DAVID GRANOVSKY

Archive for April 28th, 2009|Daily archive page

SWINE FLU EXPOSE 1977 & SWINE FLU PANIC 2009

In ALL ARTICLES on April 28, 2009 at 10:41 pm

SWINE FLU EXPOSE (1977)

SWINE FLU EXPOSE (1977) is a book by Eleanora McBean Ph.D., N.D.

You can read SWINE FLU EXPOSE (1977) here: http://repairstemcell.wordpress.com/swine-flu-expose-1977-long/

Quotes by Eleanora McBean:

“TYPHOID MARY” WAS NEVER A CARRIER by Eleanora I. McBean, Ph.D., N.D.

Other Eleanora McBean Books:
[1977] Vaccination, The Silent Killer—-Honorof, Ida, and McBean.

[1977] Swine Flu Expose by Eleanora I. McBean, Ph.D., N.D.

[1957 CLASSIC] THE POISONED NEEDLE by Eleanor McBean

[1957] The Hidden Dangers In Polio Vaccine (Chapter 10 of Poisoned Needle) by Eleanor McBean

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Swine flu panic 2009

Read it here: Swine flu panic 2009

“Virus Mania is a social disease of our highly developed society. To cure it will require conquering fear, fear being the most deadly contagious virus, most efficiently transmitted by the media. Errare humanum est sed diabolicum preservare… (to err is human, but to preserve an error is diabolic).”—-Etienne de Harven

Swine Flu Mortality Explained

In ALL ARTICLES on April 28, 2009 at 10:22 pm

One of the reasons flu is so closely watched is because of the huge number of humans who come down with it every year. A small change in mortality rates (the percentage of people who die from a disease) can have a huge impact because the numbers are so large.

In an average year, according for the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), between 5 and 20 percent of the U.S. population comes down with the flu. For the purposes of this calculation let’s say it is halfway: 12.5%.

Twelve and a half percent of the U.S. population is about 37.5 million.

The CDC also reports that 200,000 people are admitted to hospitals in the U.S. for flu or flu-like symptoms every year.

Other researchers have calculated that on average, about 40,000 people die in the United States each year from the flu or complications of the flu. As a comparison, According to the CDC about 650,00 die from heart disease and about 550,000 die from cancer. Every year.

If 40,000 people die out of the 37.5 million who come down with the flu that is a mortality rate of a little over one tenth of one percent.

According to a Stanford University summary of the great flu pandemic of 1918, the mortality rate in that outbreak was about 2.5 percent – almost 25 times the mortality of a normal flu year.

So, to complete the discussion, if this Swine Flu has a higher than normal mortality rate, maybe even as high as 2.5%, and a normal number of Americans – 37.5 million – are infected with it then over 950,000 Americans would die of that flu strain.

If contagion rates are higher than average and this strain of flu is as virulent as the 1918 strain then well over a million Americans might die of it.

In Mexico, as of yesterday, 1,300 people had contracted the disease and 80 had died – a mortality rate of over 6 percent.

Hence, the concern.

via CNSNews.com – Don’t Cry for Me Influenza.

Seal U.S.-Mexico Border to Prevent Spread of Swine Flu, Says Democratic Homeland Security Committee Member

In ALL ARTICLES on April 28, 2009 at 10:06 pm
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Rep. Eric Massa (D-N.Y.), Homeland Security Committee member, who has called for closing U.S.-Mexico border to address swine flu problem.

Seal U.S.-Mexico Border to Prevent Spread of Swine Flu, Says Democratic Homeland Security Committee Member

Monday, April 27, 2009

By Penny Starr, Senior Staff Writer

(CNSNews.com) – Rep. Eric Massa (D-N.Y.), member of the House Homeland Security Committee, is calling for the “immediate” and “complete” closure of the U.S. border with Mexico until officials in that country can contain the spread of the H1N1 virus, or swine flu.

“The public needs to be aware of the serious threat of swine flu, and we need to close our borders to Mexico immediately and completely until this is resolved,” Massa said in a statement posted on his congressional Web site. “The CDC (Centers for Disease Control) and the WHO (World Health Organization) are monitoring this situation closely and I call on all Americans to pay attention and follow their instructions as this situation develops. I have complete faith in our medical professionals and look forward to a swift conclusion to this problem.”

Massa criticized the media for its coverage of the outbreak, which led to U.S. officials declaring it a public health emergency on Sunday.

“I am making this announcement because I see this as a serious threat to the health of the American public and I do not believe this issue is receiving the attention it needs to have in the news,” Massa said.

via CNSNews.com – Seal U.S.-Mexico Border to Prevent Spread of Swine Flu, Says Democratic Homeland Security Committee Member.

