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Influenza Intrigue
by
Bill Sardi
by Bill Sardi
Strange
events surround the monitoring of influenza viruses throughout the
world. The public keeps hearing of an impending flu pandemic that
could sweep the world and kill millions. Most on the minds of infectious
disease experts is the dreaded H5 N1 strain of influenza virus which
was involved in the 1918 Spanish flu outbreak that killed millions
worldwide. Will H5 N1 reappear? Infectious disease experts say it
is only a matter of time before H5N1 encircles the globe with potentially
lethal ferocity.
Potentially
deadly influenza viruses exist harmlessly in birds. But, occasionally,
these viruses jump from birds to pigs. In 1918 it is believed a
variety of swine flu jumped from pigs to humans. There, it mutated
into an entirely new strain that humans had little immunity towards.
At
this moment in time H5N1 appears to be confined to birds in Asia,
but a few cases of H5N1 have jumped from animals to humans , resulting
in the death of less than 100 people. So far, human transmission
doesn’t appear to be strong. Will the H5N1/2005 version fizzle out
as did the SARS virus that only killed 812 people worldwide?
Maybe
H5N1 is for real this time. The fact that an entire family of five
was infected with H5N1 in Vietnam, as reported in late March, 2005,
is cause for concern. Is the H5N1 flu virus naturally mutating into
a more virulent and transmissible strain? Or is someone helping
the process along?
Who
put the mutated human flu virus in a pig in South Korea?
Nature
Magazine, in its February 24 issue, reported that Henry Niman,
a biologist with Recombinomics, last November was examining flu
virus gene sequences that were placed in GenBank, a public database
in New Mexico run by the World Health Organization. Niman found
a strain of human flu virus that was created in 1940 in a London
lab by scientists who were experimenting with the virus that had
caused the flu pandemic of 1918. The problem is that this mutated
human flu virus was placed in GenBank by researchers at Chungnam
National University Daejon, South Korea. It had been obtained from
a pig! This flu gene sequence doesn’t exist in nature. It had to
be artificially implanted into pigs.
The
World Health Organization has characterized the flu gene sequences
as a laboratory error, but the Korean scientist who posted them
insists they are real. The genetic sequence of the virus, called
WSN/33, "poses a grave danger to human health,"
says Henry Niman in Science Magazine. [Science, March
4, 2005, Volume 307, p. 1392] You’ve now got the two most prestigious
scientific journals commenting on this intrigue. As Martin Enserink
of Science Magazine asked: "Is this evidence of an
embarrassing and mistaken release from a laboratory, or a ‘smoking
gun’ from a secret biowarfare experiment?" Five months
after the gene sequences for the WSN/33 virus was posted on the
GenBank database, its existence, reported in many pigs on many farms
in Korea, goes unexplained.
A
laboratory mistake, or bioterrorism?
If
it is an inadvertent release from a laboratory, why isn’t there
swift action by the World Health Organization to stop its spread?
To add to the intrigue, North Korea reports on March 27, 2005 that
it has experienced its first outbreak of the deadly bird flu virus.
[BBC News March 27, 2005] Are South Korean labs attempting to sabotage
the North Korean food supply?
Henry
Niman says there is nothing remotely similar to the WSN/33 flu virus
that has circulated in recent decades and "most of the global
population would have little or no immunity to the virus."
Laurie Garrett, author of The Coming Plague and Betrayal of Trust,
who resigned from her post as a newspaper reporter to report directly
on bioterrorism and impending flu pandemics to the Council on Foreign
Relations, quotes an Internet journal as saying "these sequences
could represent a military experiment that resulted in an unplanned
release. Moreover, at this point, bioterrorism cannot be ruled out."
[Laurie Garrett, Feb. 23, 2005, Council Foreign Relations]
Why
the propaganda?
But
is bioterrorism being used as a scapegoat for the release of the
mutated human flu virus into a pig in South Korea? At the very same
time these events are unfolding, the news media is releasing reports
that "the threat of a biological terrorist strike by al
Qaeda is very real." [Source: Interpol, reported by CNN.com
Feb. 24, 2005] Why the propaganda that suggests al Qaeda could spread
killer viruses? Killer viruses would sweep the globe and kill off
those with the weakest immunity and poorest nutrition. The Arab
world would likely suffer more deaths than developed nations from
such a flu outbreak.
