Swine Flu Crisis Involves Huge Health Controversy and Probably Another Cover-up

Wayne Parsons
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Posted by Wayne ParsonsApril 27, 2009 2:11 PM

In my first article on the new Swine Flu scare I didn't realize that this connection with pigs, Swine Flu, MRSA and C.Diff has been raging among corporate interests, their cadre of hired-gun veterinarians and those concerned about public health (as opposed to greed and profits). My article Health Alert For Hawaii: Is The New Swine Flu A Threat To The Islands? was just the beginning. Now I learn that an international cover-up is in progress over this issue and that veterinarians have been bribed to give false health certificates for pigs. I also have learned that an American pig farmer was infected with Swine Fever when his pig herd was culled in 2000 - he is still suffering - and it turned out that his pigs were not sick. Bizarre? You bet. John Grisham kind of stuff. Too crazy to believe. But now the world shudders in the shadow of a pandemic. Wash your hands and read on.

So what is Swine Fever, and is it different from Swine Flu? What are Zoonotic diseases and what is MRSA and C.Diff?

Swine Flu: "Swine Influenza (swine flu) is a respiratory disease of pigs caused by type A influenza viruses that causes regular outbreaks in pigs. People do not normally get swine flu, but human infections can and do happen. Swine flu viruses have been reported to spread from person-to-person, but in the past, this transmission was limited and not sustained beyond three people."

Swine Fever: Classical swine fever (CSF) or hog cholera (also sometimes called pig plague based on the German word Schweinepest) is a highly contagious disease of pigs and wild boar. Swine fever causes fever, skin lesions, conclusions and usually (particularly in young animals) death within 15 days. The symptoms are indistinguishable from those of African swine fever.

MRSA: Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is caused by Staphylococcus aureus bacteria — often called "staph." It's a strain of staph that's resistant to the broad-spectrum antibiotics commonly used to treat it. MRSA can be fatal. Most MRSA infections occur in hospitals or other health care settings, such as nursing homes and dialysis centers. It's known as health care-associated MRSA, or HA-MRSA. Older adults and people with weakened immune systems are at most risk of HA-MRSA. More recently, another type of MRSA has occurred among otherwise healthy people in the wider community. This form, community-associated MRSA, or CA-MRSA, is responsible for serious skin and soft tissue infections and for a serious form of pneumonia.

C.Diff: Clostridium difficile, often called C. difficile or "C. diff," is a bacterium that can cause symptoms ranging from diarrhea to life-threatening inflammation of the colon. Illness from C. difficile most commonly affects older adults in hospitals or in long term care facilities and typically occurs after use of antibiotic medications. In recent years, C. difficile infections have become more frequent, more severe and more difficult to treat. Each year, tens of thousands of people in the United States get sick from C. difficile, including some otherwise healthy people who aren't hospitalized or taking antibiotics.

So what's the connection to food safety and our health with C. Diff? According to an MSNBC Report:

A potentially deadly intestinal germ increasingly found in hospitals is also showing up in a more unsavory setting: grocery store meats.

More than 40 percent of packaged meats sampled from three Arizona chain stores tested positive for Clostridium difficile, a gut bug known as C. diff., according to newly complete analysis of 2006 data collected by a University of Arizona scientist.

Nearly 30 percent of the contaminated samples of ground beef, pork and turkey and ready-to-eat meats like summer sausage were identical or closely related to a super-toxic strain of C. diff blamed for growing rates of illness and death in the U.S. — raising the possibility that the bacterial infections may be transmitted through food.

Oh, yes and then there is the term "Zoonotic Disease".

Zoonotic diseases are those diseases caused by infectious agents that can be transmitted between (or are shared by) animals and humans.

You'll find a lot about Zoonotic disease at veterinary websites.

And finally "Circovirus": Circoviruses are very small non-enveloped icosahedral viruses with a single stranded circular DNA genome. They have been described in pigs (porcine circovirus, PCV), chickens (chicken anemia virua, ChAV), psittacines (psittacine beak and feather disease virus, PBFD) and pigeons. The virus targets the lymphoid tissue and causes immunosuppression in the host.Circoviruses are the smallest pathogenic DNA viruses that have been identified and characterized in animals.

