Mitchell Wiener, Assistant Principal Of School, Becomes First Swine Flu Death In New York

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KAREN MATTHEWS | May 17, 2009 10:42 PM EST | AP

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FILE - In this May 15, 2009 file photo, Anita Seeratan, 13, an 8th grader at the Susan B. Anthony middle school, holds up a copy of the 2005 yearbook open to the page with the photograph of assistant Principal Mitchell Wiener, in New York. A hospital official said Sunday May 17, 2009 that Mitchell Wiener has become the first New York City death linked to the swine flu virus. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer, File)

NEW YORK — A school assistant principal who was sick for several days with swine flu on Sunday became the city's first death linked to the virus and the nation's sixth.

Mitchell Wiener, who worked at an intermediate school in Queens, died Sunday evening, Flushing Hospital Medical Center spokesman Andrew Rubin said. Wiener, who had been hospitalized and on a ventilator, had been sick with the virus for nearly a week before his school was closed on Thursday. Complications besides the virus likely played a part in his death, Rubin said.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg said the death of Wiener, who was 55 and had taught for decades, "is a loss for our schools and our city."

"He was a well-liked and devoted educator," Bloomberg said in a statement.

Wiener was hired as a substitute teacher in March 1978, then as a mathematics teacher, working in that position until 2007. Since then, Wiener had been employed as an assistant principal at I.S. 238, also known as the Susan B. Anthony Intermediate School, in the Hollis neighborhood.

Besides Wiener, no one else in New York City has become seriously ill from the virus. As of Sunday afternoon, health officials had reported five other deaths in the U.S.: three in Texas, one in Washington state and one in Arizona.

Most people sickened from the swine flu, or the H1N1 virus, have complained of mild, seasonal flu-like symptoms such as fever, cough, sore throat, body aches and fatigue.

The city's first outbreak of swine flu occurred three weeks ago, when about 700 students and 300 other people associated with a Catholic high school in Queens began falling ill following the return of several students from vacations in Mexico, the epicenter of the outbreak. The school was closed.

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Five more city schools were to close Monday because of concern for swine flu, bringing the total to 11, including Wiener's.

City health officials announced Sunday that four Queens public schools and one Catholic school would close for up to five school days. Three of the public schools are in the same building in Flushing. Each school had students with flu-like illness last week.

The latest school closings will affect nearly 3,000 students. Schools will be providing curriculum material online, and parents will be able to pick up materials at schools and other locations, schools Chancellor Joel Klein said.

There were no documented cases of swine flu at any of the schools, said Jessica Scaperotti, a spokeswoman for the city's Department of Health and Mental Hygiene.

The health department said it is monitoring unusual clusters of flu cases as it works to stop the spread of the swine flu virus.

"We are now seeing a rising tide of flu in many parts of New York City," Health Commissioner Thomas Frieden said in a statement. "With the virus spreading widely, closing these and other individual schools will make little difference in transmission throughout New York City, but we hope it will help slow transmission within the individual school communities."

Frieden was named Friday by President Barack Obama to head the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, where he will be faced with some immediate decisions on how to deal with the nation's swine flu outbreak, including whether to produce a vaccine. He'll begin at the CDC in June.

The school where the virus was first reported in the city, St. Francis Preparatory, has been cleaned and reopened, and many New Yorkers had assumed before the latest flurry of school closings that the danger of swine flu was subsiding.

But Dr. Scott Harper, an epidemiologist with the health department, said health officials weren't surprised by the continued presence of the virus.

"It's so unpredictable," Harper said.

As of the weekend, there were 178 confirmed swine flu cases in New York City, Harper said, but the number of actual cases is believed to be much higher.

Health officials urged people with underlying health conditions to see their doctors if they believe they may have been exposed to swine flu. That includes people with diabetes, people whose immune systems are compromised because of certain cancer medications, pregnant women, elderly people and infants.

___

Associated Press writer Cristian Salazar contributed to this report.

NEW YORK — A school assistant principal who was sick for several days with swine flu on Sunday became the city's first death linked to the virus and the nation's sixth. Mitchell Wiener, who wor...
NEW YORK — A school assistant principal who was sick for several days with swine flu on Sunday became the city's first death linked to the virus and the nation's sixth. Mitchell Wiener, who wor...
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- Moshe I'm a Fan of Moshe 206 fans permalink
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My most sincere regrets to the Weiner family for their tragic loss.

