Influenza Virus Mashup

Influenza Virus Mashup

Archive for April, 2011

[Crof's H5N1] Indonesia: 18 B2B H5N1 outbreaks in Gorontalo

Posted by Automator On April - 30 - 2011

Via The Poultry Site.com: Indonesia Reports 18 Bird Flu Outbreaks. Excerpt:

A total of 18 outbreaks of H5N1 highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) have been reported, all in Gorontalo province in northern Sulawesi, a region free of the disease for almost four years. 

The veterinary authority sent an Immediate Notification dated 26 April to the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE). 

The report describes 18 outbreaks of HPAI starting between 30 March and 6 April in the region of Gorontalo, all in village flocks. 

In total 4,709 birds were affected, of which 817 and 4,119 have been destroyed. 

The presence of the H5N1 sub-type of the HPAI virus has been confirmed. 

It adds that since the end of March 2011, and with laboratory confirmation by the Disease Investigation Center in Maros, the Gorontalo province is infected with HPAI. Since then, the disease has spread in four districts of Gorontalo province: Gorontalo, Gorontalo municipality, Boalemo and Bone Bolango. 

Stamping out is the main control measure for HPAI in the area. Movement control of poultry has been done, especially using check points.

[Avian Flu Diary] Measles: Forgotten, But Not Gone

Posted by Automator On April - 30 - 2011

(Fri, 29 Apr 2011 12:23:00 +0000)

 

 

# 5530

 

 

Measles, which was once almost a youth’s `rite of passage’ in the United States, has been all but eliminated in recent years after the introduction of the first measles vaccine in 1963.

 

The chart below (source: CDC) shows the remarkable effectiveness of the vaccination campaign.

 

image

 

While many parents today think of measles as a relatively benign childhood illness, it actually produced significant morbidity and mortality with respiratory, ocular, and neurological complications - sometimes resulting in death.

 

During the 1950s – before the introduction of the measles vaccine – in the United States the disease infected roughly 4 million, hospitalized nearly 50,000,  and contributed to the deaths of several hundred every year.  

 

Admittedly, a vast improvement over the mortality rates from earlier in the century, when the disease was far deadlier (for reasons that quite frankly, remain hard to explain – Ian York explored this fascinating mystery in Measles week, part I: Introduction ).

 

But in recent years lower uptake of the vaccine – its reputation tainted by (disproven) claims of a possible link to autism (popularized by Dr. Andrew Wakefield and promoted by various anti-vaccination groups) – and the continual importation of the disease from countries where it remains endemic - have allowed the virus to keep a toehold in developed nations.

 

In developing countries, the incidence – and mortality rate – of measles remains high.   These statistics from the World Health Organization:

 

 

Measles

Fact sheet N°286

Key facts
  • Measles is one of the leading causes of death among young children even though a safe and cost-effective vaccine is available.
  • In 2008, there were 164 000 measles deaths globally – nearly 450 deaths every day or 18 deaths every hour.
  • More than 95% of measles deaths occur in low-income countries with weak health infrastructures.
  • Measles vaccination resulted in a 78% drop in measles deaths between 2000 and 2008 worldwide.
  • In 2008, about 83% of the world’s children received one dose of measles vaccine by their first birthday through routine health services – up from 72% in 2000.

 

Today news on measles from several fronts. 

 

First, the WHO’s  WER (Weekly Epidemiological Record) brings us details on an ongoing measles outbreak in Europe, that has infected more than 6,500 people in 33 nations.

 

Measles outbreaks in Europe

As of 18 April 2011, 33 countries in Europe had reported  6500 measles cases. Epidemiological investigations and genotyping have confirmed transmission of measles virus among several countries in the Region and in the Americas.

<SNIP>

In all these outbreaks, except for the second out-
break in Spain and the outbreak in Turkey, the D4
genotype
of measles virus has been confirmed.
The B3 genotype of measles virus was isolated
from cases in the second measles outbreak in
Spain, while the D9 genotype, originating from
and common in south-east Asia (e.g. Malaysia and
Indonesia) was confirmed to have caused the out-
break in Istanbul (Turkey) in January 2011.

