Spike In Australian H1N1 Cases Could Lead WHO To Declare Pandemic
June 11, 2009 by fluoutbreak
The H1N1 (swine flu) outbreak could soon be declared the first flu pandemic in 41 years after a recent jump in the number of confirmed cases in Australia, WHO officials said Tuesday, the AP/Google.com reports (Jordans, AP/Google.com, 6/9).
“The number of confirmed cases in Australia surpassed 1,200 on Monday, and the virus is no longer restricted to schools and other institutions there, suggesting that community-wide spread has begun” writes the Los Angeles Times (Maugh, Los Angeles Times, 6/10). “The total means Australia has seen a four-fold increase in a week,” the BBC reports (BBC, 6/9). “Such a spread in two regions of the world — it already has been observed in North America — is the primary criterion for raising the alert level to Phase 6,” according to the Los Angeles Times (Los Angeles Times, 6/10).
However, “Some flu experts think the world already is in a pandemic and that WHO has caved in to country requests that a declaration be postponed,” AP/Google.com writes. “On the surface of it, I think we are in Phase 6″ – the equivalent of a pandemic, WHO Director-General Margaret Chan said. The WHO on Wednesday will hold a conference call with international governments in order to confirm the latest reports that the virus has become established outside of North America, HealthDay News/Forbes reports. “Once I get indisputable evidence, I will make the announcement,” Chan said (HealthDay News/Forbes, 6/9).
“We very clearly see what is going on in Australia, but what we’re doing is working very hard to make sure that everyone is in the best position as we get closer to a Phase 6 declaration,” WHO’s acting Assistant Director-General Keiji Fukada said. Bloomberg writes, “Raising the WHO’s six-step pandemic scale to its highest level might cause people who are healthy to flock to hospitals, preventing the sick from getting care, [Fukada] said,” during a conference call with reporters Tuesday (Serafino, Bloomberg, 6/9).