There is good that can come out of even tragedy though:

The specter of a pandemic could finally prompt Americans into using some common sense hygiene (i.e., wash your hands; don't cough and sneeze on other people; if you are sick stay home so you don't unnecessaryly spread the sickness to others; especially stay away from young children, the elderly, weak, etc., if you are sick).

And the financial collapse could similarly promote greater common sense in personal finances (i.e., don't spend more than you make even if you can; don't waste and you will have enough; save for a rainy day that will surely come; etc.).

Wouldn't it be great though if the majority of Americans could start learning the easy way instead of the hard way?

That change starts with us each as individuals: Using common sense protects us all; failure to use common sense creates great risks for us all.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:18 PM on 05/18/2009
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My sincere condolences to the Wiener family but....

Generally flu is NOT a fatal disease!

The 1918 pandemic deaths probably are related to secondary bacterial infection say some of the world's leading flu experts.

The 35,000 CDC reported annual seasonal "flu deaths" are mostly in the frail and elderly. The CDC admits that.

WE MUST GET REAL ABOUT ASSESSING GENUINE RISKS AND FOCUS OUR ATTENTION ON THOSE LEST WE INCITE PANIC,WASTE RESOURCES ,AND UNECCESARILY IMPACT COMMUNITY ACTIVITIES AND COMMERCE.

Dr. Rick Lippin
Southampton,Pa
http://medicalcrises.blogspot.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:47 PM on 05/18/2009
- wdw505 I'm a Fan of wdw505 69 fans permalink

well said

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:02 PM on 05/18/2009
- whoknew--- I'm a Fan of whoknew--- 15 fans permalink

Respectfully, I have been posting that the potential of the potential of any serious infectious agent does not preclude to panic as long as the public is given some kind of "game plan" in the event of any kind of disaster.

Also I was wondering about your statement regarding the 1918 H1N1 pandemic because I have read at some sites that the reason why young people with robust immune systems over-reacted to the viral onslaught to the point of a cytokine storm which the body's immune system becomes its own worse enemy.

If you have this book what are your comments on it ("The Great Influenza: The Story of the Deadliest Pandemic in History" - John Barry) regarding "cytokine storm"

Also this site;

http://www.recombinomics.com/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:09 PM on 05/18/2009
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John Barry is a great historian/writers who is making a very important contribution .But I for one respectfully disagree with his scientific conclusions

The one I disagree with most is that it is inevitable that we will have another killer pandemic of the flu. I DO NOT BELIEVE THIS TO BE A FORGONE ASSUMPTION

Much has changed since 1918

Dr. Rick Lippin

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:51 PM on 05/18/2009
- MarionKIN I'm a Fan of MarionKIN 7 fans permalink
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Isn't it true that 1/3 of those hospitalized in two Mexico City hospitals showed no fever before being admitted for other serious (mainly respiratory) symptoms and that 60% of the hospitalizations there were in age groups 20-40? These patterns are unlike the seasonal flu. There must be a middle ground between panic and apathy. I don't think you're helping.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:32 PM on 05/18/2009
- wdw505 I'm a Fan of wdw505 69 fans permalink

mexico is a third world country the citizenry at large are not properly fed and not in outstanding health....­..then add to those issues, bad health care at best. i will not even go into hygiene.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:59 PM on 05/18/2009
- carnegie I'm a Fan of carnegie 14 fans permalink
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Mr. Weiner looks in his photos to be at least 100 ponds overweight. I've heard reports that he had no"pre-existing condition" including a statement from his son. When is this overweight country going to realize obesity is a most serious--and common--pr­e-existing condition?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:08 PM on 05/18/2009
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At least 100 pounds overweight? You know, I understand that people search for reasons for someone's death when the person dies young or relatively young. I understand that a healthy diet, exercising, not smoking, not drinking excessively, and regularly taking part in a stress reduction activity have all been linked to longer, healthier lives. HOWEVER, in the end, we all die. Some of us die younger than others, regardless of how well we've taken care of ourselves. That's life. You have no reason to think that if this man was thinner, he would have survived the flu.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:44 PM on 05/18/2009
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Don't bother. It's much easier for this person to judge the man who dies as someone who deserved it. Carnegie is probably someone who would say that my Type I diabetes is caused by me eating too much sugar as a kid.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:03 PM on 05/18/2009
- bsc I'm a Fan of bsc 10 fans permalink

you actually have every reason to think that is he lived a healthier lifestyle he may have had a better chance for survival. obesity is a comorbidity and increases the risk of all serious diseases including diabetes, cancer, heart disease, etc.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 05/18/2009
- MarionKIN I'm a Fan of MarionKIN 7 fans permalink
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The pre-existing condition was gout.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:33 PM on 05/18/2009
- janinius I'm a Fan of janinius 15 fans permalink
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RIP, sir. you will be missed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:11 AM on 05/18/2009
- studlyguy I'm a Fan of studlyguy 9 fans permalink

