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• <br />Anoka County Multi- Jurisdictional <br />All Hazards Mitigation Plan <br />4.1.1.5 PandemicsNectors <br />Pandemics occur when disease affects large numbers of the population worldwide. Epidemics <br />occur when large numbers are affected in a more localized area such as a city, region, state, or <br />nation. Pandemics have occurred three times in the world's human population. <br />The 1918 -1919 Spanish Flu caused the highest number of deaths. India had 16 million deaths. <br />The U.S. had 675,000 deaths. Worldwide, the estimated fatalities were 20 million to 50 million. <br />The 1957 -58 Asian Flu was identified in February 1957 in China. By June, it entered the U.S. <br />Globally it caused a million deaths. In the U.S., 70,000 persons died. It was a Type A virus. <br />The 1968 -69 Hong Kong Flu caused four million deaths worldwide and 34,000 deaths in the <br />U.S. It was a Type A virus. <br />Influenza occurs every year and nations attempt to prepare for the "flu season" which brings one <br />to two weeks of symptoms, even pneumonia and death. The cost in the U.S. is $71 to $167 <br />billion annually. Some 36,000 in the U.S. and 250,000 to 500,000 worldwide die annually. <br />Three types of influenza viruses exist: A, B, and C. Type A viruses are of most concern for <br />humans, pigs, marine mammals and birds. Type B virus has been identified in the seal <br />population and is fatal. Influenza C virus is associated with ticks. <br />Influenza viruses are constantly evolving. The viruses undergo minor and major modifications <br />through antigentic drift and antigentic shift. Antigentic drift is the mechanism responsible for <br />creating small changes in the genetic composition of the virus. Antigentic drift occurs in Type A <br />and B influenza. Antigentic shift describes significant changes in the genetic structure of the <br />virus. It occurs only in type "A" when two different virus strains are simultaneously present in a <br />host or after transmission of viruses from different hosts. The two viruses swap genetic material <br />creating a "new" virus never before seen. The ability to jump species, the constant changes in <br />the generic makeup of the influenza virus, the potential for vaccine loss, and the rapid spread of <br />Flu viruses are some of the reasons influenza is always a threat to the world's population. <br />Avian flu was first discovered in Canada. It is estimated that 50% of wild ducks in Canada carry <br />various forms of the flu. Highly infectious forms are destructive to domestic poultry causing a <br />rise in food costs. Three strains of avian influenza viruses are known to jump the species barrier <br />from birds to non -human animals to humans: A(H9n2), A(H7N7) and A(H5N1). A(H5N1) is the <br />most lethal, causing death in 68% of humans infected with it. Coughing or sneezing, victims <br />spew infectious droplets at a rate of 150 feet per second. Shaking hands or contact with <br />contaminated public washrooms and doorknobs can spread the disease very quickly. <br />Scientists expect that an Avian H5 Flu virus, which has swept through chickens and other <br />poultry in Asia, will change genetically into a flu that can be transmitted to humans. It has <br />emerged as a highly pathogenic strain of influenza virus that is affecting the entire western <br />component of Asia. The CDC is preparing for a possible pandemic. Humans have no immunity <br />to this new avian flu. <br />Small Pox (variola major) was last seen in the US in 1949. The last naturally occurring case was <br />in Somalia in 1977. Smallpox vaccination in the US ended in 1972 except for military personnel. <br />When smallpox was considered eradicated worldwide, only two laboratories were designated to <br />keep the virus. One lab was the CDC in Atlanta, Georgia, and the other lab was in Russia. <br />When the USSR break -up occurred, the location of Russia's smallpox virus became unknown. It <br />was widely thought that at least four other countries received part of the virus. <br />