Headlines:

Sanitize Your Nose: Help Protect Yourself and Others from Infection

Building a Better Bridge From Hospital to Home Health Care

The Oncology Leader’s Advanced Practitioner Toolkit

Cancer Clinical Trials See Shortage of Participants

Infant Health Inequity

Tips to Help Older Adults Stay Apart, Not Alone During COVID-19

World Restart a Heart Day Highlights CPR Safety

Don’t Let Diabetes Wipe That Smile From Your Face

Fitness Has a New Focus During Medicare Open Enrollment Time

“Keep Up The Rates” Campaign Encourages Vaccination Amidst COVID-19

Stem Cells Research

Herbal Elderberry Supplements Support Sleep and Immunity

Cancer Center Finds Smokeless Tobacco May Help You Quit

Certain Medicare Plans Could Offer Members Food Assistance Benefits

Health Officials Still Focused on COVID, Despite Rise in Opiod Epidemic

Blood Pressure Control Starts With Measuring Accurately

Oral Health Tips for a Timeless Smile

Enjoy Pregnancy Without Foot Pain

Best Tips to a Health Lifestyle You Need to Understand

Don’t Let COVID-19 Impact Your Credit Score

Military Veterans, Here’s What You Need to Consider About Medicare

Clinical Trials Seek Cancer Patients

Don’t Ignore Irregular Heart-Related Complications

Your Blood’s Amazing Trip Through Your Vascular System

MyFreePharmacy Takes the Pain Out of Filling Prescriptions

Getting the Most of Medicare Prescription Drug Home Delivery

Students’ Mental Health Must Figure in Plans to Restart Classes

Do we need a dedicated global agency that would deal with covid 19 and other future pandemics?

Professional Diseases

Drug-Free Device Simplifies Sinus Pain Relief

Should Your Exercise Routine Include Massage?

Helping Teens Improve Mental Health by Finding Happiness

Need More Treatment Options? Cancer Clinical Trials May Help

Better Immunity is Just a Spray Away For Health

About Palliative Therapies To Treat Mesothelioma

5 Tips to Practice Good Public Hygiene

Should animals be used in research?

Dry Eye: Causes, Symptoms and Treatment

Women’s Hearts Need Attention

Mental Health of Students Must Figure in Restarting Classes

Self-care on Your Schedule with Mental Wellness App

NFL Superstar and Family Tackle High Blood Pressure

A One-of-a-Kind Lifeline: A First Responder’s Kidney Health Journey

5 Tips to Save Money While Getting Quality Health Care

Study Shows Older Americans Are Coping Best During the COVID-19 Pandemic

Why Getting a Flu Shot Makes Sense

Tips to Help You Avoid Cold and Flu All Year

Turning 65: What to Consider When Selecting a Medicare Plan

How to Safely Select Your 2022 Medicare Plan During The COVID-19 Pandemic

Seven Ways to Support Healthy Blood Pressure During Pregnancy

HIV/AIDS: What Methods of Treatment Can the Modern Medicine Offer?

Insulin Production Of UNDBIO Supported By Sen Manchin And WV Officials

Is Your Family at Risk for Hypothyroidism?

Three Tips to Avoid Heartburn

New Treatment Shows Signs of Curbing Cancer Growth

Should the State Regulate Social Media Use to Prevent Its Negative Impact on Mental Health and Social Media Addiction?

How to Maximize Your 2022 Medicare Advantage Plan

Control Your Blood Pressure, Protect Your Body Health

Colorectal Cancer Screening Options Reduce Disparities

Ultrasound Technology Helps Clean and Whiten Teeth With Braces

Expert Offers Tips to Boost Your Immunity

Novel Cell Therapy May Improve Heart Failure Symptoms

How to Maximize Your Medicare Plan in 2023

Should unhealthy people be refused emergency organ transplants due to their lifestyle choices?

Patty Duke Family Reunites for Dinner: Medicare on the Menu

Stay Smart When Using OTC Pain Medicines

Fitness Has a New Focus During Medicare Open Enrollment Time

The Newest Diagnostic Exam Aging Adults Can’t Miss: The Elderoscopy

Arm Your Medicine Cabinet for Cold and Flu Season

Five Tips You Need to Know about Prescription Home Delivery

Can’t Stop Smoking? Protect Your Smile

Homeopathic Medicine

Expand Your Self-Care Horizon with Quantum Energy

Program Teaches EMS Workers How to Respond to Epilepsy

Novel Drug Shows Potential to Repair Stroke Damage

Got Diabetes? Take Your Multivitamin

Now There’s a Painless Cure for the Most Common Cancer Type

Why Getting a Flu Shot Makes Sense

Regenerative Medicine May Help Avoid Surgery

Yes, Most Insurance Plans Cover Chiropractic Care

Artificial Coma

Three Things Every Contact Lens Wearer Should Know

Can Chiropractic Care Help Treat Obesity?

