Check out the FAQ,Terms of Service & Disclaimers by clicking the
link. Please register
to be able to post. By viewing this site you are agreeing to our Terms of Service and Acknowledge our Disclaimers.
FluTrackers.com Inc. does not provide medical advice. Information on this web site is collected from various internet resources, and the FluTrackers board of directors makes no warranty to the safety, efficacy, correctness or completeness of the information posted on this site by any author or poster.
The information collated here is for instructional and/or discussion purposes only and is NOT intended to diagnose or treat any disease, illness, or other medical condition. Every individual reader or poster should seek advice from their personal physician/healthcare practitioner before considering or using any interventions that are discussed on this website.
By continuing to access this website you agree to consult your personal physican before using any interventions posted on this website, and you agree to hold harmless FluTrackers.com Inc., the board of directors, the members, and all authors and posters for any effects from use of any medication, supplement, vitamin or other substance, device, intervention, etc. mentioned in posts on this website, or other internet venues referenced in posts on this website.
We are not asking for any donations. Do not donate to any entity who says they are raising funds for us.
yes, presumably they are cutting free access to flunet.
Who can register ? how ?
> If you are a registered user for a specific programme,
> simply click on the Registered User Login and type in
> your Login and Password to access the restricted user site.
WHO-secrecy...
now that Southern flu starts and we need to know
****** or H3N2
AUS H3:4,2,4,2,5,3
AUS Mx:29,20,36,49,41,45
Chile H3:30,65,78,110,15,0
Chile Mx:34,51,62,37,55,0
China H3:293,446,494,678,744,421
China Mx:92,110,69,72,55,24
India H3:5,13,21,25,19,0
India Mx:425,484,393,358,273,0
Japan H3:16,7,10,4,4,3
Japan Mx:8,11,2,3,2,0
Kenya H3:0,11,4,7,12,6
Kenya Mx:0,0,0,1,0,0
Mexico H3:55,36,27,15,0,0
Mexico Mx:0,1,0,0,0,0
South Africa H3:37,22,11,13,6,-
South Africa Mx:18,21,28,38,13,-
Thailand H3:5,6,3,9,10,-
Thailand Mx:28,27,43,65,79,-
Those few cases of seasonal H1N1 that China and Australia had.. would they be the same strain that had circulated in small amounts last flu season (before panflu became dominant?
The salvage of human life ought to be placed above barter and exchange ~ Louis Harris, 1918
Mx dominating worldwide again, after the intermezzo of H3 from week
USA still has 80%-85% H3, though. But Europe has clearly Mx, ~98%.
Even Sweden which was vaxed ~70% or such last season.
Makes you wonder whether USA may also get another wave of Mx, once H3 goes down in 5-10 weeks
we should add the estimated proportion of infections in 2009/10
to the vaccination coverage rate.
Maybe even stronger weighted - a real infection should protect
better the next year than a vaccination.
However, when mass vaccination just only means that they
get another strain the next season, then it's worth less.
Well, looking at the ILI-charts at Eurosurveillance it seems
that Sweden,Norway,Iceland also have fewer ILI in total
this season than other countries
This paper describes the epidemiology of fatal pandemic influenza A(H1N1) cases in the United Kingdom (UK) since April 2009 and in particular risk factors associated with death. A fatal case was defined as a UK resident who died between 27 April 2009 and 12 March 2010, in whom pandemic influenza A(H1N1) infection was laboratory-confirmed or recorded on the death certificate. Case fatality ratios (CFR) were calculated using an estimated cumulative number of clinical cases as the denominator. The relative risk of death was estimated by comparing the population mortality rate in each risk group, with those not in a risk group. Across the UK, 440 fatal cases were identified. In England, fatal cases were mainly seen in young adults (median age 43 years, 85% under 65 years), unlike for seasonal influenza. The majority (77%) of cases for whom data were available (n=308) had underlying risk factors for severe disease. The CFR in those aged 65 years or over was nine per 1,000 clinical cases (range 3-26) compared to 0.4 (range 0.2 to 0.9) for those aged six months to 64 years. In the age group between six month and 64 years, the relative risk for fatal illness for those in a risk group was 18. The population attributable fractions in this age group were highest for chronic neurological disease (24%), immunosuppression (16%) and respiratory disease (15%). The results highlight the importance of early targeted effective intervention programmes.
.
> Across the UK, 440 fatal cases were identified. (2009/10)
High prevalence of antibodies to the 2009 pandemic influenza A(H1N1) virus
in the Norwegian population following a major epidemic and a large vaccination campaign in autumn 2009
Re : France suivi 2011
« Répondre #42 le: Aujourd'hui à 04:01:46 »
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
zero (0,0) is at bottom left, as usual.
e.g.:
46,0,0,4,5,0,0,3,15,19,69,Iceland
46% of population vaccinated with Pandemrix in 2009/10
5 samples of flu A in 2010, weeks 40-52
19 samples of flu A in 2010 weeks 1-9
0 samples of flu B in 2010, weeks 40-52
69 samples of flu B in 2010 weeks 1-9
flu-a/flu-B = (5+19)/(0+69)
uhh, I meant flu-B/flu-A above, not flu-A/flu-B
the amount of escaping the vaccine
so
flu-B/flu-A = (0+69)/(5+19) = 69/24 = 2.876
which is relatively much.
Countries with few Pandemrix-vaccination have little
flu-B this season and much flu-A:
Czech,Austria,Greece,Estonia,Italy
ecept Estonia, which is an exception - they have little flu-B
but also little flu-A
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
the Northern "good Pandemrix-vaccinated" countries had fewer
flu-A this season, but also more flu-B
we might consider a strategy to only vaccinate against
the virulent strains and "allow" the milder ones
Comment