Enough of this 30,000 to 40,000 die every year from the so called regular flu,making this news everytime one person dies from swiny flu thingy,is getting really old ,Huffpo,it's already been confirmed this is no more virulent then seasonal flu,so fear propaganda is rolling along in the good ol" U.S.A. and it doesnt take much to fear with the American public ,their not to bright and believe every little thing they hear on the entertainment news channels CNN,MSNBC,­FOX,pretty soon I'll add Huffpo,too the list.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:26 AM on 05/18/2009
- MarionKIN I'm a Fan of MarionKIN 7 fans permalink
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Wow - you are generally clueless about this entire matter. Start paying attention. Most experts guess this will be more along the lines of 1957 flu, which killed 2-4 million people ... not the 1918 H1N1 that killed 40 - 80 million. Still, that does NOT mean this flu year will be like 2007, 2008. People like you, who ignorantly belittle the necessary precautions, are the first to panic when reality hits. Learn more.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:38 PM on 05/18/2009
- MarionKIN I'm a Fan of MarionKIN 7 fans permalink
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Start paying attention. Most experts guess this will be more along the lines of 1957 flu, which killed 2-4 million people ... not the 1918 H1N1 that killed 40 - 80 million. Still, that does NOT mean this flu year will be like 2007, 2008. People like you, who ignorantly belittle the necessary precautions, are the first to panic when reality hits. Learn more.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:38 PM on 05/18/2009
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It's stunning to hear all the people out here complaining about how they think this story is so overblown and old news. The WHO, CDC and local health officials are taking the proper steps.

I'm a Queens resident who has two small children, one of which attends school. It's worrisome to see just how quick these children are getting sick and the area is spreading out on the map. This isn't a normal rate at which students usually get ill. And although the statistics of the regular flu are there year after year and most people don't panic about it, doesn't make the nature of this flu less of a concern simply by it's death toll as of 3 weeks into its course here.

My prayers go out to the Vice Principal and his family.

I guess for some, it's not a concern until it's in their own backyard or it's someone they know that dies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:59 AM on 05/18/2009
- Bitsko I'm a Fan of Bitsko 506 fans permalink
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NIMBY indeed! And to think just a few years ago, the rest of the country loved us New Yorkers so very, very much. Let them pay the share in federal income tax that we do and you'll hear their tires squeal.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:14 AM on 05/18/2009
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Right. Texas is still being hit hard, so we are still taking it seriously here. One elementary school in Houston has closed because of twelve cases confirmed at that school last week. Four hundred children stayed home last week--some of whom are ill, and some of whom are trying to keep from getting ill. We have no idea how many cases the school will end up having. So, yes, it's still a concern here because it's definitely "in our backyard."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:25 AM on 05/18/2009
- wdw505 I'm a Fan of wdw505 69 fans permalink

no, people die each year from the flu, this seems to be less important than normal flu

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:25 AM on 05/18/2009
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Did you even read my post?

And No the rate at which children are becoming ill at the schools that close is not NORMAL. That is why they are closing them down something that doesn't happen at a whim here in New York.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:01 PM on 05/18/2009
- MarionKIN I'm a Fan of MarionKIN 7 fans permalink
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You are not paying attention to what's going on at all, are you?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:39 PM on 05/18/2009
- MarionKIN I'm a Fan of MarionKIN 7 fans permalink
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Listen, the 36,000 people who die annually in the US are from Thirty Million cases! The hospitaliz­ation/deat­h ratios here are several times higher than the usual flu. (Seasonal flu is .0023% mortality; this is more like .02 - .7% (depending on the region and whether you count all the suspected deaths in Mexico who were buried before the test was finished. You count those, and the number jumps much higher. Either way, it's considerably higher than .0023). Most experts expect it to be similar to the 1957 flu, which killed 2-4 million people. (That's NOT nearly as bad as the 1918 H1N1 so-called Spanish Flu, but it's still serious! Think about this: "only" 2.7% of the people who caught the Spanish Flu died from it, but it affected 97% of the population. 2.7 of 97% = tens of millions of deaths, particularly among young people. Flu isn't only about mortality rates, but morbidity rates, too. This bug has been shown in labs to be viable through 73 generations. Each case infects 1.4 - 1.6 others. Do the math.

