Experts in autocracies have pointed out that it is, unfortunately, easy to slip into normalizing the tyrant, hence it is important to hang on to outrage. These incidents which seem to call for the efforts of the Greek Furies (Erinyes) to come and deal with them will, I hope, help with that. As a reminder, though no one really knows how many there were supposed to be, the three names we have are Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone. These roughly translate as “unceasing,” “grudging,” and “vengeful destruction.”
As perils go, this is not one that should cause immediate panic, and that’s in large part because it’s being addressed so early. But, in combination with CoViD-19 and climate change, it’s definitely food for thought.
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Alert but not alarmed: what to make of new H1N1 swine flu with ‘pandemic potential’ found in China
Ian M. Mackay, The University of Queensland
Researchers have found a new strain of flu virus with “pandemic potential” in China that can jump from pigs to humans, triggering a suite of worrying headlines.
It’s excellent this virus has been found early, and raising the alarm quickly allows virologists to swing into action developing new specific tests for this particular flu virus.
But it’s important to understand that, as yet, there is no evidence of human-to-human transmission of this particular virus. And while antibody tests found swine workers in China have had it in the past, there’s no evidence yet that it’s particularly deadly.
Read more: Victoria is on the precipice of an uncontrolled coronavirus outbreak. Will the new measures work?
What we know so far
China has a wonderful influenza surveillance system across all its provinces. They keep track of bird, human and swine flus because, as the researchers note in their paper, “systematic surveillance of influenza viruses in pigs is essential for early warning and preparedness for the next potential pandemic.”
In their influenza virus surveillance of pigs from 2011 to 2018, the researchers found what they called “a recently emerged genotype 4 (G4) reassortant Eurasian avian-like (EA) H1N1 virus.” In their paper, they call the virus G4 EA H1N1. It has been ticking over since 2013 and became the majority swine H1N1 virus in China in 2018.
In plain English, they discovered a new flu that’s a mix of our human H1N1 flu and an avian-based flu.
What’s interesting is antibody tests picked up that workers handling swine in these areas have been infected. Among those workers they tested, about 10% (35 people out of 338 tested) showed signs of having had the new G4 EA H1N1 virus in the past. People aged between 18 to 35 years old seemed more likely to have had it.
Of note, though, was that a small percentage of general household blood samples from people who were expected to have had little pig contact were also antibody positive (meaning they had the virus in the past).
Importantly, the researchers found no evidence yet of human-to-human transmission. They did find “efficient infectivity and aerosol transmission in ferrets” – meaning there’s evidence the new virus can spread by aerosol droplets from ferret to ferret (which we often use as surrogates for humans in flu studies). G4-infected ferrets became sick, lost weight and acquired lung damage, just like those infected with one of our seasonal human H1N1 flu strains.
They also found the virus can infect human airway cells. Most humans don’t already have antibodies to the G4 viruses meaning most people’s immune systems don’t have the necessary tools to prevent disease if they get infected by a G4 virus.
In summary, this virus has been around a few years, we know it can jump from pigs to humans and it ticks all the boxes to be what infectious disease scholars call a PPP — a potential pandemic pathogen.
If a human does get this new G4 EA H1N1 virus, how severe is it?
We don’t have much evidence to work with yet but it’s likely people who got these infections in the past didn’t find it too memorable. There’s not a huge amount of detail in the new paper but of the people the researchers sampled, none died from this virus.
There’s no sign this new virus has taken off or spread in the regions of China where it was found. China has excellent virus surveillance systems and right now we don’t need to panic.
The World Health Organisation has said it is keeping a close eye on these developments and “it also highlights that we cannot let down our guard on influenza”.
Read more: 4 unusual things we’ve learned about the coronavirus since the start of the pandemic
What’s next?
People in my field — infectious disease research — are alert but not alarmed. New strains of flu do pop up from time to time and we need to be ready to respond when they do, watching carefully for signs of human-to-human transmission.
