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Showing posts with label bird deaths. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bird deaths. Show all posts

Friday, January 6, 2012

H5N1 PANDEMIC POSSIBILITIES?

Conspiracy or Truth? ...



"Scientists from two universities are now in the process of publishing papers on how they weaponized bird flu, while the WHO says this information should not be made public in case it gets into the wrong hands. Meanwhile, the H5N1 disease has claimed some lives again in Asia, but authorities assure us the cases did not involve human-to-human spread.

The picture I get from all this is that if there were ever a true, deadly bird flu pandemic, it could only be the result of the kind of weaponized virus intentionally created by virologists like these- but has someone much higher up put them up to this?"

China: Bird flu death not from human-human spread

BEIJING (AP) -- The strain of H5H1 bird flu that killed a Chinese man cannot spread among people, a health agency said Monday, appealing for calm after the country's first reported case of the disease in humans in 18 months.

Genetic analysis indicated the virus spread directly from poultry to the victim, who died Saturday in the southern city of Shenzhen, the Shenzhen Disease Control Center said in a statement reported by the official Xinhua News Agency.

"Though it is highly pathogenic to human beings, the virus can not spread among people," the statement said, according to Xinhua. "There is no need for Shenzhen citizens to panic."

H5N1 rarely infects humans and usually only those who come into close contact with diseased poultry. Scientists are closely watching the virus for any signs it is becoming more easily transmissible from human to human.

A 39-year-old bus driver surnamed Chen developed a fever Dec. 21 and was hospitalized Dec. 25, according to an earlier statement by city and provincial authorities. The provincial health department said Health Ministry experts confirmed Saturday that he was infected with H5N1.

Xinhua said health authorities still were trying to figure out where he was infected.


AP


Ma Hanwu, vice director of Shenzhen Center for Disease Control and Prevention, right, speaks as Zhou Boping, director of the Shenzhen No. 3 People's Hospital looks at the documents during a press conference about a bird flu patient in Shenzhen in south China's Guangdong province.

http://yourlife.usatoday.com/health/story/2012-01-03/China-Bird-flu-death-not-from-human-human-spread/52358102/1


Scientists Brace for Media Storm Around Controversial Flu Studies

on 23 November 2011, 4:48 PM | 
ROTTERDAM, THE NETHERLANDS—Locked up in the bowels of the medical faculty building here and accessible to only a handful of scientists lies a man-made flu virus that could change world history if it were ever set free.

The virus is an H5N1 avian influenza strain that has been genetically altered and is now easily transmissible between ferrets, the animals that most closely mimic the human response to flu. Scientists believe it's likely that the pathogen, if it emerged in nature or were released, would trigger an influenza pandemic, quite possibly with many millions of deaths.

In a 17th floor office in the same building, virologist Ron Fouchier of Erasmus Medical Center calmly explains why his team created what he says is "probably one of the most dangerous viruses you can make"—and why he wants to publish a paper describing how they did it. Fouchier is also bracing for a media storm. After he talked to ScienceInsider yesterday, he had an appointment with an institutional press officer to chart a communication strategy.

Fouchier's paper is one of two studies that have triggered an intense debate about the limits of scientific freedom and that could portend changes in the way U.S. researchers handle so-called dual-use research: studies that have a potential public health benefit but could also be useful for nefarious purposes like biowarfare or bioterrorism.

The other study—also on H5N1, and with comparable results—was done by a team led by virologist Yoshihiro Kawaoka at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and the University of Tokyo, several scientists told ScienceInsider. (Kawaoka did not respond to interview requests.) Both studies have been submitted for publication, and both are currently under review by the U.S. National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity (NSABB), which on a few previous occasions has been asked by scientists or journals to review papers that caused worries.

NSABB chair Paul Keim, a microbial geneticist, says he cannot discuss specific studies but confirms that the board has "worked very hard and very intensely for several weeks on studies about H5N1 transmissibility in mammals." The group plans to issue a public statement soon, says Keim, and is likely to issue additional recommendations about this type of research. "We'll have a lot to say," he says.

"I can't think of another pathogenic organism that is as scary as this one," adds Keim, who has worked on anthrax for many years. "I don't think anthrax is scary at all compared to this."

Some scientists say that's reason enough not to do such research. The virus could escape from the lab, or bioterrorists or rogue nations could use the published results to fashion a bioweapon with the potential for mass destruction, they say. "This work should never have been done," says Richard Ebright, a molecular biologist at Rutgers University in Piscataway, New Jersey, and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute who has a strong interest in biosecurity issues.