Also, Mitchell Wiener was in a modern metropolitan hospital. They did EVERYTHING they could to save him, including using advanced experimental drugs. He died. If that doesn't trouble you, you don't understand the implications.

The other factor is that so many of the serious cases happen in the 20-40 age group. Mean age of hospitalization is 15. That is MUCH younger than the average "seasonal" flu.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:53 PM on 05/18/2009
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I live in Utah

I have been sick for two week ,s have no Idea if it is swine flu but what ever it is

it is a bad one , the weakness you feel is the worst part besides the coughing damm I have coughed so much my throat is raw walk to the kitchen for water need to rest just to walk back to bed.

I think I am getting better

but not much energy !! tire easily have never been so weak and tired in my life and I am almost fifty years old

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:46 AM on 05/18/2009
- SameSo I'm a Fan of SameSo 9 fans permalink

I'm sorry i missed your post earlier. Hope you still check back. Please take a peg of garlic (diced) with a glass of water every 3-4 hours. Also drink lots of clear fluids (water, broth, unsweetened orange juice).

Believe me, this is effective. Its just too bad you werent on this regimen from the momen you began feeling ill.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:46 AM on 05/18/2009
- Meah I'm a Fan of Meah 52 fans permalink
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Have you called your physician? Have you been tested?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:57 AM on 05/18/2009
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I agree with Meah. If you are still feeling this ill after 2 weeks, you might want to see your physician to make sure you are okay. It's not typical to be quite this ill after 2 weeks. Better to be extra safe.

Get well soon.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:07 AM on 05/18/2009
- wdw505 I'm a Fan of wdw505 69 fans permalink

that is what doctors are for, if it is that bad

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:27 AM on 05/18/2009
- whoknew--- I'm a Fan of whoknew--- 15 fans permalink

Go to the doctor, get some help.

I finally after two really, really bad bouts of the flu went and got a flu shot last year. It worked for me, I didn't get sick that year.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:22 PM on 05/18/2009
- wsblake I'm a Fan of wsblake 9 fans permalink

What the media fails to mention of course is that the flu kills tens of thousands of Americans every year. Just another program of fear initiated by an Orwellian government and a corporate media fixated on more and more profit from selling air time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:21 AM on 05/18/2009

I agree, although being a pregnant woman at 39 weeks I can only be that much more careful to not get "infected" since "ANY" flu, including the swine flu, is something that I could get...espe­cially since I have no immunity to it. For those that are healthy and have nothing else impairing their health, yes...it's not such a panic. But many pregnant women and new mothers of small infants are worried because even though in extreme emergency cases we can get Tamiflu, it's not recommended for us or a child under the age of 1. So, yes...with a 2 year old and a baby in my tummy, I'm quite happy to be kept informed and to hear that people are taking proper action to shut down a school or be overly sensitive to the outbreak (kids share so many germs). There are plenty of other cases of people who don't want to get sick due to an underlying condition - lets not forget those people because of course...t­he virus can mutate. Maybe the 1st wave won't be so bad...but the 2nd wave may be.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:39 AM on 05/18/2009

In truth, the media have mentioned, on many occasions, that approximately 36,000 Americans die annually from the various flu viri. And anyone who does not understand the potential for harm from something like this is a mor_on.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:04 AM on 05/18/2009
- wsblake I'm a Fan of wsblake 9 fans permalink

Not nearly as harmul as the programs created by buying into fear as you so obviously have

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:22 AM on 05/18/2009
- scotsense I'm a Fan of scotsense 11 fans permalink
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Yeah 2 people dead from a population of 300,000,000 the potential for harm is running real high.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:25 AM on 05/18/2009
- marcain I'm a Fan of marcain 6 fans permalink
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Regular flu kills 35,000 a year in the US. It seems this Swine Flu is even a weaker virus. However, WHO enjoyed scaring the crap out of everyone when this story first broke. I sensed it was being overblown the first time I heard about it. It's so easy to manipulate people with media, authorities and fear.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:26 AM on 05/18/2009
- simplify I'm a Fan of simplify 30 fans permalink
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....and lets not forget the media and their fear based mentality did a lot t fan the panic

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:17 AM on 05/18/2009
- land2341 I'm a Fan of land2341 14 fans permalink

And had it turned out to be as bad as it could have become (and as still remains possible if it mutates again) you would have been screaming for the heads of those who "failed to warn the public".

There is no way for the government to win in these cases: tell you, you cry fear mongering, don't tell you, you complain they keep you in the dark.

