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Author Topic: Suspect H3N2v Cluster at Monroe County Fair - Indiana  (Read 3040 times)
Letsbereal
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« on: August 01, 2012, 08:33:29 AM »

Suspect H3N2v Cluster at Monroe County Fair - Indiana
1 August 2012
, (Recombinomics)
http://www.recombinomics.com/News/08011202/H3N2v_Monroe_Cluster.html

Health officials say they are waiting on test results after a number of pigs began showing symptoms of influenza A. People who came into contact with the pigs at the fair and were showing symptoms are also being tested. In the meantime, the Monroe County Fair swine barn has been closed.

The above comments on the Monroe County Fair in Bloomington, Indiana (which opened Saturday) strongly suggests that the H3N2v confirmed at the LaPorte County Fair (in exhibitors, family, and associated swine) has spread throughout Indiana (media reports cite symptomatic swine in Jackson and Hendricks counties also). 

12 of 12 swine (including those which were asymptomatic) were H3N2v positive and reports indicate the swine H3N2v sequences were closely related to the the human cases. 

Two full sets of sequences from fair cases (A/Indiana/07/2012 and A/Indiana/09/2012) have been released by the CDC and they are closely related to the West Virginia cluster at an Mineral County day care center (A/West Virginia/06/2011 and A/West Virginia07/2011) which also involved 23 symptomatic contacts who did not have swine exposure. 

Additional confirmed #H3N2v cases in 2012 include patients in Utah and Hawaii.

The emergence and evolution of this novel H3N2v sub-clade raises serious pandemic concerns.


Ebola kills at least 14 in Uganda: reports
29 July 2012
, by Andria Cheng  - New York (MarketWatch)
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/ebola-kills-at-least-14-in-uganda-reports-2012-07-29

Gates Foundation hires discoverer of Ebola
15 January 2009
, Seattle (AP - USA Today)
http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2009-01-15-gates-foundation_N.htm?csp=34

And so it begins like predicted.
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Letsbereal
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« Reply #1 on: August 03, 2012, 04:48:31 PM »

Uganda Ebola Outbreak Spreads To Local Prison
2 August 2012
, by Tyler Durden (Zero Hedge)
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/uganda-ebola-outbreak-spreads-local-prison

While world markets are transfixed by what central planners in various continents may do, but really just say, a tragedy in Africa continues to develop, as the recently reported Ebola outbreak in the infamous country of Uganda, which is not Spain, has now spread to a local prison, even as the number of infected cases has doubled in the last several days since we first reported on this most recent Outbreak which luckily has for now not spread outside of the country.

CNN reports:

"The hospital at the center of an Ebola outbreak in Uganda is now dealing with 30 suspected cases, including five from Kibaale prison, Dr. Dan Kyamanywa said Thursday.

Three patients at Kagadi hospital have been confirmed as having the virus, said Kyamanywa, a district health officer.

Doctors are now testing the suspected cases urgently so they can separate confirmed cases from those who do not have the disease, Doctors Without Borders said.

Suspected cases are still trickling into the hospital, Kyamanywa said. At least 16 people have died in the current outbreak."


More:

"We do expect the number of suspected cases to increase," he said.

"It's important to break transmission and reduce the number of contacts that suspected cases have."

There is a fear that the outbreak will spread to the capital, but it is unlikely, he said.

Many patients fled Kagadi hospital when Ebola was confirmed, he said, and the hospital is struggling to respond to all the call-outs to suspected cases.

"Right now there is no treatment for Ebola, so the most effective measure we can take is to contain the spread of the disease," said Olimpia de la Rosa,

the Doctors Without Borders emergency coordinator for Uganda Ebola intervention.

"That is why we need to start working immediately.

Other cases need to be rapidly identified because containment is what can stop it," said the expert from the aid group, which is also known as Medecins Sans Frontieres.

The Ugandan government has asked people in western Uganda to travel by public transport only if it is necessary.


Here one may wonder if, just as in the case of Fukushima, the media is not reporting the full severity of the situation:

Market day was canceled Wednesday after Uganda's president warned people not to gather in large groups.

Health officials urged the public to report any suspected cases, to avoid contact with anyone infected and to wear gloves and masks while disinfecting bedding and clothing of infected people.

Officials also advised avoiding public gatherings in the affected district.

Teams in Uganda are taking an aggressive approach, including trying to track down anyone who came into contact with patients infected with the virus and health workers have been gearing up for better protection of health workers and an influx of cases.

The workers include people from Uganda's ministry of health, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization.


And of course, the biggest concern is getting one of those infected but asymptomatic on board of a plane and headed for Europe of the US. The resulting panic would be quite unwelcome. Or welcome, depending on one administration's need to force a social clamp down.
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kerrymti
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The truth will set us free..and..open their eyes.


« Reply #2 on: August 03, 2012, 06:29:31 PM »

Yeah, my sister is going to Uganda the end of the month, with doctors w/o borders.  No stopping her or convincing her it is a bad idea...this being the same sister that took her 14 year old son to Fukishima 3 months after the 'event'...very much has her head in the sand.
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bento
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« Reply #3 on: August 03, 2012, 08:23:14 PM »

Sounds like she has more money then brains, no offense intended though.
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We are all the sum of our tears. Too little and the ground is not fertile, and nothing can grow there. Too much and the best of us is washed away.
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