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November 16, 2009 (Use j/k keys to navigate)   Email to a friend    Permalink

Watching the H1N1 flu pandemic

Health officials around the world are stepping up vaccination efforts and are closely tracking the progress of the H1N1/09 virus (often referred to as "swine flu" in the media). World Health Organization officials recently noted that the virus has spread to virtually every country in the world, reaching as far as remote tribes in Venezuela and aboriginal populations in Australia. Although the number of deaths attributed to H1N1 this year (over 7,000 to date) remains low compared to a normal seasonal flu outbreak of several hundred thousand deaths in a year, health officials remain concerned because of the instability of H1N1/09 combined with its tendency to affect younger healthier people. Collected here are photos of people around the world preparing for and dealing with the current H1N1 pandemic. (37 photos total)

A medic prepares to give students of a university an injection of the H1N1 flu vaccine in Russia's far eastern city of Vladivostok on November 9, 2009. Russia launched a vaccination campaign against the H1N1 flu disease on Monday, local media reported. (REUTERS/Yuri Maltsev)

An Afghan boy tries to sell protective masks on a market in Kabul, Afghanistan, Monday, Nov. 9, 2009. H1N1 has left 11 people dead in Afghanistan, where hundreds of Afghan and international troops are battling the disease and facing a rising militant insurgency. The Afghan Ministry of Public Health reported Monday that 710 of the 779 cases of the flu in the nation have been among military personnel. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus) #

An Israeli medical worker holds an ampule containing H1N1 flu vaccine at a clinic in Jerusalem, Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2009. Israel has already ordered enough vaccine for 30 percent of its population even though it is still in development, according to the Health Ministry. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue) #

Pilgrims pass by thermal sensors installed to detect their temperature upon their arrival at Jeddah airport, in Saudi Arabia on November 10, 2009. Expecting approximately three million pilgrims from over 160 countries to congregate around Mecca's holy sites for the annual Hajj pilgrimage, Saudi authorities have tightened health measures at the airports and sea ports as well as created the 300-bed capacity King Saud Hospital especially for H1N1 flu cases. (REUTERS/Susan Baaghil) #

Lisa Foley (center) looks on as R.N. Lana Peta administers an H1N1 flu nasal mist to daughter, Maddie, 5, at Wellesley Hills Congregational Church in Wellesley, Massachusetts on Saturday, November 7, 2009. The Wellesley Health Department, which sponsored the clinic, had about 200 doses available for children, ages 2-19 years old. (Globe Staff Photo/Wendy Maeda) #

Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko, left, wears a face mask as she visits a regional hospital in Lutsk, about 400 km (247 miles) west of Kiev, Ukraine, Monday, Nov. 9, 2009. Ukraine's presidential election in January could be postponed because of H1N1 flu, a newspaper quoted a government official as saying Friday. (AP Photo/Aleksandr Prokopenko) #

A worshipper takes holy water from an automatic dispenser at a church in Fornaci Di Briosco, around 40 km (25 miles) north of Milan, Italy on November 10, 2009. Parishes in northern Italy have begun installing automatic holy water dispensers in churches to allow the faithful to make the sign of the cross without the fear of catching H1N1 flu when using communal water fonts. (REUTERS/Stefano Rellandini) #

A vendor displays garlic at Belgrade green market, Serbia, Friday, Nov. 13, 2009. Belgrade's open-air markets were a welter of busy customers on Friday with one thing on their mind: garlic. In Serbia, garlic is a remedy for all, including H1N1 flu, whose recent surge has triggered mild panic among the population. The prices of garlic have spiked on Belgrade's markets because of the increase in demand, and public places are smelling of the little white bulbs as people munch them as if eating apples. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic) #

A young girl receives an H1N1 vaccination as she sits in her mother's car during a drive thru H1N1 vaccination clinic at Doctor's Medical Center November 5, 2009 in San Pablo, California. California public health officials say that shortages of the H1N1 vaccinations may make it impossible to vaccinate people at risk of contracting the H1N1 flu. County health agencies across California have received less than 45% of the vaccines ordered. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images) #