Look at what the CDC says - not the general media. THEY did the fear mongering.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:41 AM on 05/18/2009
- Meah I'm a Fan of Meah 52 fans permalink
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Millions of people died in 1918 from influenza in this country. SARS was stopped but could have spread. It is better for the CDC to put out serious warnings than to be lax. They did now know how bad it was. Easy to gripe. Not easy to know what to do.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:06 AM on 05/18/2009
- Promise I'm a Fan of Promise 13 fans permalink

I join in sending condolences to the family and friends of this man. And I would like to know, too, what the other conditions were that complicated the disease. I have not been following all of the cases so maybe more has been said on the subject, but I recall that some of the earliest fatalities were of people who had pre-existing health problems. I do not want to intrude into the personal medical records of this man, either, but I think that this is the kind of information that is useful for the public to have.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:51 AM on 05/18/2009
- Darcy24 I'm a Fan of Darcy24 8 fans permalink

The man's son said the only "pre-existing condition" he had was gout. He also seemed to imply the media had picked up the idea that the man had some type of pre-existing condition and ran with it, true or not. He said he had no idea where that came from.

Not every flu victim dies of something else. I wish the media would make some effort to educate the public - flu is a serious illness, people should try to avoid it if they can. Thousands of people die from it every year. Instead, they brush it off by saying, "Don't worry, that guy was sick anyway. It won't happen to you." That's not necessarily true. And not every flu virus attacks the old and infirm. Some of the most dangerous have gone after young and healthy people specifically. The 1918 flu was one of those. It killed a bunch of young healthy soldiers. Some who were exposed then went home on leave, and gave it to their local communities.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:31 AM on 05/18/2009

I read a very well written article from a prominent M.D. that said something to the effect that most people who died from the 1918 flu actually died from secondary infections­...

Their immune systems were obviously impaired by the flu, but considering how people didn't have access to antibiotics and lived in squander, they had a higher chance of contracting a secondary infection.

Not to mention that people weren't as sanitary as we are today...

I'm not downplaying the chances of contracting this flu, I'm just not panicking from all the corporate media's hype.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:56 AM on 05/18/2009
- MedinaM I'm a Fan of MedinaM 10 fans permalink

So, so sad. RIP.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:39 AM on 05/18/2009
- evilzed I'm a Fan of evilzed 13 fans permalink

Thats H1N1 not swine flu and strait from WHO.
Its sad but unfortunately thousands are dieing from the FLU and TB, AIDS, Cancers, Obesity.
I'm sorry, but this flu story is over

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:34 AM on 05/18/2009
- whoknew--- I'm a Fan of whoknew--- 15 fans permalink

Wait a minute----

See this site from the CDC-

http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:54 AM on 05/18/2009
- wdw505 I'm a Fan of wdw505 69 fans permalink

2 of those deaths were non-US citizens..­...i believe 1 was an illegal...­...the US death count is only 3

not bad at all.......­..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:58 PM on 05/18/2009
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Unless it's your children in these schools where the outbreaks are.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:39 AM on 05/18/2009

My condolences to Mr. Wiener's family and his students and colleagues.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:56 PM on 05/17/2009
- stella801 I'm a Fan of stella801 22 fans permalink
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Very sad news. I haven't heard a thing about this flu for about a week now. What is going on? I heard it might be the result of a bad lab experiment let loose.

Anyway, my sincere condolences to those who are getting sick and the families of those who are losing loved ones.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:50 PM on 05/17/2009

Yeah, here are the links that talk about how there's a chance that this flu may have been caused by "human error"

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=afrdATVXPEAk&refer=worldwide

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,519976,00.html

Don't worry though, the governments of the world will be buying hundreds of billions of expensive flu vaccines from the drug manufactures to "help" us... Everything will be ok as long as we listen to our politicians.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:57 AM on 05/18/2009
- Weirdwriter I'm a Fan of Weirdwriter 332 fans permalink
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Still nothing firm about the origin of this strain of flu. It's an odd one, may be a combination of swine/bird/human.

Can hit very hard and quick, and kill people in prime of life who seem like they'd be able to recover quickly -- then, again, seemed to be fading out in impact as it moved out from Mexico.

But because it initially resembled the horrific 1918 pandemic that killed 40 million, it scared a lot of health experts. They still don't know how that one originated, and there's no vaccine for it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:16 AM on 05/18/2009
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Educators hold a special place in my heart. How sad to lose someone who I'm sure devoted himself fully to the children of New York. My heartfelt condolences to Mr. Weiner, his family, students, and those who knew and loved him.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:48 PM on 05/17/2009
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