Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Outbreaks of new flu strains in 2009


Outbreaks of new flu strains in 2009 the global outbreak of type A influenza virus H 1 N 1 strains new Or generally called "swine flu" outbreak was started since April 2552 onwards, although the virus contains a combination of genes of human influenza virus in poultry and swine influenza virus with swine address. Sierra Red. One of the strange manner in which HIV is an N a rarely contact to elderly people aged over 60 years.


The new flu strain is found first in the state of Veracruz. Mexico And there is evidence that the disease outbreak has been a long time since the previous month will be officially certified. Although the Mexican government is trying to stop the outbreak by closing government buildings and many private and even. Infection outbreaks quickly, but also around the world. And on 11 June 2552 the World Health Organization and U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has announced the level of the spread of infection. "Epidemic around.


Near the 2009 flu disease that you should know


Situation of influenza in 2009, while this is still mutiny over the world. Many other countries can not control. The number of infections increasing every day. Although casualties may not be very serious and unlikely as Sa ×'s disease or avian flu in 2009, but it is spread from person to person easily.


2009 is a cold called a science that A/H1N1 avian pig breeding new Influenza infection, a new Never met before. Caused by genetic changes. The swine flu and avian influenza May be accessed in the pig as contagion Later in the pig cells are two types of virus attacks.


Genetic contamination between the unit division. Until the virus is a new breed. This normally will install directly from those who experience only pork. Without contacting consumption among albeit this virus from person to person contact through coughing, sneezing and touching of objects to share similar to the spread of ordinary flu.


Tuesday, August 24, 2010

How to prevent flu in 2009.


Guidance for the general public.

1. Wash your hands frequently with soap and water. Or use alcohol gel to clean hands.

2. Do not use straw cup water spoon restaurant napkin towel handkerchief with others

3. Do not associate closely with patients with flu symptoms.

4. Maintain strong health. By eating a nutritious drink plenty of water for sufficient sleep. And exercise regularly.

5. Should be avoided in places where people are crowded and ventilation is not good for a long time unnecessarily.

6. Follow the instructions other Department of Health closely


Advice for cold or flu patients.

1. If there are no serious medical conditions such as high fever, not eating and has no absorption. Symptoms can be treated by self at home. No need to go to the hospital. Paracetamol should be used to reduce fever. (Do not use aspirin), sleeping enough. And drink plenty of water.

2. Temporary stop learning until they healed. And avoid close associate. Or objects with others.

3. Wear a mask when you need them with others. Handkerchief or tissue mouth and nose every time I sneeze.

4. Wash your hands frequently with soap and water. Or use alcohol gel to clean hands. Especially after coughing, sneezing.

5. If there is severe respiratory distress, such as breathlessness, vomiting, very tired absorption should see a doctor immediately.

Monday, August 23, 2010

Drugs and vaccines for new strains of the flu in 2009


There are flu antiviral drugs, the two groups. 1. Adamantanes amantadine name and generic drugs are remantadine. 2. Drugs inhibit enzyme Common names include neuraminidase drug oseltamivir (mixture tablets) and zanamivir (drug inhalation spray).

Oseltamivir is sold in Thailand in its trade name Tamiflu, and Roche GPO-A-Flu's Government Pharmaceutical Organization zanamivir in the trade name Relenza drug company GlaxoSmithKline is the second type of new drugs to be used in hospitals. And prescribing by specialists only.

Typically, drugs are indicated for major for the treatment or prevent influenza (H3N2) and physicians can take oseltamivir and zanamivir used to treat or prevent avian flu (H5N1) and influenza strains of the new 2009 (H1N1) An. due to a virus strain similar.

Reports of resistance of influenza virus (H3N2), which makes the treatment ineffective, however, viruses from patients is a new flu strain in 2009 in the U.S. and Mexico. Also respond to oseltamivir and zanamivir are good (for work) but are resistant to the drugs amantadine and remantadine does not work, so the latter two drugs are not suitable to be used in the treatment Drug reduces the severity of the flu and reduce the duration of illness. In the case of treatment Drugs will be effective if the dose as soon as possible after symptoms of illness not exceeding 48 hours (two days) after I receive medication during this time may be the result of treatment is not good enough.

U.S. Center of Disease Control (CDC) has recommended oseltamivir and zanamivir for the prevention and treatment of new influenza strains in 2009 by the discretion of physicians. That decision based on clinical and epidemiological. Including evaluating the potential hazards of drug use compared to the benefits received.