A worker of the Beyoglu municipality uses disinfectant in a primary school classroom, part of precautions taken against the H1N1 virus in Istanbul, Turkey, Friday, Oct. 30, 2009. Two H1N1 patients died on Thursday, bringing the death toll from the flu in Turkey to three, the Health Ministry said. (AP Photo/Ibrahim Usta) #

A student receives an H1N1 vaccine injection at a hospital in Suining, Sichuan province, China on November 11, 2009. H1N1 flu is on the rise in China and Japan after triggering an unusually early start to the winter influenza season in Europe, Central Asia and North America, the World Health Organisation said. (REUTERS/Stringer) #

A Muslim pilgrim, wearing a mask for protection against H1N1 flu, walks in the courtyard of the Prophet Mohammed Mosque in the Saudi holy city of Medina on November 11, 2009. (MAHMUD HAMS/AFP/Getty Images) #

A young man wears a gas-mask as he rides a bus in the western Ukrainian city of Lviv on November 4, 2009. The World Health Organisation said today that it was valid to assume that most of the cases of influenza reportedly sweeping through Ukraine were caused by the H1N1 virus. (YURIY DYACHYSHYN/AFP/Getty Images) #

Sheila Garcia, 3, has her temperature taken on her forehead before visiting a patient at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford in Palo Alto, California, Monday, Oct. 19, 2009. Hospitals around the country are turning away child visitors at the door, restrictions that aim to limit spread of H1N1 flu to patients sick from other causes. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma) #

Technicians perform a dry run in the influenza manufacturing facility at Sanofi Pasteur in Swiftwater, Pennsylvania. As nervous Americans clamor for the H1N1 flu vaccine, production is running several weeks behind schedule, and health officials blame the pressure on pharmaceutical companies to crank out the ordinary flu vaccine at the same time, and an antiquated manufacturing process that relies on millions of chicken eggs. (AP Photo/Sanofi Pasteur, David W. Coulter) #

A worker dumps boiled eggs that have been used to produce H1N1 vaccine onto a truck at Sinovac Biotech Company in Beijing, China on Nov. 3, 2009. (AP Photo) #

A boy wears a mask while waiting for an H1N1 vaccination at a hospital in Taipei, Taiwan on November 9, 2009. The Taiwan government started vaccinations against the H1N1 virus on Monday for infants from six months to one year old. (REUTERS/Nicky Loh) #

An Israeli medical worker injects a man with H1N1 flu vaccine at a clinic in Jerusalem, Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2009. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue) #

Media film as a nurse vaccinates a clinic employee with Pandemrix, a vaccine against H1N1 influenza, at the UKE clinic in Hamburg October 26, 2009. (REUTERS/Christian Charisius) #

A robot designed to help doctors diagnose H1N1 flu quivers as a man with a full protective outfit puts a tube into its throat during a demonstration at the Security & Safety Trade Expo in Tokyo, Japan, Thursday, Oct. 22, 2009. The life-sized humanoid was developed by Medical Education Technologies, Inc. (METI), the world's leading supplier of human patient simulators, based in Sarasota, Florida, to help medical workers recognize symptoms of the illness and learn to treat patients. It sweats, moans, cries and convulses just like a human would when infected with the H1N1 virus and if the robot is not treated properly the symptoms gradually get worse and it stops breathing. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara) #

An announcement by the sanitary authorities is posted on the door of a school closed due to a H1N1 virus infection among students in Bucharest, Romania on November 2, 2009. Authorities have closed several schools recently due to the rapid spread of the H1N1 flu virus and boosted vaccine stockpile to face a potential pandemic more resolutely. (REUTERS/Bogdan Cristel) #

A South Korean student, suffering from a high fever, is placed in a separate exam room as a precaution against the H1N1 virus, as she waits to take her college entrance exam, in Deajeon, south of Seoul, South Korea, Thursday, Nov. 12, 2009. (AP Photo/Yonhap, Yang Yong-suk) #

A child peers in the window as she waits in line to receive the H1N1 vaccine in Haltom City, Texas October 30, 2009. Tarrant County is distributing 1,600 injectable doses of the H1N1 vaccine to children ages 6 months to 18 years and pregnant women today. (REUTERS/Jessica Rinaldi) #