Ever hear of The GARDINER HYPOTHESIS?

Mutated Circovirus in pigs, the consequences of being treated with heavy use of antibiotics, is followed by MRSA in pigs and then MRSA and C.Diff epidemics take off in humans. A circovirus mutation in Britain in 1999 was covered up. The resulting epidemics spread first around the UK, then to Canada and from there, most recently, to the United States.

Mr. Gardiner is a crusader for truth in this complex health issue:

The people most likely to be handling animals other than their owners are likely to be the vets treating them, often for routine procedures.

The people most likely to be giving the pets and their owners MRSA are veterinarians.

Several series of tests have been taken at veterinary conferences. The results?

Vets, especially livestock vets, carry MRSA in disproportionate numbers. The vets, themselves creditably, although not in Britain,have provided the evidence.

Which is why the Dutch and other Continental European countries target veterinarians for special testing and decontamination at the hospital door. They want to stop them spreading it to other patients under their "Search and Destroy" regime, lately adopted by one private hospital in Dublin.

Alas, that bright bit of spin that pets are the problem has hit the floor at great speed. And worse for the vets, the full consequences are yet to be played out.

There is lot going on here. A knowledgeable source who has been in the middle of this for many years writes:

So, what is the truth? We should find out in the next few days. American officials are reported to be in Mexico and in the pig farms. Vets true, but they can hardly hide up sick pigs in large numbers in such a serious situation, so we should, get reliable reports on the health status of Mexican pigs. The big question is just what do we do if the pigs are sick with Swine Fever. Neither hospitals or pig farms worldwide can face another onslaught of zoonotic disease and the inevitable mutations.

Let's hope the news is hopeful, but more importantly that it is truthful and factual.

22 Comments

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Pat Gardiner
Posted by Pat Gardiner
April 27, 2009 3:04 PM

I'm deeply honoured to be labeled an "American" but as you can see from my spelling, I'm actually English (or Irish if you like.)

I have a long association with the USA, being a former maritime military agent for what is now Sealift Command - and an agent for the once great United States Lines amongst others at Britain's premier seaport of Felixstowe

I have a deep affection for your country and even drove across America in 2005, whilst recovering from pancreatic cancer, to try to warn your authorities of the gathering pig health storm.

That was before Homeland Security, so I guess they did not listen seriously to an old war colleague rambling on about protecting the prairies from pig disease.

So, I'm really glad that even late, you are getting the story from an old friend that prayed for you to come alive to a new threat.

God Bless America. Keep your prairies clean


Pat Gardiner

Pat Gardiner
Posted by Pat Gardiner
April 27, 2009 3:15 PM

That should read "cold war colleague" not "old war colleague."

I might feel a bit battered lately, but I'm not that old.

Pat

Wayne ParsonsInjuryBoard Attorney Member
Posted by Wayne Parsons
April 27, 2009 3:21 PM

My mistake. At this point you are sort of an International personality and we appreciate your efforts to get the truth out - in Europe and the United States and elsewhere. I look forward to learning more from you - and getting your insights - as this story unfolds. Thanks.

Wayne ParsonsInjuryBoard Attorney Member
Posted by Wayne Parsons
April 27, 2009 3:21 PM

My mistake. At this point you are sort of an International personality and we appreciate your efforts to get the truth out - in Europe and the United States and elsewhere. I look forward to learning more from you - and getting your insights - as this story unfolds. Thanks.

Wayne ParsonsInjuryBoard Attorney Member
Posted by Wayne Parsons
April 27, 2009 3:21 PM

My mistake. At this point you are sort of an International personality and we appreciate your efforts to get the truth out - in Europe and the United States and elsewhere. I look forward to learning more from you - and getting your insights - as this story unfolds. Thanks.

Dr Kadiyali M Srivatsa
Posted by Dr Kadiyali M Srivatsa
April 29, 2009 5:31 AM

Hi Wayne, thank you for filling in the gaps in my understanding of why and how the bacterial threat has surfaced. It is interesting to hear from a solicitor taking about corporations concealing the truth that resulted in this pandemic.

