calm down, calm down

From BBC news: UK calls for wild bird import ban.

Aberdeen University microbiologist and bird flu expert Professor Hugh Pennington said Britons should not be alarmed by the discovery.

He said the virus had been “doing the rounds of the Far East for about 10 years” but still had not mutated into the “form that we really fear – the form that could infect people on any scale at all”.

The head of the Medical Research Council, Professor Colin Blakemore, said the discovery of the virus would have been more worrying in a migratory bird.

He said: “Clearly birds in quarantine are not in contact with domestic birds, with farm birds in this country.”

Edit: Fly on over to curious hamster’s for a bit of Monty Python.

yay! decent bread in LA…

I’ve been pretty lucky so far, living close to Amandine on Wilshire Blvd, where I get my weekly fix of French pastries. There’s also a Belgian chocolatier on Wilshire, which is also meant to have good croissants. Le Pain Quotidient in Santa Monica was one of my first stops for a post-beach breakfast when I lived in Venice. (There’s a branch in Westwood near all the cinemas too.) And you can get a darn good baguette at the West LA Farmers’ Market if you’re not too late (plus the baker is a really nice guy who gave me a whole bag of rolls for nothing last week because he had no baguettes left!).

And it looks like a new glut of bakeries are opening across the city. This is all good news for P, who is a big bread fan. And while there’s nothing better than home-baked bread, I make it so rarely that we have to find that fix elsewhere. It doesn’t help that Flickerite/food blogger/maker of mouthwatering dishes-Santos posts beautiful photos of bread that makes me want to give up my day job and just bake, bake bake…

yay! decent bread in LA…

I’ve been pretty lucky so far, living close to Amandine on Wilshire Blvd, where I get my weekly fix of French pastries. There’s also a Belgian chocolatier on Wilshire, which is also meant to have good croissants. Le Pain Quotidient in Santa Monica was one of my first stops for a post-beach breakfast when I lived in Venice. (There’s a branch in Westwood near all the cinemas too.) And you can get a darn good baguette at the West LA Farmers’ Market if you’re not too late (plus the baker is a really nice guy who gave me a whole bag of rolls for nothing last week because he had no baguettes left!).

And it looks like a new glut of bakeries are opening across the city. This is all good news for P, who is a big bread fan. And while there’s nothing better than home-baked bread, I make it so rarely that we have to find that fix elsewhere. It doesn’t help that Flickerite/food blogger/maker of mouthwatering dishes-Santos posts beautiful photos of bread that makes me want to give up my day job and just bake, bake bake…

a real flap

Maybe it’s because I’m way over here on the other side of the Atlantic (with a whole continent inbetween to boot!), but the current worry about bird flu in Europe isn’t keeping me up at night.

Standard disclaimer: I don’t know any better than your regular layman/woman about H5N1, other avian viruses, let alone virus biology.

So let’s have a look at what the experts have to say. The WHO has a clearly written FAQ on avian flu and its possible impact on humans.

For the scaremongers, the key worries are that:

  • this H5N1 strain of bird flu causes a high rate of death in infected birds.
  • the H5N1 strain was found in a few South-East Asian countries in 2003, but spread within 2 years north (e.g. Russia, Mongolia), east (e.g. Korea, Japan), and west (e.g. Turkey, Romania).
  • when it infects humans (and it has done so very rarely for a virus so prevalent in bird stocks), it causes serious problems like pneumonia and multi-organ failure even in healthy people, and has a high rate of fatality. Compare this to the “regular” flu virus, which causes deaths mainly in the immunocompromised (e.g. the very young, old and ill).
  • an infected person can pass it on to their immediate contacts (by means as yet undeterminted).
  • most humans won’t have immunity to H5N1 because it’s a new strain; we haven’t had time to develop our own antibodies to it.

And now that you’re worried, here’s my feeble attempt to allay your fears:

  • Although the H5N1 strain has been infecting birds since 2003, it hasn’t killed very many people in the countries that have infected birds.
  • So far, the human-to-human infections have been through very close contact (although I don’t know if that’s because members of the same family are exposed to the same source of virus, e.g. bird droppings).
  • Cases of human infection have been in people who live in close quarters with their livestock; there’s no evidence that meat and eggs we buy in the supermarket will cause infections. (I’m having chicken tonight…)
  • The third hit (mutation of the virus into something that spreads easily between humans not in close contact) hasn’t happened yet.
  • Umm, what with all the scaremongering, some governments have woken up and are putting in place measures that the WHO recommended a loooong time ago.
  • Edit: And I’m reminded over in the comments on curious hamster’s blog that it’s very likely that should the virus cross species and become more transmissible between humans, it will lose pathogenicity (i.e. be less lethal).

As for drug and vaccine treatments, companies other than Roche are making generic versions of anti-viral drugs and there’s a promising ongoing vaccine trial in Hungary. My main worry is that with rich governments stockpiling anti-flu drugs (and mind you they work on regular flu, and have yet to be tested on H5N1), developing countries won’t get a look-in. But then again, a truly sensible government that has stockpiled these drugs can offer them to any country in immediate need of it with the knowledge that stopping the virus dead in its tracks elsewhere also stops it from entering your shores. This needs cooperation, and even better, a respected world body to coordinate matters. After the ridiculous failure of the US governing bodies (state and federal) to deal with the recent hurricanes, I wouldn’t want to wait for the richest nation in the world to get involved. Thank goodness the frontline countries are getting their act together. Hopefuly we have learned lessons from the SARS outbreak, and have learned to forgo national pride and *communicate* with each other.

I have hope for the human species surviving any possible pandemic yet…

One plus one equals nothing very much

Cheney resignation rumors fly.

Ooer… Interesting. [Tinfoil hat on] What are the chances that suggestions of Condoleeza Rice suceeding Cheney should he resign should be floated a few episodes in to the new Commander-in-Chief TV series? Has an idea been planted into public consciousness? [Tinfoil hat off]

Speaking of which, if The West Wing is a liberal’s wet-dream, is Commander-in-Chief a feminist’s? I’ve only seen bits of two episodes, and the focus seems to be less on the workings of the White House or Presidency, and more on the difficulties faced by the first female president.

It also seems to me that the producers did not think the American viewing public was ready for a woman winning a Presidential election outright (probably true in this country), and introduced a deus ex machina of the incumbent dying, thus allowing the female VP to step up. For reasons as yet undisclosed (political leanings/ability/gender), there is great objection to Mackenzie Allen (asexual name) taking the post, and Machiavellian machinations ensue.

I haven’t seen enough to be hooked yet, but the idea behind the series is appealing. And the timing is pretty good too, with speculation about Hillary Clinton being spouted every so often. In a country that’s so big, with geography determining political culture, perhaps the best place to stimulate debate and raise issues is a fictional TV series. (Then again, The West Wing has been running for donkey seasons (into it’s 7th, methinks), and look where this country’s at…)

There’s a spoof political blog on the series, but it doesn’t seem to be updated regularly.