Whats next for the Swine Flu alert level: 4 or 6?
The World Health Organization (WHO) has declared a global flu pandemic after holding an emergency meeting.
It means the swine flu virus is spreading in at least two regions of the world with rising cases being seen in the UK, Australia, Japan and Chile.
WHO chief Dr Margaret Chan said the move did not mean the virus was causing more severe illness or more deaths.
The swine flu (H1N1) virus first emerged in Mexico in April and has since spread to 74 countries.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/8094655.stm
Background:>
For the purposes of this question, i'm taking 'imminent' to be 2 months, and here's the alert level link and description
http://www.who.int/csr/disease/avian_influenza/phase/en/index.html
Category Editor Clarification
If the alert level is changed to any level of 6, ie 6a 6b 6c., this will count as 6 for purposes of settlement.
Settlement details:As reported by a major mainstream news source.
| Level 6 |
| |||
| Level 4 |
| |||
| No change to alert level by suspend date |
|
- Activity: H$1,207,542 |
- Predictions: 2147 |
Comments: 100
Suspend date: Tue 30th Jun 11:59pm PST
Settlement date: Thu 11th Jun 1:35pm PST
Prediction cut-off: Predictions on this question after Thu 11th Jun 12:59pm PST have been voided because they were made after the question could be settled
Initial likelihoods: Level 6: 40%, Level 4: 20%, No change to alert level by suspend date: 40%
Action history:
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jTkkEKE5LtPih_5Jcc-3MpD0gOYQD98OH0U00
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/8094655.stm (market suspended)
It means the swine flu virus is spreading in at least two regions of the world with rising cases being seen in the UK, Australia, Japan and Chile.
WHO chief Dr Margaret Chan said the move did not mean the virus was causing more severe illness or more deaths.
The swine flu (H1N1) virus first emerged in Mexico in April and has since spread to 74 countries.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/8094655.stm
Suspend date: Tue 30th Jun 11:59pm PST
Settlement date: Thu 11th Jun 1:35pm PST
Prediction cut-off: Predictions on this question after Thu 11th Jun 12:59pm PST have been voided because they were made after the question could be settled details
Predictions (2147)
Comments (100)
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"Sing 'Happy Birthday' to Fight Swine Flu"
http://usgovinfo.about.com/b/2009/05/01/sing-happy-birthday-to-fight-swine-flu.htm
http://news.sympatico.msn.cbc.ca/abc/world/contentposting.aspx?isfa=1&feedname=CBC-WORLD-V3&showbyline=True&date=true&newsitemid=swine-flu-research
http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/years/2009/0501093mugs1.html?232
A clear case of Pandemic Panic in my opinion :-)
'A growing number of cases in Spain, New Zealand and other countries -- where travelers brought the disease home and could be spreading it to others -- means that sustained transmission of the disease is likely to take hold soon in more countries, Scott Dowell, head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention international team, said in an interview Friday. That development -- community outbreaks in more than one region of the world -- would fit the World Health Organization's criteria for its highest global alert level, phase 6. "It's going to happen imminently," he said."
Michael Ryan, WHO Director of Global Alert and Response, said it remained probable that the alert level would be raised from its current level of 5 to the top of the 6-stage scale. "At the present time I would still propose that a pandemic is imminent, because we are seeing the disease spread," Ryan said. "At this point we have to expect that phase 6 will be reached..."
02 May 2009 @ 15:55:36 GMT (http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L2710434.htm)
or
"WHO still believes flu pandemic is imminent?!"
;-)
May 3, 2009 | BBC News
There is no evidence of the swine flu virus spreading in a sustained way outside North America, a top World Health Organization official says. Dr Michael Ryan, WHO Director of Global Alert and Response, praised European nations' handling of cases and said events did not seem out of control. Mexico has cut its suspected death toll by 75 to 101, indicating the outbreak may not be as bad as initially feared.
The country has ordered a five-day shutdown in a bid to contain the virus. Mexican Health Minister Jose Angel Cordova told the BBC that, based on samples tested, the mortality rate was comparable with that of seasonal flu. Dr Ryan, meanwhile, said that there was "no evidence of sustained community spread outside of North America".
