Cookiely wrote:fact789 wrote:Hillsborough county, FL now has 6 confirmed cases. Manatee has 1, and Sarasota, Co has 2. All confirmed newly today.
A friend of mine went to Borders to get his mom a gift card for Mothers Day, He has allergies and coughed into his hand. A man that was in the cafe came running over and cursing at him. He had a young child and my friend didn't want to continue the cursing but he has this wierd sense of humor and coughed on purpose and didn't cover his mouth. The man had a mask around his neck and not over his face and was acting really wierd so my friend went and notified the manager. Paranoia and hardly any disease. I can't imagine how people are going to react if and when their is a pandemic. Will we be assaulted or lynched for coughing or sneezing in the grocery store?
Wow, I'm amazed to hear of people still freaking out over this. Nobody I've encountered in Texas is at all concerned about this anymore. It was scary for a time when the disease was new and seemed to be both spreading and killing very quickly, but now we're mostly concerned with ongoing flooding.
Apparently a rather major outbreak is occurring in the Chicago area, as Illinois and Wisconsin far and away have more cases confirmed than any other states (including the inital vectors of California, Texas, or New York) Also, three more deaths have been confirmed - one in Costa Rica, one in Alberta, and one in Washington State. All of them apparently involved pre-existing medical conditions.
Countries where H1N1 seems to be spreading human-to-human based on the number of cases: (per Wikipedia)
Mexico - 2,062 confirmed cases
USA - 2,883 confirmed cases
Canada - 330 confirmed cases
Spain - 98 confirmed cases
UK - 65 confirmed cases
27 other countries have confirmed 15 or fewer cases of swine flu.
Every U.S. state except Mississippi, North Dakota, West Virginia, Wyoming, and Alaska have confirmed cases, notably:
Illinois - 487 confirmed cases
Wisconsin - 414 confirmed cases
Texas - 208 confirmed cases
New York - 196 confirmed cases
California - 193 confirmed cases
Arizona - 186 confirmed cases
Washington - 176 confirmed cases
Michigan - 135 confirmed cases
The rest are below 100 according to the Wikipedia chart which used several references, including but clearly not limited to this one...
http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/update.htmI wonder, if H1N1 had turned out to be more serious, could and would we have done a better job of containing it? Despite the initial precautions, it's basically spreading unchecked out from every city with a major airport, particularly the Chicago/Milwaukee metro area.