very serious disease that requires hospitalization. Although the virus currently does not easily spread among humans, if the virus changes it could easily be spread like seasonal influenza. Hence, early recognition of cases is important.
Globally since 2003, there have been 615 laboratory confirmed cases of avian influenza with 364 related deaths.
The Ministry of Health will continue to keep the public informed of developments via the MoH website www.cdcmoh.gov.kh where relevant health education materials can also be downloaded.
For more information on human influenza please call the MoH Influenza Hotline numbers: 115 (free call); 012 488 981 or 089 669 567

Or contact:

Ministry of Health
Dr Sok Touch: Tel +855 12 856 848
Dr Ly Sovann: Tel +855 12 825 424
World Health Organization
Dr Pieter JM van Maaren: Tel +855 23 216 610
Dr Reiko Tsuyuoka: Tel +855 23 216 610 http://www.wpro.who.int/mediacentre/releases/2013/20130129/en/index.html

Monday, January 28, 2013

Newest 'superbug' stomach virus strain spreads quickly, hard to kill


January 28, 2013 at 6:40 PM

It may not be faster than a speeding bullet or able to leap tall buildings in a single bound, but the newest “superbug”could knock you off your feet.
The latest norovirus — better known as a stomach virus — strain has hit the South Jersey area after making its way to the country all the way from Down Under.
Named GII.4 Sydney for its origin point in Australia, the virus causes severe gastrointestinal symptoms, including nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and cramps.
“It’s nasty,” said Kennedy Health System’s Chief Medical Officer Dr. David Condoluci, an infectious disease specialist. “Basically, you go through about 24 to 48 hours of hell.”
He said that while some people may call it a “stomach flu,” the norovirus is nothing like influenza, which can cause high fevers, coughing, body aches and respiratory issues.
This bug hits the digestive system, and can cause severe dehydration if fluids aren’t replenished frequently, Condoluci said.
The Sydney strain accounts for about 50 percent of norovirus outbreaks in the past year, he said.
“It’s taken a new, more prominent role,” Condoluci said. “Some years it’s worse than others, this year seems to be a bad one again.”
While some pharmaceutical companies are in the midst of developing one, there aren’t any vaccinations yet for norovirus strains — which are often called “cruise ship” bugs for how quickly they can spread in a confined, highly populated ship — and there’s not much you can do when it hits besides replenish fluids constantly.
“Since this is a virus, antibiotics will not work,” Condoluci said, adding that the horrendous symptoms mean your body is actually doing exactly what it’s supposed to.
“What your body is trying to do with the nausea and vomiting is to get rid of viral particles. It’s trying to expunge them. You don’t really want to shut off the body from the diarrhea and vomiting. We want the body to get rid of the virus.”
But there is a plus side — it ends.
“The good news about it is that it lasts about two days, then you get better,” Condoluci said.
So while you may feel like you’re going to die, you probably won’t.
He said those most at risk for death or severe health effects, including dehydration, are the very young or very old, who may have underlying conditions that are aggravated by the strain on their bodies.
While some are calling it a “superbug,” Dr. David Kaufman, chief of infectious disease at South Jersey Healthcare, said it’s actually not much different than the norovirus strains that spread quickly this time of year.
“As to whether it’s any worse, I think time’s going to tell,” Kaufman said. “My impression is this is another norovirus, not like a super norovirus.”
But, like every norovirus strain, it’s highly contagious and hard to kill, he said.
Unlike influenza or other viruses that take ingesting hundreds or thousands of particles of the virus to get sick, it takes less than 20 norovirus particles to get hit with the illness.
“That’s a tiny amount. It’s like saying if you have a poison, if you take one picogram it will kill you. It’s just 18 viral particles, it’s like nothing,” Kaufman said, adding that it’s made even worse by the fact norovirus is so hard to kill.
“The virus is very good at surviving in a whole bunch of environments, foods, surfaces, water. It’s a very transmissible disease,” Kaufman said. “It means it doesn’t take much, and it’s easy to catch.”
The virus also changes each year with each new strain, meaning if you had it last year, you’re not protected this time around.
“Whatever part (of the virus) your immune system recognizes, now it’s changed slightly and it doesn’t recognize it,” Kaufman said. “Now you’re not immune.”
The only recommendation Condoluci or Kaufman had for avoiding the virus is simple — to wash your hands, very, very thoroughly.
But even then, Kaufman said, the amount needed to get sick is so small, simply washing them or using hand sanitizer isn’t enough
“If this were like Salmonella, where your minimum infectious dose is 200 or 1000 organisms, you’re going to easily clean that amount off,” Kaufman said, adding that it’s much harder to remove the small amounts of norovirus particles it takes it get ill. “It’s not just like, ‘Oh, I washed my hands so I can’t give you the norovirus.”
If someone in your household does become ill, he said it’s important they use a separate bathroom — the virus comes out in “immense numbers” in stool — and still be vigilant about hand washing.
He said with how hearty the virus is and how easily it spreads, he’s just thankful it is in-and-out, quite literally, in a few days.
“It’s a tough customer,” Kaufman said. “Thank God it doesn’t make you sicker.”   http://www.nj.com/gloucester-county/index.ssf/2013/01/newest_superbug_stomach_virus.html

