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PostPosted: Tue Nov 29, 2011 3:15 am 
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Special interview on H3N2 pandemic (H3N2pdm11) at midnight (EST) on Dec 1

http://www.rense.com/about/guests.htm

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PostPosted: Tue Nov 29, 2011 4:15 am 
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Commentary

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/11291 ... lance.html

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PostPosted: Tue Nov 29, 2011 9:19 am 
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Is the Next H1N1 on Its Way?

Is H3N2 the next big outbreak? Should we be worried?
By Parent Society Editors

Several months ago, we told you about a new version of the swine flu (flashback to 2009) that had struck several children. But we also said not to worry all that much about it. After all, this version of influenza was being contracted from pigs. It wasn’t spreading from person to person …. yet.

Well, folks, we’re sorry to report that the virus now known as swine-origin A/H3N2 has started popping up in children who have had no contact with animals. So maybe we should start to be a little bit concerned.

In this msnbc.com article, it’s reported that three children in Iowa have come down with H3N2 — a virus previously only found in pigs. But “none of the children or anyone around them had exposure to swine, turkeys or other sources,” said Patricia Quinlisk, medical director for the Iowa Department of Public Health. You know what that means: people are catching it from people, now. That’s the first step in an epidemic.

This new bug contains components of the human flu, avian flu, H1N1, and other swine flu viruses. It’s known as a recombinant virus, which means that it’s a combination of a whole bunch of viruses and it’s continuing to evolve.

And, in case you were wondering, this year’s flu shot does not protect against this nasty condition.

We do have a piece of good news, though. As of now, it’s reported that the H3N2 flu is pretty similar to the regular flu, with symptoms including fever, cough, fatigue, body aches and loss of appetite. There have been no deaths due to H3N2 as of yet. However, it’s worth noting that all of the people who have had the illness so far are children. If this virus follows in the path of H1N1, pregnant women and the elderly really should be on high alert.

Our best advice? If you’re sick, stay home. If your kids are sick, keep them home from school. And, of course, wash your hands frequently. It doesn’t take a scientist to eradicate a flu virus. Just some warm soap and water.

http://parentsociety.com/parenting/kids ... n-its-way/

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 Post subject: Re: Swine H3N2 Pandemic
PostPosted: Tue Nov 29, 2011 9:58 am 
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niman wrote:
WHO clearly beginning to prepare for trH3N2 pandemic

http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/arts-a ... 25253.html

WHO trying to hit the sweet spot in responding to puzzling new flu virus

By: Helen Branswell, The Canadian Press

Posted: 11/26/2011 3:31 AM | Comments: 3 (including replies) | Last Modified: 11/26/2011 8:22 AM

Image

This scanning electron micrograph view depicts some of the ultrastructural details displayed by H3N2 influenza virions responsible for casing illness in Indiana and Pennsylvania in 2011. THE CANADIAN PRESS/ho-Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

The spread of an odd new flu virus that has been jumping from pigs to people in parts of the United States has the World Health Organization gearing up its response planning, a senior official of the agency says.

The UN health body is figuring out what needs to be done if the virus continues to spread and a global response is required, Dr. Keiji Fukuda, assistant director-general for health security and environment said in an interview from Geneva.

The WHO wants to be ready to make recommendations and issue guidance to countries if the need arises — though Fukuda stressed at this point it is far from certain there will be that need.

"We're very aware that we don't want to over-play or under-play. We're trying to get that right," says Fukuda, a leading influenza expert.

"(We're) trying to make sure that we're ready to move quickly, if we have to move quickly, but also trying not to raise alarm bells."

The desire to be prepared without raising alarm is a legacy of the 2009 H1N1 pandemic. The WHO was heavily criticized in Europe for declaring that event a pandemic when the outbreak turned out to be far milder than originally feared.

But what exactly the agency — and the world — might need to prepare for now is very unclear. With the public relations problems of the 2009 outbreak fresh in the minds of health officials, no one is using the "p" word these days.

Yet in some respects the parallels to 2009 are striking.

A new swine-origin flu virus is causing sporadic infections in parts of the United States. Since the new virus was first spotted in July, 10 cases have been confirmed in Maine, Indiana, Pennsylvania and Iowa. All have been children under 10, with a lone exception — a 58-year-old adult. Three of the cases have required hospitalization but most of the infections have been mild, like regular flu.

It is an influenza A virus of the H3N2 subtype, a distant cousin of H3N2 viruses that circulate in humans.

Scientists at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control say the hemagglutinin gene, the H3, looks like that of H3N2 viruses that used to circulate in people in the early 1990s.

It is sufficiently different from contemporary human viruses that the H3N2 component of the seasonal flu shot is not expected to protect against this virus, though it might boost antibody levels in those who were exposed to the earlier H3N2 viruses.