HIV was taken seriously not MRSA as a major threat in 1980s. In UK, MRSA was rapidly spreading in neonatal units. Infected babies were not even isolated and the callus attitude of nurses and doctors helped these bacteria multiply and spread. The first report of invasive CA-MRSA was reported in USA was reported in JAMA (2007 highlighted in CNN. Since then various countries have come forward to accept they have a problem. This bacteria has been spreading their plasmid and educating other bacteria to resist antibiotics. Now we have almost ten different bacteria and fungus that are resistant to treatment.

In 1980s, I noticed babies who were subjected to various practical procedures (inserting IV cannula, intubation or inserting catheters) were getting MRSA. I could not get any funding to organise studies to prove my hypothesis nor a device to compare. JAMA published information sheet in 2007, which include invasive procedure as the risk factor.

To help me prove my hypothesis, I developed two devices, tested my technique and proved we could reduce invasive practical procedures. I hoped the manufacturers would help develop new devices to help us perform practical procedures and reduce contaminated hospital waste that breed bacteria. The results of my study were published in medical journals but the cannula manufacturers did not bring in changes because they felt my technique would de-skill doctors. Unfortunately, this simple mistake has now escalated to catastrophic proportion, and difficult to manage.

When I read NHS was planning to spend billions (£) cleaning the hospitals in 2004, I wrote to CMO, Prime Minister and the health secretary this will be a wistful expense. We must clean our act and take meticulous care when we perform practical procedures. Studies published by Dept of Health, state, “They are puzzled by the findings” and now pointing their fingers at IV access & urinary catheters.

CA-MRSA is said to be colonised in sewers, rivers and soil and is said to infect healthy adults and children. One in three of us carry these bacteria in our hands and nostril. This bacteria is also said to be resistant to antiseptic lotions used to clean skin before performing blood tests, inserting needle or cannula. More than 50% of nurses who wash hands more than 10 times were found to develop dermatitis and are colonized with MRSA. Our stethoscope, swipe cards and mobile phones are colonized with CA-MRSA. White blood cells in our body cannot kill them because the bacteria is said to carry an enzyme that destroy immunoglobulins.

I feel ethically uncomfortable to subject patients to practical procedures knowing this could potentially introduce bacteria that kill the very patient we try to revive or treat.

Swine flu was first identified in 1930 as a common and sometimes fatal respiratory disease in pigs caused by type A influenza virus (H1N1). Human are said to have infected the pigs and now the virus has returned to infect humans. Influenza A (H1N1) virus resistance to oseltamivir was reported by WHO in July 2008 and has spread all over the world.

The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control said that the infection of humans with influenza 'A' virus of animal origins is a concern "because of the risk that this could represent the appearance of viruses with pandemic potential."

Swine and human H1N1 viruses are not the same, which means that seasonal flu vaccines for humans will not work against the animal variant. The impact of a new influenza pandemic has grossly been estimated at 1-2 billion cases of flu, 5-12 million cases of severe illness, and 1.5-3.5 million deaths worldwide. It could result in 1 million to 2.3 million hospitalizations and 250 000 to 650 000 deaths in industrialized nations alone.

Patients with Swine flu will have poor immune response to prevent bacterial infections. This will help entry of CA-MRSA (colonised in our nostrils) through the mucus membrane and spread rapidly to lung producing pneumonia. In hospitals, very sick patients will be subjected to practical procedures like IV drips and catheter insertion. These devices will help MRSA enter circulation resulting in invasive MRSA (severe septicaemia and death).

I feel sad to when I read about these spreading infections in our community because these major corporations could have averted this problem long time ago. Over enthusiastic protection of their medical devices and preventing advances in developing new technique has made people loose faith in doctors and is likely to end of our medical profession.

I hope the medical device and equipment manufacturers will read this and make some effort to help reduce the number of avoidable deaths.

Tom YoungInjuryBoard Staff
Posted by Tom Young
April 29, 2009 7:18 AM

So am I correct that the primary issue with the Swine Flu is the susceptibility to secondary infections that may be resistant to antibiotics? Is it not the flu that kills you but the resultant bacterial disease caused by MRSA / VRSA?