The research by the Kawaoka and Fouchier teams set out to answer a question that has long puzzled scientists: Does H5N1, which rarely causes human disease, have the potential to trigger a pandemic? The virus has decimated poultry flocks on three continents but has caused fewer than 600 known cases of flu in humans since it emerged in Asia in 1997, although those rare human cases are often fatal. Because the virus spreads very inefficiently between humans it has been unable to set off a chain reaction and circle the globe.

Some scientists think the virus is probably unable to trigger a pandemic, because adapting to a human host would likely make it unable to reproduce. Some also believe the virus would need to reshuffle its genes with a human strain, a process called reassortment, that some believe is most likely to occur in pigs, which host both human and avian strains. Based on past experience, some scientists have also argued that flu pandemics can only be caused by H1, H2, and H3 viruses, which have been replaced by each other in the human population every so many decades—but not by H5.

Fouchier says his study shows all of that to be wrong.

Although he declined to discuss details of the research because the paper is still under review, Fouchier confirmed the details given in news stories in New Scientist and Scientific American about a September meeting in Malta where he first presented the study. Those stories describe how Fouchier initially tried to make the virus more transmissible by making specific changes to its genome, using a process called reverse genetics; when that failed, he passed the virus from one ferret to another multiple times, a low-tech and time-honored method of making a pathogen adapt to a new host.

After 10 generations, the virus had become "airborne": Healthy ferrets became infected simply by being housed in a cage next to a sick one. The airborne strain had five mutations in two genes, each of which have already been found in nature, Fouchier says; just never all at once in the same strain.

Ferrets aren't humans, but in studies to date, any influenza strain that has been able to pass among ferrets has also been transmissible among humans, and vice versa, says Fouchier: "That could be different this time, but I wouldn't bet any money on it."

The specter of an H5N1 pandemic keeps flu scientists up at night because of the virus's power to kill. Of the known cases so far, more than half were fatal. The real case-fatality rate is probably lower because an unknown number of milder cases are never diagnosed and reported, but scientists agree that the virus is vicious. Based on Fouchier's talk in Malta, New Scientist reported that the strain created by the Rotterdam team is just as lethal to ferrets as the original one.

"These studies are very important," says biodefense and flu expert Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities. The researchers "have the full support of the influenza community," Osterholm says, because there are potential benefits for public health. For instance, the results show that those downplaying the risks of an H5N1 pandemic should think again, he says.

Knowing the exact mutations that make the virus transmissible also enables scientists to look for them in the field and take more aggressive control measures when one or more show up, adds Fouchier. The study also enables researchers to test whether H5N1 vaccines and antiviral drugs would work against the new strain.
Fouchier says he consulted widely within the Netherlands before submitting his manuscript for publication. The U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH), which funded the work, has agreed to the publication, says Fouchier, including officials at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. (NIH declined to answer questions for this story.) Now, Fouchier is eagerly waiting for NSABB's judgment.

Osterholm says he can't discuss details of the papers because he's an NSABB member. But he says it should be possible to omit certain key details from controversial papers and make them available to people who really need to know. "We don't want to give bad guys a road map on how to make bad bugs really bad," he says.

But some scientists say the board's debate comes far too late, because the studies have been done and the papers are written. "This is a good example of the need for a robust and independent system of PRIOR review and approval of potentially dangerous experiments," retired arms control researcher Mark Wheelis of the University of California, Davis, wrote to ScienceInsider in an e-mail. "Blocking publication may provide some small increment of safety, but it will be very modest compared to the benefits of not doing the work in the first place."

Scientists have long discussed whether to have mandatory reviews of dual-use studies before they begin, and given the global risks, some have even argued for some international risk assessment system for pandemic viruses. For instance, a proposal by four researchers from the Center for International and Security Studies at Maryland would have classified Fouchier's work as an "activity of extreme concern" that would have required international pre-approval.

But NSABB advised against such mandatory systems in 2007, and most countries don't have formal mechanisms in place to review studies before they start. (In the United States, it's "recommended" that researchers ask an institutional review board for advice if they think a study raises concerns.) Fouchier's study was greenlighted in advance by the Dutch Commission on Genetic Modification (COGEM), but that only means the panel is satisfied with safety procedures at Fouchier's lab, explains chair Bastiaan Zoeteman; it's not COGEM's job to decide whether a study is desirable. NIH didn't give the funding prop
osal a special review either, says Fouchier.

"The creation of a pandemic virus has been the classical example of dual-use research of concern the past decade," says Ebright. "It's remarkable that the NSABB is discussing it in 2011."

