Stop Squawking Over Avian FluBy Michael Fumento The American Spectator, January 3, 2007
While doomsayers with extremely old wall calendars continue to invoke the devastating 1918-1919 Spanish flu pandemic as a model, they continue to ignore some rather important developments since then. That includes antibiotics to treat the secondary infections that then, as now, are the ultimate cause of most flu deaths. Better nourishment alone would dramatically reduce the death rate – even if we're actually quite over-nourished. That's why a recent widely misinterpreted medical journal article said that if there were a repeat of the Spanish flu that 96 percent of the deaths would be in the developing world. Alarmists also ignore the introduction of antivirals, developments in flu vaccine production, and recent studies and observations that show avian influenza type H5N1 is neither as contagious nor as deadly as they claim. Start with the last. We're warned that H5N1 in birds is mutating like gangbusters and therefore any day may mutate to become readily transmissible from human to human. Or it may "reassort," meaning that it could mix with human flu in an animal or human and emerge with the worst aspects of both. But H5N1 was first discovered in Scottish chickens in 1959 and has therefore had almost half a century to do either. Theoretically it still could; but it won't be tomorrow and quite possibly never.
Separately, the scientists used gene splicing to create a hybrid virus. They found these hybrids also did not pass easily between the animals. Moreover, ferrets injected with the reassorted virus symptoms were less severe than with those who received pure H5N1. Reassortment appears to have weakened the germ. How about all the talk of H5N1 having a death rate above 50 percent? This is based on a readily-dismissible artifact: The numbers come from that tiny subset of persons whose flu symptoms are so severe that go to the hospital – Third World hospitals with Third World medicine, at that. To find a true death rate, researchers studied residents in a rural district in Vietnam and published their results in the January 2006 in the Archives of Internal Medicine. They found a mortality rate for those infected with avian flu of about one in 140 or 0.71 percent – about the same as seasonal human flu. Assuming H5N1 did become pandemic, we are now building huge stockpiles of two antivirals – Tamiflu and Relenza – that appear they could be tremendously effective against avian flu H5N1 because they specifically target neuraminidase (the "N" part of the name.) Research at St. Jude's Research Hospital has shown that H5N1 appears to express the highest level of neuraminidase of any flu since 1957. Other studies show the drugs can effectively kill two birds with one stone by both preventing a person from getting the flu or, if they do get it, from transmitting it. A review of four of them in the American Journal of Epidemiology showed that preventative administration of Relenza reduced the chance of becoming infected by 75 percent, reduced the chance of transmission by 19 percent, and reduced the severity of illness by 52 percent. For Tamiflu preventative administration reduced the chance of becoming infected by 81 percent, reduced the chance of by transmission by 80 percent, and reduced the severity of illness by 56 percent. Meanwhile, at least six different drug companies have vaccines for H5N1 in testing or even in production while awaiting regulatory approval. At least one country has ordered enough for every citizen. The focus in developing these vaccines is making them in cell cultures rather than eggs. This could reduce the time needed to create them from the present 9-month period to just 90 days. A pneumonia vaccine has already been available for decades, and pneumonia is by far the greatest killer of flu victims. Every day that passes doesn't bring us a closer to a pandemic. It does bring us closer to having ever larger and more-effective stockpiles of drugs to both prevent and treat avian flu in the highly unlikely event there is pandemic. Read Michael Fumento's additional work on the flu. Michael Fumento is a health, science, and military writer and the author of numerous books. |
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