A teacher checks a student's body temperature as a precaution against H1N1 flu at a primary school in Wuhan, in central China's Hubei province, Monday, Nov. 2, 2009. (AP Photo) #

Figures in a Nativity scene, depicting the birth of Jesus Christ, wear face masks in a shop in the H1N1-hit city of Naples, Italy on November 5, 2009. Italy has reported 26 victims of the H1N1 influenza virus have died, and 41,000 people have been vaccinated in the country by the start of November. (REUTERS/Stefano Renna/Agnfoto) #

Belarussians suspected of carrying the H1N1 flu take their turn in the examination room at a hospital in Minsk on November 2, 2009. Belarus has yet to confirm a death from the virus, but doctors keep watch amid a growing panic in nearby Ukraine. (VIKTOR DRACHEV/AFP/Getty Images) #

A teacher sprays alcohol to sterilize students' hands as a precaution against th spread of the H1N1 flu at a primary school in Wuhan, in central China's Hubei province, Monday, Nov. 2, 2009. (AP Photo) #

Reserve soldiers wearing face masks to guard against the H1N1 flu virus take part in a reserve forces training at a military training field in Seoul November 4, 2009. South Korea on Tuesday raised its flu alert status to the highest "red" level to prepare for a possible national emergency caused by the rapid spread of Influenza A, Yonhap News Agency reported. (REUTERS/Yonhap) #

A dog wears a protective mask against the H1N1 flu on its face on a street in Enshi, Hubei province, China on November 5, 2009. (REUTERS/China Daily) #

Kevin Solis, left and his mother Abdi Santoyo wear protective face masks as a precaution against H1N1 flu contagion at a beach in Cancun, Mexico. (AP Photo/Israel Leal ) #

Pupils rub their arms and rest in a classroom after receiving H1N1 influenza vaccine injections at a school in Shanghai, China on November 10, 2009. (REUTERS/Aly Song) #

Saudi Arabian nurses attend the launch of amn H1N1 vaccine campaign in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Saturday, Nov. 7, 2009. Saudi Arabia's health minister said Saturday the kingdom will not ban anyone considered high risk for H1N1 flu from performing the Hajj pilgrimage this year. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar) #

Taiwan's President Ma Ying-jeou receives an H1N1 vaccination inside an elementary school in Taipei County November 16, 2009. Ma took the vaccination as a symbolic show of support for the vaccine. (REUTERS/Nicky Loh) #

Two Afghan zookeepers watch as Afghanistan's only known pig, Khanzir, eats at the Kabul Zoo November 2, 2009. The pig, a curiosity in Muslim Afghanistan where pork and pig products are illegal because they are considered irreligious, was quarantined in July 2009 because visitors to the zoo were worried it could spread the H1N1 flu strain. The pig was released from quarantine later that month. (REUTERS/Oleg Popov) #

Police riot officers confront Paris-Saint-Germain soccer supporters on the Old Port, in Marseille, southern France, Sunday, Oct. 25, 2009, after the cancellation of the League One soccer match between Marseille and Paris-saint-Germain - the game postponed after a third PSG player was diagnosed with the H1N1 flu on Sunday, forcing the quarantine of the players and staff. (AP Photo) #

A newlywed couple wearing masks kiss as they leave the city hall after their wedding in the western Ukrainian city of Lviv on October 31, 2009. (YURIY DYACHYSHYN/AFP/Getty Images) #

A girl watches while her mother gets an H1N1 influenza vaccine shot in Vancouver, British Columbia October 26, 2009. (REUTERS/Andy Clark) #

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I need to get me a gas mask...

Posted by Eugene November 16, 09 12:35 PM
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Number 9 is so incredibly North American. What's next? Drive-thru eye exams? Dental appointments? Liver transplants? S'il vous plait!

Posted by Peter Tardif November 16, 09 12:41 PM
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crazy. people should have bigger worries than this. RIP to all who have passed away b/c of this virus though..

Posted by Jason Bourne November 16, 09 12:43 PM
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Fear not! My whole family has had it without extreme problems. This is ridiculous!

Posted by TheHealthyOne November 16, 09 12:46 PM
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I am impressed by the automatic holy water dispenser. That one makes a lot of sense.

I too would like a gas mask. That thing rocks.