(Continue . . . )

 

 

As you can see, there are a number of different strains or genotypes of measles.  New ones emerge, or are detected, every so often.  As of mid-2010, the World Health Organization (WHO) maintained reference strains representing 23 recognized genotypes.

 

From Eurosurveillance this week, a report on a novel strain of (an existing genotype:G3) of measles which has spread across Europe over a 2 month period.

 

Eurosurveillance, Volume 16, Issue 17, 28 April 2011

Rapid communications

Appearance of a novel measles G3 strain in multiple European countries within a two month period, 2010

K E Brown, M N Mulders, F Freymuth, S Santibanez, M M Mosquera, S Cordey, J Beirnes, S Shulga, R Myers, D Featherstone

During late 2010, a previously unrecognised strain of measles genotype G3 virus was identified in five different European countries by the World Health Organization Measles and Rubella Laboratory Network. Apart from one, none had a travel history to south-east Asia, the usual source of G3 viruses, although epidemiological links could be established between some of the cases. This case series illustrates the value of genotyping and sequencing in tracking measles infections, and identifying otherwise unrecognised chains of transmission.

(Continue . . . )

 

And next, from the Journal of Infectious Diseases a report on the impact of an outbreak of measles in Tucson, Arizona in 2008 that affected two healthcare facilities. 

 

 

Health Care–Associated Measles Outbreak in the United States After an Importation: Challenges and Economic Impact

 

J Infect Dis. (2011) jir115 first published online April 28, 2011 doi:10.1093/infdis/jir115

Sanny Y. Chen,

Shoana Anderson, Preeta K. Kutty, Francelli Lugo, Michelle McDonald, Paul A. Rota, Ismael R. Ortega-Sanchez, Ken Komatsu, Gregory L. Armstrong, Rebecca Sunenshine, and Jane F. Seward

 

You can follow the above link to read the entire article, or for the short version, you can read the press release from the IDSA.

 

Infectious Diseases Society of America

Measles outbreak underscores need for continued vigilance in health care settings

[EMBARGOED FOR APRIL 29, 2011] The U.S. measles vaccination program has been successful in eliminating endemic measles in the United States; yet this success has provided challenges that require ongoing vigilance for the rapid identification and response to measles cases in health care settings. In 2008, the largest reported health care-associated measles outbreak in the United States since 1989 occurred in Tucson, Arizona, costing approximately $800,000 in response and containment efforts. In a report published in The Journal of Infectious Diseases and available online, researchers identify preventive measures hospitals and health care facilities can implement to reduce the likelihood and decrease the economic impact of a future measles outbreak in these settings.

 

Due to a highly effective vaccine and high vaccine coverage, measles was declared eliminated in the United States in 2000; however, the potential for measles infection still exists in this country. Non-adherence to U.S. vaccination recommendations and infection among unvaccinated travelers coming into the United States continue to pose potential threats to the public and to health care personnel. In the 2008 Tucson outbreak, an unvaccinated, infected Swiss traveler visited a hospital emergency department on February 12. The traveler was admitted to the hospital the next day, but a measles diagnosis was not confirmed until February 20. This ignited an intense and lengthy public health investigation and response to persons with suspected and confirmed measles as well as contacts of those persons.

(Continue . . . )

 

And again from the Journal of Infectious diseases, an editorial comment on the above study by Stephen M. Ostroff.  

The full text of both articles is freely available.

 

EDITORIAL COMMENTARY:

Stephen M. Ostroff

Measles: Going, Going, But Not Gone

J Infect Dis. (2011) jir125 first published online April 28, 2011 doi:10.1093/infdis/jir125

 

 

While not the scourge of the early 20th century in the United States, measles remains a serious public health threat in much of the world, and is only held at bay in developed countries by relatively high vaccination rates.

 

There is a lot more to the measles story, and I highly recommend reading the entire Mystery Rays blog series on the disease by Ian York from 2010.

 

Measles week, part I: Introduction

Measles week, part II: Emerging disease

Measles week, Part III: Not the answers

Measles week, part IV: Some of the answers

Measles week, Part V: What about the vaccine?