The CDC is still doing serological work — checking stored blood samples for antibodies that react to this virus — to try to figure out how much vulnerability there is to the new virus. The current thinking is most people over the age of 21 or so would have had exposure to similar flu viruses and would therefore have some protection against it.

Teenagers and children might not, though even that's not 100 per cent certain. Flu expert Malik Peiris, chair of the department of microbiology at the University of Hong Kong, says he thinks exposure to contemporary H3N2 viruses might provide some protection against these swine viruses.

"It is important to see the serological data to see how much vulnerability or susceptibility there is in the human population," Peiris says.

Dr. Arnold Monto, a flu expert at the University of Michigan, says if a major part of the human population has antibodies that react to the virus, it may not be much of a threat.

"If there's a lot of immunity in the population, there probably will not be any kind of extensive spread except maybe in these little clusters where you have little folks who don't have much immunity to anything," he says.

Fukuda, on the other hand, says further spread cannot be ruled out: "I think that certainly there's no reason why this virus, if it continues to spread human to human couldn't move from country to country among young people."

The first seven infections appeared to have been instances where the virus passed from pigs to people. But the most recent cases, in Iowa, seem pretty clearly to have involved person-to-person spread.

There were three confirmed cases in that cluster, but it was likely larger. Two contacts of the first confirmed case were also ill, but were not tested. And the people in this cluster seemingly had no contact with pigs, suggesting they caught the virus from an unidentified person.

The virus was previously isolated from pigs in the U.S. Midwest, says Dr. Nancy Cox, head of the CDC's influenza division, though she won't specify where.

Canadian authorities say there are no reports of the virus in this country. And the WHO knows of no cases other than those in the United States, Fukuda says.

To some in the flu world, the situation is reminiscent of 1977. That year an H1N1 virus started circling the globe, causing infections mainly in young people. H1N1 viruses hadn't been spotted for 20 years at that point; it is widely believed the virus was accidentally released from a laboratory.

On some lists of pandemics, the 1977 outbreak is named. Most flu experts, though, do not consider it a pandemic. Some, like Monto, refer to it as a pseudo pandemic.

While the flu world doesn't want to over-react to this virus, it doesn't feel safe ignoring it either.

The CDC asked the laboratory that makes seed strains for vaccine companies to produce a vaccine candidate virus for this H3N2. It is already in the hands of manufacturers.

And the WHO is looking at what it needs to do to be ready. One of the tasks it is currently working on is trying to figure out what to call this virus, if it should continue to spread.

Naming the pandemic virus was a nightmare for public health officials in the start of the 2009 outbreak.

Flu experts accustomed to talking about viruses based on the animals they normally infected — bird flu, swine flu, dog flu, human flu — were caught in a political vise when powerful agricultural interests objected to references to the virus's swine origins.

But calling the virus simply H1N1 didn't differentiate it from the human H1N1 that was circulating before the pandemic. (It has since disappeared.) Recently the pandemic virus was officially named H1N1 pdm09.

This swine-origin H3N2 virus poses the same naming challenges.

And this time, the WHO wants to be prepared. Fukuda says the WHO has been in discussion with its animal health counterparts, the UN Food and Agriculture Agency and the OIE, the World Organization for Animal Health, to work out a possible name.

"We're pretty aware that we don't want to increase stigma, we're pretty aware that it is always possible for people to get afraid of food or to enact trade embargoes or things like that. So to the extent that naming the virus in a way which minimizes those things can be done, we think it's better," he says.

"It's just one of those lessons that we've learned. Take a look at those things early. So that's what we're doing."

Still, it's all being done with the realization that there may be no need for heightened public health responses, apart from the increased surveillance the U.S. has mounted.

"This is one of the things that we've discussed," Fukuda says.

"This could be the only cluster we see," he says, referring to the Iowa cases. "We could see some sort of stuttering picture for a long time. Or we could see things jump. All of those things are possible."

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 Post subject: Re: Swine H3N2 Pandemic
PostPosted: Tue Nov 29, 2011 10:03 am 
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Location: Pittsburgh, PA USA
niman wrote:
niman wrote:
WHO clearly beginning to prepare for trH3N2 pandemic

http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/arts-a ... 25253.html

WHO trying to hit the sweet spot in responding to puzzling new flu virus

By: Helen Branswell, The Canadian Press

Posted: 11/26/2011 3:31 AM | Comments: 3 (including replies) | Last Modified: 11/26/2011 8:22 AM

The spread of an odd new flu virus that has been jumping from pigs to people in parts of the United States has the World Health Organization gearing up its response planning, a senior official of the agency says.


H3N2pdm11 (aka S-OtrH3N2) is NOT puzzling. The story is in the sequence, and when the CDC released the sequences from human cases infected with triple reassortants, the puzzle was easily soved and the 2011 pandemic was quite predictable.