Need to take medicine to prevent or not? Determine whether these drugs are prescribed to provide only Patients can not purchase your own use. The medication works to prevent about 70% to 90% in principle no need to exclude certain medicines to prevent such cases only.
1. People who are close to patients has been confirmed that the H1N1 flu strain on new And the people who are at high risk to severe complications if infected with influenza major chronic diseases, including some who are aged 65 years or more children under 5 years and pregnant women. The doctors will consider, as appropriate.
2. Medical personnel who are not properly protected during the close. Patients confirmed that infection. Or patients may be infected. (Wait for the laboratory confirmation) or patients suspected to be infected. (Who is returning from areas with outbreaks).

Ya need to keep on re jar? Drug therapy is the first in patients infected with influenza to attend. Treatment in hospital Patients at high risk for complications if infected with the flu. Subject to the discretion of physicians.

Influenza vaccine is currently available injections to prevent new strains of influenza in 2009 or not?
There are currently no vaccines to prevent new strains of influenza in 2009 directly in humans. Only swine flu vaccine used in pork, which can not only apply to people and no evidence that influenza vaccine in humans can be. Used to prevent a new flu strain in 2009 or not, because a vaccine produced by different strains.

And the influenza vaccine strains or the new 2009?
There are scientists in various countries to speed up vaccine research for New flu strain in 2009 due to new virus strains that have not had outbreaks before. This may take at least 5-6 months after infection as the cause of the outbreak in clear

กลับมาระบาดอีกครั้งกับไข้หวัด 2009


แม้เวลาจะผ่านไปแล้ว 1 ปี แต่ไข้หวัด 2009 ก็ยังสามารถกลับมาระบาดใหม่อีกครั้งในปีนี้ ซึ่งตั้งแต่ 3-4 เดือนที่ผ่านมา ได้ตรวจพบผู้ที่เป็นไข้หวัด 2009 มาแล้วหลายหลาย ทั้งที่เป็นดารานักแสดง หรือประชาชนทั่วไป ดังนั้นหากท่านมีอาการที่คล้ายหรือบ่งบอกว่า ท่านอาจจะเป็น ไข้หวัด 2009 ท่านก็รีบควรเข้าไปพบแพทย์อย่างเร่งด่วน เพื่อความปลอดภัยของท่าน
แม้ปัจจุบันจะมีวัคซีนป้องกันไข้หวัด 2009 แล้วแต่ประชาชนส่วนใหญ่ก็ยังไม่ได้รับารฉีดวัคซีนไข้หวัด 2009 เนื่องมาจากประชาชนส่วนใหญ่คิดว่า ไข้หวัด 2009 นั้นได้เลิกระบาดในประเทศไทยไปแล้ว
ทางที่ดีที่สุด ท่านควรศึกษาถึงโรงไข้หวัด 2009 ให้เข้าใจและเมื่อเจออาการที่คล้ายว่าจะเป็นไข้หวัด 2009 ก็ควรจะรีบพบแพทย์โดยด่วนที่สุด

Sunday, September 6, 2009

WHO supports fair access to influenza A (H1N12009) vaccine. An interview with Marie-Paule Kieny



WHO/L Solberg
Dr Marie-Paule Kieny

Dr Marie-Paule Kieny is director of the Initiative for Vaccine Research at the World Health Organization (WHO). She received a degree in Economics in 1977, followed by a PhD in microbiology in 1980, both from the University of Montpellier in France. Her research career began with the development of a recombinant rabies vaccine. Since then, she has worked on the design of AIDS vaccine candidates and done research on cancer immuno-gene therapy, targeting mainly breast and cervical cancers. She has also served on several expert committees on vaccine discovery, AIDS and cancer research.



The vast majority of cases of pandemic influenza A (H1N1) have been mild so far with few deaths. It remains to be seen whether the virus will mutate into a more virulent strain. Marie-Paule Kieny explains how WHO is supporting countries’ efforts to protect their populations with vaccines that should become available as of this month.

Q: When will the first doses of vaccine for the pandemic influenza A (H1N1) be ready?

A: Some manufacturers announced in July that vaccine is available, but that doesn’t mean it’s ready for use, as it needs regulatory approval. Regulatory authorities are considering the best way to register these vaccines as quickly as possible. The consensus is that the first doses will be available to governments for use in September.

Q: Who will get vaccinated first? Who decides this?