 

 

            (Thu, 28 Apr 2011 15:59:00 +0000)

             

             

             

            # 5529

             

            Nine-banded Armadillo -wikipedia

             

             

            Armadillo and road kill jokes abound in the south (Why did the chicken cross the road?  . . .  To prove to the armadillo it can be done). But apparently some people actually do indulge in that cliché of a southern delicacy – known in finer rural dining establishments as `possum on the half shell’.

             

            I’ll not bother to debate the culinary merits of armadillo stew, since I’m fully aware that tastes (of people, and presumably armadillos) vary. A lesson learned after I once futilely tried to explain `grits’ to friend from the UK while she countered with vividly told tales of `the haggis’.  

             

            Neither of us gained much ground with the other.

             

            Different strokes, I guess.

             

            But it is worth noting today that an article in the NEJM is reporting that some of the roughly 150 cases of Leprosy in the United States each year may arise from the consumption of, or more likely - contact with - armadillos.

             

            This is not exactly a new idea, since it has been known since the 1960s that armadillos can carry the etiological agent responsible for leprosy;  Mycobacterium leprae.

             

            Establishing a link between strains carried by humans, and carried by armadillos, has only recently  been accomplished.

             

            Below is the link to the NEJM article, but for more details I have the HRSA press release as well.

             

             

            Probable Zoonotic Leprosy in the Southern United States

            Richard W. Truman, Ph.D., Pushpendra Singh, Ph.D., Rahul Sharma, Ph.D., Philippe Busso, Jacques Rougemont, Ph.D., Alberto Paniz-Mondolfi, M.D., Adamandia Kapopoulou, M.S., Sylvain Brisse, Ph.D., David M. Scollard, M.D., Ph.D., Thomas P. Gillis, Ph.D., and Stewart T. Cole, Ph.D.

            N Engl J Med 2011; 364:1626-1633April 28, 2011

             

             

            FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
            Wednesday, April 27, 2011

            Leprosy in U.S. may be transmitted by armadillos, study finds

            A new genetic study on leprosy bacteria reports that armadillos may be a source of infection in the Southern United States. The collaboration between scientists at the Health Resources and Services Administration’s (HRSA) National Hansen’s Disease Program (NHDP) in Baton Rouge, La., the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne and Institute Pasteur in Europe, and the Instituto de Biomedicina in Venezuela sheds light on the potential risk of transmission of leprosy bacteria between armadillos and humans. The risk of transmission is extremely low.

             

            The study, led by Richard W. Truman, Ph.D., Research Scientist at NHDP, and published in the April 28 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, was partially supported by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health.

             

            “Leprosy has been feared throughout human history, and there are still regions in several countries, including in the southern United States, where new cases of this disease continue to occur,” said Dr. Truman.  “The results of this study will help us better understand where some of these infections originate.”

             

            Caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium leprae, leprosy, also known as Hansen’s disease, primarily affects the skin and peripheral nerves. It is a chronic infection that afflicts more than 2 million persons worldwide with nerve damage, deformity or disability. Today, leprosy is found mostly in tropical regions of the world; at least 250,000 new cases are reported globally every year, with 150-250 cases occurring in the United States. Leprosy is treatable with antibiotics but is easily misdiagnosed, and delays in therapy increase the likelihood of disability and deformity.

             

            Leprosy was thought to be spread only between humans via respiratory droplets. Armadillos are the only other known natural hosts of leprosy bacteria. These data confirm a long-suspected link between armadillos and the 30 to 40 new cases of leprosy seen each year in U.S.-born Americans who have never traveled abroad to regions where the disease is prevalent.

             

            The new study, scientists compared the gene sequences of M. leprae samples taken from humans and armadillos in the United States.  They found that 64% of the human samples had a particular genotype that had never been seen before, and 85% of samples from armadillos shared that same genotype.

             

            “These findings do not change the risk of acquiring leprosy from armadillos, which remains extremely low,” said Dr. James Krahenbuhl, director of NHDP.  “Armadillos have been suspected as a source of human infection in the Gulf Coast area for 40 years.”

             

            “Genetics and genomics have become important tools for studying how diseases behave in natural settings,” said Christine Sizemore, Ph.D., chief of the Tuberculosis and Other Mycobacterial Diseases Section at NIAID. “The data and methods used in this study can be applied in other areas of the world to monitor leprosy transmission and identify other possible environmental reservoirs.”