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 Post subject: Re: Swine H3N2 Pandemic
PostPosted: Tue Nov 29, 2011 10:41 am 
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niman wrote:
niman wrote:
niman wrote:
WHO clearly beginning to prepare for trH3N2 pandemic

http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/arts-a ... 25253.html

WHO trying to hit the sweet spot in responding to puzzling new flu virus

By: Helen Branswell, The Canadian Press

Posted: 11/26/2011 3:31 AM | Comments: 3 (including replies) | Last Modified: 11/26/2011 8:22 AM

The spread of an odd new flu virus that has been jumping from pigs to people in parts of the United States has the World Health Organization gearing up its response planning, a senior official of the agency says.


H3N2pdm11 (aka S-OtrH3N2) is NOT puzzling. The story is in the sequence, and when the CDC released the sequences from human cases infected with triple reassortants, the puzzle was easily soved and the 2011 pandemic was quite predictable.

What is puzzling is how the media can continue to claim H3N2pdm11 is "jumping from pigs to people" after the Iowa cluster.

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 Post subject: Re: Swine H3N2 Pandemic
PostPosted: Tue Nov 29, 2011 10:45 am 
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niman wrote:
niman wrote:
niman wrote:


H3N2pdm11 (aka S-OtrH3N2) is NOT puzzling. The story is in the sequence, and when the CDC released the sequences from human cases infected with triple reassortants, the puzzle was easily soved and the 2011 pandemic was quite predictable.

What is puzzling is how the media can continue to claim H3N2pdm11 is "jumping from pigs to people" after the Iowa cluster.

Detailed commentary soon.

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PostPosted: Tue Nov 29, 2011 10:59 am 
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niman wrote:
niman wrote:
Limited Human-to-Human Transmission of Novel Influenza A (H3N2) Virus — Iowa, November 2011
Dispatch
November 23, 2011 / 60(Dispatch);1-3


Enhanced surveillance for ILI has been implemented in health-care facilities in the communities where patients A, B, and C reside. IDPH has instructed health-care providers to obtain respiratory specimens from patients with ILI for influenza diagnostic testing at SHL.
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtm ... 0d1123a1_w

The above LIMITED surveillance in the Iowa neighborhood, coupled with requests for samples from ILI cases with swine exposures, is a response that is dramatically different from the response to the 2009 pandemic (H1N1pdm09).
The CDC remains in denial of H3N2pdm11.

The 2011 trH3N2 pandemic was predicted on December 17, 2010 when the index case for the Minnesota cluster was announced.

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/12171 ... demic.html

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PostPosted: Tue Nov 29, 2011 11:06 am 
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niman wrote:
niman wrote:
niman wrote:
Limited Human-to-Human Transmission of Novel Influenza A (H3N2) Virus — Iowa, November 2011
Dispatch
November 23, 2011 / 60(Dispatch);1-3


Enhanced surveillance for ILI has been implemented in health-care facilities in the communities where patients A, B, and C reside. IDPH has instructed health-care providers to obtain respiratory specimens from patients with ILI for influenza diagnostic testing at SHL.
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtm ... 0d1123a1_w

The above LIMITED surveillance in the Iowa neighborhood, coupled with requests for samples from ILI cases with swine exposures, is a response that is dramatically different from the response to the 2009 pandemic (H1N1pdm09).
The CDC remains in denial of H3N2pdm11.

The 2011 trH3N2 pandemic was predicted on December 17, 2010 when the index case for the Minnesota cluster was announced.

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/12171 ... demic.html

The Emerging H3N2 Swine Pandemic
Recombinomics Commentary 23:10
December 17, 2010


This case of human infection with swine origin influenza virus (SOIV) brings the total number of human infections with swine origin influenza viruses reported to CDC since 2005 to 19. Previously, five of these reports had been swine origin A (H3N2) viruses. The most recent Minnesota case brings the number of reports swine origin A (H3N2) infections in humans in the United States to six. Human infections with swine origin H3N2 virus infections have also been reported from Pennsylvania and Wisconsin in October and November 2010, Minnesota in May 2010, Iowa in September 2009, and Kansas in August 2009.

The above comments are from the latest CDC update on H3N2 triple reassortants (trH3N2)..........

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PostPosted: Tue Nov 29, 2011 11:40 am 
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11/13 trH1 cases described in New England Journal of Medicine by CDC in 2009

http://www.nejm.org/doi/pdf/10.1056/NEJMoa0903812

Table 1 lists "swine exposures" but CDC managed to withhold the sequences, which were central to the paper. These sequences were not released until Nov 18, 2010 which followed the Recombinomics Nov 14, 2010 analysis in the absence of the critical sequences.

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