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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: bird flu + leave us + flu  Related to the article below (Last Update: 5/13/2008)

UN chief to chair first food task force meeting on Monday
World Bank Group, DC -
[BBC News/Factiva] South Korean officials say they have killed the entire poultry population of Seoul to curb the spread of bird flu? ...
The almanac
United Press International -
In 2006, health officials said the virulent bird flu that raised fears of a human pandemic mostly had been snuffed out in Southeast Asia where it claimed ...
US health minister in Jakarta to strengthen bilateral cooperation
Antara, Indonesia - Apr 14, 2008
He said there was close cooperation between Indonesia and the United States in health affairs, especially in bird flu management. According to US Embassy ...

BBC News
Do you need to stock up the bunker?
BBC News, UK - May 2, 2008
The impact of a bird flu pandemic would be even worse, he says. It would put a "huge strain" on national health systems and leave a gaping hole in the ...

Stars and Stripes
More avian flu outbreaks reported in South Korea
Stars and Stripes, DC - Apr 17, 2008
Avian flu outbreaks typically happen when geese, ducks and other large birds migrate and leave feces in rice paddies. From there, the virus can spread to ...

Natural News.com
How to Beat and Prevent the Avian Flu and Other Influenzas
Natural News.com, AZ - Apr 23, 2008
I hope that all of the publicity about the Bird Flu proves to be a false alarm, as well as the theories that it may be a deliberately engineered flu, ...
Indonesia holds major bird flu exercise in Bali
Reuters - Apr 25, 2008
The Sanglah hospital in Bali has been designated to treat bird flu cases, while patients with other diseases at the hospital will not be allowed to leave ...
Smuggled Peking Ducks Pose Avian Flu Threat to Philippines
Pinoy Press, Philippines - Apr 29, 2008
Malacanang warned today against possible outbreak of the deadly Avian Flu if exotic fowl meat from other Asian countries continued flooding the local market ...

Cincinnati CityBeat
Excerpt: 'Where in the World Is Osama Bin Laden?'
ABC News - Apr 16, 2008
... sarin, anthrax, Ebola, E. coli, Lyme disease, Legionnaires' disease, smallpox, salmonella, dengue fever, Asian flu, bird flu, swine flu, yuppie flu, ...
A Do-It-Yourself Approach to Finding bin Laden NPR
all 248 news articles »
50 Ways To Save The Earth ... ON A T-SHIRT!
Awearness, NY - May 9, 2008
There are many things out there trying to harm us: AIDS; Pollution; Global Warming; Bird Flu; Medical bills. Some are natural, some are man-made, ...
Source: Google News

Avian Influenza Virus H5N1: A Review of Its History and Information Regarding Its Potential to Cause … -
BL Ligon - Seminars in Pediatric Infectious Diseases, 2005 - Elsevier
... virus was found to transmit directly from bird to humans ... clothing used on the farm
does not leave the farm. ... an international strategy to deal with the avian flu. ...

[BOOK] The Monster at Our Door: The Global Threat of Avian Flu -
M Davis - 2006 - books.google.com
... Magical Urbanism: Latinos Reinvent the US City ... Printed in the United States ofAmerica ...
Fortunately, the doctors now suspected bird flu and quickly administered ...

Ecology and evolution of the flu -
DJD Earn, J Dushoff, SA Levin - Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 2002 - Elsevier
... is found in a wide variety of bird and mammal ... obstacle to simple compartmental modelling
of flu is antigenic ... in which individuals can enter or leave the class ...

Pandemic Flu: We Are Not Prepared -
M Lipsitch - MedGenMed, 2005 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... planned domestic stockpile of oseltamavir would leave over 99 ... scenarios recently
assessed by the US Department of ... UK to stockpile drugs against bird flu pandemic ...

