this is madness now…

Quake strikes near Acapulco, Mexico

updated 14 minutes ago

MEXICO CITY, Mexico (CNN) – A strong quake measuring 6.0 in magnitude struck southwestern Mexico near the resort city of Acapulco on Monday, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

USGS measured the quake’s epicenter in the state of Guerrero about 43 miles northeast of Acapulco. The preliminary magnitude is 6.0, but that could change.

Authorities in Acapulco evacuated hotels there, although there were no reports of damage, according to CNN affiliate TV Azteca.

The temblor was felt about 145 miles (230 km) to the north in Mexico City.

CNN Producer Lonzo Cook, who is in the Mexican capital, said people there headed out into the streets after a vibration shook the building for about 30 to 40 seconds. There was no visible damage, he said.

“People in neighboring office buildings — quite a majority of them wearing masks because of the swine flu outbreak — were piling out into the streets,” Cook said. “There were a few humorous people on the stairways saying, ‘This is the apocalypse. First the swine flu, and now this.’ “

However, most people were in “high spirits,” Cook said.

Gupta: Swine flu affecting people in prime

updated 1 hour, 32 minutes ago

MEXICO CITY, Mexico (CNN) — CNN chief medical correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta has gone to Mexico, the apparent epicenter of the swine flu outbreak where more than 100 people have died in suspected cases.

CNN’s Dr. Sanjay Gupta, reporting outside a Mexico City hospital, says people can’t get swine flu by eating pork.

With governments scrambling to prevent further outbreak, Gupta appeared Monday on CNN to address people’s concerns.

CNN: We got a question that comes to us over Twitter. This question, “I heard that you can’t contract swine flu from eating pork. Is that true? If so, why? Does cooking or curing pork destroy the virus?”

Gupta: It is true. You cannot catch it from eating the pork. And it is true that cooking it to a certain temperature, around 160 degrees, also inactivates most of the pathogens in the pork as well.

Also keep in mind, this is mainly an airborne thing or something that lives on inanimate objects, so people touch the virus, then they touch their mouth, they touch their nose, they touch their eyes. That seems to be the most common mode of transmission.

CNN: Another question that we have we haven’t gotten to, actually, which is an important question, also on Twitter. “If a person has had the flu shot this year, is he or she protected? Does this person have a better chance of getting it, or would it just be a milder case?” Thank you.

That’s from John Martin in Rome, New York. So what’s the answer, doc?

Gupta: Well, it doesn’t appear that the flu shot really offers much in the way of protection, although it may offer some, and here’s why.

This particular virus seems to be a combination of several different strains: two strains of swine flu, one strain of bird flu and one strain of human flu. It’s the human flu that that flu shot may protect slightly against. So you’re protecting against a part of the virus if that makes any sense.

But it’s a very good idea to get your flu shot, for sure. Always think about that. But in terms of protecting for swine flu, it’s not going to be enough.

CNN: We’ve got another question … via Twitter this morning. And this is a question, of course, everybody is wanting to know the answer to: “Could this strain get out of control and mutate into something similar to the 1918 pandemic?”

Gupta: Well, when you look at pandemics, they have several different qualities. They’re usually a virus or some sort of pathogen the world has never seen before. They cause a lot of death, and they’re sustainable in populations. We know that this is a new virus.

It is very hard to figure out just how deadly this is yet. We know that over 100 people have died here in Mexico, but we don’t know out of how many people who got sick. There are about 1,300 people who had serious illness, but there may be thousands more who had mild illness who never went to the hospital. So it’s hard to tell how lethal this is.

So, you know, on one hand, in 1918, you didn’t have global air travel. Nowadays, you do. So this virus can move around the world a lot faster. But right now, it doesn’t seem like it’s as lethal. You know, it’s just early in this whole process to be able to tell.

CNN: Sanjay, one question that we haven’t gotten to … most of the people who died from swine flu in Mexico were in the prime of their lives really, and this usually hits infants or the elderly. What does that say to you as a doctor?

Gupta: This is interesting. And the same thing happened in sort of a nonintuitive way when we were talking about SARS and when we were talking about avian flu.

Think about it like this: Typically, you think of someone who has a weakened immune system, who’s going to be most adversely affected by an infection. Their immune system simply can’t fight it.

But in these cases, it’s the immune system itself that reacts robustly, and it’s the immune system in that reaction to the virus that is causing death in these patients. So the virus starts that cascade, but all that fluid builds up in the lungs, and all those inflammatory cells throughout the body — that’s what’s causing the problem. We saw the same thing with SARS and with avian flu as well.

Which is why exactly as you said … [people in their] 20s and 30s and 40s, this hospital behind me, they say that’s been the bulk of their patients with regard to swine flu.

CNN: You know, Sanjay, everybody knows that you’re the sort of doctor that gets out there in the thick of things whenever something happens around the world — any kind of public health emergency or disaster. And you’re there in Mexico City, and a lot of people at home might be thinking, why the heck would Dr. Gupta want to go to a place where there’s disease outbreak. What are you doing to protect yourself?

Gupta: Well, we are trying to — you know, we’re clearly being very cautious here. We’re not taking any chances. These masks can be helpful. But, you know, this is going to sound simple, but simply washing our hands. This is a virus that lives on keyboards, lives on money. We don’t shake hands with people. That’s the way it’s probably being spread, and that’s what we’re trying to avoid.

But this is where it started. If we figure out what happened here, we may figure out what happened in the rest of the world.


1 Comments

  1. David, April 27, 2009:

    You realize this is just a mutation of the Burgosian flu. Its striking mexico 1st since George made me cross back on the rio grande

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