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uk.business.agriculture |
Pat's Note: This is the news agency conformation on the statement made He says "over" 100,000 and I think that's right. It will be over He says the cases are doubling. It may be closer to tripling. So, the Minister is perhaps understandably slightly under estimating. Based on multiple sources, it will have peaked by mid September, maybe That casts doubt on the decision taken to replace seasonal flu vaccine Dodgy data costs lives. The plus point is that the over 60s do seem to have natural immunity. The major risks now are a mutation, especially in under- supervised We need to know that pig farms are being watched, that humans with flu We need to know whether British pigs have MRSA, for how long, at what None of this will be done of course. Kids die whilst British http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5hC2LA23ecMBYyTEqeq... --
earlier by Britain's Health Minister.
100,000 by the end of August based on current figures. The "over"
matters to the maths.
Who knows? He might be right.
a little later if the Ministers figures are nearer to being right.
Before winter and before a vaccine becomes available.
with H1N1 vaccine, which in turn illustrates the human cost of not
getting the start point and date established and accurate figures
earlier.
Self interest aside, they would bed block during a period of intense
pressure. Although children with pre-existing conditions are most at
risk, the total deaths are still low. MRSA has played at part in
children's deaths in the USA.
pig farms - with a second wave and the possibility of increased MRSA
related deaths.
are kept away from pigs.
percentage and which strains. We need to test pig and pork workers and
vets for MRSA, at the workplace and on entry to hospital. We need to
use the more invasive tests that throw up a smaller number of false
negatives.
government veterinary science prances about manufacturing and
disseminating fake data.
Regards
Pat Gardiner
Release the results of testing British pigs for MRSA and C.Diff now!
www.go-self-sufficient.com and http://animal-epidemics.blogspot.com/