Some of this seems over like sensationalized photos to me, but I do hope this is not a pandemic in the making. One is bound to come sooner than later, as we can be immune to everything, everywhere.

Posted by Flogging Murphy November 16, 09 12:49 PM
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#28 is a gem - two soldiers with their noses poking out! H1N1 has killed just slightly more people than Leprosy has in the same amount of time.

Posted by david November 16, 09 01:01 PM
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There was an automatic holy water dispenser in ancient Rome. I don't see what the big deal is.

(You actually had to pay for holy water by the way. It was not a "Push Button, Receive Bacon" kind of thing)

Posted by Tacoma November 16, 09 01:05 PM
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Ridiculous. Over the top hyped disease.
Masks on the beach? Masks for dogs?
There are worse everyday risks than H1N1.

Posted by Mugros November 16, 09 01:05 PM
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I'm disgusted by the panic created to sell this untested vaccine.

With a little bit of research (independent of the popular media) it's easy to see that there are ulterior motives behind the H1N1 scare.

Posted by Jonas November 16, 09 01:11 PM
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I am insanely amused by the idea of catching Swine Flu from Holy Water.

Posted by Wesley November 16, 09 01:16 PM
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@ #2 about Number 9. While I agree with you it's from N. America, wouldn't you think it better to forgo the waiting room to save another life, or would you rather hundreds packs into a poorly ventilated room just to wait for a shot? Free the Pigs!

Posted by Syd November 16, 09 01:22 PM
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My wife, myself, and both of my kids have had this and made it through. Even our health care provider felt it was hype, especially for those who are generally healthy. Mind you, it was the worst feeling flu I've ever had, but it was not the instant death sentence the news seems to portray it as. If you have a preexisting disease, especially asthma, certainly get yourself immunized. H1N1 is murder on the lungs and I can only imagine how asthma sufferers feel under it.

My wife watches news in Spanish, and their take on the news is so bad as to be borderline illegal. This is the same group of news wonderkids who predicted on the 6pm news at the time that the Hale-Bopp comet would destroy the world and actually did not give a weather report for the following day.

Posted by Dave November 16, 09 01:25 PM
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H1N1 must be really bad if Baby Jesus needs a mask!

Posted by Jamie G. November 16, 09 01:25 PM
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uhh, is it me or does #16 look more like boiled chicks than boiled eggs????

Posted by Anonymous November 16, 09 01:29 PM
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If you could get Leprosy from people on the subway- trust me - there would be a bit of hubbub.
And hey- not even talking about the slim chance of fatality.
I have sick elderly parents so ANY flu would be a problem. And who can afford to be out of work for a week with the flu.
So people are wearing masks. They are still going out and they aren't screaming, tearing their hair out in the streets. This is a highly preventable illness. What's wrong with doing what you can to avoid it?

Posted by Mrs.Meh November 16, 09 01:30 PM
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Think about 4 million deaths globally from cigarettes each year, or what about the complications of drug resistant Tuberculosis. This H1N1 is a bit over done.

Posted by Mark in Austin Texas November 16, 09 01:31 PM
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The masks don't work to KEEP you from getting the flu, just from spreading it. And the stats on that are iffy at best. So, yeah, don't waste your money on masks or garlic for crying out loud. Wash you hands and stay home.

Posted by jr November 16, 09 01:36 PM
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Overhyped disease. This is just a flu. Go to the doctor, take your medicine and get over it.

Posted by Leandro November 16, 09 01:41 PM
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i hope H1N1 scare is over soon

Posted by Anonymous November 16, 09 01:47 PM
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I love that Afghanistan's only known pig was quarantined though.....

Posted by C November 16, 09 01:48 PM
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I have actually been wrapping myself in bubble wrap everyday to prevent from getting H1N1. Unfortunately I have spent a small fortune in bubble wrap and some people have said I look ridiculous. But I haven't gotten sick yet!

Posted by Someone who is "sick" of swine flu November 16, 09 02:16 PM
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This illness has been ridiculously sensationalized.

Going by deaths this year, you're 300 times more likely to die from diarrhea than swine flu.

Posted by kylegetsspam November 16, 09 02:25 PM
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Lol, H1N1 seems to be everywhere except in France =P)

Posted by Joris November 16, 09 02:31 PM
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Don't blink, or you will miss the pandemic.