A: Vaccine will not be available on the private market and governments will decide who gets vaccinated first. WHO recommends that health workers be the first, to protect the health system and allow them to care for influenza and other patients. The strategy a country takes will depend on its policy objectives and the availability of vaccine. For example, if a country decides to concentrate on protecting essential infrastructure, it may target different people, such as truck drivers, if they are critical for food delivery. Others may try to reduce transmission of the virus. For example, the United States of America decided to immunize children before or at school entry who are in closer physical contact than adults and can amplify infection rates. Countries may also try to reduce morbidity and mortality and target specific groups, such as pregnant women. Some high-income countries have ordered enough vaccine for the whole population. Nevertheless, no countries will have vaccine for everyone from the first day it is available for use, so that each country will need to prioritize. Some middle-income countries have also placed contracts with pharmaceutical companies and have been purchasing vaccine for between 1% and 10–20% of the population. WHO is working hard with manufacturers, governments and donors to ensure that developing countries can access vaccine as soon as possible to immunize their health workers, and when more vaccine becomes available, other groups will be immunized.

Q: How are influenza vaccines produced?

A: The main method is by injecting seed virus into embryonic chicken eggs and harvesting the fluid after several days and purifying it. There are two technologies. More than 90% of influenza vaccines available are known as “inactivated vaccines”, which means you kill the virus to produce the vaccine. Less common are “live attenuated vaccines”, which are derived from a weakened form of the virus that is not killed.

Q: How many different vaccine candidates will be available for A (H1N1)?

A: About 30. Most will be inactivated virus vaccines made in eggs, some will be killed virus vaccines made in cell cultures and a few will be live attenuated virus vaccines. Then you have a lot of variation in the way vaccine is purified and in whether or not it is mixed with an additive, called an adjuvant, which is a booster of immunogenicity (which is the capacity of a vaccine to evoke an immune response) and which is used with killed virus vaccine. All vaccines create antibodies to fight the virus; some will produce a local response, such as attenuated vaccine administered in the nose to give more immunity at the port of entry of the virus. The industry will use tiered pricing, so high-income countries might pay between US$ 10–20 per dose, middle-income countries may pay about half that and low-income half that price again. These are ballpark figures but this is the order of magnitude.

Q: Isn’t it too early to produce vaccines because the pandemic virus could mutate?

A: Although the virus can mutate, we hope that there will be enough cross-protection through recognition of the new virus. But if the virus changes too much, we will need new vaccines.

Q: WHO has recommended the use of adjuvant in pandemic vaccines, but some countries don’t plan to follow this guidance.

A: Many countries, including the USA, have not licensed vaccines with adjuvants of any kind yet. Other vaccines with the same type of adjuvant as planned for pandemic influenza A (H1N1) vaccines have, however, been licensed in European countries. Countries that intend to use vaccine with adjuvant will find that there is a large body of safety data for adults and some for children. In any case, all countries will need to carry out good post-marketing surveillance to make sure that they pick up any early sign of a safety problem with a particular vaccine.

Q: These must be the fastest vaccines ever produced. Given their fast-tracking, what is the guarantee of safety and efficacy?

A: The testing of influenza vaccines is different from that of other vaccines, because the rabies and measles vaccines for example do not change. Since influenza viruses evolve constantly, it is impossible to carry out a complete clinical analysis of seasonal influenza vaccines yearly because the composition changes each year to adapt to the virus and so you are always a year behind. A complete clinical evaluation is not needed also because manufacturers produce seasonal influenza vaccines using the same procedure and equipment, but for a different virus each year. In the USA, vaccines for seasonal influenza are licensed without clinical trials on the basis of a “strain change”. The US regulatory authorities consider the change from seasonal to pandemic H1N1 influenza vaccine production (using the same procedure) as a change in the strain and therefore will not request clinical trials before registration. Having said that, all manufacturers will perform clinical trials to find out whether one or two doses are necessary, to test it in special populations and to administer it jointly with other vaccines. In Europe, a strain change is accompanied by a small clinical trial requested by the European Medicines Agency. In the last couple of years, manufacturers in the European Union registered “mock-up” or prototype H5N1 bird flu vaccines as nobody knows which H5N1 strain might become a pandemic strain. Manufacturers made clinical batches of an H5N1 vaccine with virus stocks from China, Indonesia and Viet Nam. They carried out clinical trials and submitted the results to the regulatory authorities who said the vaccines were fine. They are not allowed to sell H5N1 vaccines, since there is no H5N1 pandemic, but they can use the same procedure to make H1N1 pandemic vaccine. That way they can get a licence in a few days. This is another way vaccines can be licensed without clinical trials, while still ensuring safety on the basis of what is known about influenza vaccines. Based on the extensive knowledge available on seasonal vaccines and the results obtained through evaluation of H5N1 avian influenza vaccines, there is no doubt that it will be possible to make effective H1N1 pandemic vaccines.