             

            The NHDP is a center of excellence comprising an outpatient clinic and referral center for treatment and rehabilitation, training and research, all focused on leprosy. The NHDP outpatient clinic and 11 contract clinics in the U.S. manages 3000 cases. An additional 600 cases are managed by private sector physicians with services and consultation provided by NHDP physicians.  The NHDP is the only provider of these services in the United States:  Visit the National Hansen’s Disease Program or the NIAID Leprosy website for more information about leprosy.

             

             

            While the risks of contracting leprosy (Hansen’s Disease) for the discriminating diner are exceedingly low, this is a fascinating bit of medical detective work.

            (Thu, 28 Apr 2011 15:59:00 +0000)

             

             

             

            # 5529

             

            Nine-banded Armadillo -wikipedia

             

             

            Armadillo and road kill jokes abound in the south (Why did the chicken cross the road?  . . .  To prove to the armadillo it can be done). But apparently some people actually do indulge in that cliché of a southern delicacy – known in finer rural dining establishments as `possum on the half shell’.

             

            I’ll not bother to debate the culinary merits of armadillo stew, since I’m fully aware that tastes (of people, and presumably armadillos) vary. A lesson learned after I once futilely tried to explain `grits’ to friend from the UK while she countered with vividly told tales of `the haggis’.  

             

            Neither of us gained much ground with the other.

             

            Different strokes, I guess.

             

            But it is worth noting today that an article in the NEJM is reporting that some of the roughly 150 cases of Leprosy in the United States each year may arise from the consumption of, or more likely - contact with - armadillos.

             

            This is not exactly a new idea, since it has been known since the 1960s that armadillos can carry the etiological agent responsible for leprosy;  Mycobacterium leprae.

             

            Establishing a link between strains carried by humans, and carried by armadillos, has only recently  been accomplished.

             

            Below is the link to the NEJM article, but for more details I have the HRSA press release as well.

             

             

            Probable Zoonotic Leprosy in the Southern United States

            Richard W. Truman, Ph.D., Pushpendra Singh, Ph.D., Rahul Sharma, Ph.D., Philippe Busso, Jacques Rougemont, Ph.D., Alberto Paniz-Mondolfi, M.D., Adamandia Kapopoulou, M.S., Sylvain Brisse, Ph.D., David M. Scollard, M.D., Ph.D., Thomas P. Gillis, Ph.D., and Stewart T. Cole, Ph.D.

            N Engl J Med 2011; 364:1626-1633April 28, 2011

             

             

            FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
            Wednesday, April 27, 2011

            Leprosy in U.S. may be transmitted by armadillos, study finds

            A new genetic study on leprosy bacteria reports that armadillos may be a source of infection in the Southern United States. The collaboration between scientists at the Health Resources and Services Administration’s (HRSA) National Hansen’s Disease Program (NHDP) in Baton Rouge, La., the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne and Institute Pasteur in Europe, and the Instituto de Biomedicina in Venezuela sheds light on the potential risk of transmission of leprosy bacteria between armadillos and humans. The risk of transmission is extremely low.

             

            The study, led by Richard W. Truman, Ph.D., Research Scientist at NHDP, and published in the April 28 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, was partially supported by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health.

             

            “Leprosy has been feared throughout human history, and there are still regions in several countries, including in the southern United States, where new cases of this disease continue to occur,” said Dr. Truman.  “The results of this study will help us better understand where some of these infections originate.”

             

            Caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium leprae, leprosy, also known as Hansen’s disease, primarily affects the skin and peripheral nerves. It is a chronic infection that afflicts more than 2 million persons worldwide with nerve damage, deformity or disability. Today, leprosy is found mostly in tropical regions of the world; at least 250,000 new cases are reported globally every year, with 150-250 cases occurring in the United States. Leprosy is treatable with antibiotics but is easily misdiagnosed, and delays in therapy increase the likelihood of disability and deformity.

             

            Leprosy was thought to be spread only between humans via respiratory droplets. Armadillos are the only other known natural hosts of leprosy bacteria. These data confirm a long-suspected link between armadillos and the 30 to 40 new cases of leprosy seen each year in U.S.-born Americans who have never traveled abroad to regions where the disease is prevalent.

