Why Is Bird Flu Of Such Concern?
With bird flu dominating the news lately, it has left many
people wondering why it is such a concern. An outbreak of a
virus in Asia may seem like it would have little impact on our
daily lives; yet many people have become obsessed with the
disease. Is it possible there may be more than meets the eye
with bird flu?
Bird Flu, also known as avian influenza, is not a new virus; it
has actually been around since the early 1900's. So why the big
scare? A particular strand of the virus, H5N1, has been
contracted by several humans, over 100 people, and led to the
death of over half of those infected. Since most of the types of
this virus only affect birds and some other animals, it was of
concern when people started contracting the disease in the first
place. Likewise, when so many people died as a result, concern
was replaced with apprehension. Now, however, an even larger
crisis may be at hand.
With the increase in the spread of the virus, many are worried
that a pandemic will start as a result - basically a global
plague sweeping across the world. Information regarding a
pandemic and other contamination issues of bird flu is available
in ebook 2 of "A Guide to Bird Flu and How to Avoid Catching
It." For a pandemic to occur, three things must take place: a
new virus must emerge, it causes serious illness in humans, and
is easily spread among humans. The first two on this list have
already taken place. This strand of the virus is new to humans
and it causes very serious illness among those infected.
However, because the virus has primarily been passed from birds
to humans, and not by human to human contact, the third
condition has not yet been fulfilled.
The concern is that, because the virus is infecting humans, it
will mutate to the point that human transmission takes place on
a wide scale. The more people it infects, the more opportunity
it has to mutate. If this should happen, containing the disease
will be almost impossible. Also, because there is little
available in the way of treatment, many people will die as a
result.
Many Americans are not concerned because the outbreaks have only
occurred in Asia at this point. However, even in Asia, the virus
is spreading rapidly. Also, with international travel so
commonplace, once human transmission is possible, the virus will
know no bounds, especially not geographically. Much like AIDS,
it will devastate the world, consuming people of all ages,
ethnicities, and backgrounds.