Q: What’s been done to ensure that developing countries get enough vaccine?

A: It depends on what we mean by “enough”. Some countries want to vaccinate every member of the population, but there is no way we can do this for the whole world. WHO has a cross-organizational operation that is in place to secure vaccines for developing countries. This is spearheaded by the Director-General’s Office and the legal and vaccine departments. We are engaged in three types of activities. The first is to negotiate donations with manufacturers. Two have been announced: 100 million doses by sanofi-aventis and 50 million doses from GlaxoSmithKline. Second, we are working with other manufacturers to reserve a portion of their vaccine production for WHO at a reduced price. Third, we are working with governments to raise funds to purchase vaccines. We are also working with 11 vaccine manufacturers based in developing countries, providing them with seed financing and technical expertise to help them produce influenza vaccine domestically. We have also helped them access technology and given them sub-licences to use technology for producing live attenuated vaccine. These 11 companies will be manufacturing some of the 30 different expected vaccines.

Q: What happens if developing countries have only partial coverage?

A: Coverage will be partial and not only in developing countries. But we should not be “hypnotized” by vaccines. There are other measures, such as social distancing, school closure, avoidance of large gatherings, antibiotics and personal hygiene. This is not like rabies, which is 100% fatal: we are talking about a disease from which most people recover very well. We will try to help countries to gain access to as much vaccine as possible, at least to preserve their health systems functioning, but there is just not enough vaccine for every country in the world to vaccinate every member of the population twice.

credit: who.int

Friday, August 21, 2009

What is the new influenza A(H1N12009)?


What is the new influenza A(H1N1)?
This is a new influenza A(H1N12009) virus that has never before circulated among humans. This virus is not related to previous or current human seasonal influenza viruses.


How do people become infected with the virus?
The virus is spread from person-to-person. It is transmitted as easily as the normal seasonal flu and can be passed to other people by exposure to infected droplets expelled by coughing or sneezing that can be inhaled, or that can contaminate hands or surfaces.

To prevent spread, people who are ill should cover their mouth and nose when coughing or sneezing, stay home when they are unwell, clean their hands regularly, and keep some distance from healthy people, as much as possible.

There are no known instances of people getting infected by exposure to pigs or other animals.

The place of origin of the virus is unknown.

What are the signs and symptoms of infection?
Signs of influenza A(H1N12009) are flu-like, including fever, cough, headache, muscle and joint pain, sore throat and runny nose, and sometimes vomiting and diarrhoea.

Why are we so worried about this flu when hundreds of thousands die every year from seasonal epidemics?
Seasonal influenza occurs every year and the viruses change each year - but many people have some immunity to the circulating virus which helps limit infections. Some countries also use seasonal influenza vaccines to reduce illness and deaths.

But influenza A(H1N12009) is a new virus and one to which most people have no or little immunity and, therefore, this virus could cause more infections than are seen with seasonal flu. WHO is working closely with manufacturers to expedite the development of a safe and effective vaccine but it will be some months before it is available.

The new influenza A(H1N12009) appears to be as contagious as seasonal influenza, and is spreading fast particularly among young people (from ages 10 to 45). The severity of the disease ranges from very mild symptoms to severe illnesses that can result in death. The majority of people who contract the virus experience the milder disease and recover without antiviral treatment or medical care. Of the more serious cases, more than half of hospitalized people had underlying health conditions or weak immune systems.

Most people experience mild illness and recover at home. When should someone seek medical care?
A person should seek medical care if they experience shortness of breath or difficulty breathing, or if a fever continues more than three days. For parents with a young child who is ill, seek medical care if a child has fast or labored breathing, continuing fever or convulsions (seizures).

Supportive care at home - resting, drinking plenty of fluids and using a pain reliever for aches - is adequate for recovery in most cases. (A non-aspirin pain reliever should be used by children and young adults because of the risk of Reye's syndrome.)

credit: who.int

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