Why did I think that you might be past mocking, Joseph?
Here, from http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/diseases/flu/fluinfo.htm
Types of influenze viruses -- including the fact that they are transmissable in some cases from animals: http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/diseases/flu/viruses.htm
Please note the four myths in the chart at the bottom of this page: http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/diseases/flu/facts.htm
From here: http://familydoctor.org/handouts/477.html
http://www.canadianchiropractor.ca/Past_Issues.htm?ID=720
Influenza virus strains mutate, necessitating a new vaccine each year. Technicians affiliated with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) collect influenza viruses from pigs and people in foreign lands, e.g., China.
CDC personnel then attempt to predict which viruses will infect people in the United States the following year-the CDC crystal ball. These CDC-selected viruses are distributed to vaccine manufacturers early in the year for influenza vaccine production for administration that autumn.
Predicting which influenza viruses from China, for instance, will infect people in Dayton, Ohio, a year later involves a fair amount of guesswork. Flu shot history is replete with examples of poor matches between influenza viruses in the vaccine and those actually infecting people.
http://www.vaccineinfo.net/immunization/vaccine/influenza/flu_vaccine_facts.shtml
(I keep finding the references to China and the Orient, but am running out of the time I alot myself for web searches to give you the definitive reference I would like to on this)
Man O man O man! This one does it for me! SARS was not only predicted, but predicted exactly as a flu outbreak a couple of years ago! Here you go:
http://www.fluwatch.com/output_news_1.cfm?pageid=65&ID=37
Here, from http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/diseases/flu/fluinfo.htm
Now, would anyone care to tell me how SARS is different from flu?Influenza (the flu)
Influenza Viruses
Influenza, also known as the flu, is a contagious disease that is caused by the influenza virus. It attacks the respiratory tract in humans (nose, throat, and lungs). The flu is different from a cold. Influenza usually comes on suddenly and may include these symptoms:
Fever
Headache
Tiredness (can be extreme)
Dry cough
Sore throat
Nasal congestion
Body aches
These symptoms are usually referred to as "flu-like symptoms."
Anyone Can Get the Flu, But the Disease Is More Severe for Some People
Most people who get influenza will recover in one to two weeks, but some people will develop life-threatening complications (such as pneumonia) as a result of the flu. Millions of people in the United States — about 10% to 20% of U.S. residents — will get influenza each year. An average of about 36,000 people per year in the United States die from influenza, and 114,000 per year have to be admitted to the hospital as a result of influenza. Anyone can get the flu (even healthy people), and serious problems from influenza can happen at any age. People age 65 years and older, people of any age with chronic medical conditions, and very young children are more likely to get complications from influenza. Pneumonia, bronchitis, and sinus and ear infections are three examples of complications from flu. The flu can make chronic health problems worse. For example, people with asthma may experience asthma attacks while they have the flu, and people with chronic congestive heart failure may have worsening of this condition that is triggered by the flu.
For a list of groups that are at high risk for complications from influenza, see: Who Should Get a Flu Shot
How the Influenza Virus Is Passed Around
The flu is spread, or transmitted, when a person who has the flu coughs, sneezes, or speaks and sends flu virus into the air, and other people inhale the virus. The virus enters the nose, throat, or lungs of a person and begins to multiply, causing symptoms of influenza. Influenza may, less often, be spread when a person touches a surface that has flu viruses on it – a door handle, for instance – and then touches his or her nose or mouth.
The Flu Is Contagious
A person can spread the flu starting one day before he or she feels sick. Adults can continue to pass the flu virus to others for another three to seven days after symptoms start. Children can pass the virus for longer than seven days. Symptoms start one to four days after the virus enters the body. Some persons can be infected with the flu virus but have no symptoms. During this time, those persons can still spread the virus to others.
How To Know if You Have the Flu
Your respiratory illness might be the flu if you have sudden onset of body aches, fever, and respiratory symptoms, and your illness occurs during November through April (the usual flu season in the Northern Hemisphere). However, during this time, other respiratory illnesses can cause similar symptoms and flu can be caught at any time of the year. It is impossible to tell for sure if you have the flu based on symptoms alone. Doctors can perform tests to see if you have the flu if you are in the first few days of your illness.
