School was closed in Mexico yesterday because of this lethal Swine Flu:
Mexico closed its schools across its capital Friday after at least 16 otherwise healthy people died and more than 900 others fell ill from what could be a new strain of swine flu. The World Health Organization worried that it could mark the start of a flu pandemic. Scientists in the U.S. and Mexico were trying to determine if the deaths were due to the same new strain of swine flu that sickened seven people in Texas and California.
The World Health Organization counted at least 57 deaths in Mexico, although it wasnāt yet clear if this larger number was due to swine flu. āWe are very, very concerned,ā WHO spokesman Thomas Abraham said. āWe have what appears to be a novel virus and it has spread from human to human.ā If international spread is confirmed, that meets WHOās criteria for raising the pandemic alert level, he added.
WHO also raised its internal alert system Friday, enabling the agency to divert more money and personnel to dealing with the outbreak. āItās all hands on deck at the moment.ā Abraham said. Mexicoās Health Secretary, Jose Cordova, said only 16 of the deaths have been confirmed to have been caused by the new strain, through testing at government laboratories. Samples from 44 other people who died were still being tested. The health department put the total number of people sickened at around 943 nationwide.
Cordova said samples also were sent to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, to determine whether itās the same virus infecting seven people in Texas and California. As of now, tests show the flu is a ānew, different strain ⦠that originally came from pigs,ā he said. āWe certainly have 60 deaths that we canāt be sure are from the same virus, but it is probable,ā Cordova told MVS radio in Mexico City.
Cordova described a chilling new strain that had killed only people among the normally less-vulnerable young and mid-adult age range. One possibility is that the most vulnerable segments of the population ā infants and the aged ā had been vaccinated against other strains, and that those vaccines may be providing some protection. But Dr. Anne Schuchat of the CDC said āat this point, we do not have any confirmations of swine influenza in Mexicoā of the kind that sickened seven California and Texas residents. All seven U.S. victims recovered from a strain of the flu that combines pig, bird and human viruses in a way that researchers have not seen before. The swine fluās symptoms are like those of the regular flu, mostly involving fever, cough and sore throat, though some of the seven also experienced vomiting and diarrhea.
SMH. Pop that vitamin C and try to stay well, people. If your co-worker coughs, promptly dismiss his or her *ss.