Is there any indication that the Swine Flu makes one more susceptible to secondary bacterial infection than the regular seasonal flu? Or is the issue simply the numbers involved since humans have no natural immunity to the Swine Flu? Hence more folks get sick and then are ripe for secondary bacterial infections.

I had Influenza A this year. I recovered. Was it just as likely I would get a secondary bacterial infection while fighting regular seasonal flu as it would be if I had Swine Flu?

What are the odds any secondary infection would be anti-biotic resistant? 1%? 20%? 80%? Not all staph is MRSA / VRSA right?

So secondary bacterial infections are the primary threat and staph bacteria is increasingly resistant to anti-biotics. Who is responsible for this resistance? Who or what entity(ies) should be taken to task for the explosion of MRSA / VRSA? Is it the use of antibiotics in livestock? Overuse?

Pat Gardiner
Posted by Pat Gardiner
April 29, 2009 8:00 AM

I suspect that the main issue with many virus infections is secondary bacterial infections.

That not new, but in the oft repeated true mantra "that you cannot treat viral infections with antibiotics", we lose sight of something that Charles Dickens and every ship's agent knows.

If you mix people closely together in insanitary conditions, with constant inflows of new people from elsewhere, they get ill and that renders them vulnerable to even more illness.

Every time I hear of a human health outbreak, I try to get the strain, then cross check. In almost every case pigs share not only the illness, but also the strain with humans.

Not every staph is antibiotic resistant, not every other bacteria is either, but the increasing number that are, are shared with pigs.

Ther is no doubt in my mind, having been at the epicentre of pig outbreaks of mutated MRSA, CSF, FMD and poultry in avian flu (twice) - and having seen epidemics of MRSA, C.Diff, Norovirus and others in our hospitals, intensive farming is to blame. The wild use of antibiotics, overcrowding and the constant movements around and across international boundaries of live animals is and was a recipe for disaster.

I am now extremely unpopular in livestock farming and veterinary circles in the UK. This is something that causes me great sadness, but I can live with standing up to BIG PIG and bad government.

Kids lives come first. They might even be pig farmers and veterinarian's kids.

Pat Gardiner

Dr Kadiyali M Srivatsa
Posted by Dr Kadiyali M Srivatsa
April 29, 2009 9:20 AM

Tom & Pat, you are both right about Swine flu makes you susceptible (your immune response to prevent bacterial infection is supressed) to secondary bacterial infections that kill. The odds of getting MRSA/VRSA is difficult to answer but please read this article published in Guardian More ...

It is interesting to see so many solicitors concerned with this human catastrophy. I hope I am making things clear but if you need to see medical publications and links, please visit my website.

Swine and Influenza viruses are not the same, which means that seasonal flu vaccines for humans will not work against the animal variant. The impact of a new influenza pandemic has grossly been estimated by WHO is at 1-2 billion cases of flu, 5-12 million cases of severe illness, and 1.5-3.5 million deaths worldwide. It could result in 1 million to 2.3 million hospitalizations and 250 000 to 650 000 deaths in industrialized nations alone.

The disease does not normally spread to humans, though infections were sporadically recorded, especially among people who have been directly exposed to pigs. The recent cases in Mexico and the United States, however, appear to have spread through human contact and not through pigs.

In 1918 flu pandemic - which started among soldiers and eventually killed as many as 40 million - was the result of swine flu (scientists now know it was in fact a strain of bird flu). The death of these people was not due to virus but mainly because they developed secondary bacterial (Staphylococcus aureus) infection.

This resulted in scientist to look for antibiotics. Alexander Fleming’s successfully by luck invented Penicillin to treat Staphylococcus aureus. He mentions in his speech that doctors must take care and protect the "Wonder Drug". Four years later the first strain of Penicillin resistant staphylococcus bacteria evolved.

Drug Company soon developed another antibiotic (Flucloxacillin / Methicillin) which neutralise penicillinase (enzyme) released by Staphylococcus. Now the same bacteria are resistant to various antibiotics.

