Bird Flu
        and You

                                     
                                                   Bird Flu: What Can We Do About It?

 
The topic that will be discussed in the following article is being widely discussed in various venues most especially on the internet. Yet despite the popularity of the topic we feel that there is still a need for more sources that provide objective information. So here it is, read on.

Bird Flu: What Can We Do About It?

John T Jones, Ph.D.

Sidenote: Hope you're finding this useful? I have always been curious about this matter. And when I found very little quality information about it, I decided to share a part of what I've learned about it - which is why this article came to be written. Read on.

A Little History

We continually get warnings of a Bird Flu pandemic. So far, all cases of Bird Flu have come from contact with infected birds. Half of those who have contacted the Bird Flu have died.

There has been no human to human transfer of the Bird Flu. The fear is that the virus will mutate to a form that will allow direct human contact to pass the virus.

The Bird Flu is related to the Flu of 1918 that started in the United States at our ports and then spread through military camps such as Fort Dodge, Iowa. The pandemic was worldwide and the death total exceeded that of the then current war, World War I known as the Great War.

To read about the 1918 epidemic go to http://virus.stanford.edu/uda/. The most susceptible victims were those between the years of 20 and 40. The young and old were spared as is predicted with the Bird Flu.

My father caught influenza in 1918. My cousins father was pronounced dead in France because he was near death. He was tagged on his toe as a goner. Somehow, he recovered.

The flu knew no boundaries. Hermits were found dead in the Pine Barrens of New Jersey and in other remote locations. Hospitals were crammed full and morticians and grave diggers were in short supply. See the Stanford University URL for the gory details.

According to the Stanford University reference, school children jumped rope to the following rhyme:

I had a little bird, Its name was Enza. I opened the window, And in-flu-enza.

A Little Flu Goes a Long Way

The influenza plague of 1918 was thought to have originated in Spain so it was called the Spanish Flu. It occurred in three cycles as it circled the earth again and again. Our reference URL from Stanford University says that 80-90% of the population contacted the Spanish Flu. Only two inhabited islands escaped the flu. As the article says, in India, the flu killed 50 out of every 1000 people or 5% of the population. Scientists are studying the flu of 1918 because they think it is similar or identical to Bird Flu.

The year before last when we had a serious flu epidemic, I was not able to get vaccine here in Idaho. Last year, I didnt even try. This is despite the fact that I am in the high-risk category because of my age, the fact that Ive had coronary by-pass surgery twice, and that I have the aortic valve of a kind donor pig. Most flu strains attack the very young and the old. The Bird Flu hits those in the middle the hardest, the 20-40 year olds. I worry more about my grandchildren than I do about myself.

The fact that we were in war helped to spread the flu in 1918. Well, we are in war now. Let me ask you this question; what do you think our government will be able to do before the Bird Flu hits? Many dont trust the government in emergency situations. The attack on 9/11 came as a big surprise. The Weather Service gave ample warning on Katrina and other hurricanes but the governments response was pathetic. Osama Bin Laden is still eating Shish Kabob.

Assuming that some scientific team in a government, university, industrial, or private laboratory does not come up with a vaccine, and that the vaccine can not be produced in very large categories before the Bird Flu begins to propagate from humans rather than from sick birds, what will you be able to do about it?

What is Your Community Doing?

Read the article at http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/3847203.html to learn what would be expected in Houston, Texas. The article does not reveal the Houston plan, it just says what would happen if the flu hit Houston. One thing is that the hospitals would be jammed, the doctors and nurses would be dressed in special biological warfare gear, and there would be shortages of medicines to treat the patients.

One of the dangers of Bird Flu is subsequent pneumonia. I cant think of a better place to catch pneumonia than in a hospital. I went through that last year when my hospital stay was 19 days instead of the 7-10 day normal recovery from a heart valve replacement. The bugs I had were very difficult to kill and I was taking antibiotics for two weeks after I got home. That may be a mute point. There will not be enough hospital beds anyway.

According to Nobel laureate Linus Pauling, vitamin C in large doses, 1-10 grams, can alleviate the symptoms of flu. The side affects of flu are what cause death. I take 2 grams of vitamin C each day but if I get cold or flu symptoms, I take the larger doses until the symptoms go away. Then I go back to my 2 grams to keep them away.

One thing we could do would be to get rid of the archaic custom of shaking hands. The Japanese never shake hands unless some American insists. They bow. If they get a cold, they cover their faces with medical masks.

Coughing and hand shaking are major methods of sharing the flu with your neighbors. Some politicians and church leaders who are tired of suffering from continual colds and flu bugs obtained from hand shaking carry medical wipes to clean their hands often after being exposed to the public.

I suggest you stock up on hand wipes and vitamin C.

I suggest you wash your hands frequently.

A public meeting is another sure place to get a bug. If you have symptoms of flu and are coughing, continually blowing your nose, and have a fever to boot, stay home. I dont care if it is your day to speak in church, stay home.

If you are a high-risk like me, ask your doctor what precautions you might take to prevent or treat the flu. You will not want to go into his office during a flu epidemic.

The agent causing flu is a virus. We do have some drugs that might help. Lets hope there are enough drugs and vaccines to protect all of us. Some say that such drugs will be in short supply. I'm sure that they will be.

Remember that if you hear that the Bird Flu is being passed from human to human rather than bird to human, STOP SHAKING HANDS.

John T. Jones, Ph.D. (tjbooks@hotmail.com, a retired VP of R&D for Lenox China, is author of detective & western novels, nonfiction (business, scientific, engineering, humor), poetry, etc. Former editor of Ceramic Industry Magazine. He is Executive Representative of IWS sellers of Tyler Hicks wealth-success books and kits. He also sells TopFlight flagpoles. He calls himself "Taylor Jones, the hack writer."

More info: http://www.tjbooks.com

Business web site: http://www.aaaflagpoles.com

And now you know. Its amazing how so many of our assumptions turn out to be false, in the endor how much deeper a topic is than we originally thought. We hope that this article has revealed a new dimension to this topic and given you much to think about. Doesnt the world seem so much bigger than before?