Former WHO chief who made large contributions to public health has died



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Dr. Hiroshi Nakajima
A former Director-General of  WHO, the World Health Organization has died in Poitiers, France after a short illness.
Dr. Hiroshi Nakajima passed away on Saturday the 26th of January. He was 84 years old.
According to WHO, many of its most successful programmes owe a debt to Dr. Nakajima's work, including DOTS, the strategy for tuberculosis care and control, and the expansion of the global programme for childhood immunization.
WHO Director-General Margaret Chan said for all of these initiatives, the impact on people's health mattered most to Dr. Nakajima.
One of his greatest passions was to see polio defeated, she continued, and efforts toward that goal are a tribute to his memory.

Bahraini child dies from pneumonia severe

Bahraini public prosecution denies the death of a child due to tear gas and says: suffering from severe pneumonia 
01/28/2013


Manama dpa: official denied Bahraini child dies as a result of his suffocation from inhaling tear gas, and confirmed that the death was from pneumonia severe and the futility of the efforts of doctors in Mdarkih treatment. 
quoted Bahrain News Agency (us) about Nawaf Abdullah Hamza Head of Special Investigation to say that the public prosecutor had received a communication from the police station exhibitions that a citizen had reported the death of her son, aged eight years as a result of his suffocation from inhaling tear gas, which was launched by the security forces for nearly a week, which led to the transfer to Salmaniya Hospital, where he died inside yesterday. 
added that the Attorney General took over the investigation as stated in the communication upon receipt, and commissioned the forensic doctor to indicate the cause of death, pointing out that the signing of the medical examination on the body of the child of the deceased and an autopsy necessary and view the medical file and installed by Log child hospital show his disorder and shortness of breath as a result of the crisis of usury and pneumonia, note that he suffers from a lack of vitamin 'D' and distortions bones chest and legs. 
has confirmed the coroner in his absence compromised criminal in death, and explained that it was a natural result of pneumonia severe , a condition, and the futility of the efforts of 

doctors in treatment Mdarkih.

Experts: Avian flu attack wasn't bioterrorism



The government has moved to debunk rumours that a recent outbreak of avian flu was deliberately triggered.

January 29, 2013
With alarm spreading over a rumour that biological weaponry caused a recent avian flu attack, Indonesian officials moved this month to set the record straight.
Painstaking investigations into the outbreak have yielded no evidence to support such speculation,National Intelligence Agency (BIN) chief, Lt. Gen. Marciano Norman told reporters.
"Until now, there is no indication that the virus is leading to bioterrorism," Marciano said on January 10th. "However, we have to stay alert. In the future, it is possible that biological attacks will be used in wars. But I do not think Indonesia has gone that far."
Co-ordinating Political, Legal, and Security Affairs Minister Djoko Suyanto said a special government team was set up to look into the allegations.
"The team consists of many members of intelligence agencies and people from public health offices,” he said, adding that "we have not received any reports that have been validated". False reports spur public anxiety
Terrorism expert Wawan Purwanto told Khabar Southeast Asia the rumours were stirring up fears among Indonesians.
"They (whoever spreads the news) will cause society to panic," he told Khabar. "We recommend that the Ministry of Health and experts promptly inform the public" that there is no cause for alarm.
At the same time, he said, the possibility of such threats should not be dismissed. "If a person is deliberately injected, then it means this is an act of terror. We must be alert and stay vigilant."
Indonesia has been the site of repeated avian flu outbreaks. To date, at least 11 provinces and 69 counties – including in Java, Sumatra, Bali and Sulawesi -- have been affected.
Experts are still unsure about how the virus is entering the country. Chairul Anwar Nidom, Chief of the Avian Research Centre at Airlangga University, told Khabar that in 2003, officials discovered a strain that is 98.2% similar to the one found in China. The most recent version is 99.2% similar to the Chinese strain.
In the past, the H5N1 avian flu virus reportedly only attacked chickens. However, over the past three months, the virus has been killing thousands of ducks, contributing to the alarm.
According to data from the Ministry of Agriculture and the Directorate General of Livestock and Animal Health, more than 513,700 ducks died.
The virus has also been killing ducks in a number of other countries, including China, Vietnam, Thailand, and Bangladesh. In Indonesia, the first reported attack came in Brebes, a small district in Central Java last October.
Chairul agrees there is no basis for believing that someone is trying to mount a biological attack via bird migration, as some have suggested. The rumours are contradicted by science, he noted.
"The migratory birds are not sensitive enough to catch this virus," Chairul said. "Moreover, the virus is spreading rapidly in ducks and without mutation." 