EPIDEMIOLOGY: Indonesia Taps Village Wisdom to Fight Bird Flu -
D Normile - Science, 2007 - sciencemag.org
... hos- pital records for retrospective bird flu cases ... bacteria?microbes that help keep
us healthy by ... whole immune system and therefore leave patients extremely ...

Avian Flu From an Occupational Health Perspective -
J Halpin - Archives of Environmental Health: An International Journal, 2005 - Heldref Publications
... 21 This includes mainly the bird-han- dling ... of the world currently affected by avian
flu. ... The US Congressional Budget Office recently published projections ...

An Investor?s Guide to Avian Flu -
S COOPER, D COXE - BMO Nesbitt Burns Research, August, 2005 - longwoods.com
... The US mortality rate was roughly 2.5%, but rates in ... It has re- ported large-scale
bird deaths and has ... to some remote regions where avian flu outbreaks have ...

[PDF] Influenza surveillance in Hong Kong: results of a trial Physician Sentinel Programme -
KA Fitzner, SM McGhee, AJ Hedley, KF Shortridge - Hong Kong Med J, 1999 - hkmj.org
... a month either because of leave or absence ... software (Lotus Develop- ment Corp.,
Cambridge [MA], US). ... The recent H5N1 ?bird flu?outbreak emphasises the need ...
-

[PDF] Drugs could head off a flu pandemic?but only if werespond fastenough -
N FER - NATURE, 2005 - birdflubook.org
... BIRD FLU MOVES TOWARDS EUROPE Migratory birds may have ... atHarvard University, says
the papers leave him con ... WASHINGTON DC The US Congress slapped an energy bill ...

[DOC] The fight against the flu -
J Adler - Newsweek, 2005 - geocities.com
... as some people couldn't bear to leave their houses ... military spokesman told NEWSWEEK
last week that "bird flu is not ... part of the WHO's plan to combat avian flu. ...

Source: Google Scholar

Gaps in bird flu plan leave US vulnerable-senators

WASHINGTON - The U.S. Agriculture Department's failure to develop a "comprehensive" program to monitor for bird flu could leave the country unprepared if an outbreak happens, a bipartisan group of senators said on Friday.

In a letter to Agriculture Secretary Mike Johanns, six lawmakers said some states were not as prepared as they should be for the disease. In order to better protect public health, they said, the department should provide states with a protocol for developing their own avian influenza response plan, rather than leaving that to the individual states.

The letter also expressed concern that the U.S. Agriculture Department has not done enough to prepare for an outbreak in multiple states or increase awareness among backyard poultry owners for symptoms of the virus.

We need leadership from USDA in preparing for the arrival of avian flu," said Sen. Tom Harkin, an Iowa Democrat on the Senate Agriculture Committee.

"USDA's failure to develop a comprehensive monitoring program leaves us in the dark about areas of the country where better surveillance is needed. And USDA's inadequate assistance and cooperation with states and industry leaves our nation unnecessarily vulnerable," he said.

The letter also was signed by Democratic Sens. Harry Reid, Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and Charles Schumer and Republican Charles Grassley.

Last month, USDA's inspector general said the United States did not have adequate measures in place to survey and monitor for avian influenza, including the deadly H5N1 strain.

The latest bird flu strain is known to have killed more than 130 people and forced hundreds of millions of birds worldwide to be destroyed.

H5N1 has remained largely an infection of birds as it has spread through Asia, Europe and Africa. This strain has not been found in the United States so far.

Some experts believe the H5N1 virus could mutate so that it could spread easily from person to person, potentially killing millions of people.

Abbott says some blood glucose meters defective

CHICAGO - Abbott Laboratories Inc. on Thursday warned users of certain of its glucose blood testing meters that they may give incorrect readings, or not work at all.

The company said its FreeStyle and FreeStyle Flash blood glucose meters sold in the United States may switch the unit of measure or in rare cases, stop working, especially with low batteries. The defects may lead to misreading of test results and potentially hyperglycemia, Abbott said. The medical device and drug maker issued a letter to doctors and its registered customers in the United States alerting them to the defect.

