MSNBC Warning: H1N1 Pandemic May Let In New Viruses...
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"The declining wave of pandemic H1N1 flu is
likely to be followed by new, unknown strains of seasonal flu which
health authorities must watch carefully to devise protection measures,
European flu experts said on Friday.
The
European Center for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) warned that
flu viruses "never stand still" and said governments should not relax
H1N1 flu vaccination programs, but remain on guard for possible changes
in the virus and new strains.
"The
historical pattern of human influenzas is that after pandemics, the
world experiences a new mix of viruses," the ECDC's flu expert Angus
Nicoll wrote in the Eurosurveillance scientific journal.
In a telephone interview, Nicoll said although
signs from many parts of Europe and the United States suggest
circulation of H1N1 is declining, it is still too early to say the
pandemic is over.
He
noted that the virus responsible for the last pandemic in 1968-70
became more easily transmitted between its first and second winter, so
that there were more cases and deaths in the second winter (1969-70) in
at least two European countries.
An
earlier pandemic in 1957-58 also declined before Christmas 1957, but
then came back to cause a rise in flu-related deaths in the new year of
1958.
In the
current pandemic, new infections of H1N1 flu have fallen sharply in
recent weeks and some governments have been left with an oversupply of
vaccines ordered to protect their populations against the virus that
emerged last March.
Uptake
of the vaccine has been limited in some countries and advice from
medical experts that one dose is enough to protect against the virus,
rather than the two originally anticipated, means some governments have
more than they need.
Latest
data from the ECDC, which monitors disease in the European Union, show
that H1N1 — also known as swine flu — has killed more than 11,600
people around the world, more than 2,000 of them in Europe.
‘Expect the unexpected’
Nicoll
said pandemic H1N1 flu had not completely halted other flu viruses in
recent months, but had been the predominant strain, meaning that its
decline could open the way for a new mix of viruses known as
inter-pandemic or seasonal flus.
He said governments should continue to urge
people to get vaccinated against H1N1, since the shots were "the most
potent countermeasure" for any human flu.
"The rule with influenza, pandemic and inter-pandemic, is to maintain vigilance and expect the unexpected," he said.
Nicoll
also said some H1N1 vaccines, which governments ordered from drugmakers
like GlaxoSmithKline, AstraZeneca, Sanofi-Aventis, Novartis and Baxter,
among others, may prove useful in warding off any new strains of
seasonal flu that emerge in the wake of the pandemic.
"Countries
should see through what they planned to do," he said. "And one of the
good things about some of the vaccines that European countries are
using is that they have adjuvants (or boosters), which it makes it much
more likely that they can cope with a virus that changes."