             

            The new study, scientists compared the gene sequences of M. leprae samples taken from humans and armadillos in the United States.  They found that 64% of the human samples had a particular genotype that had never been seen before, and 85% of samples from armadillos shared that same genotype.

             

            “These findings do not change the risk of acquiring leprosy from armadillos, which remains extremely low,” said Dr. James Krahenbuhl, director of NHDP.  “Armadillos have been suspected as a source of human infection in the Gulf Coast area for 40 years.”

             

            “Genetics and genomics have become important tools for studying how diseases behave in natural settings,” said Christine Sizemore, Ph.D., chief of the Tuberculosis and Other Mycobacterial Diseases Section at NIAID. “The data and methods used in this study can be applied in other areas of the world to monitor leprosy transmission and identify other possible environmental reservoirs.”

             

            The NHDP is a center of excellence comprising an outpatient clinic and referral center for treatment and rehabilitation, training and research, all focused on leprosy. The NHDP outpatient clinic and 11 contract clinics in the U.S. manages 3000 cases. An additional 600 cases are managed by private sector physicians with services and consultation provided by NHDP physicians.  The NHDP is the only provider of these services in the United States:  Visit the National Hansen’s Disease Program or the NIAID Leprosy website for more information about leprosy.

             

             

            While the risks of contracting leprosy (Hansen’s Disease) for the discriminating diner are exceedingly low, this is a fascinating bit of medical detective work.

            [Crof's H5N1] The death rates for Spanish flu

            Posted by Automator On April - 29 - 2011

            Mike Coston has one of his trademark posts this morning: Study: Urban vs Rural Mortality From Spanish Flu. He includes links to relevant information and adds his own thoughtful and informed comment. Highly recommended.

            [Crof's H5N1] Egypt: Politics and H5N1

            Posted by Automator On April - 29 - 2011

            Via IRIN: Two bird flu cases confirmed in Egypt. Excerpt:

            The recent confirmation of two cases of avian influenza in Egypt has raised fresh fears of a possible spread of the disease when the government is still trying to stabilize following mass protests three months ago. 

            “Chicken traders move large numbers of birds among the governorates uncensured,” said Abdel Aziz Al-Sayed, chairman of the Poultry Section at the Egyptian Federation of the Chambers of Commerce. 

            The fragile security in the country, he added, had allowed many poultry shops and farms to emerge in heavily populated areas, increasing the risk. 

            Of the 143 cases so far confirmed in Egypt, including the latest two, who had the A (H5N1) virus, 47 have been fatal, according to the UN World Health Organization.

            (Thu, 28 Apr 2011 13:42:00 +0000)

             

             

            # 5528

             

             

            The last `Great’ Influenza pandemic occurred in 1918-19, and while estimates vary widely, it may have claimed as many as 100 million lives.  A new strain of H1N1, it was known at the time as `Spanish Flu’.

             

            The impact of this pandemic, however, varied greatly. In 2006, in a Lancet journal (doi:10.1016/S0140- 6736(06) 69895-4) article cited as much as a 30-fold difference in mortality rates around the world:

             

            Estimation of potential global pandemic influenza mortality on the basis of vital registry data from the 1918—20 pandemic: a quantitative analysis

            Christopher JL Murray , Alan D Lopez , Brian Chin , Dennis Feehan , Kenneth H Hill

            Excess mortality ranged from 0·2% in Denmark to 4·4% in India. Since there was some under-registration of mortality in India, total pandemic mortality could have been even higher.

             

            Indeed, in some the more remote regions of the world – such as among the Maori of New Zealand or the Eskimos of Alaska – the mortality rates were even higher.

             

            The following account comes from Alaska’s pandemic history on http://1918.pandemicflu.gov/

             

            In some areas, influenza decimated whole villages. A schoolteacher reported that in her immediate area “three [villages were] wiped out entirely, others average 85% deaths…Total number of deaths reported 750, probably 25% [of] this number froze to death before help arrived.”

             

            One of the other striking features of the 1918 pandemic – aside from the high death toll – was the sparing of those over the age of 65 in the United States.