The
news media continue to quote misleadingly high mortality rates from
the bird flu, but the reported cases are in undeveloped countries
where human immunity is low. The SARS virus was barely noted as
a public health problem in the US where, due to better nutrition
and public hygiene, immunity is relatively high.
Preparation
Julie
Gerberding, Centers for Disease Control chief, says her agency is
getting ready for a possible pandemic next year. [Associated Press,
Feb. 22, 2005] Great Britain is laying plans to shut down schools
and offices if the bird flu arrives and has ordered millions of
antiviral drugs, such as Tamiflu (a drug developed by Gilead Sciences,
formerly headed by Donald Rumsfeld, Secretary of Defense). [The
Observer, March 27, 2005] The British are also increasing
emergency mortuary space for dead bodies. [The Independent, March
27, 2005] President Bush has issued a directive that would allow
authorities to detain or isolate international airline passengers
suspected of having avian flu. [Reuters April 1, 2005]
The
CDC has launched a human trial for an H5N1 vaccine, but a report
in New Scientist says these trials are likely to be a waste of money.
The pandemic is anticipated to begin before stocks of H5N1 vaccine
could be sufficiently boosted. [New Scientist March 23, 2005]
Will
the vaccine work? The National Institutes of Health recently published
a report showing efforts over three decades to inoculate US citizens
against the flu have not saved lives. [Associated Press, Feb. 14,
2005; Archives Internal Medicine 165: 265, 2005] How would a new
flu vaccine be expected to work any better? The new H5N1 vaccine
is being tested in adults age 18 to 64 years of age, who are not
high-risk populations. The elderly and the very young are most at
risk for viral infection.
The
Infectious Diseases Society of America is calling for antiviral
drugs for at least 50 percent of the population. [Science Daily
April 1, 2005] But Tamiflu, a widely promoted antiviral drug, is
only marginally helpful in reducing the spread of a flu virus. [Prescrire
International 12: 8588, 2003] Amantadine (Symmetrel), another
drug that may be stockpiled in anticipation of a flu epidemic, produces
so many side effects it cannot be safely given to public safety
officers, the military or medical personnel. Amantadine also induces
a change in the flu virus so that it becomes resistant to the drug.
What
about boosting immunity?
Should
a pandemic ensue, or even the false threat of a pandemic, martial
law could be declared and forced vaccination or quarantine be ordered.
Even if vaccines or medicines are in stock, it is unlikely that
they could be administered in a timely manner for so many millions
of people. Public health authorities are over-reliant upon vaccines
and drugs, while shunning nutrients that would elevate natural immunity.
A
new scientific discovery could prevent or reduce mortality from
the flu. Nutritional status not only affects a person’s response
to a virus, but also the genetic makeup of the viral genome. [Trends
Microbiology 12: 41723, 2004] Mice that are deficient
in the trace mineral selenium are more susceptible to infection
by viruses, including the influenza virus. Viruses mutate in selenium-deficient
animals and become virulent. Selenium prevents the mutations that
increase tissue damage during infection. [J American College Nutrition
20: 38488S, 2001; FASEB Journal 15: 1846-48, 2001; Journal
Nutrition 133: 146367S, 2003]
Oddly,
a United Nations/World Health Organization affiliated body known
as CODEX is limiting the amount of nutrients, like immune-boosting
selenium, zinc, vitamin C and vitamin E, in dietary supplements
this summer. The timing seems misplaced. Some observers predict
a black market in vitamin and mineral supplements soon. (See www.globalvitamintakeover.com.)
April
6, 2005
Bill
Sardi [send
him mail] is
a consumer advocate and health journalist, writing from San Dimas,
California. He offers a free downloadable book, The Collapse of
Conventional Medicine, at his
website.
Copyright
© 2005 Bill Sardi Word of Knowledge Agency, San Dimas, California.
Not intended for commercial use or posting on other websites. Permission
to reprint should be obtained from
the author.
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