Posted by dean November 16, 09 02:34 PM
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anyone know what the gas is in pic ten in the classroom?

Posted by arp November 16, 09 02:46 PM
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I got this H1N1 last July, and it was like a normal flu, but with more fever and cough. Nothing to worry about, I was ok after 4 or 5 days

Posted by Andre November 16, 09 02:47 PM
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Is anybody else besides me surprised that virtually none of the people administering the shots are wearing GLOVES?! What ever happened to universal precautions???

Posted by Chloe-OBrien November 16, 09 02:50 PM
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This is the Boston Globe so I'll chime in with "What about all those cute little baby chicks they killed to get the vaccine?" ;-)

Nice to see some people getting vaccinated... you sure don't see that in our neck of the woods in central Massachusetts.

Posted by Richard Head November 16, 09 03:00 PM
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The whole h1n1 ordeal has been poorly managed. There weren't enough vaccines available at a critical time, the doctors don't prescribe tamiflu so more people end up in the hospital swamping the emergency rooms across the country. No, these people are not "faking" their symptoms: they've been pretty sick with a very high fever for a few days and they are not getting better.
It's not the flu that kills! It's the complications to the flu, such as pneumonia, that kills. A person's immune system is ravaged by the intense battle against the flu, leaving a person vulnerable to other germs or nosocomial infections.

Posted by michelle November 16, 09 03:10 PM
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What happened to the awareness of aids, std's and other much wider spread healthproblems? it seems, at least in my country the Netherlands that no attention is given to more serious problems.

when any Dutch politician speaks about,and advices to take the vaccine, I can't help to notice the hidden agenda of companies selling this vaccine.

Posted by Mathijs van Houten November 16, 09 03:13 PM
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#11 is a very good foto. The girl on the left feels the other girl's paín.

Posted by flipflop November 16, 09 03:15 PM
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wow nice piccs you got over there , but i ,too,think its a little to much.
here at the Netherlands everyone is scared too but strange enough ( i work at a older-home) i see a lot of people but i didn't see anyone sick with the H1N1-virus,or is it because its just like the 'normal' flu? ;)

Posted by anna November 16, 09 03:24 PM
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overkill... in california of the 13,000 reported cases of swine flu only 2% turned out to be true cases of swine flu.

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/10/21/cbsnews_investigates/main5404829.shtml

Posted by Sergiu November 16, 09 03:24 PM
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The vaccine is made from chicken eggs? Sounds good enough to me. Sign me up!

Posted by Joel November 16, 09 03:25 PM
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That's just ridiculous! It just seems that like this everybody forgot about economy crisis, we have other distractions, it's fun!
I want too a gas mask! just in case of I will get some stupidity!!!

Posted by Alexandra November 16, 09 03:35 PM
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Anonymous@14: "uhh, is it me or does #16 look more like boiled chicks than boiled eggs????"

It's both, actually. Flu vaccine is manufactured using *fertilized* chicken eggs. (It has to be whole cells; an unfertilized egg is only half a cell and won't work for replicating the virus.) So there are indeed chicken embryos inside those boiled eggs. Kinda like a balut (a boiled fertilized egg, considered a delicacy in some parts of the world).

Posted by Calli Arcale November 16, 09 03:36 PM
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The sky is falling - the sky is falling.

NOT

Posted by Jake November 16, 09 03:56 PM
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#35 really glad someone else asked that. Yep looked like balut.

Posted by Anonymous November 16, 09 04:14 PM
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that poor pig looks dead already...

Posted by jen November 16, 09 04:23 PM
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Number 3 is my wallpaper now. Thanks

Posted by wojtek ptak November 16, 09 04:42 PM
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That looks serious!

Posted by ashley November 16, 09 05:18 PM
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The vaccine isn't MADE from chicken eggs, that's where they incubate it

Posted by Torrey November 16, 09 05:28 PM
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Mandatory, mandatory! Prepare for the mandatory. What´s wrong with all the people. Do we love fear?

Posted by Marcin November 16, 09 05:57 PM
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Can't believe the Drive thru... Only in the Americas...

Take your vitamins!