Putting Psoriasis to Rest Starts with Relieving Stress

Is Your Eye Makeup Making You Sick? What You Need to Know

Every Lung Cancer Patient Should Ask About Biomarkers

Cell Therapy May Improve Heart Failure Symptoms

Medicinal Mushroom Supplement AHCC Helps Clear “Invisible” HPV Infections

New Law Makes It Easier to Save on Prescription Costs

Should Abortion be Legal?

Ex-Navy SEAL Finds New Mission With Chiropractic Care

Nighttime Skin Care Tips for Younger-Looking Skin

Better Immunity is Just a Spray Away

Understanding Cancer Research Studies and Evaluating Outcomes

This Heart Month, Pledge to Help Your Heart with These 3 Fitness Tips

Breakthrough Medical Technologies Save and Improve Millions of Lives

Nurse Educators Combat COVID-19 Vaccine Myths

Expand Your Self-Care Horizon with Quantum Energy Technology

Three Ways the Oil Spill May Threaten Human Health

Healthy Eating for a Happy Heart

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Virologist’s Book Warns of Coming Lethal Flu Pandemic
Flu

Date

Scientists have long held that it will not be weapons of mass destruction that kills the human race, but rather a biological one.

Case in point: the flu pandemic of 1918, colloquially known as the Spanish flu, occurred during World War I and spread worldwide during 1918-1919. Published research suggests the final death toll may have been as high as 100 million.Despite decades of developments in biology and virology at the cost of more than $80 billion, the U.S. is unprepared to handle a flu pandemic of a similar scale if one should occur, contends Dr. Steven Hatfill, a specialist physician and virologist with additional training in medical biochemistry, and experimental pathology.

After more than a decade of study, Dr. Hatfill and his team have published a book, Three Seconds Until Midnight, in which he revisits the challenges of the 1918 pandemic and highlights the limitations of the current public health system in the U.S. in the event of a serious pandemic on the scale of the 1918 event.”There are worse viruses out there in nature than another 1918-type pandemic.

They are simply waiting for the right conditions to jump into man,” says Dr. Hatfill.In addition, “the overwhelming majority of Americans assume that the CDC and public health authorities are capable of rapidly detecting when a new outbreak of infectious disease is occurring and that they will quickly respond with a vaccine, drugs, and other measures to contain the event. In reality, none of this is true with respect to a serious pandemic,” he emphasizes.

In the book, Dr. Hatfill and his team point out how the U.S. has an insufficient public health workforce and lacks the “surge” medical capacity needed for a pandemic situation with mass casualties, and that no programs are currently in place to train personnel how to handle a pandemic.Vaccine distribution is another problem, says Dr. Hatfill. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) documents show that in a pandemic on the scale of the 1918 event, a minimum of 123 to 125 million Americans will not receive any anti-viral drugs or vaccine until at or near the peak period of infection and death.

Historically, the poor, socially disadvantaged urban communities will be hit the hardest.Citizens are uninformed on how to care for family members at home if they contract a contagious and possibly lethal infection, and entire households can become ill, Dr. Hatfill says.Dr. Hatfill’s book outlines how the government can salvage its preparedness plan by considering more involvement by the military in a disaster response mode, similar to the role played by the Armed Forces after Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

The major problems in pandemic preparedness occur not with the federal government but with the local city authorities who continue to be unprepared to manage an outbreak of a serious lethal infectious disease on a 1918-type scale. This includes having rational methods to manage worker absenteeism, organizing alternate care sites, expanding mortuary capabilities and teaching non-pharmaceutical interventions to the public.”We now live under population densities that are a new phenomenon in human civilization and we have no precedent to indicate if we are nearing a threshold or not”. As a consequence, every individual alive today is participating in a great on-going global biological experiment,” says Dr. Hatfill.Three Seconds Until Midnight will be available for purchase online via Amazon or Kindle in approximately mid-October.

Facebook
Twitter
Reddit
LinkedIn
Email

More
articles

Join DBN Today!

Let DBN help guide you to success!

Doctors Business Network offers everything new and existing health care providers need to establish and build a successful career! Sign up with DBN today and let us help you succeed!

DBN Blog