Swine Flu - Early signs it is developing resistance to vaccine - Occasion2B
    | •Main  |  • Drop Box  |  • Chat   |  • forum  |  • links  |  • YoNews   |  • Archives  |  • Contact  |  • Join Forum  |  • Donate  |  • Quick Post   |  

Occasion2b - first place on earth to see tomorrow   





Drag button to toolbar
or bookmarks to
post from any where




Full size


• General Discussion

• Pandemic Flu

Yonews Page

YoNews Portal

• All Things Prepper

• Game Area

• Archives









Status
Status

The sun Today


Right click and view
for larger image










Welcome, . Please login or register. Or not
         ~ Guest posting on ~
May 23, 2012    03:58:17 PM                                

• View most recent posts.

Please login with username and password

   Search:       Advanced search
  * Home Search Calendar Login Register

                   

Pages:[1] Print Start new topic
beast
Hero Member
Posts: 9392


Occasion2B
WWW
Swine Flu - Early signs it is developing resistance to vaccine
« Sep 21, 2009    01:31:38 PM »

Swine flu virus hasn't mutated, official says
H1N1 remains mild, but there are early signs of some vaccine resistance
The Associated Press
updated 9:30 a.m. ET, Mon., Sept . 21, 2009

HONG KONG - The swine flu virus hasn't mutated into a more deadly strain but there are early signs it is developing resistance to vaccine, the World Heath Organization's chief said Monday.

Authorities are monitoring closely whether the virus was morphing into more virulent forms that would make it deadlier, the organization's Director-General Margaret Chan said.

"We are not seeing that situation right now," Chan told reporters as the WHO convened a conference in Hong Kong.

The WHO says the swine flu virus — also known as H1N1 — has killed almost 3,486 people worldwide as of Sept. 13. South America and North America account for the majority of deaths.

For now, the infection is generally mild and most people recover without treatment. But should it become deadlier, developing nations could be especially vulnerable because those populations lack adequate health care and are already fighting a myriad of diseases including AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis.

Chan said manufacturers were on track to develop billions of new doses of the vaccine over the next year. The vaccine is highly effective against the swine flu virus, though there were a small number of instances — about 25 in the world — of a vaccine-resistant flu.

more:
URL:
Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32950905/ns/health-swine_flu/
Reply with quote
Pages: [1] Print Start new topic 
« previous next »
Jump to:  

Powered by SMF 1.1.16 | SMF © 2011, Simple Machines
Twitter Mod created by 2by2host.com - a web hosting company
| Sitemap