The problem we have now is how we manage “Secondary Bacterial Infections” which often occur follow Swine flu. This flu does not encourage or stimulate bacterial infection but makes it easy for bacteria to enter lungs, skin or brain. If meningitis has one enzyme, MRSA has some eight enzymes that kill and is very difficult to treat because we have antibiotics that do not work.

I came across very good articles about Swine flu in Time.com and am sure you will find them interesting.

Please read my publication in medical journal, watch some video (youtube) “Medifix”. I have stated how and why staphylococcus infection increased and what the contributing factors were. Initial reports about the association of IV Cannula and catheters appeared in 1962, but the major corporations ignored this fact and did nothing about it. More ... %20Article%20in%20Medical%20Journal.pdf

I have lobbied, exhibited, spoke to various device manufacturers and religiously distributed leaflets at Medica since 2005-2008. I also met Mr Alister Darling when he was the minister of DTI in 2007 in India and explained to him the situation. So whom can I prosecute or blame? My family and I should join the crowd and hope I will not get these viral infections.

wayne parsonsInjuryBoard Attorney Member
Posted by wayne parsons
April 29, 2009 1:11 PM

Thank you Srivatsa and Mr. Gardiner. The detailed information is extremely helpful and enlightening. I hope that everyone visits your websites and learns more about the science and medicine.

More ... %20Article%20in%20Medical%20Journal.pdf

More ...

Mr Gardiner's web information is linked in the article above.

Rick ShapiroInjuryBoard Attorney Member
Posted by Rick Shapiro
May 02, 2009 7:30 AM

Wayne:
Virginia Beach Injuryboard member Shapiro here with a shoutout to you for providing great info to not only consumers, but to lawyers, and to medical professionals looking to protect their patients in the future! It is important to learn from mistakes and to help the public and medical folks control this growing health crisis.

Dr Kadiyali M Srivatsa
Posted by Dr Kadiyali M Srivatsa
May 02, 2009 12:40 PM

Prof John Oxford, of Barts and the London School of Medicine, said this H1N1 virus could mutate to make drugs or vaccines ineffective. The virus could spread to south-east Asia where it could mix with the highly virulent H5 form to create an "Armageddon" virus.

Swine flu is not stupid to start slaughtering us to start with. It looks as if the virus is testing the waters. It may die out but will soon come back with a vengeance.

Medical profession does need help from solicitors to help bring in changes. Our plea has been ignored and facts brushed under the carpet. Its not only our profession under threat but also our family and children. These infections will be the biggest occupational hazard we have ever seen,

wayne parsonsInjuryBoard Attorney Member
Posted by wayne parsons
May 02, 2009 1:32 PM

I am hearing a lot of my friends saying that they think WHO and the CDC over reacted and this was blown out of proportion. I agree with Dr. S. but how do we convince the skeptics?

Jano Soto
Posted by Jano Soto
May 03, 2009 10:37 PM

It's a great article! Congrats, I live in Puebla, MEXICO, yes, Mexico........ And I have a Brother who's a Doctor in Mexico City, and he got Swine Flu while attending patients, he's already recovered. I don't think the WHO or the CDC over reacted, because I people don't know they got this new Influenza virus they might die because of it.

wayne parsonsInjuryBoard Attorney Member
Posted by wayne parsons
May 04, 2009 2:12 AM

Jano. I am REALLY interested in what the perception of this problem is in Mexico. Glad to hear that your brother is ok. Let us know what is going on down there.

Kadiyali M Srivatsa
Posted by Kadiyali M Srivatsa
May 04, 2009 6:04 AM

Thanks Jano for joining. Nice to hear your brother is now OK. Please tell him we are getting mixed message filtered through various agencies. They are also claiming high death rate in Mexico could have been due to other causes and not related to H1N1.Please ask your brother to join us or you can let us know.

