orichalcum: (Fumble bad)
orichalcum ([personal profile] orichalcum) wrote2009-04-26 10:47 am

Swine Flu

For folks who haven't been paying attention to the news lately:

There's a reasonable chance that the swine flu is going to turn into a global pandemic. For most people, it just results in mild flu symptoms. In Mexico, however, there has been so far a 6% fatality rate, entirely among young, healthy adults (which is not normal for the flu). If you're having flu symptoms and having any respiratory distress, going to the hospital and getting things checked out is not the world's worst idea.

We are planning on picking up a few emergency supplies and, if we can find them, some surgical masks later today, in case there's a "no congregating in public places" warning that goes out. I don't think this is time to push the panic button, but it may be time to press the caution button.

CP and I, fyi, have had 2nd-degree contact with a flu victim (the same archaeologist that President Obama met directly, oddly enough), but the point of contact was long enough ago that we would have already come down with symptoms were there any danger. (There's a 2-5 day incubation period; the disease appears to be airborne and highly infectious. We had lunch with my cousin 6 days ago, who 8 days before that had been at a conference with that archaeologist.)

[identity profile] feir-fireb.livejournal.com 2009-04-26 09:09 pm (UTC)(link)
Other interesting notes: H1N1 is the same flu group as Spanish Flu of 1918. Apparently the Spanish Flu also primarily affected the young and healthy in part because it would set up a feedback loop for a disproportionate immune system response. This effect is something they have drugs for these, but I don't know how widely held they are.

[identity profile] orichalcum.livejournal.com 2009-04-27 04:44 am (UTC)(link)
Interesting. Yeah, it sounds like in the U.S., we've got lots of Tamiflu and it works well against this. That is, well, less true for much of the world.