H7N9
- cronus
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Re: H7N9
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg2 ... t-bay.html
US invokes emergency act to keep H7N9 flu at bay
THE US government has declared that H7N9 bird flu "poses a significant potential for a public health emergency", and has given "emergency use authorisation" for diagnostic kits for the virus. This means tests can be used that haven't gone through the usual lengthy approval process by the US Food and Drug Administration.
They are right to be concerned. H7N9 could be a tough adversary: New Scientist has learned that it provokes a weaker immune response than most flu, making vaccines hard to produce.
Although H7N9 is not, so far, transmissible between humans, it does cause severe disease in people, is easier to catch than other bird flu strains, and may need only a few mutations to go pandemic. The UK has already given doctors instructions on when to test people for H7N9, and how to manage any with the virus.
The US's emergency authorisation will allow the use of a kit that looks for flu genes using a polymerase chain reaction test, which has been made specific for H7N9. The kit has had preliminary tests but would normally need more exhaustive tests to be approved. Innovative new diagnostics should eventually be authorised too, says Charles Chiu of the University of California in San Francisco.
This kind of fast, high-throughput screening for pandemic flu, possibly at borders, might allow early cases to be treated with antiviral drugs, potentially slowing the spread of the virus while vaccines are made.
The next emergency authorisation is likely to be for immune-stimulating chemicals called adjuvants to put in those vaccines. These were used in vaccines in Europe and Canada during the 2009 pandemic, but adjuvants suitable for flu are not currently approved in the US.
Labs are now making "seed" viruses for manufacturers to create H7N9 vaccine. That process faces the same development delays as in 2009, when vaccine arrived too late for most people.
(continued)
US invokes emergency act to keep H7N9 flu at bay
THE US government has declared that H7N9 bird flu "poses a significant potential for a public health emergency", and has given "emergency use authorisation" for diagnostic kits for the virus. This means tests can be used that haven't gone through the usual lengthy approval process by the US Food and Drug Administration.
They are right to be concerned. H7N9 could be a tough adversary: New Scientist has learned that it provokes a weaker immune response than most flu, making vaccines hard to produce.
Although H7N9 is not, so far, transmissible between humans, it does cause severe disease in people, is easier to catch than other bird flu strains, and may need only a few mutations to go pandemic. The UK has already given doctors instructions on when to test people for H7N9, and how to manage any with the virus.
The US's emergency authorisation will allow the use of a kit that looks for flu genes using a polymerase chain reaction test, which has been made specific for H7N9. The kit has had preliminary tests but would normally need more exhaustive tests to be approved. Innovative new diagnostics should eventually be authorised too, says Charles Chiu of the University of California in San Francisco.
This kind of fast, high-throughput screening for pandemic flu, possibly at borders, might allow early cases to be treated with antiviral drugs, potentially slowing the spread of the virus while vaccines are made.
The next emergency authorisation is likely to be for immune-stimulating chemicals called adjuvants to put in those vaccines. These were used in vaccines in Europe and Canada during the 2009 pandemic, but adjuvants suitable for flu are not currently approved in the US.
Labs are now making "seed" viruses for manufacturers to create H7N9 vaccine. That process faces the same development delays as in 2009, when vaccine arrived too late for most people.
(continued)
What will the world be like after its ruler is removed?
- JimC
- The sentimental bloke
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Re: H7N9
Scrumple, I'm glad you're back. Your news posts, for example, are always interesting, gloomy or not...


Nurse, where the fuck's my cardigan?
And my gin!
And my gin!
- cronus
- Black Market Analyst
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Re: H7N9
I may go for good soon. Consider this the epilogue.JimC wrote:Scrumple, I'm glad you're back. Your news posts, for example, are always interesting, gloomy or not...
What will the world be like after its ruler is removed?
- Svartalf
- Offensive Grail Keeper
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Re: H7N9
If you go, I might just come after you to drag you back, or ask Pappa and rachel to plague all your computer accounts with virii and bugs.
Embrace the Darkness, it needs a hug
PC stands for "Patronizing Cocksucker" Randy Ping
PC stands for "Patronizing Cocksucker" Randy Ping
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Re: H7N9
It's really the H3N2 virus that constitutes a global pandemic. Thousands of people a year are dying - dropping like flies -- and yet, our media covers H7N9 and stuff like SARS. It's a conspiracy!
Captain Trips is already among us! It is the H3N2 virus! Run!
Captain Trips is already among us! It is the H3N2 virus! Run!
Re: H7N9
SARS is/was a joke.. I'm sure I mentioned that back in the day of the SARS panic in Toronto I was working at Mount Sinai hospital..
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Re: H7N9
Făkünamę wrote:SARS is/was a joke.. I'm sure I mentioned that back in the day of the SARS panic in Toronto I was working at Mount Sinai hospital..
We have SARS.
There is only a 98% survival rate from SARS.
That means, soon, only 98% of us will be alive....
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