Cambodia and then two youngster infected with the H5N1 avian flu death


Cambodia and then two youngster infected with the H5N1 avian flu death
29/01/2013 12:56 AM


Cambodia have two children, died after being infected with the highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza, bringing the death toll to four people.
World Health Organization office in Cambodia, said the 10 seven-month-old girl who lived in central Kampong Speu province, and a nine-year-old girl living in the southern Kampot province after infection, local time, on Monday, one after another in the hospital died.
Cambodia three reports of avian flu last week, these two deaths. http://www.metroradio.com.hk/997/News/Default.aspx?NewsID=20130129005633

Good Morning Good Morning

Dam function forces killed dozens of chickens: Employment ...  somewhat "rigid"His chickens Revelation beating.

Dam function forces killed dozens of chickens: Employment ... somewhat "rigid"

(LD) - No. 24 - Tuesday, 01/29/2013 05:35
    Related to the functional forces broke into home, beating dozens of people's chicken, day 28.1, according to the understanding of Labor Reporter, the incident stems from only 2009 of Can Tho..

    Tommorow Never Knows


    Warning over killer pneumonia linked to flu

    A warning has been issued over a killer strain of pneumonia that is striking otherwise healthy flu sufferers, after half of cases for a whole year have been seen in just one month.

    Pneumonia seen in one of the lungs.
    Pneumonia seen in one of the lungs. Photo: ALAMY
    The disease can leave patients in a life-threatening condition within hours and up to three in four will die.
    It typically strikes after a normal bout of flu and affects previously healthy middle-aged people.
    Government scientists have recorded 18 cases of PVL community acquired pneumonia between December 6th and January 7th. Normally between 30 and 40 cases are seen in a whole year in the UK.
    So far four peple have died.
    It is not known what has caused the surge in cases.
    The bug, with the full name Panton-Valentine Leukocidin-positive Staphylococcus aureus, is extremely virulent. It is carried on the skin of around three per cent of the population and usually causes boils and skin infections.
    However it can enter the bloodstream and may travel to the lungs or get into the lungs following a bout of flu.
    Once there it causes pneumonia and patients become critically ill very quickly.
    They may cough up blood, have difficulty breathing and are extremely unwell, experts said.
    The 18 cases have all needed intensive care and several required sophisticated life-support known as ECMO, where oxygen is pumped into the blood outside the body because the lungs are overwhelmed with infection.
    The patients ranged in age from four to 63 years with a median age of 41 and most have flu-like symptoms before developing pneumonia. In five cases the bug had spread between family members.
    Experts at the HPA said the bug can be treated with a range of antibiotics but is so deadly because of the speed at quick it causes severe illness.
    Pneumonia can cause severe illness but most people recover and often do not need hospital treatment. However pneumonia caused by PVL-SA causes very serious complications extremely quickly, experts said.
    Professor Angela Kearns, at the Antimicrobial Resistance and Healthcare Associated Infections Reference Unit at the HPA, said: "Levels of PVL colonisation in the community have doubled in the last ten years but from a very low base and less than five per cent of the population, probably nearer three per cent, carry it on their skin.
    "It usually causes skin boils and abcesses but can in rare cases cause severe pneumonia. It is one of those random events caused by bacterial infection. The mortality rate is so high because of the speed of onset, the lungs become overwhelmed because we can get on top of the infection.
    "Treatments are available, it is getting that happen as quickly as possible.
    "We have seen outbreaks in households.
    "We do no think we are seeing the start of an epidemic."
    The bulletin from the HPA said: "Healthcare personnel should remain vigilant for such cases, especially during the influenza/respiratory virus season.
    "HPA Guidance on the diagnosis and public health management of such infections and their close contact is available."
    It urged doctors to send samples to the HPA for testing from suspected cases and said fees for such tests would be waived.
    Flu levels have risen in the last month but remain within normal limits for winter.