The letter advises patients to always check to make sure the meter is calibrated and that it displays the standard unit of measure, milligrams per deciliter in the United States.

Lyme disease compound is harmful, US FDA warns

WASHINGTON - An unapproved compound mixed by pharmacists to treat Lyme disease should not be used, U.S. health officials warned on Friday, after one person died and another was hospitalized earlier this year.

The Food and Drug Administration said other users of the compound, called bismacine, have reported severe side effects that can include kidney failure and cardiovascular collapse. The agency said it was investigating all reported cases but did not say how many people had reported problems. Bismacine, also known as chromocine, contains large amounts of the metal bismuth, used in some medications to treat ulcer-causing bacteria, according to the FDA.

In March, one person was hospitalized after receiving the compound. In April, another person died from the treatment, the agency said.

Some doctors have been known to administer the injectable solution to treat the disease, which is caused by bacteria often spread by tick bites; if untreated, Lyme can affect the nervous system, joints and heart. Some states have already taken legal action against such physicians. The FDA said it was evaluating those who supply the compound.

Anyone who has taken the product and is concerned about side effects may want to seek medical care, it added.

Balance training protects the ankles from sprains

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - High school athletes can markedly reduce their risk of ankle sprains, especially those with a history of ankle sprains, by spending five to ten minutes of practice time doing simple balance exercises, a study shows.

"It has been recognized for a number of years that balance training helps people post-injury, whether it is a knee injury or ankle injury," Dr. Timothy A. McGuine, Senior Athletic Trainer at the University of Wisconsin Health Sports Medicine Center in Madison told Reuters Health.Balance training has also been shown to reduce the incidence of injuries in adult soccer players.

"Our goal was to see if could get similar results with high school athletes by designing a balance training program that was easily incorporated into practices," McGuine noted.

A total of 765 male and female high school soccer and basketball players were randomly assigned to an intervention group that participated in balance training or to a control group that performed only standard conditioning exercises.Early in the season, McGuine explained, the intervention group did balance exercises five days per week. They started with basic balance training like standing on one leg with their eyes shut and standing on one leg while trying to dribble a basketball or kick a soccer ball. They then progressed to standing on a balance or "wobble board."Once the regular soccer or basketball season started, athletes performed these simple balance exercises three times per week. The balance exercises took about 7 to 10 minutes out of practice time.

Sixty-two of the 765 athletes sustained an acute ankle sprain during their sports season.

According to McGuine and colleagues, the rate of ankle sprains was significantly lower in the balance trainers (6 percent versus 10 percent in the control group)."The results of this study document that a simple, inexpensive, balance training program performed during a high school sport season will reduce the rate of ankle sprains by 38 percent in male and female high school soccer and basketball players," the investigators report in The American Journal of Sports Medicine.Ankle sprains are very common in high school athletes and they have a "profound impact on healthcare costs and resources," McGuine and colleagues point out.A decrease of 38 percent of ankle sprains in this population would reduce direct health care costs by $26 million and indirect health care costs by $380 million each year if the program were used on a national level for these two sports alone, the team calculates.Consistent with other studies, the current study found that athletes who sustained an ankle sprain within the previous 12 months had more than double the risk of sustaining another sprain. The balance-training program reduced the risk of re-injury in these athletes by nearly half.The balance-training program also appeared to reduce the incidence of ankle sprains in athletes without a history of ankle sprains, although the difference was not statistically significance. The rate of ankle sprains for athletes without a history of ankle sprains was 4.3 percent in the balance-training group and 7.7 percent in the control group.McGuine also noted that "our initial data looks like we have more ACL tears, more knee problems in the kids who didn't do the balance exercises."

The balance-training program used in this study "is low tech -- it doesn't take a lot of time -- it doesn't cost a lot," and could be easily incorporated into most athletic team practices and physical education classes, McGuine said. "There is no down side to it."

 
 
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