As far as I can tell, the specific tests we use for influenza in humans won’t identify this new G4 EA H1N1 virus, so we should design new tests and have them ready. Our general flu A screening test should work though.
In other words, we can tell if someone has what’s called “Influenza A” (one kind of flu virus we usually see in flu season) but that’s a catch-all term, and there are many strains of flu within that category. We don’t yet have a customised test to detect this new particular strain of flu identified in China. But we can make one quickly.
Being prepared at the laboratory level if we see strange upticks in influenza is essential and underscores the importance of pandemic planning, ongoing virus surveillance and comprehensive public health policies.
And as with all flus, our best defences are meticulous hand washing and keeping physical distance from others if you, or they, are at all unwell.
Ian M. Mackay, Adjunct assistant professor, The University of Queensland
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone, as badly as the United States is handling – or perhaps we should say not handling – both climate change and CoViD-19, if we continue to fail as spectacularly, this could become a real danger. Plus, this particular virus is just another new virus. We have not yet had to begin to think about old viruses lying in wait under the permafrost with the potential to leap out and bite us. These things are real, and, sadly, so is willful ignorance, which is the main thing standing in the way of our being able to deal with them. I wish there were a way you could just eliminate willful ignorance, but I am not holding my breath.
The Furies and I will be back.
15 Responses to “Everyday Erinyes #222”
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As I’m sure we’ve all heard or read, it’s believed that the coronavirus was initially transmitted to humans in China by bats.
In our country, it’s now being transmitted by dingbats.
You win the internet today.
Most definitely, Nameless
Your comment, Nameless, was succinct, and so spot-on!
I can’t add anything else to the conversation. LOL,
Excellent! Good informational post.
Thanks, Joanne.
Thanks JD, and amen Nameless!
If this does mutate and spreads, human to human, we can be sure that Trump* and the Republican Reich will undermine the best responses to it here, if they are still in power.
A good posting, and Nameless has struck gold, again!
In case I did not get to mention here, previously, we appear to be safe from our close brush with the virus.
Very glad to hear that.
Mitch
With a deep sigh of relief for you & family!
Glad to hear that your are all safe.
Now THAT is some good news worth celebrating!
So glad you and yours weren’t infected, Mitch.
Stay vigilant, though. Keep that mask on and keep washing those hands.
Gerald Ford was not re-elected in part due to his handling of the Swine Flu while in office…where vaccination was pushed and more deaths came from the vaccination than from that Swine flu…I lived in MN at the time and can attest how ghastly the side effects to that vaccine were since that was one of the few places that jumped into vaccinating all with both feet very fast. So the caution I heard in the authors you used Joanne was very welcome. Thanks for a well researched piece on this topic.
Great post. Appreciate the information that keeps us on top of these viruses.
Thanks Joanne
The Swine Flu has been on the Chinese radar for quite some time and on those of large (farm-factory) pork producers in Australia and The Netherlands. And apparently in America, given this New York Time opinion piece, dated 1-1-2020, Why Did One-Quarter of the World’s Pigs Die in a Year?
We’re talking close to 200 million pigs that got slaughtered in China, some in the most horrible way as described by the Sun: How China’s horrific 13-storey ‘hog hotels’ risk new swine flu pandemic – as pigs are burned alive to fight infections I know, it’s the Sun, so this is a bit of anti-China propaganda because it targets China for the disease-prone factory farming that is grown completely out of hand in Europe (including hog-hotels), Australia and undoubtedly America too. Not a peep about them.
Every two years or so, a new swine flu pandemic (with a new strain) breaks out and millions of animals are culled, some in the most horrific way, not because humans could be at risk, but because of the money involved in this and other types of ‘meat’ business. Bird flu, swine flu, goat flu, you name a type of animal kept inside with hardly/no room to move or lie down and it developed a type of lethal flu. And after every pandemic and its culling, the meat industries started again on the same footing. What if the next flu is lethal to humans too? The answer belongs in the same realm as global warming. If we want to keep animal-transmitted diseases from our door, we humans really need to rethink our lifestyle.