Keim agrees about the need for reviews up front. "The process of identifying dual use of concern is something that should start at the very first glimmer of an experiment," he says. "You shouldn't wait until you have submitted a paper before you decide it's dangerous. Scientists and institutions and funding agencies should be looking at this. The journals and the journals' reviewers should be the last resort."

NSABB does not have the power to prevent the publication of papers, but it could ask journals not to publish. Even Ebright, however, says he's against efforts to ban the publication of the studies now that they have been done. "You cannot post hoc suppress work that was done and completed in a nonclassified context," he says. "The scientific community would not stand for that."
http://news.sciencemag.org/scienceinsider/2011/11/scientists-brace-for-media-storm.html

Pandemrix Trials 5 Die 

http://www.scribd.com/doc/20770775/Pandemrix-Trials-5-Die-Page-16

WHAT DO YOU THINK?  DO YOU THINK THAT IT IS LIKELY TO BE LIKE LYME DISEASE?  ...  OR DO YOU THINK THAT THIS IS JUST FEAR MONGERING TO KEEP THE PEOPLE UNDER THEIR CONTROL?

Friday, January 7, 2011

Seriously, One Of My Favs For Today..."Top Tweets: Birds Falling From the Sky Edition"

Here has to be one of my favorites for today..."Top Tweets: Birds Falling From the Sky Edition" http://news.yahoo.com/s/atlantic/20110104/cm_atlantic/toptweetsbirdsfallingfromtheskyedition6438_1


Top Tweets: Birds Falling From the Sky Edition

WASHINGTON, DC – Arkansas's New Year's rain of 5,000 dead birds followed by a smattering of dead fish and even more birds in Louisiana sparked some dramatic reactions. Suggested explanations on Twitter have ranged from pollution to the apocalypse.

The New York Times' Brian Stelter wonders if film studios have taken movie promotions to a new level.

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Meaning in the deaths of the animals?


