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As a small fraction — some 2.4 million doses — of the nasal spray version of the new swine flu vaccine began arriving last week at local health departments, plans for limited distribution were being formulated on the fly or dusted off from earlier in the decade, when fears of an avian flu pandemic sparked a rush of emergency preparedness.
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We should be aware that the prolonged warning that a future pandemic could be sparked by avian influenza viruses is likely to cause pandemic fatigue in the public, and would probably not change their perception of avian influenza risk and associated protective behavior [ 22].
Although the simian foamy virus (SFV) is not known to cause disease or to spread between humans, researchers say the virus is something to monitor closely; given enough time, it could evolve into something more dangerous--just like its two retrovirus cousins, one of which sparked the AIDS pandemic.
We speculate on conditions in Mexico which may have sparked this flu pandemic, the first in 41 years.
The high fatality of over 60% in human infection has sparked a fear that a disastrous pandemic strain may arise by mutation or reassortment with currently circulating seasonal influenza virus [1].
Recent public opinion research in Latin America and the Caribbean shows poor understanding and low public awareness of the risks of avian and pandemic influenza and widespread skepticism about the likelihood of H5N1 mutating into a new human virus that could spark a pandemic.
The increase in oseltamivir resistance reported recently has therefore sparked a debate on how to use oseltamivir in non pandemic influenza and the risks associated with wide spread use during a pandemic.
Analyses of the H7N9 strains isolated from four new cases show that the virus is evolving rapidly, heightening anxiety about the virus's potential to spark a pandemic.
Flu experts worry that if the virus mutates into a form that could be easily passed among humans, it could spark a pandemic.
Although GOF actually encompasses "a huge swath of life sciences research," he said, officials decided to focus only on influenza, MERS, and SARS because they are can be transmitted through the air and have the potential to spark a pandemic.
Hence the possibility is real that over time, one day, a novel avian influenza A virus could mutate into a robust human-transmissible virus sparking a pandemic.
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