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8030859.stm
WHO Expecting to Move to Designate Flu Outbreak as Pandemic (http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601080&sid=a8eran5FGYrg&refer=asia)
WHO Official Expects to raise Flu Alert to Highest level (http://www.pennlive.com/newsflash/index.ssf?/base/national-4/1241314103215750.xml&storylist=health)
WHO: Highest alert level is likely (http://www.upi.com/Top_News/2009/05/02/WHO-Highest-alert-level-is-likely/UPI-93331241278775/)
Caution is prudent, officials say, but virus isn’t as lethal as first feared
By TODD ACKERMAN
Copyright 2009 Houston Chronicle
May 2, 2009, 11:59PM
"WHO chief prepares for pandemic" (http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124135130674780783.html)
"The World Health Organisation is likely to raise its flu alert to the top of its six-point scale and declare a pandemic, its director-general indicated in an interview published on Monday. In remarks setting the scene for another alert increase, but without saying when, WHO chief Margaret Chan warned against over-confidence following a stabilisation in the number of new cases of the H1N1 strain that has proved deadly in Mexico. "Level 6 does not mean, in any way, that we are facing the end of the world. It is important to make this clear because (otherwise) when we announce level 6 it will cause an unnecessary panic," she told Spanish newspaper El Pais."
http://www.who.int/csr/disease/avian_influenza/phase/en/
http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5hQNWA8B7IZMKmE3_1Vw1o_Jh7swQ
By the end of the day today, the flu will be confirmed in nearly 40 states and most Canadian provinces, as it's still spreading. There are no travel restrictions on people from those two countries...meaning that they're free to spread the virus wherever/whenever they want. Meaning? Just because a certain nation may have just one or two mild cases now doesn't mean the virus can't/won't be introduced into that country in a few months, or weeks, or days...
Finally, remember this: the Spanish Flu pandemic of 1918 was very mild in the late spring when it first appeared. After 'simmering' for several months, it blew up into a full-scale killer of millions in the fall. That's what has the WHO worried...
"As we get later on into Phase 6 then these sorts of measures will become less useful because there will just be more infections around and you can't quarantine everyone in the world," he said.
Source: http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/World/2009/05/04/9345956-cp.html
Thu May 7 7:27am EDT (http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSTRE5462MN20090507)
"The United Nations agency's guidelines state that as soon as the virus starts spreading freely in two regions of the world, its six-point pandemic alert should be raised to the top notch. With infection numbers rising in Europe, public health experts are struggling to decide whether it is worth sounding the full alarm over H1N1, which is treatable with existing drugs and appears less severe than seasonal flu in most cases.
"Under the rules, just one country outside the Americas needs to have a community-level outbreak of the new strain to trigger a Phase 6 designation indicating a global pandemic is under way.
"Some experts believe Britain is especially vulnerable to a community-wide outbreak, given the flu strain is propagating inside some schools. Spain also has a relatively large cluster of infections, with 73 according to the latest WHO tally.
"No one country, however, is likely to want to be seen as tipping the scale toward a pandemic declaration, especially with discontent rising about whether public health experts have exaggerated the risks of the H1N1 strain. That leaves the WHO in a difficult spot, given many disease experts anticipate the new virus could rebound with a vengeance later this year when winter temperatures conducive to the spread of flu return to the populated northern hemisphere."
Report: H1N1 Could Infect 2 Billion
EVERYONE PANIC!!!
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/05/07/health/main4998549.shtml?source=RSSattr=HOME_4998549
Then it goes on to say:
"WHO flu chief Keiji Fukuda says the number wasn't a prediction, but that past experience with flu pandemics indicated one-third of the world's population gets infected."
Obviously CBS's news ratings are down relative to last week.
...when pigs fly!
"Alarum! alarum! alarum! The red-coats! The red-coats! To arms! alarum!"
And trailing this sound, far waving behind him, like a pennon, the eager horseman dashed onward to the village.
--"The virus has moved into the southern hemisphere, where influenza season is just beginning, and could mix with circulating seasonal flu viruses or the H5N1 avian influenza virus to create new strains. 'This is a very unusual circumstance,' Schuchat said."
--"We think this virus is in most of the United States," Schuchat said. "The individual numbers are likely to be a very great underestimate."