    I've Just Seen a Face


    KP govt tackles pneumonia, measles outbreak in Upper Dir


    UPPER DIR:  A health crisis in Khyber Pakthunkwa’s (KP’s) Upper district continues unabated, with the death toll due to an outbreak of measles and pneumonia resulting in 47 deaths over the last two weeks.
    In order to control the epidemics, a special unit has been set up in the Dir District Headquarters Hospital (DHQ) along with mobile health teams, which have been dispatched to the region.
    Upper Dir District Health Officer Dr Abdul Wakeel confirmed on Monday that the death toll due to pneumonia and measles has now risen to 47 at the very least. He added, however, that the number of deaths may be higher as many areas still remain accessible due to harsh weather conditions.
    Family members hold their children suffering from measles and admitted at a hospital.
    Dr Wakeel explained that the health teams have been dispatched to the affected areas and have been accompanied by World Health Organisation (WHO) and other organisations’ staff to monitor the health crisis.
    “So far around 1,400 children have been vaccinated while door-to-door vaccination is still continuing,” he added.
    Sources in the provincial health department said that the affected children were also experiencing severe malnutrition, which need to be taken care of on an urgent basis.
    The KP health department, along with the WHO and other UN bodies are focusing on handling the crisis in the worst-hit areas of Thall, Komrat and Lamoti.  http://dawn.com/2013/01/28/kp-govt-tackles-pneumonia-measles-outbreak-in-upper-dir/

    Back in the USSR

    Increased incidence of community-acquired pneumonia
    Chief Medical Officer of the Kurgan region Gregory Khokhlov adopted a resolution defining problems for agencies responsible for ensuring the health of citizens...
    In the Kurgan region in 2012, the incidence of community-acquired pneumonia increased by 8.6% and accounted for 2545 cases of disease, the rate was 268.6 per 100 thousand people (2011 - 2343 cases; 247.3 per 100 thousand population).
    On the third week of 2013 recorded 73 cases of community-acquired pneumonia - 0.8 per 10 thousand people, which is 14.3% higher than the incidence of the 2nd week in 2013 (67 cases, 0.7 per 10 thousand population) 60% higher incidence of the same period last year (the third week in 2012 - 47 cases, 0.5 per 10 thousand population).
    Disease cases are registered in all age groups: 0-2 years - 9, 3-6 years - 4, 7-14 - 6, 15-17 - 2 18-39 - 8, 40-64 years - 26, over 65 - 18.
    According to severity: 1 heavy (the patient was hospitalized), 68 cases of moderate (53 people were hospitalized), 4 - mild (2 patients hospitalized)..


    01/28/2013 17:23 Society

    The first cases of influenza reported in the Baikal region

    Deceived and punished.Changeable weather caused the growth of colds. During the last week in the region has increased the number to a hospital. The first cases of influenza.
    Changes in temperature and clothes are not for the weather.According to doctors, this is enough to get sick. Over the last week in the Irkutsk region recorded 12 and a half thousand cases of SARS, 4 - influenza. Most of the cases - children. - Compared to last week, we have increased the incidence of the total population by 10%. According to our forecasts, in the near future is expected epidemiological rise of flu and other viruses - said deputy chief state sanitary doctor of the Irkutsk Region Love Nursayanova. risk that the epidemic will s....  http://vesti.irk.ru/obshestvo/2013/01/28/181811/



    28.01 12:41

    Black Label Yurga garrison. A Hidden Epidemic

    Black Label Yurga garrison.  A Hidden Epidemic
    Recruits from the Novosibirsk region filled hospitals units in Jurg. Mothers of soldiers reported that the garrison from the end of last year, a raging epidemic of pneumonia.
    However, most cases of servicemen do not receive appropriate medical care - "Boys are like living dead."Sibkray.ru tried to understand the causes of the continuing state of emergency - from this "unrecognized" military leadership of the epidemic to the recent history of the suicide.
    Troops stationed in Jurg, enjoys notoriety. Only in January, one soldier committed suicide, two other attempts failed. Just on the eve of the new year is another soldier died in hospital from pulmonary edema. Meanwhile, much of the recruits from the Novosibirsk region leaves it there.

    At first sight, for the Novosibirsk mother the news that her son sent to serve in Jürg should rejoice. Not the Far East and the Arctic, drive ..