             

            image

            The infamous `W shaped curve’ of the 1918 pandemic clearly shows that the death rates among those in their teens, 20s, and 30s was much higher than was normally seen in previous influenza years.

             

             

            This wide disparity in mortality rates – much of it based on anecdotal accounts – has long intrigued researchers.  Today we’ve a new study from the Norwegian Institute of Public Health that attempts to answer some of these questions.

             

            What they found was that the mortality rate varied nearly 100 fold between remote, rural regions and urban populations, and that in the more remote areas, older persons were just as susceptible to the virus as those who were younger.

             

             

            First excerpts from the Press release, then a link to the study.   I’ll return with some comments.

             

            Large differences in mortality between urban and isolated rural areas

            Published 27.04.2011 , updated: 27.04.2011, 12:30
            Stikkord:

             

            In urban communities, less than 1 in 100 inhabitants died from Spanish flu in 1918, but in isolated communities up to 9 out of 10 died. An important explanation for the differences is due to different exposure to influenza in the decades before the Spanish flu came. Those living in urban communities probably had a higher degree of pre-existing immunity that protected against illness and death in 1918 than those living in very isolated rural areas. This is shown in a new study from the Norwegian Institute of Public Health.

             

            Previous studies have suggested that an important reason for the large regional differences in mortality must be that people living in cities were more frequently exposed to similar viruses to the one that caused the Spanish flu earlier in life than those living in rural and extremely isolated areas.

             

            “It is not inconceivable that there was a different geographical spread of the virus in the 1800s and early 1900s, at a time when intercontinental communication networks were less developed” said Svenn-Erik Mamelund, a senior adviser in the Division of Infectious Disease Control at the Norwegian Institute of Public Health.

             

            “No one knows exactly which influenza viruses circulated before 1918. But a leading theory is that there were H1-like viruses circulating in the period before the last major pandemic, the Russian pandemic of 1889-90. Some viruses circulating prior to 1889 may therefore have been related to the virus that caused the Spanish flu in 1918, A (H1N1). This would mean that some people who were older than 28-30 years in 1918 may have had some protection against severe infection and death from Spanish flu because of previous exposure to similar viruses,” he said.

            (Continue . . . )

             

             

            This study appears in the Journal Epidemics.

             

            Geography May Explain Adult Mortality from the 1918–20 Influenza Pandemic

            Original Research Article
            Pages 46-60
            Svenn-Erik Mamelund

             

             

            The theory that a similar H1 virus circulated prior to 1890 – and that provided some immunity to those over the age of 30 – is bolstered by this study.

             

            Young people, and those older people living in isolation during the 1880s had not been exposed, and were therefore more vulnerable to the 1918 virus.

             

            But as the author points out, that alone is not likely to have accounted for the huge difference in mortality.  From the abstract, the author writes:

             

            Low exposure to H1-like viruses in adults could not alone explain the high total mortality in remote populations (up to 90%). A high concurrent disease load, crowding, low genetic variability, a lack of basic care, and infrequent exposure to other forms of influenza virus 1890–1917 may have played a role as well.

             

            This form of immunological cross-protection from previous exposure to A-type influenza viruses other than H1N1 can only be explained as a consequence of cellular immunity against internal proteins that show less inter-strain variation than the surface proteins.

             

             

            Our most recent pandemic experience, once again at the hands of the H1N1 virus, proved milder than feared probably for the same reasons.

             

            As populations intermingle - we trade more viruses - and over time build up a certain level of immunity.  And part of that immunity may be generic cellular immunity, as opposed to antibodies to specific pathogens.

             

            And in this highly mobile world, that may bode well for the next pandemic – assuming it comes from a relative of a virus that we’ve seen in the recent past; an H1, H2, or H3 strain.

             

            There are no guarantees, of course.

             

            Should a less familiar strain emerge, however, no one knows how severe an impact it might have.

             

            The H5N1 virus has – thus far – killed about 50% of its known victims.  Far worse than the Spanish flu of 1918.  The H7 and H9 avian strains, however, have produced generally mild illness and few fatalities in humans.

             

            So there is obviously more to the influenza mortality and morbidity story than just being immunologically naive to a virus. 

             

            While today’s paper may not provide definitive answers to the questions surrounding the 1918 pandemic, it does give us more data to ponder and a plausible explanation for its divergent impact around the world.