--"More Americans are seeing doctors for influenza-like illnesses at a time of year when such visits are usually on the decline."
--"It would be futile to try to stop the virus in the United States because it was only identified after person-to-person transmission had taken place for weeks before it was identified. 'Our indications are that it is still accelerating,' Schuchat said. Mexican officials have said outbreaks there are on the wane but Schuchat disagreed. 'In some parts of that country they may see a decline,' she said. But fresh outbreaks were occurring in other parts, she said."
--"'This particular virus has all of the hallmarks that we look for with a possible pandemic,' Schuchat said. It's a new strain capable of spreading easily and killing people."
-----------------------
In other flu news:
--Thailand reported its first case of A/H1N1 today. That comes on the heels of Japan and Australia, which both confirmed their first cases yesterday.
--There was a death in Costa Rica from the swine flu announced today, making that country the fourth with a confirmed fatality from the virus.
--Nearly 4,400 cases of the virus are now confirmed in 29 countries on five continents, with the EU the hardest hit after North America. That number is up 4,500% in the past two weeks.
--Cases in the U.S. continue to grow; the virus has been confirmed by the CDC in 43 states, and probable cases are awaiting confirmation in at least four others.
Stay tuned...
swine flu!
--The CDC says that the number of cases is growing too quickly to count, and that there are many more cases than have been reported. "I think the cases we’re confirming are the tip of the iceberg,” said Dr. Anne Schuchat of the CDC. (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30398682/)
--This year's virus is, according to epidemiologists, a bit more dangerous than the one that caused the last pandemic (in 1968). Those same scientists also speculate that somewhere in the vicinity of 32,000 people already had the virus in Mexico before the end of April when the global community became aware of it. (http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N11538600.htm)
--In a normal year, about 10% of the population gets sick with the seasonal flu; scientists project that this virus--which is "substantially more transmissible" than seasonal flu "clearly has pandemic potential", and may eventually infect two to three times the average number (http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/tools_and_services/mobile_times/swine_flu/article6269046.ece)
--The WHO says that the virus has "potential" for pandemic. "Most cases in Europe, Asia and South America are linked to travelers bringing the virus home with them, but there is a possibility the disease will become established there too," said WHO's flu chief Keiji Fukuda. (http://www.pr-inside.com/who-potential-for-swine-flu-spread-r1244908.htm)
--Worldwide, the number of confirmed cases of the flu "nearly doubled" over this past weekend. (http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=30761&Cr=+flu+&Cr1=)
--In La Gloria, Mexico, where the virus was first found running rampant, reasearchers believe the virus was transmitted there over 14 to 73 generations. That is, one person infected another, who infected another, and so on, up to 73 times. (http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N11538600.htm)
--So far, at least, A/H1N1 is spreading at a more or less logarithmic pace, doubling in the number of confirmed cases roughly every four or five days. If the current rate of sperad were kept up, there'd be more than one million cases somewhere around the last few days of June. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Influenza-2009-cases-logarithmic.png)
everything looks better on a logarithmic chart... :)
http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/World-News/Swine-Flu-First-In-Depth-Study-Of-H1N1-Says-One-Third-Of-World-Could-Be-Infected/Article/200905215280099?lpos=World_News_First_Home_Article_Teaser_Region_4&lid=ARTICLE_15280099_Swine_Flu%3A_First_In-Depth_Study_Of_H1N1_Says_One_Third_Of_World_Could_Be_Infected
http://www.redorbit.com/news/health/1686994/london_study_maintains_flu_has_full_pandemic_potential/
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/article2424699.ece
Place your bets... :-|
13 May 2009 -- As of 06:00 GMT, 13 May 2009, 33 countries have officially reported 5728 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection.
Mexico has reported 2059 laboratory confirmed human cases of infection, including 56 deaths. The United States has reported 3009 laboratory confirmed human cases, including three deaths. Canada has reported 358 laboratory confirmed human cases, including one death. Costa Rica has reported eight laboratory confirmed human cases, including one death.