    Suspected Case of Meningococal Virus in Bnei Brak




    The Health Ministry reported, Monday, that a five-year-old boy from Bnei Brak, east of Tel Aviv, was admitted to Schneider Children's Hospital in Petach Tikva and was being treated for meningococal disease, a virus which can prove fatal if not treated quickly. The boy was transferred to the children's ward after antibiotics improved his condition. Bacterial samples were taken from him for laboratory analysis and preventativetreatment was administered to his family and people in the yeshiva where he learns. The ministry continues to investigate the boy's contacts.
    Fast action by parents and doctors at Kaplan Hospital in Rechovot was recently credited with saving a three-year-old who had a meningococal rash. Doctors say parents whose children have a rash and high fever should not hesitate to bring them to an emergency room.

    http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/Flash.aspx/260838#.UQaxd7_pccc

    Cambodia reports 2 new fatal cases of bird flu in humans, surpassing total for all of 2012



     

     
     
     
    PHNOM PENH, Cambodia - Two more children have died in Cambodia of bird flu, bringing the number of fatal cases to four since the start of this year.
    The Cambodian office of the U.N.'s World Health Organization said a 17-month-old girl from central Kampong Speu province and a 9-year-old girl from southern Kampot province died Monday after being hospitalized.
    Last week, Cambodia reported three human cases of bird flu, two of them fatal. For of all 2012, the country reported a total of three cases, all fatal.
    Cambodia since 2005 has reported 26 cases, 23 of them fatal.
    WHO says bird flu, also known as avian influenza, or H5N1, has killed 360 other people worldwide since surfacing in 2003. Most human cases have been linked to contact with infected poultry. http://www.canada.com/health/Cambodia+reports+fatal+cases+bird+humans+surpassing+total+2012/7882660/story.html

    While My Guitar Gently Weeps


    Deadly Flu of 1918 Spurred Denial, Then Drastic Action

     5:42 am, Mon Jan 28, 2013.

    The near-closure of the entire city, mandatory face masks and hundreds of deaths were just weeks ahead, along with an epic battle of commerce versus public health.
    But nobody in the coastal town by the border was too worried about a deadly flu rampaging across the world in September 1918. "San Diego is full of colds just now," a local newspaper noted, but that wasn't even in a story. It was just an advertisement for something called Dover's Powders.
    Things changed almost instantly. Within days, camps of World War I soldiers were quarantined, the local health board president warned of a disease "more murderous than any epidemic the nation has yet experienced" and officials shut down schools, theaters, churches and more.
    The deadliest epidemic to ever hit the nation had come to San Diego, where it would take the lives of 368 people, or about one in every 200 residents. Many of those stricken were young and strong, unlike the victims of this year's flu season in the county. (So far, 14 people have died, their ages ranged from 46 to 92, and all but one were already weakened by existing illnesses.)
    From Kansas to the World
    The epidemic of the Spanish flu didn't start in Spain. The first reports in the world came from a military camp in Kansas, where dozens of men died after struggling to breathe amid fever, headaches, chills and fluid-filled lungs.
    Other soldiers survived to be shipped out to Europe to fight in World War I in Europe. They almost certainly spread the illness to that continent, where hundreds of thousands fell ill and died.
    As September 1918 turned into October, hundreds would die in single days in Philadelphia and Boston, and the first reported cases of the deadly flu appeared in San Diego at the Army's Camp Kearny.
    By early October, four military facilities were quarantined. The "Bluejackets" training at a naval training camp at Balboa Park had to stick around and not take their usual liberty three times a week. They played sports and games instead, the San Diego Union reported.
    No Spitting in Balboa Park
    "Order has been passed out that there is to be no expectorating on the streets of the park," the paper reported. "The punishment is that the lad spitting on the street or the plaza must wear a cigar box swung about his neck, and this box is partially filled with sand and serves as a receptacle for the cigarette and cigar stubs of the victim’s shipmates."
    The city itself, though, didn't worry too much. Bustling with 70,000 residents and just three years past the exposition that put Balboa Park on the national map, San Diego had other things on its mind. Soldiers were flooding the city to prepare to fight in the war, and the recently elected mayor who'd run on a "More Smokestacks" platform, was pushing for more business.
    As the flu worsened, city leaders took a pro-business position. They weren't too interested in shutting anything down to prevent the flu's spread even after the local coroner quit to protest their lack of action.... 

    Everybody's Got Something to Hide

     ..Except Me and My Monkey



     C'mon, Indonesia..You will have to eventually admit there are positive human cases of H5N1!

    C'mon, Saudi Arabia.. I know what you are hiding..

    C'mon, Uganda..The new Ebola outbreak will be reported and that's that.

    C'mon, State dep't.. You know as well as I do there are cases in Indonesia, Cambodia and Egypt!

    C'mon, WHO..You are supposed to be telling people in a timely manner what is goin on!

    C'mon, CDC.. I mean really.. are you gonna do your job at all?

    C'mon, U.S. Agriculture Dep't.. Where is the report on the "Low Path" H5N1 report in the New York live poultry market.. and what is the N-type?