What You Should Do If You Get the Flu
Rest
Drink plenty of liquids
Avoid using alcohol and tobacco
Take medication to relieve the symptoms of flu
Influenza is caused by a virus, so antibiotics (like penicillin) don’t work to cure it. The best way to prevent the flu is to get an influenza vaccine (flu shot) each fall, before flu season.
Do Not Give Aspirin To a Child or Teenager Who Has the Flu
Never give aspirin to children or teenagers who have flu-like symptoms – and particularly fever – without first speaking to your doctor. Giving aspirin to children and teenagers who have influenza can cause a rare but serious illness called Reye syndrome. Children or teenagers with the flu should get plenty of rest, drink lots of liquids, and take medicines that contain no aspirin to relieve symptoms.
The Myth of the "Stomach Flu”
Many people use the term "stomach flu” to describe illnesses with nausea, vomiting, or diarrhea. These symptoms can be caused by many different viruses, bacteria, or even parasites. While vomiting, diarrhea, and being nauseous or “sick to your stomach” can sometimes be related to the flu — particularly in children — these problems are rarely the main symptoms of influenza. The flu is a respiratory disease and not a stomach or intestinal disease.
Types of influenze viruses -- including the fact that they are transmissable in some cases from animals: http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/diseases/flu/viruses.htm
Please note the four myths in the chart at the bottom of this page: http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/diseases/flu/facts.htm
From here: http://familydoctor.org/handouts/477.html
The vaccine contains three different influenza strains. These are chosen during the previous season based upon which strains were most prevalent during the preceding year, which strains are circulating in other areas of the world (e.g. China), and which strains can be easily incorporated into the new vaccine.If I get a flu shot, can I still get the flu?
Yes. Even with a flu shot, you aren't 100% protected. Each year, the flu vaccine contains 3 different strains (kinds) of the virus. The strains chosen are those that scientists believe are most likely to show up in the United States that year. If the choice is right, the vaccine is 70 to 90% effective in preventing the flu in healthy people under 65 years of age. If you're older than 65, the vaccine is less likely to prevent the flu. Even if you get the flu after the vaccine, your flu symptoms should be milder than if you didn't get the vaccine. You'll also be less likely to get complications from the flu.
http://www.canadianchiropractor.ca/Past_Issues.htm?ID=720
Influenza virus strains mutate, necessitating a new vaccine each year. Technicians affiliated with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) collect influenza viruses from pigs and people in foreign lands, e.g., China.
CDC personnel then attempt to predict which viruses will infect people in the United States the following year-the CDC crystal ball. These CDC-selected viruses are distributed to vaccine manufacturers early in the year for influenza vaccine production for administration that autumn.
Predicting which influenza viruses from China, for instance, will infect people in Dayton, Ohio, a year later involves a fair amount of guesswork. Flu shot history is replete with examples of poor matches between influenza viruses in the vaccine and those actually infecting people.
http://www.vaccineinfo.net/immunization/vaccine/influenza/flu_vaccine_facts.shtml
(I keep finding the references to China and the Orient, but am running out of the time I alot myself for web searches to give you the definitive reference I would like to on this)
Man O man O man! This one does it for me! SARS was not only predicted, but predicted exactly as a flu outbreak a couple of years ago! Here you go:
http://www.fluwatch.com/output_news_1.cfm?pageid=65&ID=37
Joseph, in short, I do my homework. I have also raised six kids, cared for dozens of fosters, and know for sure that flu is NOT stomach upset! If your doctor thinks it is, please print this off and give it to him. Thank you.Monto is one of a group of experts on infectious diseases who agree that someday an especially infectious version of this deadly illness will emerge, resulting in a global catastrophe. There is ample reason to believe that this will happen, they say, because three such pandemics already have occurred in this century alone, including one in 1918 that resulted in more than 20 million deaths. Contributing to their certainty is the fact that this scenario does not involve some unknown foreign invader, such as the Ebola virus, but rather something that already happens every year -- an outbreak of the flu.
This disaster basically will begin with a small, but severe, outbreak of respiratory illness in South China, they say. Soon afterward, these outbreaks will be reported in Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea, and Japan.