The following countries have reported laboratory confirmed cases with no deaths - Argentina (1), Australia (1), Austria (1), Brazil (8), China (3, comprising 1 in China, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, and 2 in mainland China), Colombia (6), Cuba (1), Denmark (1), El Salvador (4), Finland (2), France (13), Germany (12), Guatemala (3), Ireland (1), Israel (7), Italy (9), Japan (4), Netherlands (3), New Zealand (7), Norway (2), Panama (29), Poland (1), Portugal (1), Republic of Korea (3), Spain (98), Sweden (2), Switzerland (1), Thailand (2), and the United Kingdom (68).
ongoing outbreak
As of 6:00 GMT, 15 May 2009, 34 countries have officially reported 7520 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection.
Mexico has reported 2446 laboratory confirmed human cases of infection, including 60 deaths. The United States has reported 4298 laboratory confirmed human cases, including three deaths. Canada has reported 449 laboratory confirmed human cases, including one death. Costa Rica has reported eight laboratory confirmed human cases, including one death.
The following countries have reported laboratory confirmed cases with no deaths - Argentina (1), Australia (1), Austria (1), Belgium (1), Brazil (8), China (4), Colombia (10), Cuba (3), Denmark (1), El Salvador (4), Finland (2), France (14), Germany (12), Guatemala (3), Ireland (1), Israel (7), Italy (9), Japan (4), Netherlands (3), New Zealand (7), Norway (2), Panama (40), Poland (1), Portugal (1), Republic of Korea (3), Spain (100), Sweden (2), Switzerland (1), Thailand (2), and the United Kingdom (71).
As of 07:00 GMT, 16 May 2009, 36 countries have officially reported 8451 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection.
Mexico has reported 2895 laboratory confirmed human cases of infection, including 66 deaths. The United States has reported 4714 laboratory confirmed human cases, including four deaths. Canada has reported 496 laboratory confirmed human cases, including one death. Costa Rica has reported nine laboratory confirmed human cases, including one death.
The following countries have reported laboratory confirmed cases with no deaths - Argentina (1), Australia (1), Austria (1), Belgium (2), Brazil (8), China (4), Colombia (11), Cuba (3), Denmark (1), Ecuador (1), El Salvador (4), Finland (2), France (14), Germany (14), Guatemala (3), Ireland (1), Israel (7), Italy (9), Japan (4), Netherlands (3), New Zealand (9), Norway (2), Panama (43), Peru (1), Poland (1), Portugal (1), Republic of Korea (3), Spain (100), Sweden (2), Switzerland (1), Thailand (2), and the United Kingdom (78).
http://www.stuff.co.nz/world/asia/2419198/Teenage-swine-flu-explosion-in-Japan
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/18/world/asia/18flu.html
Panamá (55), Colombia (11), Brasil (8), Costa Rica (8) y un fallecimiento, El Salvador (4), Guatemala (3), Cuba (3), Argentina (1), Perú (2), Ecuador (1) y Chile (2)
I disagree with one of your quotes, you said the flu chief said:
"As we get later on into Phase 6 then these sorts of measures will become less useful because there will just be more infections around and you can't quarantine everyone in the world," .
We can quarantine everyone in the world, just disallow interplanetary travel -- and also space station travel, etc., although they are only in near earth orbit, so maybe that 's ok, anyway.
Almost.
But then on Monday, many nations pleaded with WHO to not raise the level, as it would be bad for tourism, bad for business, and bad for the economy as a whole. And today in Geneva, the head of the WHO, said the following: "For Phase 5 to Phase 6 I need to satisfy myself that this is a global phenomenon...I [need to] see more signals coming from the virus itself or the spread of the disease, including severity." She's reportedly going to be "...looking for signs of sustained spread in the Southern Hemisphere first".
Upshot? The pandemic call will almost certainly come...though it may not happen for some time. These markets may yet be open for a while...
(It's also come to the attention of WHO that some nations have been intentionally underreporting their case numbres as a way to hold onto tourism dollars. Whether that will be a factor is anyone's guess.)
(P.S. - I posted this on the big three H1N1 markets this morning, so you'll likely see it again.)
Not sure if you said this in jest or not.
