April 27, 2009

                        
Swine flu alarms world
                            


Fears of a global swine flu pandemic intensified with new infections discovered in the United States and Canada on Sunday (April 26), while millions of Mexicans hid indoors to avoid a virus that has already killed up to 100 people.

 

While deaths have only been recorded in Mexico, the outbreak is spreading with 20 cases in the United States and six in Canada, and possible cases as far afield as Europe, Israel and New Zealand.

 

Mexican President Felipe Calderon has offered a glimmer of hope, stating most of the roughly 1,300 people in the country suspected of having the flu have a clean bill of health.

 

The United States declared a public health emergency and a top official at the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, or CDC, feared there would be deaths in the United States as the new strain of flu spreads.

 

The Mexican capital became a "ghost town" as many residents stayed home, fearing infection. Many who ventured out wore masks.

 

Juan Casiano, a 39-year-old office worker, walking briskly through a city park said it is the first time that he left the house in two days to get some fresh air.

 

The Roman Catholic faithful listened to mass on the radio rather than go to church, and baptisms and confirmations were cancelled. Professional soccer games were played in empty stadiums, bars were closed and cyclists stayed off the road in the normally chaotic city of 20 million people.

 

Mexico's retail and leisure sector faces a hole in takings as shoppers and diners stay home next week. Mexico City Mayor Marcelo Ebard said public closures could last 10 days.

 

Finance Minister Agustin Carstens said the flu's impact would be "transitory," but the peso currency, already weakened by the economic crisis, fell nearly 3 percent in electronic trading on Sunday night as traders reacted to the scale of the flu crisis.

 

The World Health Organization has declared the swine flu a "public health emergency of international concern" that could become a pandemic or global outbreak of serious disease.

 

A pandemic would deal a major blow to a world economy that is already suffering its worst crisis in decades, and experts say it could cost trillions of dollars.

 

A 1968 "Hong Kong" flu pandemic killed about 1 million people globally.

 

There were worries that fatalities could surface elsewhere according to CDC 's Dr. Anne Schuchuat. Health officials around the world were preparing for the illness' possible spread beyond the 20 cases confirmed in the United States.

 

Eight schoolchildren in New York were confirmed as having caught the swine flu virus, although like other cases reported outside Mexico they were relatively mild.

 

Officials said they would release a quarter of the US stockpile of the antiviral drugs Tamiflu, made by Roche, and Relenza, from GlaxoSmithKline. Both have been shown to be effective against the new swine flu.

 

Flu is characterized by a sudden fever, muscle aches, sore throat and dry cough. Victims of the new strain have also suffered more vomiting and diarrhea than is usual with flu.

 

Although it is called "swine flu" there is no evidence any of the cases stemmed from contact with pigs.

 

Health officials say they do not understand why deaths have been reported in Mexico but nowhere else. Schuchat said it is really premature to state if the disease is different in Mexico from the US.

 

The outbreak has snowballed into a major headache for Mexico, already grappling with a violent drug war and economic slowdown, and has become one of the biggest global health scares in years.

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