Advertise on this page

Bird Flu Manual
Preparedness Supplies
FEATURED SUPPLIERS
Before you buy read
our affiliate statement.

Tamiflu for your staff and families
PharmaMedics Drug Brokers.
Don't rely on Government
and hospital supplies. There won't be enough!


Pandemic Monitor
Alert Service

iJet World Pandemic Monitor.
International. Be the first to know. Your people home first!


N95 Face Masks
Suppliers of the Alpha Pro Tech N95 face respirator.

Bird Flu Products ... from HealthBirdflu. All the Bird Flu Preparedness supplies you'll need.

Bird Flu Books
...from Amazon.com
Our selection of the best books to help you prepare.

Avian Flu Pandemic
Hidden Cures

A Scientist's Answer to the Pandemic Threat.

Bird Flu Survival
Guide

A great reference to own, just in case. Be prepared!

How To Protect Yourself
and Your Loved Ones

Unique 7-Perimeter
Immune Defense System.


Help For The
Developing Pandemic

Critical information you'll need
from this electronic book.


Act Now, Survive
An Emergency Later!

What You Must Know
To Prepare For A Disaster.


Survival Kits
...purely informative
Buying a Survival Kit? Read this run-down on what to look for.

Video Conferencing
...purely informative
An answer to Social Distancing?
Read this review on the best
equipment that's available.


Emergency Kits
...from Amazon.com
Take a look at this
selection from Amazon.com.


Organize For Safety
Step by step guide for emergency and disaster preparedness.



Useful Resources
ALL FREE

Sickness Records
Software

Freeware for recording
infection in the workplace


Work Loss Calculator
Estimate the potential
number of work days lost.


Bird Flu Screensaver
Personal Hygiene Reminder screensaver.

Home Response Guide
Download, print this guide,
and keep it ready at home.


Bird Flu Response
Template

An exhaustive template to
start off your preparedness.


Bird Flu Certification
Test

Medical Professional? Take this certifcation test to see if
you're up to scratch.


Swap Links with us
Related website? Join our
reciprocal links programme.


*These resources are provided freely. You are encouraged to send these to your colleagues and friends to help encourage Bird Flu planning and awareness.

Can't find what you're looking for? Try:
Google

Links Page

www.BIRDFLU-MANUAL.com
PREPAREDNESS FOR BUSINESSES AND HOMES




Bird Flu eManual for Businesses

To obtain access to our Manual Contents all you have to do is subscribe! It's free!

Yes! I want free access to the manual contents!


Insert Email Address Here:
*Email addresses are NOT released to any other parties.
Please see our privacy statement.

More help? Need a complete solution? Something with all the hard work done for you? Something with customisable templates of procedures, presentations, project timelines and tutorials ... to hand hold you through it all? Then you're looking for our Bird Flu D-I-Y eManual-eBook. It has all of this and much, much more. To learn more about it and get some free stuff click here.



Pandemic Influenza FAQ



PANDEMIC INFLUENZA FAQ


These are the most Frequently Asked Questions on Pandemic Influenza.


More interested in Bird Flu specifically? See our Bird Flu FAQ.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Q. What is pandemic flu?

  Flu that spreads rapidly causing widespread epidemics around the world. Pandemic influenza occurs when a new, highly infectious and dangerous strain of the influenza virus appears.

In contrast to the 'ordinary' or 'seasonal', flu outbreaks which we see every winter, flu pandemics occur infrequently - usually every few decades. There were three in the last century. The most serious was in 1918, killing millions of people worldwide. Smaller pandemics happened in 1957 and 1968.

Q. What is the difference between an epidemic and a pandemic?

  A pandemic occurs over large geographical areas (usually worldwide) and affects a high proportion of the population; an epidemic, although it may be serious, usually refers to what is happening in one country or region.

Q. Is another pandemic of influenza is likely?

  Flu viruses are constantly changing and adapting, so it is likely that viruses sufficiently different from 'ordinary' flu strains to cause a pandemic will emerge from time to time. International disease experts are saying that the world is overdue for the next pandemic.

Q. When is the next pandemic due?

  We do not know - it can't be predicted. The gaps between previous pandemics have varied widely. Intervals between previous pandemics have varied from 11 to 42 years with no recognisable pattern. Three influenza pandemics occurred in the last century - 1918/19 (Spanish flu), 1957/58 (Asian flu) and 1968/69 (Hong Kong flu). All affected large numbers of the population, causing many deaths and huge economic and social disruption.

