2006 Essential Guide to Influenza: Medical Data about Influenza, Vaccines, Tamiflu and other Drugs, Avian Flu and the H5N1 Virus, Government Documents and Data (Ring-bound)
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2006 Essential Guide to Influenza: Medical Data about Influenza, Vaccines, Tamiflu and other Drugs, Avian Flu and the H5N1 Virus, Government Documents and Data (Ring-bound) Overview
This up-to-date compendium of major documents and reports from the federal government provides essential information on influenza, including the subject of bird (avian) influenza and killer influenza pandemics. It includes the latest information on the H5N1 virus which some scientists believe could produce a devastating pandemic similar to the 1918 Spanish Flu which killed tens of millions around the globe. This thoroughly researched collection presents vital information from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Contents include: · Influenza Disease Description · Hospitalizations in the United States · Testing and Laboratory Diagnosis · Vaccines · Nasal-spray Vaccine (FluMist) – Live Attenuated Influenza Vaccine · Prevention and Control · Recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) · Clinical Description and Diagnosis · Chemoprophylaxis and Treatment Guidelines · Antiviral Medications · Information for Schools · Pandemics · Surveillance · Bird and Avian Flu · Asian Bird Embargo · Human Disease from H5N1 – Clinical Information · Tamiflu · CDC Avian Flu Symposium An influenza pandemic is a global outbreak of disease that occurs when a new influenza A virus appears or “emerges” in the human population, causes serious illness, and then spreads easily from person to person worldwide. Pandemics are different from seasonal outbreaks or “epidemics” of influenza. Seasonal outbreaks are caused by subtypes of influenza viruses that are already in existence among people, whereas pandemic outbreaks are caused by new subtypes or by subtypes that have never circulated among people or that have not circulated among people for a long time. Past influenza pandemics have led to high levels of illness, death, social disruption, and economic loss. There are many different subtypes of Influenza or “flu” viruses. The subtypes differ based upon certain proteins on the surface of the virus (the hemagglutinin or “HA” protein and the neuraminidase or the “NA” protein). Pandemic viruses appear (or “emerge”) as a result of a process called "antigenic shift,” which causes an abrupt or sudden, major change in influenza A viruses. These changes are caused by new combinations of the HA and/or NA proteins on the surface of the virus. This change results in a new influenza A virus subtype. The appearance of a new influenza A virus subtype is the first step toward a pandemic, but the new virus subtype also must spread easily from person to person to cause a pandemic. Once a new pandemic influenza virus emerges and spreads, it normally becomes established among people and moves around or “circulates” for many years as seasonal epidemics of influenza. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization have large surveillance programs to monitor and “detect” influenza activity around the world, including the emergence of possible pandemic strains of influenza virus. Information in this publication is not a substitute for professional medical advice; of course, readers are urged to consult with a professional health care provider for any suspected illness.
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