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New flu not quite a pandemic yet: WHO
Tue May 12, 2009 12:44am EDT
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By Jonathan Lynn
GENEVA (Reuters) - The new H1N1 virus shows no signs of sustained person-to-person spread outside of North America and so has not yet tipped over into a pandemic, a top World Health Organization official said on Monday.
Dr. Keiji Fukuda, acting WHO assistant director-general, also told a news briefing it was too early to say whether the swine flu virus would cause a pandemic.
"We remain at phase 5," Fukuda said, referring to the agency's second-highest pandemic alert level. "It is still a confusing situation."
WHO said its laboratories have confirmed 4,379 infections with the new strain.
But the worst impact is still in North America, with 60 deaths. The United States alone has 2,600 cases.
"We know that we are seeing things change on an almost daily basis," Fukuda said.
"We are evaluating the clinical features, we are evaluating the epidemiology and the spread. We will continue to evaluate what is the impact on both people and countries."
In Mexico, millions of children, many of them wearing surgical masks and clutching hand sanitizer, went back to classes for the first time in two weeks.
Schools throughout Mexico were scrubbed from floor to ceiling last week and the 20 million students who returned on Monday were told to follow strict hygiene rules.
"If everyone respects them, we're going to have a safe and healthy return," Education Minister Alonso Lujambio said.
ITCHY MASKS
Although there is no evidence to show masks protect people who have not been infected, many children wore them. "I know it's to protect us but the mask is very uncomfortable. It makes me itchy," said Pamela, a 10-year-old at a school in the capital.
Mexican health officials said the death toll there has risen to 56 as results come in of tests on people who died in recent weeks. Mexico has had a total of 2,059 cases of the swine flu distributed throughout all but three of the country's 32 states, Health Minister Jose Angel Cordova said.
An international team reported the virus appears to act like a pandemic strain, being more easily passed along than the regular seasonal flu.
Neil Ferguson of Imperial College London and colleagues reported in the journal Science that as many as 23,000 Mexicans were likely infected with the swine flu virus. Continued...
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