PANDEMICS DURING THE LAST CENTURY

 

Years

 

1918-1919

1957-1958

1968-1969

Flu type

 

Spanish Flu

Asian Flu

Hong Kong Flu

 

Likely origin

Unknown

(The first cases were in Europe and USA)

China

China

Estimated deaths Worldwide

 

50Million

1 Million

1 Million





























Q. Where is the new virus likely to come from?

  Past experience suggests that it will first appear in Asia, but it could be anywhere.

Q. Will it arrive in winter like normal flu?

  Not necessarily. A new virus may not follow the usual seasonal pattern of ordinary influenza. It could occur at any time of the year.

Q. How long will it take to spread around the world?

  Probably less than six months and possibly just a few weeks. The increasing speed and volume of modern travel means infectious diseases can travel very rapidly round the globe.

Q. How is the virus spread?

  The virus is easily passed from person to person by breathing in air containing the virus produced when an infected person talks, coughs or sneezes. It can also spread through hand/face contact after touching a person or surface contaminated with the virus.

Q. How will a new virus be detected?

  Scientists in an international network of laboratories, co-ordinated by the World Health Organization (WHO) are watching for it all the time. This network provides a mechanism for monitoring flu viruses and avian flu information around the world, detecting the emergence of influenza viruses with pandemic potential, and alerting other countries.

Q. How will we know when a pandemic is possible?

  When a new strain of influenza virus has not only been identified but also causing illness and has started spreading from one person to another.

Q. Can't it be prevented at this stage?

  International effort will be put to trying to control a pandemic at this early stage. However, influenza is highly infectious and because whole populations will be susceptible to the new virus, despite people's best efforts it is likely to continue to spread.

Q. What will make a pandemic more likely to happen?

  A pandemic will be considered imminent when a new virus has shown it can spread easily between people. In practice, this means when a new strain of the virus has been identified as the cause of chains of illness passed from one person to another or illness in more than one country, with no obvious links.

Q. What can we expect to happen?

  Once the pandemic reaches your Country it will take a few weeks to take hold, but it will then cause widespread illness across the country over a period of 2-3 months. There may be a second wave of illness a few weeks or months later. Previous experience suggests around a quarter of the population will develop flu during this time.

Q. How many people are likely to catch flu during the pandemic?

  From past experience, up to a quarter of the population are likely to develop flu, although it could be more. More than this may be infected without getting symptoms (sub-clinical infection).

Q. Could everyone become ill?

  Everyone will be susceptible, but in the past as many people as become ill shake off the infection without developing illness (asymptomatic infection).

Q. How predictable will the effects of a pandemic be?

  Every pandemic is different so we cannot be sure how a new pandemic will behave. But we can make sensible plans for what we think is most likely, based on previous experience and our knowledge of how the world has changes since the last pandemic in 1968.

Q. How will this impact on health services?

  A flu pandemic will, therefore, place considerable pressure on health and social services due to the greatly increased number of patients with influenza who will require treatment together with depletion of the workforce due to illness.

Q. How will this impact on business?

  Each pandemic is different and the impact on business cannot be fully established until more is known about how a pandemic is evolving. Absences from work will depend largely on the age group most affected by the virus. Previous pandemics suggest that up to 10% or more of the population may have to take days of work. Absence may be compounded by the need for some workers to care for family members, and any disruption to transport services.

Q. Will schools be affected?

  Pandemic flu is likely to spread rapidly in schools, so they may have to close. Some may also have to close for short periods because of staff shortages. This, in turn, will affect working parents who may need to stay at home to care for their children. Closing schools will, therefore, have an impact on business continuity and the maintenance of essential services. Decisions such as whether to close schools as a measure to try to slow the spread of the pandemic will be taken at the time.

Q. Will other sectors of the community be affected?

  Pandemic flu will impact on al services including health, police, fire, the military, fuel supply, food preparation, distribution and transport, prisons, education and business. Al are likely to be affected by staff sickness, travel restrictions and other potentially restrictive countermeasures, and by the knock-on effects of reduced transport, deliveries etc.

Q. Will people be prevented from travelling?

  At the start of a pandemic people are likely to be advised not to travel to affected areas or attend international gatherings such as large conferences and sports events. Later, depending on how the disease develops, measures may have to be taken to restrict people's movements to prevent or delay further spread of the disease.

Q. Will the health services be able to cope with so many patients all at once?

  There will certainly be greatly increased pressure on the health services, which is used to planning for such emergencies. A flu pandemic is one of the more serious crises which the health services plan for.