Pandemic: What would happen next?

In ALL ARTICLES on April 28, 2009 at 7:18 pm

CNN — The world hasn’t seen a pandemic in 41 years, when the “Hong Kong” flu crossed the globe and killed about one million people worldwide. If swine flu reaches pandemic levels, what would happen next? A man wearing a protective mask reads a newspaper outside a hospital in Mexico City.

A man wearing a protective mask reads a newspaper outside a hospital in Mexico City.

Click to view previous image 1 of 3 Click to view next image more photos »

Recurrent outbreaks of avian Influenza and the outbreak of SARS in 2003 rang alarm bells as potential pandemics.

Although both jumped the “animal-to-human” barrier, neither disease mutated enough to enable sustained human-to-human infection, said Dr. K.Y. Yuen, head of microbiology at Hong Kong University.

Strictly speaking, avian influenza and SARS did not become pandemics because they were too good at killing their hosts.

“For a sustained pandemic, it needs to be able to maintain human-to-human contact without killing its host off,” he said.

Avian influenza “never became a man-to-man disease,” said Dr. Lo Wing-Luk, an infectious disease expert.

“Swine flu is already a man-to-man disease, which makes it much more difficult to manage, and swine flu appears much more infectious than SARS.”

But the World Health Organization cautions that it cannot say whether it will cause a pandemic. According to epidemiologists and health experts, here’s what the world might see if there is another pandemic, based on past experience:

The disease would skip from city to city over an 18- to 24-month period, infecting more than a third of the population. World Health Organization officials believe that as many as 1.5 billion people around the globe would seek medical care, and nearly 30 million would seek hospitalization. Based on the last pandemic and current world population, as many as 7 million people could die, epidemiologists said.

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“Hospitals will become overcrowded; schools will close; businesses will close; airports will be empty,” Lo said.

“Business will become very bad as people avoid as much social contact as possible,” Yuen added.

Health facilities will become overrun with patients, and there would be less-than-adequate staffing as medical health professionals fall ill themselves, experts say.

“We saw cases in SARS where people who should have gone to the hospital for things like cancer treatment didn’t go, and that resulted in higher deaths,” Lo said.

The very young and very old will probably be the most susceptible to the illness.

Experts caution that much is still unknown about the current swine flu virus and its severity and that it is too early to say whether it will lead to a pandemic. Right now, the focus is on finding answers and containing the spread.

via http://edition.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/04/27/pandemic.next/index.html

Mexican Immigration Officials Required to Wear Anti-Flu Face Masks at U.S.-Mexico Border Crossings

In ALL ARTICLES on April 28, 2009 at 7:07 pm
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Mexican Immigration officials, wearing surgical masks, work at the US-Mexico border crossing in Tijuana, Mexico, Monday, April 27, 2009. (AP photo)

Mexican Immigration Officials Required to Wear Anti-Flu Face Masks at U.S.-Mexico Border Crossings

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

By Edwin Mora

(CNSNews.com) – Mexican immigration officials on the U.S.-Mexican border say they have been required to wear face masks whether swine influenza poses a threat or not.

Meanwhile, on the U.S. side of the border, it is up to the discretion of Customs and Border Protection officials whether to wear masks to protect themselves against the flu.

via CNSNews.com – Mexican Immigration Officials Required to Wear Anti-Flu Face Masks at U.S.-Mexico Border Crossings.

Call It ‘North American Flu,’ Meat Industry Says

In ALL ARTICLES on April 28, 2009 at 3:05 pm
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Call It ‘North American Flu,’ Meat Industry Says

Call It ‘North American Flu,’ Meat Industry Says

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

By Susan Jones, Senior Editor

(AP Photo)

(CNSNews.com) – Don’t call it “swine flu,” says the American Meat Institute. A more accurate name for the headline illness is “North American flu,” and that’s what the media should be calling it, the group argues.

“According to the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE), North American Flu is a more accurate description of the virus that has affected people in North America,” said American Meat Institute President J. Patrick Boyle.

Boyle quoted from an OIE press release, which read: “The virus has not been isolated in animals to date. Therefore, it is not justified to name this disease swine influenza. In the past, many human influenza epidemics with animal origin have been named using their geographic name, e.g. Spanish influenza or Asiatic influenza, thus it would be logical to call this disease ‘North-American influenza.’”

Boyle stressed that eating pork is safe…

via CNSNews.com – Call It ‘North American Flu,’ Meat Industry Says.

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