Jano Soto
Posted by Jano Soto
May 04, 2009 12:02 PM

Kadiyaly and Wayne, that's Exactly what happened, as you know only in the USA 40,000 People die each year du to estational Flu, I really don't know the numbers in Mexico but it should be pretty high to, the difference was that late april they discovered that it was a new type (mutation) of the virus. So at the begining everybody got pretty scared (with a reason) but at the same time they thought that all deads were because of this "new" virus.
Now, after the lab tests they realized that only some had H1N1 (mutated)
Let me tell you that almost all the deaths here ocurred in people that had the Flu but Didn't know it was something differet, so it took them many days to go to a Hospital, and they were already attacked agressivle by the bacteria (in other words it was to late)
As for my Brother, what can I say, is like every other time you get sick, he felt bad, had himself tested, took the tamiflu and relenza and he Got Healthy.
So, in his opinion, and mine, this is just like the estational flu, and also is not a very good killing virus, if you get it, you just take the medicine. ( I think Mexico has Medicine for 5 million)
BUT LETS NOT FORGET HOW IMPORTANT IS TO STOP THIS VIRUS FROM SPREADING, BUT AT THE SAME TIME TELL PEOPLE THAT IT NOT SO SERIOUS, HOW CAN YOU DO THAT? ITS IMPOSIBLE........ Remeber that there's a lot of ignorant people in the world, just see what happened in Egypt, And I also know of some mexicans who got "Sent Back" from Germany, just for being Mexicans.
Also here in Mexico now the same people that last week were very scared, now they believe that the whole thing is Goverments LIE (many reasons)But the main one, is that they didn't saw death people in the streets like in the movies, also they think that a little over a hundred deaths is nothing.......
I think that Mexico acted fairly well, in slowing the spread.. also the WHO and the CDS. We all have to be alert but Calm.
We don't want to be in panic, but we also don't want 10 million people sick and contagios with some of them in the hospitals needing tamiflu and relenza or facing a sure death, that's what the WHO is trying to avoid.
So you guys can be sure you will have some cases in Hawaii.
(I Love Hawaii and I will be there in a couple of weeks)
And those who get sick will get healthy 5 days after taking the medicine, easy as it is.
I hope the insight helped........

wayne parsonsInjuryBoard Attorney Member
Posted by wayne parsons
May 04, 2009 1:16 PM

Have you heard any talk in Mexico or from your brother, about the comment from Dr. Srivatsa above that "Prof John Oxford, of Barts and the London School of Medicine, said this H1N1 virus could mutate to make drugs or vaccines ineffective. The virus could spread to south-east Asia where it could mix with the highly virulent H5 form to create an "Armageddon" virus.

Swine flu is not stupid to start slaughtering us to start with. It looks as if the virus is testing the waters. It may die out but will soon come back with a vengeance."?

Jano Soto
Posted by Jano Soto
May 04, 2009 2:15 PM

Well, a lot of things can happen or may not happen, in my personal opinion those ideas are simply that "ideas"

But based in what we know, and in how the virus is acting, I think the the actions taken by the CDS, WHO and Mexican Authorities are correct, and we have to be calm no to panic or to get into those "Armageddon" ideas that can do more harm than good.

I know that Prof Oxford knows that every virus could mutate, and that's not a new thing, we've known that since long long time.

But again.......... Imagine this that's happening in the USA or in Mexico, happening in a very poor country of Africa, the outcome could result in millions of deaths......

Lou
Posted by Lou
May 13, 2009 9:57 PM

I returned from Honolulu last month and I was told that I had the virus....swine flu...however, my sister-in-law had this virus. She gave me a hug and that was the beginning of this illness..I flew back to CA and tried not coughing...so now, I am at my home in CA and I would like a suggestion to take medicine over the counter remedies ...the doctor that I usually visit, will not see me...until I am feeling better...and without a fever...what can I do for now?

Wayne ParsonsInjuryBoard Attorney Member
Posted by Wayne Parsons
May 13, 2009 11:25 PM

Hey Lou. I feel your pain. I am over my head on this one but I am going to ask readers to make suggestions. I cannot really fathom that your doctor will not see you. Did I get that right? You need to be tested and I understand that Tamiflu is effective but it is a prescription. Hey all of you out there! What is Lou to do?

Jano Soto
Posted by Jano Soto
May 14, 2009 10:30 AM

There's no other Medicine against this virus, that's why the world is in alert! Go to another Doctor inmediatly, or better to a hospital! And report that doctor, I bet he will loose his license, in Mexico if this happens by law they loose it.
Lou, TAMIFLU will get you healthy, but you have to act fast.

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