Posted by B Bixby November 16, 09 07:04 PM
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Ooh, can't we just eat the fertilized eggs then, instead of getting stung by a big needle? I hate needles.

@21: I have not been wrapping myself in anything, and still did not get it :). This swine flu is overrated. It is ridiculous what people do just because they believe what others tell them to.

Wonderful pictures, however. I love # 9 - pathetic, 11, 14, and 29- unbelievably hilarious!

Posted by Laura November 16, 09 07:06 PM
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Those aren't chicken eggs, not like you'd buy at the store. They're chicken embryos. Chicken embryos are very, very commonly used to test and develop vaccines, not just H1N1 vaccines or flu vaccines in general.

I had H1N1 a couple of weeks ago. It was almost exactly like regular flu and lasted for about 5-6 days. I stayed home while I was sick, and so none of my coworkers got sick. The hype is kind of ... hype-ish. I didn't particularly ENJOY having the flu or anything, but mono was worse.

Posted by sabend November 16, 09 07:25 PM
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It's not over-hyped, not over publicized, and officials are not making too big a deal out of this. If it were to become what it might, and kill tens – or hundreds – of millions of people, the complainers here would be the first to prattle on about not enough having been done to prevent disaster.

The REAL tragedy most likely is though some precautions are ridiculous (gas masks and protecting dogs), there's a good chance reasonable measures will prevent a pandemic. Then you can bet the very same critics will start to bellyache about wasted resources.

Stalin once said, "The death of one man is a tragedy. The death of millions is a statistic." You can't stat thinking of people as statistics, or too many will slip through the holes in the safety net.

Posted by Eric November 16, 09 08:38 PM
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The word pandemic is getting a bad reputation. There are three specific criterias that explain the term:
1) a disease NEW to the population
2) an infection causing SERIOUS (not deadly) illness to humans
3) the ability to SPREAD EASILY from person to person

PEOPLE may be confusing this word and its meaning with EPIDEMIC.

Posted by Phyllis November 16, 09 08:52 PM
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It's too bad the flu vaccine doesn't even work.

http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200911/brownlee-h1n1

“The estimate of 50 percent mortality reduction is based on “cohort studies,” which compare death rates in large groups, or cohorts, of people who choose to be vaccinated, against death rates in groups who don’t. But people who choose to be vaccinated may differ in many important respects from people who go unvaccinated—and those differences can influence the chance of death during flu season. Education, lifestyle, income, and many other “confounding” factors can come into play, and as a result, cohort studies are notoriously prone to bias.”

“In 2004, for example, vaccine production fell behind, causing a 40 percent drop in immunization rates. Yet mortality did not rise. In addition, vaccine “mismatches” occurred in 1968 and 1997: in both years, the vaccine that had been produced in the summer protected against one set of viruses, but come winter, a different set was circulating. In effect, nobody was vaccinated. Yet death rates from all causes, including flu and the various illnesses it can exacerbate, did not budge.”

Read the article for yourselves. I'm not going to categorically dismiss the value of all vaccines, but maybe it is time to start investigating the science behind the claims. You be the judge of whether or not the CDC and WHO are ever worth trusting again.

Posted by Jerry Edison November 16, 09 10:16 PM
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It's easy to say that H1N1 is over sensationalized and that people who were infected got through it fine. I'm sure those sentiments will change when someone you know and cares for gets it and dies.
Precaution is a better deterrent but get vaccinated anyway just in case.
No one can predict how many people will get infected or get sick and die, but if the virus mutates to deadlier strain like the 1918 Spanish flu, no one will pan how over hyped it is then.
There are a lot of people who died from this strain already and I'm sure the families of those who died wished there was a vaccine last year.
So I hope people who read this blogs don't get dissuaded from getting the vaccine especially if they are in the high risk group.

Posted by Jon November 17, 09 12:05 AM
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#37 is great

Posted by G Emmanuel November 17, 09 12:36 AM
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Two words for the alarmists:
BIRD.
FLU.

Posted by Stephen November 17, 09 12:44 AM
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Come on people, its like wearing your seat belt, you never know when somethings going to hit you. I don't like wearing my seat belt but guess what, I was involve in a very bad accident and the seat belt help save my life.