I respectfully disagree with your assessment of the use of quarantine. My interpretation of the flu chiefs quote is regarding how to stop the spread of disease on our planet. The way I read your reply, is that it is OK to let everybody on earth contract any number of diseases, as long as they do not travel outside of our gravitational pull. Our first priority is to isolate the people with the flu, so that we can try and contain it, best as possible.
BTW, I have been wondering about your profession. I don't like to sound ignorant, but I really have no idea what a Solar Physicist does?
(Requesting a layman explanation please.)
Void and start over?
1) The current 6-phase system stands, but WHO changes the criteria for raising to the highest level. For now, that's sustained human-to-human transmission in at least two WHO regions...and we've got that already (or very nearly so). There's talk that the new criteria would be that the CFR (case fatality rate) would need to be over a certain percentage. At any rate, that would seem to leave this market viable.
2) There's talk that WHO might further subdivide phase 6 into different degrees based on CFR. A First Degree Phase 6 pandemic might be about where we are now; Second Degree might be akin to the 1957 and 1968 pandemics; and a Third Degree pandemic might be similar to the 1918 Spanish Flu one. (Of course, a Fourth Degree pandemic would be like something from I Am Legend, The Stand or 28 Days Later.) In such a case, anything in phase 6 would still be a pandemic, so this market would still seem to be viable.
3) There's talk that WHO might just add additional higher phases: a Phase 6 pandemic would be what we have now, Phase 7 would be like 1957 or 1968, and Phase 8 would be like 1918. (And Phase 9 would be from a Hollywood horror/disaster flick.) Here, again, Phase 6 would still be a pandemic, so this market would still stand.
4) Against the advice of physicians, WHO may continue to cave into requests from its member states by stating that a pandemic is really only a pandemic when a politician--not an epidemiologist or virologist--says it is. That would keep this at Phase 5 for many, many months, even to the point of infecting a few billion people while killing "only" 2 to 3 million. That would leave this market intact.
5) WHO could just entirely scrap their current 6-phase plan and go with something entirely different. If that were to occur, that would make this market unviable, and likely call for a void (though not necessarily).
I reckon we'll see...
\\n\\r
\\nOver the next several months, the new H1N1 flu virus is likely to continue to spread around the world, reaching into the southern hemisphere along with winter, then possibly staging a resurgence in the northern hemisphere come fall.\\r
\\n\\r
\\nHundreds of thousands of people could fall sick, and some will die. Public health officials will scramble to minimize the damage, as governments and drug makers continue to invest millions of dollars in a potential vaccine.\\r
\\n\\r
\\nYet the public, after an initial spasm of fear and concern, has turned its attention away from a strain that seems less serious than first advertised. The complacency is increasing the challenge for health officials who are trying to track and limit the spread of a disease that can still make people seriously ill even if it isn\'t deadly for most.\\r
\\n\\r
\\nAs of Wednesday, the virus had sickened at least 13,398 people in 48 countries from Argentina to the U.S., and 95 people have died, according to the World Health Organization. In the U.S., 7,927 probable and confirmed cases in 47 states and the District of Columbia have been reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, with at least 11 dead. Officials believe thousands more -- at least 100,000 in the U.S. -- have had the virus, but weren\'t tested or sick enough to visit a doctor.
