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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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To: neolib who wrote (213265)12/13/2004 1:41:03 AM
From: Amy J  Read Replies (1) of 1577651
 
neolib, a flu pandemic would change that unfortunately.

mercurynews.com

Specter of deadly flu pandemic fails to alarm government

By Dan Gillmor

Mercury News Technology Columnist

Suppose we knew that terrorists were about to launch a biological weapon that would kill somewhere between 10 million and 100 million people, maybe more.

Suppose, further, that we knew of ways to limit the damage and prevent many of those deaths because we had detailed medical knowledge of the type of biological threat we were facing -- even if we couldn't create a precisely targeted antidote or vaccine ahead of time.

Now imagine that the U.S. government was making only modest preparations -- that we were in key ways leaving the matter to a greedy pharmaceutical industry that has botched its handling of a similar but much milder hazard.

It's true.

Sometime in the fairly near future, a deadly flu pandemic will sweep the globe. It almost certainly will be a variant on the avian influenza (often called the ``bird flu'') that has already claimed several dozen lives in Asia and to which few humans have immunity.
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