That pretty much what a vaccine is for. Just in case! Better be safe than sorry. Get a shot if you want, don't get a shot if you don't want. No one is forcing you to have one. Of course if it mutates and starts killing people in the millions, I'm sure the governments will force you to have a shot.

Posted by Peter November 17, 09 02:02 AM
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I'm surprised at the number of comments saying it's no big deal.

That's the point. It's a highly unstable virus, unlike the seasonal flu, and has a great potential to mutant and become highly fatal, especially if it mixes with the also unstable H5N1. The point of all of the vaccinations is to try to limit the spread so that it doesn't have a chance to turn into a highly fatal virus and cause another epidemic like in 1918 which killed 3% of the worlds population. The 1918 epidemic started off with a small rate of infection, but blew up and caused 50 million deaths... and that in a time without quick, long distance transportation like planes.

Yes, it's based on possibilities, but think of it like asteroid impacts. Wouldn't you rather have a preventative program in place than get hit unexpected?

Posted by Arlo November 17, 09 02:18 AM
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#13 was just a joke in order to show disrespect to our government who tries to use the situation in their favour before winter presidential elections. they even have bought uncertified medicine from Malasia. Now u see the difference between the level of their concern about people and own interests.

Just a pure disgrace from them
If only it was possible for all of them to lose this time((

Posted by Theo November 17, 09 04:25 AM
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Yeah go Serbs we all know garlic is cure-all. Besides you can only smell it if you're not using it so go ahed, knock yourself out :-)

Posted by Dimitrije November 17, 09 04:58 AM
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if,like those who have come out of the pandemic said,the flu is not so dangerous,then i don't understand why people even bother to take the vaccine.i feel natural medicines are better and safer,like in #8,though it is a little funny.

Posted by why even take the vaccine November 17, 09 06:54 AM
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i learned from many people that vaccine is a greater threat than flu itself

Posted by SK November 17, 09 07:09 AM
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H1N1 is the new SARS

Posted by Dan November 17, 09 07:34 AM
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Cute nurse in #5. Just sayin.

Posted by Nursefan November 17, 09 09:41 AM
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what is with this media circus?

WHO states - and has done for the last year - that 5,000 kids under the age of 2 definitely die from lack of clean water each week.

Posted by edith hughes November 17, 09 10:39 AM
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#22 city name should read "Daejeon", not "Deajeon"

Posted by Jerome Pinot November 17, 09 11:02 AM
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Great collection. People are getting creative even during a pandemic, it says somewhere that humor can safe people from the worst. How to post the link on other sites, I mean from the copy write perspective.
Thanks

Posted by Sandu November 17, 09 11:19 AM
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I'm sorry to say there are so many ignorant people! They basically say, "don't get a vaccine, you'll be fine!". I guess these same people have multiple medical degree's to give such excellent advice.
Lunacy if you ask me!
The idea of a vaccine is to prevent massive transmission of the virus and to keep it from mutating to another strain.

Then there are those who sites the "Bird Flu" as another example of over hype disease. For the most part, the infected people were quarantined and treated before it had a chance to circulate. That's what all of this is for! Precaution and Prevention!
Apparently people forget about the AID's virus which killed at least 25 million people since 1981 and still killing people today and they still haven't found a decent vaccine for that. And NO, its not just a gay diseases, women and children are casualties too. Although the transmission medium is different, had there been a vaccine before 1981, the number of death would have been less.

If you're perfectly healthy and don't want to get the vaccine, then don't!
But a large number of the population (doesn't matter where you are) are susceptible to catching the virus and it's prudent to get the vaccine especially those with breathing problems.
I wonder if those people who advocates not taking the vaccines are doctors or medical researchers because the write as if they are expert in virology.
Probably not.

Posted by Peter M November 17, 09 12:12 PM
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# 8, Well if you eat garlic raw your really won't get the virus 'cause no one is coming close to you!
I guess this is one way of getting the people of the world together.
Nice pictures! So, when are people going to turn into zombies?
Lighten up people! Get vaccinated, Don't get vaccinated it's really your choice.
besides I heard the world will end on December 21, 2012! Nostradamus and the Mayan said so!
If you live through the epidemic/pandemic and somehow live through the end of the word, send me an e-mail, we'll have a block party!

