Personal enrichment.FatherTed wrote:
and using it on what?mcjagdflieger wrote:
I would surmise they might be pocketing some of it, although im not a doctor.
they're not a corparation.
Mmm doubt that. got any sources?ATG wrote:
Personal enrichment.FatherTed wrote:
and using it on what?mcjagdflieger wrote:
I would surmise they might be pocketing some of it, although im not a doctor.
they're not a corparation.
Small hourglass island
Always raining and foggy
Use an umbrella
Always raining and foggy
Use an umbrella
Yup.FatherTed wrote:
Mmm doubt that. got any sources?ATG wrote:
Personal enrichment.FatherTed wrote:
and using it on what?
they're not a corparation.
interesting...
Small hourglass island
Always raining and foggy
Use an umbrella
Always raining and foggy
Use an umbrella
Heaps of places around town are dishing out hygene products like they're cheap candy, people been given the flu talk etc...
That will help. I'm still waiting til it migrates again and merges with the common cold virus. And if the strain from Hong Kong that is resistant to Tamiflu merges with the common cold virus then it'll really be bad.Pubic wrote:
Heaps of places around town are dishing out hygene products like they're cheap candy, people been given the flu talk etc...
What's the death rate in developed/non-developed countries right now?
We're at 3 deaths and 945 cases, from just over 4 million people. There have been car crashes with higher fatality rates.Harmor wrote:
That will help. I'm still waiting til it migrates again and merges with the common cold virus. And if the strain from Hong Kong that is resistant to Tamiflu merges with the common cold virus then it'll really be bad.Pubic wrote:
Heaps of places around town are dishing out hygene products like they're cheap candy, people been given the flu talk etc...
What's the death rate in developed/non-developed countries right now?
If this was like the previous versions then we could have upwards of 7% death rate. So instead of just 3 deaths in 945 it would be 66 (x22 times what you have now).
Granted, I'm not worried because I have a better chance of dying walking across the street outside my house, BUT its clear that those with weak immune systems are the most vulnerable (although completely healthy people are dying from this at an unknown rate).
In San Diego County here in California we have 265 cases and 3 deaths (1.1% death rate), but the data sample is too small.
Granted, I'm not worried because I have a better chance of dying walking across the street outside my house, BUT its clear that those with weak immune systems are the most vulnerable (although completely healthy people are dying from this at an unknown rate).
In San Diego County here in California we have 265 cases and 3 deaths (1.1% death rate), but the data sample is too small.
Who gives a shit? Michael Jackson died for Christ sake!!!!!!!!!!WienerBreath wrote:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/un_un_swine_flu
GENEVA – The World Health Organization declared a swine flu pandemic Thursday — the first global flu epidemic in 41 years — as infections in the United States, Europe, Australia, South America and elsewhere climbed to nearly 30,000 cases.
The long-awaited pandemic announcement is scientific confirmation that a new flu virus has emerged and is quickly circling the globe. WHO will now ask drugmakers to speed up production of a swine flu vaccine. The declaration will also prompt governments to devote more money toward efforts to contain the virus.
WHO chief Dr. Margaret Chan made the announcement Thursday after the U.N. agency held an emergency meeting with flu experts. Chan said she was moving the world to phase 6 — the agency's highest alert level — which means a pandemic, or global epidemic, is under way.
"The world is moving into the early days of its first influenza pandemic in the 21st century," Chan told reporters. "The (swine flu) virus is now unstoppable."
On Thursday, WHO said 74 countries had reported 28,774 cases of swine flu, including 144 deaths. Chan described the virus as "moderate." According to WHO's pandemic criteria, a global outbreak has begun when a new flu virus begins spreading in two world regions.
The agency has stressed that most cases are mild and require no treatment, but the fear is that a rash of new infections could overwhelm hospitals and health authorities — especially in poorer countries.
Still, about half of the people who have died from swine flu were previously young and healthy — people who are not usually susceptible to flu. Swine flu is also crowding out regular flu viruses. Both features are typical of pandemic flu viruses.
The last pandemic — the Hong Kong flu of 1968 — killed about 1 million people. Ordinary flu kills about 250,000 to 500,000 people each year.
lol why is that even news
i could say the same for that stupid harry potter shit. but thats why.Fallschirmjager10 wrote:
lol why is that even news