Latest Bird Flu News

Japan Flocks to Ostrich Masks to Help Fight Swine Flu Paranoia (Bloomberg)
Sunday May 31st 2009, 8:51 pm

June 1 (Bloomberg) -- Japanese researcher Yasuhiro Tsukamoto’s flock of 500 ostriches are being enlisted into the global fight against swine flu by exploiting Japan’s practice of wearing masks in public to ward off allergies and colds. [News Source]

Experts said unprepared for swine flu (redOrbit)
Sunday May 31st 2009, 3:07 pm

This year's swine flu outbreak refuted many of the predictions about how the next large-scale flu pandemic would originate and spread, experts say. The world's medical community had based much of their pandemic planning on the 2004 H5N1 bird flu outbreak in Southeast Asia, which proved to be a poor model for predicting how the latest novel flu strain, H1N1, would play out, The Washington Post ... [News Source]

Bird flu hits Bengal again (Business Standard India)
Sunday May 31st 2009, 2:42 pm

Even as the threat of swine flu continues, a fresh outbreak of the highly pathogenic avian influenza (bird flu) has been reported from West Bengal. [News Source]

Swine flu spurs experts to rethink definition of pandemic.
Sunday May 31st 2009, 10:00 am

Influenza experts are acknowledging that they were almost completely surprised by the way the current swine flu outbreak unfolded, so much so it is forcing the world to rethink what a pandemic is and what pandemic preparedness means. [News Source]

Farms feeding us a side of disease?
Sunday May 31st 2009, 10:00 am

The so-called swine flu, a mix of human, pig and bird flu strains, is a reminder that people and animals share much, including disease and infection. [News Source]

Swine flu spurs experts to rethink definition of pandemic.
Sunday May 31st 2009, 10:00 am

Influenza experts are acknowledging that they were almost completely surprised by the way the current swine flu outbreak unfolded, so much so it is forcing the world to rethink what a pandemic is and what pandemic preparedness means. [News Source]

Bird Flu Virus Remains Infectious Up To 600 Days In Municipal Landfills (Medical News Today)
Sunday May 31st 2009, 7:20 am

Amid concerns about a pandemic of swine flu, researchers from Nebraska report for the first time that poultry carcasses infected with another threat - the "bird flu" virus - can remain infectious in municipal landfills for almost 2 years. Their report is scheduled for the June 15 issue of ACS' semi-monthly journal Environmental Science & Technology. Shannon L. [News Source]