Birds fall, dead fish: How the ancients found meaning in bird signs and omens

  • January 6th, 2011 7:23 am ET
In a Time.com article, Why the Aflockalypse Is Business As Usual For Biodiversity—And Why That's Not Good, Bryan Walsh reasons that the mass animals deaths reported in the media this past week: The dead birds in Louisiana, Arkansas and Sweden and the fish in Britain, Florida, Brazil, Haiti and New Zealand, are not signaling some kind “Revelations-like event” but rather are quite common.
He quotes, Greg Butcher of the Audubon Society:
Mass bird die-offs can be caused by starvation, storms, disease, pesticide, collision with man-made structures or human disturbance ... Initial findings indicate that these are isolated incidents that were probably caused by disturbance and disorientation.
He also refers to a quote by LeAnn White, a wildlife disease specialist with the U.S. Geographical Surveywho stated "she knew of at least 16 cases over the past 20 years of large numbers of blackbirds dying all at once."
The article concludes that these recent events point to bad state of affairs of biodiversity on the planet and the high rate of extinction of many species (see video).
Except for the media’s pleasure in linking up random events and sensationalizing them, what else except end time’s prophecies could stir such shock and awe deep in our psyches?
The truth could lie in our racial memories. Augury, the study of the chattering, singing, feeding and flight of birds, was used in ancient times to foretell future events or receive guidance from the Deity or Spirit. In ancient Rome and Greece, almost nothing was undertaken unless birds “sanctioned” it.
Ancient Romans had a very extensive form of augury and it took on great importance. Whenever a Roman official needed confirmation about a policy, an augury was scheduled. An augur usually performed their augury on a hill top. An area was mapped out on the hill and great attention was taken to the compass direction. During the augury many things were noted such as whether the birds made sounds, which direction were they flying, what kind of birds were they, and if they made any changes of direction. The augur would also pay close attention to weather elements and cloud formations. The augur would ask yes or no questions and then make note of all the natural phenomenon. After many long hours or days of observation, the official would receive the advice of the augur.
Interesting bit of trivia the author adds that: “ Whenever it was time to install new government leaders an augury was always held to make sure the installment had the proper timing. “
This is the meaning of the word inauguration.
Socrates was also a believer in augury but with the provision that the birds or whatever form used were just instruments of the gods to bring messages to us mortals.
Only, whereas most men say that the birds or the folk they meet dissuade or encourage them, Socrates said what he meant: for he said that the deity gave him a sign. Many of his companions were counselled by him to do this or not to do that in accordance with the warnings of the deity: and those who followed his advice prospered, and those who rejected it had cause for regret. (Xenophon)
Roman augury was practical, it didn’t predict future events but essentially taught them “whether they were to do or not to do the matter purposed; giving a simple, yes or no answer. Not all birds could give auguries among the Romans.
“They were divided into two classes: Oscines, those which gave auguries by singing or their voice, and Alites, those which gave auguries by their flight.”
Some examples of omens:
The raven: a favorable omen when it appeared on the right.  "Of the call of ravens, Pliny says that the worse message is when they make a plaintive whine, as though they were being strangled." (Natural History X.33)
The crow: unfavorable when it was seen on the left.
Some birds by their mere appearance, as the bubo (eagle owl), spinturnix (Plin. Nat. 10.34-37), and some again were birds of omen only to particular classes of events or people: e. g. the aegithus (hawk) for weddings and agriculture (ib. 10.21), the swan for mariners, and the dove for kings (Serv. ad Aen. 1.393). Other peculiarities also of their appearance were ominous, such as tearing themselves (Festus, s. v. Voisgram; Stat. Theb. 3.513). There were very great minutiae, such as the nine different notes of the owl (Plin. Nat. 10.39), but they need not be touched upon.
Whether the right side or the left side is auspicious gets a bit confusing when comparing the Romans and Greeks according to Plato:
“Plainly, however, it is based on the Pythagorean doctrine of “Opposites,” in which the Odd (number) is “superior” to the Even, and the “Right” (side) to the Left (as also the “Male” to the “Female”). In Greek augury, also, the left was the side of ill omen (sinister), whereas in Roman augury the right is so.” (Plato in Twelve Volumes)
From a few ancient texts, from TyresiasParnassus,Calchas and others blessed with the gift of understanding the language of birds, the following bits can be gathered from a few records:
If a flock of birds came flying about a man, it was an excellent omen.
Vultures were unlucky and meant slaughter if following an army. Also ravens and crows were dangerous for armies; (Alexander the Great’s death was preceded by ravens).
Owls portended victory, swallows were unlucky, cocks crowing were auspicious but if a hen did the same it was considered a very bad judgment.
Birds flying into houses were such bad omens in ancient Greece that they would capture these birds and hang them outside their doors to atone for “those evils which they threatened the family”
An interesting form of divination used in both ancient Greece and Rome was performed with chickens:
After opening the chicken pen (with chickens especially put aside for this purpose), corn or crumbs were thrown to the ground; if the chickens did not immediately run to eat or scattered the food with their wings, flew away or didn’t even notice the food, it was considered a “no” or a bad omen.  If they leapt out of the pen and even dropped food from pecking so hard it was a “yes” and portended success and happiness.
Toxic waste in Ancient Rome?
The only bit about fish was this from Suetonius: The Lives of the Twelve Caesars (1889):
There was also found a large chest, filled with a variety of poisons, which being afterwards thrown into the sea by order of Claudius, are said to have so infected the waters that the fish were poisoned and cast dead by the tide upon the neighbouring shores.
It would be interesting to see what an ancient augur in Louisiana, Arkansas or Sweden would say to its rulers or peoples. The prophecies would probably be a bit conflicting since in each place the birds would be positioned in a different direction in the sky; each individual receiving a message from the Deity depending on if the bird fell on their roof or in their swimming pool.
After standing on high ground and looking about in all directions with my ancient lituus (a small curved wand augurs used to mark out the sky), the safest augury in this case for everyone would be this:
“Your world is being destroyed by your carelessness, selfishness and greed.”
Inauspicious.
Resources:
Suetonius: The Lives of the Twelve Caesars; An English Translation, Augmented with the Biographies of Contemporary Statesmen, Orators, Poets, and Other Associates. Suetonius. Publishing Editor. J. Eugene Reed. Alexander Thomson. Philadelphia. Gebbie & Co. 1889.
PLINY'S NATURAL HISTORY. THIRTY-SEVEN BOOKS. A TRANSLATION ON THE BASIS OF THAT BY DR. PHILEMON HOLLAND, ED. 1601.
Pausanias. Pausanias Description of Greece with an English Translation by W.H.S. Jones, Litt.D., and H.A. Ormerod, M.A., in 4 Volumes. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1918.
Harvard studies in classical philology, Volume 89. By Harvard University. Dept. of the Classics, Harvard University
Plato. Plato in Twelve Volumes, Vols. 10 & 11 translated by R.G. Bury. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1967 & 1968.
Bird Signs: How birds and bird images permeate the human psyche By Wild Bird Center Boulder. Bird Signs by Steve Frye