Scary new H7N9 bird flu strain leaps from China to Taiwan; human transmission already achieved?(NaturalNews) The H7N9 bird flu strain is on the rise, having already
killed 22 people in China while infecting 108. That's a kill rate of 20%
-- among the highest ever witnessed in a bird flu strain. It has also
spread outside of China, infecting a Taiwan national who brought the
infection back to Taiwan and now
rests in critical condition in a Taiwan hospital.
Health
authorities in the region haven't yet said this strain of bird flu has
achieved human-to-human transmission, but it seems increasingly likely
that such a trait either already exists or will develop very quickly.
That's because the virus has been spreading among chickens
without any symptoms showing.
It doesn't make the chickens sick, in other words, allowing chickens to
be "stealth carriers" of a virus that can easily leap to unsuspecting
humans.
H7N9 is a "triple reassortment" virus that combines
genetic code from three different flu virus strains. This makes it
"...one of the most lethal influenza viruses that we've seen so far,"
said Keiji Fukuda,
the assistant director-general for health security with the World
Health Organization. "This is an unusually dangerous virus for humans."
Because
the virus can quietly spread among non-symptomatic chickens, hundreds
more people have almost certainly already been infected with it. In the
coming weeks, we will likely see yet more victims hospitalized and
killed by H7N9.
Human-to-human transmission already achieved?As
Yahoo News reports, WHO's China representative Michael O'Leary has released figures showing that half the people infected with H7N9 had
no contact with poultry.
If true, this would be strong evidence that
H7N9 has already achieved "human-to-human transmission," turning it into a
"nightmare influenza" that might already be spreading across the
population. That status is not proven yet, however, and more observation
is needed before such a conclusion could be substantiated.
"If H7N9 were to stably adapt to humans, it would probably meet with little or no human immunity," writes Peter Horby from
Nature.com.
"Detecting and tracking a partially human-adapted H7N9 virus in a city
as vast as Shanghai or Beijing would be difficult; tracking a fully
adapted virus would be impossible. And it could easily spread nationally
and internationally. Eastern
China is now one of the most 'connected' population centers in the world.
Seventy per cent of the global population outside China lives within two
hours of an airport linked to the outbreak regions by a direct flight
or a single connection (see go.nature.com/tvfev8). Travel restrictions
or border screening will not contain pandemic influenza for long."
Beware of the vaccine hypeOf
course, we all have a right to be skeptical about any bird flu fear
mongering. We know that both the WHO and the CDC routinely hype
infectious disease for the primary purpose of
pushing vaccine sales.
The
WHO famously declared a "stage six pandemic" in the last influenza
outbreak, and only later did we learn that most of the decision makers
at WHO were
receiving financial kickbacks from vaccine manufacturers.
For
all we know, in fact, it's the vaccine companies that are actually
developing and releasing these bioweapons in China in order to sell more
vaccines. That exact scenario has already been described by a Chinese
colonel...
Is H7N9 a U.S. government bioweapon?Colonel Dai Xu of the People's Liberation Army said in early April that H7N9 was a
bio-psychological weapon engineered by western powers and released in China in order to
destabilize the region. His comments were dismissed by the Chinese
government, but behind the scenes many people think he may be correct.
We
already know, for example, that the U.S. Army routinely works on
developing deadly new strains of influenza as part of its bioweapons
research. This is not disputed. It's also true that
bioweapons have gone missing from U.S. government laboratories, including the
Galveston National Laboratory in Texas.
So
the idea that a biological weapon developed by the U.S. government
might find its way to China is not as far-fetched as it might first
seem.
There's also the fact that the U.S. and China are already
at war in many covert ways. China routinely steals U.S. military
secrets, for example, and the U.S. is openly engaged in an aggressive
currency war that's hurting China. Meanwhile, China is playing "debt war games" with
America's debt holdings, even while the U.S. is eroding the value of
that debt through a process of
currency creation via the Fed.
There's
a lot more going on behind the scenes than you'll ever find reported on
CNN, and the idea that this may have entered the realm of bioweapons
isn't unreasonable. Besides, a pandemic also serves the interests of the
state, because any time there's a panic, most people instinctively look
to government to save them.
Source:-
http://www.naturalnews.com/040059_H7N9_bird_flu_China.html