flue construction

Navigation

Resources

A(h1n1)'s Impact To The Flights And Airfares
By Shane Lee
This article is about the A(H1N1) and airfares. You can find some useful information in it if you are booking your China flights now. (you can get more New York,Los Angeles,San Francisco, Chicago Read more...

 

h1n1 Partners:

Tamiflu vaccine

Resources

Swine Flu Origins Revealed
By sarte
A new analysis of the current swine-origin H1N1 influenza A virus suggests that transmission to humans occurred several months before recognition of the existing outbreak.‘Using Read more...

Resources

Pregnant Women Are More Risky In Swine Flu
By Sutiyo Na
Some complications among pregnant women as the Swine Flu continue to spread across the country, and soon to the world, and that this high-risk group needs to take antivirals as soon as infection is Read more...

Resources

In Dire Need Of Swine Flu Vaccine
By Sutiyo Na
According to the World Health Organization, efforts for developing a swine flu vaccine has been ongoing since the first human case of the virus has been confirmed. Estimates place the initial doses Read more...

swine influenza: an acute and highly contagious respiratory disease of swine caused by the orthomyxovirus thought to be the same virus that caused ...

Welcome to Flu (Influneza) Information - your comprehensive h1n1 resource.

Below, you'll find extensive information on leading flue construction articles and products to help you on your way to success.

Swine Flu Can Transfer To Human Race
By Sutiyo Na
Have you been watching the news and/or read your daily broadsheets at all recently? If so, you’ve probably heard the term “Swine Flu” bouncing around a lot. While you are in the pigs fair or your hog race backyard and you were ever unlucky enough to be sneezed on by a sick pig, would you catch its flu? Not necessarily — it takes more than simply breathing in a pig's germs (just like kissing his messy and slimy nose) for you to get sick.

While most people come down with the normal human flu at some point, it’s not really a danger to anyone but the very young (from 0 month to 7 years old) and the very old (from 60 to 90 years old). Fortunately, the human immune system is there to recognize and neutralize the effects of the virus. Each year, the virus mutates just slightly and most of the population is once again susceptible to the disease. This is why a new vaccine must be created regularly to reflect the most recent influenza mutants out in the environment.


When the human flu virus mutates its external proteins, the body’s defenses still recognize them and eventually mount a response (the period of sickness occurs while the body is developing that response). If this failed to happen, you would eventually succumb to the virus and you will die.

If a people’s immune system might not immediately stop a new human influenza infection, it does recognize that new mutant and begin building a response. Avian and swine peplomers, on the other hand, are not easily recognized by the human system because our race did not include pressure from those

 

particular viruses. The animal influenza has been able to mutate enough to cross the species bridge and infect humans as well as humans we have come into a close contact with the animals (e.g. as a hog racer, we care for them and eventually sold out to the market for more extra income) that carry these viruses.

In the past this would not have been a worldwide epidemic. An infected village might just die out in isolation (the nearest hospital was more than 10 miles away from the village). Now it’s different: if a traveler can become infected from a hog race backyard in one region and fly thousands of miles to another, long before they experience symptoms of possible flu.

So what’s the fall away message from all of this? Can we do anything? Well as individuals it’s wise to go through the same sanitary practices as we might during flu season. We must be aware if our pigs catch flu during the season so that we put them instantly in a quarantine area that no other individual will take care of your pigs without protective suits. And traveling to places which have reported Swine Flu cases probably isn’t a great idea.

There are people as you observe in different agencies and they have spent their whole lives preparing for just these kinds of epidemics and they are currently working very hard to provide the public with the best information and advice about the Swine Flu.

They are only there waiting for your attention and willingness to diagnose if you suspected yourself a possible Swine Flu virus. They are there to help you live longer.
I’m world wide internet marketer and write about health, sport and finance. If You want more specific The News Outbreak About Swine Flu, Come to my Website : www.aboutswineflu.co.cc

 

We strive to provide only quality articles, so if there is a specific topic related to h1n1 that you would like us to cover, please contact us at any time.