Q. Who is at risk?

  Everyone is at risk during a flu pandemic, as no one will have immunity to the virus. Older people and those with chronic health problems may be at greater risk of severe complication like pneumonia but until the virus starts circulating it is not possible to know for sure who is at greatest risk.

Q. What are the differences between pandemic flu and ordinary flu?

  Ordinary flu is the flu that circulates in the human population al the time and produces the winter flu we see every year. Ordinary flu viruses are monitored closely. The strains likely to be circulating each year can be fairly reliably predicted so that appropriate vaccines can be prepared each year.

Pandemic flu is caused by a new or novel strain of influenza virus. One way that this could happen is as a result of an avian flu virus and ordinary flu virus mixing their genes to produce a "human bird flu" virus that can spread between people. Because it is new, no one has any protection against it and until it is identified, a vaccine cannot be developed against it. It can therefore spread very rapidly and cause high rates of illness and death. See the table on page 7 for a summary of many of the differences between ordinary and pandemic flu.

Q. How many people are likely to die?

  This will depend on factors such as how virulent the virus proves to be, which age groups are mainly affected, and how much vaccine is available. According to recent estimates, 25% of the population could fall ill. It is estimated that a pandemic could lead to several million deaths worldwide.

Q. How long will the pandemic last?

  It is estimated that pandemic flu will be widespread within about ten weeks of its first arriving in a Country, and will last for about three months. There may be a second wave of infection a few months later. These times are estimates, and may change.



Bird Flu eManual for Businesses

To obtain access to our Manual Contents all you have to do is subscribe! It's free!

Yes! I want free access to the manual contents!


Insert Email Address Here:
*Email addresses are NOT released to any other parties.
Please see our privacy statement.

More help? Need a complete solution? Something with all the hard work done for you? Something with customisable templates of procedures, presentations, project timelines and tutorials ... to hand hold you through it all? Then you're looking for our Bird Flu D-I-Y eManual-eBook. It has all of this and much, much more. To learn more about it and get some free stuff click here.





AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Email this page to someone?
Enter recipient email address below:

The intellectual property made freely available on this website is funded by advertising (with no apologies). We need to pay for it somehow! You can monetise your website too. It's easy!

Rate this information






Latest Bird Flu / Avian Flu News From Medical News Today.

07/03/2008 08:00 PM
Potential New Drug Candidates To Combat 'Bird Flu' Identified By UC San Diego Researchers
As the specter of a worldwide outbreak of avian or "bird flu" lingers, health officials recognize that new drugs are desperately needed since some strains of the virus already have developed resistance to the current roster of anti-flu remedies.
07/02/2008 07:00 PM
Animal Study Identifies New DNA Weapon Against Avian Flu
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine have identified a potential new way to vaccinate against avian flu. By delivering vaccine via DNA constructed to build antigens against flu, along with a minute electric pulse, researchers have immunized experimental animals against various strains of the virus. This approach could allow for the build up of vaccine reserves that could be easily and effectively dispensed in case of an epidemic.
07/01/2008 04:00 PM
Sinovac Initiates Phase II Volunteer Enrollment For Split Viron Pandemic Influenza (H5N1) Vaccine
Sinovac Biotech Ltd. (Amex: SVA), a leading provider of vaccines in China, announced the initiation of volunteer enrollment in its Phase II clinical trial for its split pandemic influenza vaccine. The preliminary results from this study are expected to be available in early 2009.
06/26/2008 07:00 PM
ECRI Institute And IAHSS Offer Guidance On Preparing For Pandemic Flu - July 17 Web Conference
Plans for appropriate respiratory protection are a major part of healthcare facilities' pandemic preparation. To assist hospitals with the complex task of protecting frontline staff in the event of an outbreak, ECRI Institute and the International Association for Healthcare Safety and Security (IAHSS) present
06/26/2008 03:00 PM
West Nile Virus Threat Reduced By Diversity Among Bird Populations In Surrounding Area
A more diverse bird population can help lower the incidence of West Nile virus in the surrounding human population, in a process called the "dilution effect," according to an article released in the open access journal PLoS ONE on June 25, 2008. West Nile Virus, usually infecting birds but also affecting humans, is often passed through mosquitoes.
06/19/2008 03:00 PM
Biotech Experts Available To Discuss The Critical Role Of Vaccine Adjuvants In Treating Pandemic Bird Flu
The likelihood of an influenza pandemic caused by an avian influenza (Bird Flu) virus is an increasing concern to the World Health Organization (WHO) and others. Recent breakthroughs on promising cell-based vaccines are encouraging, but manufacturing, stockpiling and distributing enough vaccine to treat victims on a massive scale remain a challenge that needs attention.


