Republic polytechic h1n1 hub

halsey02

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As at today July 03 2009...from Ministry of Health website, there are 91 CASES, and 5 new cases..

WHY isn't the POLYTECHNIC out of bounds & closed!?:eek:

ARe they waiting for someone to die from H1N1 to act?...just wondering!:p
 
Don't worry about H1N1. It's no different from seasonal flu. It causes the same symptoms and the mortality rate is no worse. In fact, current data indicates that it's a lot milder.

Carry on with your life in the normal manner. Don't let the media hype get to you. H1N1 is nothing more than a storm in a teacup.
 
Don't worry about H1N1. It's no different from seasonal flu. It causes the same symptoms and the mortality rate is no worse. In fact, current data indicates that it's a lot milder.

Carry on with your life in the normal manner. Don't let the media hype get to you. H1N1 is nothing more than a storm in a teacup.

It is more than a storm in a teacup. Fair enough, H1N1 is just another of the seasonal influenza that circulate the world, during certain time of the year, people die from flu; but H1N1 is much more deadly. The problem is, at the moment, WHO and whichever health authorities out there, doesn't know how to differetiate this from the common influenzas that are out there.

Furthermore, those with underlying medical dieases , elderly, very young & certain age group catches this quickly, and the elderly & sickly die from it quickly too.

In short, there are carriers of this flu out there in great numbers, many have it, but does not show any sypmtons for various reason.

A healthy person catches it..chances are your return to normalcy will be quick and that is not the problem.

The problem here in Singapore, one catches H1 N1, wether it kills you or not, you will inconvient all those whom you come into contact with, knowingly or unknowingly. This is what worries most people here, and the very old people, especially the WWII relics..or after...will die quicker if they catches the H1 N1

Why they are dragging the feet at REPUBLIC POLYTECHNIC, as cases there are growing each day..only those in charge of the health ministry knows, or money is more important.

This is not only a storm in a teacup..it is the monsoon drains, over flowing and unable to cope with the extraordinary storm!:rolleyes:
 
I told you so!!!!

Don't worry about H1N1. It's no different from seasonal flu. It causes the same symptoms and the mortality rate is no worse. In fact, current data indicates that it's a lot milder.

Carry on with your life in the normal manner. Don't let the media hype get to you. H1N1 is nothing more than a storm in a teacup.


Jan 14, 2010

H1N1 is 'global scam': Expert

'It's just a normal kind of flu. It does not cause a tenth of deaths caused by the classic seasonal flu,' Dr Wodarg told the Daily Star.

LONDON - BRITISH media are reporting that a prominent health expert has claimed that the H1N1 flu scare was 'faked by drug companies'.

The Daily Star newspaper reports that Wolfgang Wodarg, head of health at the Council of Europe, says the H1N1 scare was 'one of the greatest medical scandals of the century'.

Dr Wodarg also said that drug companies convinced the World Health Organisation (WHO) to declare a pandemic in order to increase profits. The newspaper also reports that the Council of Europe will be holding an emergency debate on the issue before the end of January.

'It's just a normal kind of flu. It does not cause a tenth of deaths caused by the classic seasonal flu,' Dr Wodarg told the Daily Star. 'The campaign of panic provided a golden opportunity for representatives from labs who knew they would hit the jackpot in the case of a pandemic being
declared.'

The British government, however, slammed Dr Wodarg's comments on Thursday, saying that there were 'no grounds whatsoever' for his claims.

A GlaxoSmithKline spokesman from the UK said: 'Allegations of undue influence are misguided and unfounded. The WHO declared that H1N1 swine flu met the criteria for a pandemic. As WHO have stated, legal regulations and numerous safeguards are in place to manage possible conflicts of interest.'

The Straits Times
www.straitstimes.com
 
Don't worry about H1N1. It's no different from seasonal flu. It causes the same symptoms and the mortality rate is no worse. In fact, current data indicates that it's a lot milder.

Carry on with your life in the normal manner. Don't let the media hype get to you. H1N1 is nothing more than a storm in a teacup.

why did the mexican drop like flies last year?
 
why did the mexican drop like flies last year?

Seasonal flu causes people to "drop like flies" too and at a rate higher than H1N1.

