Friday, July 07, 2006

Pandemic

Information to help businesses, individuals and families be better informed and prepared for a pandemic

A pandemic has the following characteristics:

* It is a highly contagious global disease outbreak
* It spreads easily and rapidly
* There is little or no immunity to it
* There is no vaccine
* It is deadly and kills millions of people

Presently health professionals are concerned about a fairly new and deadly avian flu or bird flu virus known as H5N1. It is spreading across Asia, Africa and Europe and is expected to reach the Americas soon. More than half the people that contracted it have died.

There have been 10 pandemics over the past 300 years with three occurring in the past century. On average there is one every 30 years. The last pandemic was nearly 40 years ago in 1968.

Experts agree that we are overdue for the next pandemic. It is not a question of if there will be one, but when it will happen.

When it hits, as many as 150 million people are expected to die.

What must you do to prepare and protect yourself or family?

http://www.pandemicinfosite.com

68% of businesses are not prepared for a pandemic.
When it hits many will go out of business or suffer devastating human and financial losses.

What must your business do to prepare and protect itself?

http://www.pandemicinfosite.com/bird-flu-business.htm


Third Bird Flu Outbreak This Month Confirmed in Japan 1-29-07
Tests confirmed that an outbreak of bird flu at a poultry farm in southern Japan was caused by the virulent H5N1 virus , the agriculture ministry said Saturday.
A state laboratory analyzed samples from 3,000 chickens that died at a farm in Hyuga in Miyazaki state, Japan's main chicken-producing region, and found the birds had been infected with H5N1, the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries said in a statement.
Earlier this month, some 4,000 chickens died from H5N1 in another town in Miyazaki, about 560 miles southwest of Tokyo.
Authorities began slaughtering the remaining 49,000 chickens at the Hyuga farm on Friday, state official Hisao Takase said.
About 21,000 birds had been destroyed by Saturday afternoon, Takase said. Another 50,000 chickens at a neighboring farm will also be killed as a precaution.
The H5N1 virus has killed or forced the slaughter of millions of birds across Asia since late 2003, and caused the deaths of at least 163 people worldwide, according to the World Health Organization.
Japan has confirmed only one human H5N1 infection, and no human deaths.
The bird flu virus remains hard for humans to catch, but international experts fear it may mutate into a form that could spread easily among humans and possibly kill millions around the world

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