By: Habib Thompson | 2010-03-29 | Diseases and Conditions Over 800 people worldwide have died of the H1N1 virus now and that number seems to be growing daily, so it appears to we'll all be living with the H1N1 virus for a long time. A virus is not a living thing, but a tiny particle of inert genetic material, and the only way it can reproduce is to find a living host.It would be accurate to say that the H1N1 virus' only function is to exist by forcing living hosts to replicate it and can only do that if the host has some kind of intrinsic weakness. They know that the only way H1N1 Swine Flu can without a doubt be identified is via genetic sampling from the infected swine or people and that is an expensive time consuming process and very unlikely to happen with the onset of an epidemic. What will without doubt manifest itself are the symptoms of fever, cough, sore throat, body aches, headache, chills, fatigue, diarrhea and vomiting, any mixture of these could prove fatal. H1N1 virus does serious lung damage and reduces lung capacity, thereby opening a Pandora's Box of future chronic health problems. read more
By: David Bron | 2010-03-26 | Diseases and Conditions The world is fraught with danger. War, Famine and Pestilence cover the lands like some biblical dooms day prediction come to life and we here in the United States are stretching the limits of our vast riches and technological resources to keep them from our shores. Politicians on both the local and national stage are preparing for the swine flu pandemic by stock piling millions of doses of H1N1 vaccine for Novel Influenza A in a direct response to the world wide dilemma, "How to prevent H1N1 swine flu?" read more
By: Dee Power | 2010-10-03 | Article Marketing This new "swine flu" passes easily from human to human (not from pig to human). Vaccinations work by introducing a weakened or dead strain of the virus into the body. read more
By: William Sutherland | 2010-03-31 | Science When the first reported cases of A/H1N1 swine flu emerged in April 2009, it was widely believed that the novel influenza strain originated in Mexico... Instead it is likely, though not confirmed, that A/H1N1, is a genetically engineered creation that accidentally escaped from a U.S. laboratory through some kind of contamination. read more
By: Joan Peterson | 2010-04-01 | Diseases and Conditions H1N1 is a combination of bird, swine and human flu viruses merged together. H1N1 was initially referred to as swine flu but should now be called H1N1. read more
By: Habib Thompson | 2010-03-31 | Diseases and Conditions Some scientists believe the Swine flu H1N1 virus could have been circulating in humans long before it reached La Gloria Mexico. H1N1 virus was known to have been in pigs on hog farms in California, and actually originated on a California-based pig farm, although the huge corporate farm in question was jointly owned by American and Mexican partners. read more
By: Aarkstore Enterprise | 2010-12-03 | Health & Fitness Aarkstore announce a new report "Opportunity Analysis of H1N1 (swine flu) Vaccination Market" through its vast collection of market research report. read more
By: Mary Bodel | 2010-07-16 | Diseases and Conditions H1N1, also as the Swine Flu causes a lot of conflicting information. They wonder that it is a true worldwide threat, what the vaccine really is, whether or not the media responsed too much on it. A current additional problem related to H1N1 is that whether or not it is a global threat. read more
By: Nicholas St Jon | 2010-03-27 | Diseases and Conditions You must be wondering just how a Flu Pandemic like the H1N1 (swine) flu could unlock secrets to better health. It's because basically, it scared me, and apparently hundreds of thousands of others too. read more
By: jenniffer | 2010-10-25 | Manufacturing Aarkstore announce a new report "H1N1 "Swine Flu" Vaccine Market Review (Revenues, Forecasts, Lessons for Future Pandemic Vaccines)" through its vast collection of market research report. read more
By: nrtntrmn | 2011-04-05 | Business Against influenza on the phone with HM2 dry, reduce the risk of contact with infected Have some knowledge of H1N1 influenza. For unknown things, people will feel fear, because we do not know how to de... read more
By: Phil Le Breton | 2010-03-29 | Health & Fitness Parents of children with autism are acutely aware of what vaccines could mean for their sons and daughters. Many are concerned about routine vaccinations, but you should also be aware of the possible dangers of the swine flu, or Influenza A(H1N1) vaccine, in particular. read more
By: David Bron | 2010-03-26 | Diseases and Conditions It's late August in North America and in few weeks one of the most controversial vaccination programs in world history will be kicking off in the United States. The untested H1N1 (swine flu) vaccine will be offered to pregnant women, children, the elderly, and people with underlying respiratory diseases. People, parents, children that care for parents, and those already at risk will be asked to make a difficult choice about the "best treatment for swine flu", face the possible H1N1 pandemic undefended that the government is gearing up for or face up to the ugly "rumors" that surround the vaccine. read more
By: Habib Thompson | 2010-04-02 | Food & Beverage A through unbiased real examination of the truth behind the Swine flu out break with real questions real solutions. This article attempts to slice through the tapestry of lies misinformation,cloaking and misdirection of government agencies working in unison with corporate interest, to hide the facts about this "new virus". read more
By: Nikhil Jain | 2010-04-14 | Diseases and Conditions H1N1, also known as swine flu, is a flu virus which is up-to-the-minute, and previously it has scattered amongst individuals. This virus has no connection with earlier or existing human cyclic infection viruses. First sensed in Mexico in April 2009, it has spread to many countries. Generally, H1N1 virus is a misnomer. read more