Bird Flu Monitor > Nations Not Meeting Bird Flu Commitments
[Enflu] Only a small number of the countries that pledged nearly $2 billion in January to fight bird flu have paid out their full commitments, a World Bank draft report says.
[Previous] FAO proposes monitoring bird migrations to fight avian flu ...
[Next] BioWarn Announces Instantaneous Detection of......
Some related posts from Technorati and Google.
[Donaldsensing.com] One Hand Clapping » Blog Archive » Bird flu a real threat or not?: Cunningham is right about our modern ability to treat bacterial infections, I am uncomfortable with his easy assurance that “our medical infrastructure is vastly better off” because our medical infrastructure can’t possible cope with being flooded with hundreds of thousands (maybe a million-plus) of patients at one time, all requiring intensive, probably-long-term treatment and all competing for the same antibiotic stocks.
[Stephensonstrategies.com] W. David Stephenson blogs on homeland security et al.: "Given that viruses do not respect borders, and that one country's actions will have ramifications for the rest of the globe, we should work to align pandemic preparedness and response efforts across nations.The international community should conform to pre-specified standards for disease reporting, scientific cooperation, public health measures to limit disease spread, and the range of related measures that support our objectives of early warning and rapid response. Early adoption of the International Health Regulations by nations represents an important step in this direction, as does the commitment by nations to the principles of the International Partnership on Avian and Pandemic Influenza.
[Stockguru.com] Company Profiles, Avian Flu (H5N1) "Bird Flu": StockGuru.com: Since then, Reticulose, was on the market for three decades and in that time had a blemish free record as a safe treatment for Herpetic diseases, encephalitis, generalized vaccine, virus infectious hepatitis, Asian influenza, mononucleosis, viral pneumonia, chicken pox and measles, before the FDA in the early 1960s had the drug re-classified as a "new drug," as part of a sweeping change in the approval process of pharmaceuticals.
[Chelseagreen.com] Bird Flu What to Do :: Chelsea Green Publishing: Fear and grief would be natural reactions to a global pandemic. By taking the time to consider the scariest possibilities and then taking the appropriate precautions, you increase your chances of maintaining a sense of balance under emergency circumstances.
Reflected tags on Technorati: Blog, Birdflu, Bird Flu Monitor