The World Health Organization will recommend that nations curtail efforts to confirm swine flu cases and assume the H1N1 virus is the culprit. Meanwhile, resistance to antiviral drug Tamiflu is seen ... As the World Health Organization prepares to recommend that most countries assume that their flu cases are the result of the novel H1N1 swine flu virus, officials are seeing the first signs of resistance to the commonly used antiviral drug Tamiflu -- though so far none that are particularly
A teenage girl traveling from San Francisco was found to be carrying Tamiflu-resistant swine flu after triggering a temperature-monitoring device in the Hong Kong airport ...
The baby is in Starship Hospital in Auckland after developing severe symptoms of the flu ... Meanwhile, clinical testing is underway on a new swine flu vaccine ... The government is hauling in 300,0 ...
Questions abound about how to best inoculate the world against swine flu as health officials plan for a campaign that could dwarf any previous flu vaccination effort ...
The U.S. is racing to make huge supplies of swine flu vaccine -- and trying to figure out how who needs it most -- even as the pandemic sweeps the globe ...
The virus is also spreading rapidly through the Southern Hemisphere. A French company announces large-scale production of a vaccine ... At least 1 million Americans have now contracted the novel H1N1 influenza, according to mathematical models prepared by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, while data from the field indicates that the virus is continuing to spread even though the normal flu season is over and that an increasing proportion of victims are being hospitalized ...
Almost 18,000 cases of swine flu and 45 confirmed deaths have been reported within the U.S. As the swine flu runs its course, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius has reported that vaccines for swine flu are currently being tested in preparation for the possibility of an outbreak later this year. She stated that the government is making every effort to be prepared and is working with governors and health and school officials in case a major vaccination program is needed ... read
This site was created to help deal with the H1N1 influenza flu pandemic. Flu preparation is important! You can have an immunization with the flu vaccine, you can have the flu shot; flu shots are good before you are showing flu symptoms, although the current trivalent influenza vaccine is unlikely to provide protection against the new 2009 H1N1 strain, vaccines against the new strain are being developed and could be ready as early as June 2009.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), in humans the symptoms of H1N1 swine flu are similar to those of influenza and of influenza-like illness in general. Symptoms include fever, cough, sore throat, body aches, headache, chills and fatigue. The 2009 outbreak has shown an increased percentage of patients reporting diarrhea and vomiting.
Recommendations to prevent the spread of the virus among humans include using standard infection control against influenza. This includes frequent washing of hands with soap and water or with alcohol-based hand sanitizers, especially after being out in public.