And again, thank you to those contributing daily to our flue construction website

How bird flu has spread
See the location of bird and human cases of the H5N1 virus - and watch the spread of the disease over time.
Father 'caught bird flu from son'
Tests show a Chinese man probably contracted bird flu from his son - renewing fears about the risk to humans.
Birds culled after flu outbreak
Thousands of birds are being slaughtered after a new case of bird flu is found in Suffolk.
Bird flu discovered in mute swans
Three mute swans in Dorset have been found dead after contracting the virulent H5N1 strain of bird flu.
Latest blow in year of outbreaks
Why the return of bird flu to the UK is a huge blow to farmers, still feeling the pinch after bluetongue and foot-and-mouth outbreaks.
Birds face cull as flu detected
An exclusion zone is in place and 6,500 birds face slaughter after a new case of bird flu is found in Suffolk.
Bird flu vaccine production boost
Researchers discover how to stretch out bird vaccine stocks so more people can be immunised in a pandemic.
UK advice for travellers
Advice for Britons travelling to countries affected by bird flu is published.
Why bird flu has been kept at bay
Scientists say why the impact of bird flu on humans has been limited so far.
Bird flu: Is it still a threat?
Bird flu was constantly in the headlines - but where are we now?
Bird flu fears focus on Indonesia
Indonesia has now overtaken Vietnam as the nation worst affected by bird flu, and global concerns are shifting towards the country's growing problem.
China rethinks bird flu history
China reveals its first human bird flu death came two years earlier than reported.
How did virus make it to the UK?
Bird migration experts say that it is not clear how the H5N1 virus arrived in the UK.
Wild bird role in flu 'unclear'
Scientists are still unsure of the role wild birds play in spreading bird flu.
Bird flu experts' wildfowl watch
Details of the 10 species of wildfowl identified by experts as the most likely possible importers of bird flu to the UK.
Cat bird flu risks 'overlooked'
Extra precautions should be taken to prevent the spread of bird flu to cats - and then to humans, scientists warn.
Eyewitness: Surviving bird flu
The Vietnamese man who survived the virulent H5N1 strain of bird flu, after it killed his brother.
Timeline: Bird flu in the UK
A date-by-date guide to how bird flu has affected the UK.
UN/WHO advice for flu-hit areas
Two UN agencies leading the fight against the spread of bird flu tell owners to keep their pets indoors.
Q&A: The Hungary link
Virus expert Prof John Oxford explains how bird flu may have spread from Hungary.
Britain's bird flu preparations
What measures has the UK taken to deal with bird flu and the threat the virus might mutate and cause a human pandemic?
At a glance: UK pandemic plans
Updated details of how the UK would cope with a possible flu pandemic have been published by the government.
No signs of panic over poultry
Despite industry fears of a collapse in poultry sales, sales of chicken and turkey are normal at one West London market.
Bird flu's 'risk to biodiversity'
The spread of bird flu poses serious risks to endangered species in many Asian countries, say scientists.
Turkey bird flu region still wary
Villagers in the Dogubeyazit region of Turkey - the heart of January's bird flu outbreak - are taking measures to prevent its return.
Germany's fight against bird flu
The alarm caused by the discovery of a dead swan with bird flu in Britain is a direct echo of what happened in Germany when its first case was detected two months ago, writes the BBC's Ray Furlong.
Poultry industry holds its breath
Bird flu poses a significant potential economic threat to the UK's poultry industry but farmers are refusing to panic.
Life in Scotland's at-risk zone
Organic farmer Ian Miller says customers are continuing to buy free-range produce despite restrictions.
Bird flu lessons from Vietnam
As poultry farms in Europe face bird flu for the first time, Vietnamese farmers are only too familiar with the disease, writes Kate McGeown.
Experts call for better flu plans
Scientists say the government is failing to take advantage of scientific developments in the fight to prevent a flu pandemic.
Scientists reveal how H5N1 kills
Scientists find a potential reason to explain why the H5N1 strain of bird flu is so deadly for people.
Bird flu vaccine '10 years away'
Some experts meeting at a bird flu conference in Paris believe an effective vaccine against a human form of the virus could still be many years away.
'I am testing new bird flu jab'
BBC news medical correspondent Fergus Walsh signs up as a volunteer to test a new vaccine for bird flu.
Human trials for bird flu vaccine
Human trials of an experimental vaccine against the H5N1 bird flu virus have begun in Belgium.
Fighting flu - outwitting a virus
H5N1 is not the only flu scientists have had to try to outwit in the past 100 years.
Are we prepared for bird flu?
Experts say it is no longer a question of if but when a pandemic of bird flu hits, so are we ready for it?

This web site was created with HyperVRE and is hosted at HostGator

© 2009 ExpertTicker.net. All rights reserved. Legal Information: Privacy Policy