All flu strains can result in death. H1N1 is just another flu virus.

Posted on Wed, Jan. 13, 2010


http://www.philly.com/inquirer/opinion/81300592.html
Commentary
Swine flu epidemic ends with a whimper

The facts on H1N1 hardly live up to months of hype.

By Michael Fumento
Hidden within the latest edition of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention'sFluView


was this sentence: "The proportion of deaths attributed to pneumonia and influenza was below the epidemic threshold."


That's right: The great American swine flu epidemic - which led to two proclaimed national emergencies and thousands of spooky news stories - has ended with a whimper.


Only 161 new infections were reported to CDC-monitored labs last week, compared to 11,470 at the epidemic's mid-October peak. Only one state (Alabama) still reports "widespread activity." Deaths and hospitalizations were 14 and 374, respectively, compared to 189 and 4,970 a week at the peak. To put that in perspective, the CDC estimates that an average of 257 Americans normally die of seasonal flu every day during the season, or about 36,000 a year.


Repeat, the American portion of the first flu pandemic declared in four decades - which just weeks ago spawned such headlines as "CDC: Cases, Deaths Are Unprecedented" - is over.


So where do the swine flu numbers go from here? Not to zero, unfortunately. Rather, we're at what's called an "endemic" level: We can expect infections, hospitalizations, and deaths to continue at something similar to the current rate until the end of flu season, in the spring. (That means there's still plenty of time to get your shot if you haven't yet been infected or vaccinated yet.)


But, judging by what we've seen so far in the United States and elsewhere in the world, especially in New Zealand and Australia, the flu season will continue to be quite mild. In both of those Southern Hemisphere countries, where winter has ended, there have been far fewer flu deaths than was normal during their past seasonal flu epidemics. Yet swine flu accounted for virtually all their cases, and no vaccine was available. In addition, these countries saw the season peak only once, without the "next wave" we've been warned of.


Why were there so few flu deaths? First, swine flu is vastly milder than the seasonal variety. According to the latest CDC estimate, while seasonal flu kills between one in 480 to one in 1,700 Americans infected, swine flu has killed only one person for every 5,000 infections. (Even that estimate is probably high, given the vastly lower death rates in comparable industrialized nations, such as France and Japan.)


Second, swine flu is more contagious than the seasonal flu strains, essentially muscling them aside. And people infected with swine flu appear to be immune to seasonal flu, just as the mild cowpox virus inoculated people against the fearsome smallpox virus (as the famed vaccine inventor Edward Jenner noted). Of those 161 new flu cases reported to the CDC last week, only four clearly weren't swine flu.


You may recall all those additional deaths we were supposed to suffer as a result of swine flu - 30,000 to 90,000, according to the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (a number I previously disputed); or "89,000 to 207,000," according to an op-ed by author John Barry. But like New Zealand and Australia, the United States can actually expect considerably fewer overall flu deaths because of the swine flu.


That means that except for the incredible amount of resources - including oceans of hand sanitizer - misspent fighting an alleged raging razorback that proved to be a mere piglet, swine flu will be a net blessing.
The media are finally beginning to admit that the World Health Organization's "pandemic" - made possible, as I've argued before, only by completely redefining the definition for political reasons - is the mildest ever. Several European countries have cut back their vaccine orders, and the chairman of the influential health committee of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, who is an epidemiologist, has asked the body to investigate what he calls the WHO's "false pandemic" and "one of the greatest medicine scandals of the century."


Yes, the WHO and the media really pulled a fast one on us. But we've surely learned a lesson from the pandemic panic - at least until the next celebrity virus comes around.
 
Seasonal flu causes people to "drop like flies" too and at a rate higher than H1N1.

All flu strains can result in death. H1N1 is just another flu virus.

Posted on Wed, Jan. 13, 2010

i was sure the people in mexico, was mostly young adult, which was not the normal demographic of seasonal flu, which hit mostly very old and very young.

actually in mexico case, more people die in drug war in a day than h1n1.

the damn mexican, they fxxk up the amercian property market, now they give us h1n1 swine virus panic.
 
why did the mexican drop like flies last year?

I think the mexican high death rate were due to their lack of hygiene ie cholera then to the flu itself..granted that most of the them died when they had the ful
 
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