Posted by Samuel November 17, 09 12:33 PM
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Many people would think twice if they worked in the hospitals that see H1N1! Many previously healthy people are on ventilators with maximum support! Everyone thinks they know it all...everyone says "I never thought it would happen to me or my family" Well, to that I say "you were warned".

Posted by Heather Davenport November 17, 09 12:39 PM
.

Alle Bilder sind gut beobachtete Situationen.

Posted by Willie Wacker November 17, 09 01:25 PM
.

LOL @ Number 11

Posted by Anonymous November 17, 09 02:27 PM
.

Wow, what is it about attempting to contain and prevent a disease that brings out all the hysterical, shrieking denialist nutjobs? There, there, you got your attention, sweeties. It's okay; the big bad photo essay can't hurt you. Time to climb back in your cribs and take a nice nap...

Posted by Brody November 17, 09 04:14 PM
.

The pig from Kabul seems to laugh with amusement ;-)

Posted by TFWC November 17, 09 06:06 PM
.

"Quote" I'm disgusted by the panic created to sell this untested vaccine.

With a little bit of research (independent of the popular media) it's easy to see that there are ulterior motives behind the H1N1 scare. "Quote"


Oh, you mean THAT kind of research? Haha! Oh, sweet irony..

Posted by Saganist November 17, 09 06:31 PM
.

# 17, Wrong!!! bad, very bad idea!

Posted by Salvador Mtz B November 17, 09 10:17 PM
.

That guy with a gas mask in #13 is riding a tram, not a bus.
Otherwise, impressive as always, keep the good work BG!

Posted by Schmouddle November 18, 09 07:24 AM
.

the bigger concern of health authorities is the fact that there could be a more massive outbreak as was the case with sars.pray to God that doesnot happen.

Posted by the bigger scare November 18, 09 08:01 AM
.

Re: #29
What is a Chinese dog doing wearing an FBI jacket, nevermind the mask?

Posted by Rebecca November 18, 09 08:56 PM
.

Lord Have Mercy !!! What a world !!!

Posted by bobby November 20, 09 05:17 AM
.

I work for a pharmaceutical company. I work in CIS. I think the media has unncessarily exaggerated it. I am taking simple precautions, but working in polyclinics and hospitals everyday. We should pacify panic and fear.

Posted by Krishan Dutt Sharma. November 20, 09 09:54 AM
.

What a great collection.
Totally on topic, lots of different perspectives.

Posted by OldUncleMe November 20, 09 11:26 AM
.

It's unfortunate that this world is filled with lots of ignorant people ... and they are the ones who may die, and not from H1N1, but from the next FLU virus that will come around later in the season. H1N1 vaccine contains SQUALENE, an adjuvant (a substance that may cause your immune system go into a "hyper-drive" and to viciously attack not only the viruses, but its own cells). Oh and by the way, the use of SUQALENE has not been approved in the US. FDA has never put it on the list of "safe" medicine. Again, for those that may not have gotten what I was saying: FDA HAS NOT APPROVED THE USE OF SQUALENE IN THE US. Nevertheless, it is present in the H1N1 vaccine. Do you own research from now on. The truth is at your fingertips. Google it. Oh and by the way, after you are done with squalene, put the following search words: "Joseph Moshe". Happy reading ....

Posted by And the truth shall set you free November 20, 09 12:24 PM
.

I think Garlic is a better choice than a shot of containing mercury. Plus its delicious! It's both antibacterial and antiviral.

Posted by Aaron November 20, 09 03:56 PM
.

Entirely agree, garlic is the solution and better choice than a shot of containing mercury. Great answer! Way to go!

Posted by Esther November 20, 09 06:12 PM
.

Next time you hear of someone who is scared of a vaccine, ask them what they'd do if they got bitten by a rapid animal.

Trying surviving rabies without a vaccine, see how far you get. Garlic isn't too effective...

Posted by LV November 21, 09 12:08 AM
.

The scary thing is that swine flu can kill people with money!

It doesn't matter if poor people die of leprosy, but if people with money die it is a real tragedy.

Yes this isn't meant to be taken literally.

Posted by Matt November 21, 09 12:42 AM
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