Wednesday, September 02, 2009

The good news — people infected with AIDS virus do not seem to be at special risk from H1N1

I'm more than a little confused here:

WHO warns of severe form of swine flu

An assistant teacher checks a student’s temperature before a class begins to prevent possible contagion of the H1N1 flu virus at Sangmyung University in Seoul August 28, 2009. REUTERS/Lee Jae-Won


Reuters | Aug 28, 2009

By Maggie Fox


WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Doctors are reporting a severe form of swine flu that goes straight to the lungs, causing severe illness in otherwise healthy young people and requiring expensive hospital treatment, the World Health Organization said on Friday.


Some countries are reporting that as many as 15 percent of patients infected with the new H1N1 pandemic virus need hospital care, further straining already overburdened healthcare systems, WHO said in an update on the pandemic.


“During the winter season in the southern hemisphere, several countries have viewed the need for intensive care as the greatest burden on health services,” it said.


“Preparedness measures need to anticipate this increased demand on intensive care units, which could be overwhelmed by a sudden surge in the number of severe cases.”


Earlier, WHO reported that H1N1 had reached epidemic levels in Japan, signaling an early start to what may be a long influenza season this year, and that it was also worsening in tropical regions.


“Perhaps most significantly, clinicians from around the world are reporting a very severe form of disease, also in young and otherwise healthy people, which is rarely seen during seasonal influenza infections,” WHO said.


“In these patients, the virus directly infects the lung, causing severe respiratory failure [emphasis mine]. Saving these lives depends on highly specialized and demanding care in intensive care units, usually with long and costly stays.”


MINORITIES AT RISK


Minority groups and indigenous populations may also have a higher risk of being severely ill with H1N1 [emphasis mine].


“In some studies, the risk in these groups is four to five times higher than in the general population,” WHO said.


“Although the reasons are not fully understood, possible explanations include lower standards of living and poor overall health status, including a high prevalence of conditions such as asthma, diabetes and hypertension. [emphasis mine]”


WHO said it was advising countries in the Northern Hemisphere to prepare for a second wave of pandemic spread. “Countries with tropical climates, where the pandemic virus arrived later than elsewhere, also need to prepare for an increasing number of cases,” it said.


Every year, seasonal flu infects between 5 percent and 20 percent of a given population and kills between 250,000 and 500,000 people globally. Because hardly anyone has immunity to the new H1N1 virus, experts believe it will infect far more people than usual, as much as a third of the population.


It also disproportionately affects younger people, unlike seasonal flu which mainly burdens the elderly, and thus may cause more severe illness and deaths among young adults and children than seasonal flu does.


“Data continue to show that certain medical conditions increase the risk of severe and fatal illness. These include respiratory disease, notably asthma, cardiovascular disease, diabetes and immunosuppression, [emphasis mine]” WHO said.


“When anticipating the impact of the pandemic as more people become infected, health officials need to be aware that many of these predisposing conditions have become much more widespread in recent decades, thus increasing the pool of vulnerable people.”


WHO estimates that more than 230 million people globally have asthma, and more than 220 million have diabetes. Obesity may also worsen the risk of severe infection, WHO said.


The good news — people infected with AIDS virus do not seem to be at special risk from H1N1, WHO said [emphasis mine].



As the very creation of the H1N1 virus is alleged to be the result of the actions of the very agencies involved in the effort to "contain" the outbreak there are many more questions than there are answers surrounding all aspects of the alleged pandemic. Indeed, there is a law suit currently filed with the FBI against WHO and a laundry list of other agencies over the "outbreak" and subsequent efforts to contain it.


But this new article absolutely baffles me. It is generally known (but not realized) among the general population that the symptoms of H1N1 are virtually indistinguishable from those of the regular flu and even the common cold. It lists a plethora of pre-existing conditions which would likely complicate an exposure or make one more susceptible.


The problem, as I see it, is that many of these conditions are ones that people with AIDS already deal with regularly. Yet, WHO is claiming that PLWH/A (People Living With HIV/AIDS) "do not seem to be at special risk from H1N1". For those of us who are PLWH/A, this is indeed good news, if not just a bit baffling.


I personally have been worried that the health police would be knocking on my door at any moment with a flu jab in one hand and a gun in the other, thus sealing my fate as a casualty of "pandemic control". Does this new information mean that I will not have to submit to another injection of toxic poisons? Or that I will just be at the back of the line? My preference is to avoid the "lines" altogether. But I can't help wondering what their motivation is for excluding PLWH/A, which is by definition "immunosuppression" which is described as a "condition(s) [that] increase(s) the risk of severe and fatal illness", from their 'short list' of those doomed to die from the latest edition of "Fear Inc., the Series".


Could it be that they have already infected us with one weaponized virus and due to the economy they don't want to 'waste' another bullet on us? Time will tell.