\\n\\r
\\nAt the time I wrote that, I wasn\'t aware of the US CDCs \"Pandemic Severity Index\", which--as it turns out--was pretty much exactly what I had in mind. This index--the PSI--breaks down pandemics into five distinct categories based on CFR (case fatality rate), along with the number of projected US deaths:\\r
\\n\\r
\\nCategory 1 Pandemic: CFR < 0.1% / Projected deaths: < 90,000 (yellow)\\r
\\nCategory 2 Pandemic: CFR 0.1% - < 0.5% / Projected deaths: 90,000 - < 450,000 (orange)\\r
\\nCategory 3 Pandemic: CFR 0.5% - < 1.0% / Projected deaths: 450,000 - < 900,000 (red)\\r
\\nCategory 4 Pandemic: CFR 1.0% 0 < 2.0% / Projected deaths: 900,000 - < 1,800,000 (purple)\\r
\\nCategory 5 Pandemic: CFR >= 2.0% / Projected deaths: >= 1,800,000 (black)\\r
\\n\\r
\\nBased on current projections, the H1N1 outbreak would be classified as a Category 2 pandemic. Seasonal flu is a yearly Category 1 pandemic (really), the 1957 and 1968 pandemics were Category 2, and 1918 was a Category 5. (The US has had no Category 3 or 4 pandemics in the past 110 years.)\\r
\\n\\r
\\nThe question is, then, will WHO adopt a similar scheme? That is, will they indeed keep their six-level system but subdivide Phase 6? If they decide to do so a week or so from now, they would likely call a pandemic fairly quickly, given the rapid spread of the virus in the Southern Hemisphere.\\r
\\n\\r
\\nIt\'ll be interesting to watch. (Here\'s a great article from the New England Journal of Medicine*: http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/NEJMp0904380 And you can read about the PSI here: http://www.pandemicflu.gov/plan/community/community_mitigation.pdf) (PDF)\\r
\\n\\r
\\n* - That 1918 flu was a doozy; note the part where it\'s stated that the number of reported cases doubled every three days. Yikes!\\r
\\n\\r
\\nP.S. - I\'m cross-posting this on the three big H1N1 markets.
\\n\\r
\\nhttp://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-05/29/content_11451166.htm
\\nYou take these long winded reports filled with mumbo jumbo and boil them down and extract the essence.\\r
\\n\\r
\\nI would recommend you as a new reporter!! Thanks for all the updates.
\\n\\r
\\nWhat the hell is this?\\r
\\n\\r
\\nFarmageddon?
\\\r = return
"The Geneva-based agency, sometime in the next 10 days, will declare the first flu pandemic in 41 years, said the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the WHO’s deliberations are private. WHO is using the time before the announcement to help member states prepare...Following yesterday’s discussion, [WHO Director Dr. Margaret] Chan is considering changes that would allow the agency to describe the situation as pandemic phase 6a, leaving the WHO two more levels -- b for moderate and c for severe -- if a more deadly bug emerges, according to the people familiar with the organization."
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aT9sIzRoUnNo&refer=home
.... as well as an economic disaster for some HD users. ^_~
http://www.upi.com/Health_News/2009/06/03/WHO-ponders-Phase-6-flu-alert/UPI-60471244007867/
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601124&sid=abFpa.MBcrYo
http://flutracker.rhizalabs.com/
The WHO Director-General convened a third meeting of the International Health Regulations (IHR) Committee on 5th June 2009. The purpose of the meeting was to update the Committee on the global situation and seek advice on proposals to introduce severity assessments in any future announcements of pandemic phase changes by WHO.
http://www.who.int/csr/disease/swineflu/3rd_meeting_ihr/en/index.html
"On the surface of it, I think we are in phase 6," or a pandemic, said Margaret Chan, WHO's director-general. Chan said it was important to verify the reports that the virus is becoming established outside North America before declaring a pandemic. "The decision to make a phase 6 announcement is a heavy responsibility, a responsibility that I will take very seriously, and I need to be convinced that I have indisputable evidence," she said. [She] said she will hold a conference call with governments Wednesday in order to verify some of the reports she has received before making a formal announcement. "Once I get indisputable evidence, I will make the announcement," she told reporters in Geneva.
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jTkkEKE5LtPih_5Jcc-3MpD0gOYQD98NDCQ80
---------------------------
So: Australia's case load has exploded to more than 1,000; Chile's has more than doubled in just two days to nearly 1,000 itself; the EU announced 184 new cases today (including a number of cases with patients who had no known exposure to anyone with A/H1N1), its biggest one-day increase in cases since the outbreak began; cases in the Southern Hemisphere are growing at a more rapid rate than cases in the Northern Hermisphere, a good sign that the disease has taken hold; today the WHO's assistant director stated at a news conference that "we are really very close" to declaring a pandemic; and now the director herself has stated that she's only waiting on "indisputable evidence" to make the call...and there's a lot of such evidence.
IOW: the call may come as early as tomorrow (06/10) or Thursday (06/11).
I've seen only one other at this level. Does anybody know how many such questions had been in the history of hubdub?
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=ak5.89nIKSxo
http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/health1/who-concludes-emergency-meeting-pandemic-declaration-expected_100203728.html
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