There are no comments yet

Leave a Comment




?
? ?
?

Powered by TalkBack
 




Subscribe
For FREE Access
Insert Email Address:
privacy statement
Continuity Business Solutions
Specialists in Bird Flu
Preparedness for Businesses
 
Get yourself a FREE one-way inbound link to your website. Make a post in the Bird Flu Manual Forum !


Bird Flu eManual MUCH MORE THAN AN eBOOK

Full of easy to implement practical ideas and solutions to help you get your business's preparedness activities completed... plus step-by-step response instructions on what to do when the pandemic takes hold. For more information click...
Bird Flu D-I-Y eManual-eBook.
Get Access To ALL of Bird Flu Manual Online Contents. Free!

To get full access rights to
the Bird Flu Manual Online
CONTENTS page simply become a subscriber! It's FREE!


Insert Email Address Here:
*Email addresses are NOT
released to any other parties.

Please see our
privacy statement


MANUAL TOPICS
The manual covers the following topics:

  • Conducting a Risk Assessment
  • Company Pandemic Response Phases
  • The Influenza Manager-
  • Business Continuity Manager
  • Office Access Control
  • Social Distancing
  • Workforce Management
  • Managing Illness at Work
  • Sickness Response Procedures
  • Workplace Disinfection
  • Communications Management
  • Supply Shortages
  • Office Environment
  • Staff Training
  • Promoting Awareness
  • Personal Hygiene Education
  • Contact Tracking
  • Regulatory Compliance
  • Public Health Sector Actions
  • Communications Tree
  • Corporate Travel Policy
  • Quarantine Room
  • Customer Management
  • Stockpiling Provisions
  • Flu vs. Common Cold Differences Fact Sheet
  • Illness Screening Flow Chart
  • Running Practice Drills
  • Pandemic Activation by Phases
  • Sample Project Timeline
  • Awareness Posters
  • Pandemics Through History
  • Lists and Forms
  • Bird Flu's Impact on Business
  • Bird Flu FAQ
  • Bird Flu Characteristics
  • Pandemic Influenza Quiz
  • Management Buy-in Training
  • Staff Awareness Training
  • Preparedness Report Template
To get full access rights to
the Bird Flu Manual Online
CONTENTS Page! Become a subscriber! It's FREE!


Insert Email Address Here:
*Email addresses are NOT
released to any other parties.

Please see our
privacy statement


Or learn more about our
Bird Flu D-I-Y eManual-eBook


Bird Flu eManual for Businesses



Reciprocal Links Page

Other Useful Resource Links

World Health Organisation Sites
Current WHO Phase of Pandemic Alert
WHO Avian Influenza ("bird flu") Fact Sheet
WHO Bangladesh
WHO Cambodia
WHO China
WHO Confirmed Human Cases of Avian Influenza A(H5N1)
WHO Democratic People's Republic of Korea
WHO Egypt
WHO Epidemic and Pandemic Alert and Response
WHO India
WHO Indonesia
WHO Laos
WHO Myanmar
WHO Nigeria
WHO Pakistan
WHO Podcasts
WHO Republic of Korea
WHO Situation updates - Avian influenza
WHO Thailand
WHO Viet Nam
WHO Weekly Epidemiological Record
WHO | Avian influenza: food safety issues
WHO | Clinical management of human infection with avian influenza A (H5N1) virus
WHO/WPRO-Human Avian Influenza A/H5N1 Cases by Onset Date
WHO: Acceptable Labs for Positive PCR Results of H5 Infection in Humans
World Health Organization Home Page

Bird Flu NGO Resources
ActionAid USA
Avian Flu - CARE USA
BRAC (Bangladesh)
CARE International UK: Bird Flu Overview
InterAction.org | Disaster Response
Partners In Health (PIH), Health Care for the Poor
Red Cross Red Crescent - Avian Influenza
Save the Children: Avian Flu




AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Can't find what you're looking for? Try:
Google
DISCLAIMER
*birdflu-manual.com provides this intellectual property free of charge, under copyright and accepts no liability or responsibility whatsoever for any acts or omissions done or omitted in reliance, in whole or in part and disclaims all responsibility or liability to any person or business, whether in contract or tort, for any direct or indirect losses, illness or injury, or damage of any kind arising from its use.



Who links to me?