            [Crof's H5N1] The death rates for Spanish flu

            Posted by Automator On April - 29 - 2011

            Mike Coston has one of his trademark posts this morning: Study: Urban vs Rural Mortality From Spanish Flu. He includes links to relevant information and adds his own thoughtful and informed comment. Highly recommended.

            (Thu, 28 Apr 2011 12:33:00 +0000)

             

             

             

            # 5527

             

            With the Great Central U.S. Shakeout drill scheduled for later this morning, today is a good day to promote the new and revised Central U.S. Earthquake Handbook provided by the USGS.

             

             

            Here is the press release, followed by a link to the (large & graphic intensive) PDF file.

             

            NOTE: I experienced some difficulties viewing this PDF in my (firefox/Foxit reader) browser, and had to save it to my desktop before viewing.

             

             

            Preparing for the Great ShakeOut Drill: Handbook Offers Vital Earthquake History and Preparedness Information to Central U.S. Residents

            Released: 4/27/2011 5:48:44 PM

            Contact Information:
            U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey
            Office of Communication
            119 National Center
            Reston, VA 20192

            The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) encourages people to join the millions in 11 states who have signed up to participate in the April 28, 2011, Great Central U.S. ShakeOut drill. The upcoming 200th anniversary of the New Madrid earthquakes is an opportune time to consider earthquake preparedness and learn about the region’s earthquake history. Go to the ShakeOut website to sign up for the drill, learn preparedness tips and learn how to “Drop, Cover and Hold On” during an earthquake.

             

            A newly released handbook from the USGS can assist with preparing for earthquakes in the central United States. “Putting Down Roots in Earthquake Country – Your Handbook for Earthquakes in the Central United States” provides detailed information about the threat of earthquakes in this part of the country, particularly along the New Madrid and Wabash Valley seismic zones.

             

            “Everyone has an individual responsibility for earthquake safety, but you’re also part of a bigger community,” said USGS Director Marcia McNutt. “In addition to saving lives, the goal of this drill is to help develop resilient communities that can recover more quickly after natural disasters.  I encourage you to learn what steps you can take to help the places you live and work ride out the next earthquake with minimal impact.”

            (Continue . . . )

             

             

            Putting Down Roots in Earthquake Country—Your Handbook for Earthquakes in the Central United States

            U.S. Geological Survey contributors: Richard Dart, Jill McCarthy, Natasha McCallister, and Robert A. Williams

            Thumbnail of and link to GIP 119 PDF (112 MB)

             

             

             

             

             

             

             

             

            This handbook provides information to residents of the Central United States about the threat of earthquakes in that area, particularly along the New Madrid seismic zone, and explains how to prepare for, survive, and recover from such events. It explains the need for concern about earthquakes for those residents and describes what one can expect during and after an earthquake.

             

            Much is known about the threat of earthquakes in the Central United States, including where they are likely to occur and what can be done to reduce losses from future earthquakes, but not enough has been done to prepare for future earthquakes. The handbook describes such preparations that can be taken by individual residents before an earthquake to be safe and protect property.

             

             

            For more on the seismic threat in the central United States, and today’s Shakeout drill, you may wish to revisit:

             

            NEPEC: New Madrid Earthquake Hazard Review
            The Great Central U.S. Shakeout
            The World Upside Down

            [Crof's H5N1] Egypt: Politics and H5N1

            Posted by Automator On April - 29 - 2011

            Via IRIN: Two bird flu cases confirmed in Egypt. Excerpt:

            The recent confirmation of two cases of avian influenza in Egypt has raised fresh fears of a possible spread of the disease when the government is still trying to stabilize following mass protests three months ago. 

            “Chicken traders move large numbers of birds among the governorates uncensured,” said Abdel Aziz Al-Sayed, chairman of the Poultry Section at the Egyptian Federation of the Chambers of Commerce. 

            The fragile security in the country, he added, had allowed many poultry shops and farms to emerge in heavily populated areas, increasing the risk. 

            Of the 143 cases so far confirmed in Egypt, including the latest two, who had the A (H5N1) virus, 47 have been fatal, according to the UN World Health Organization.