The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
states on their main flu Web site
http://www.cdc.gov/flu/ that flu activity is increasing
in the United States, with most states reporting "widespread
influenza activity."
But wait stop the presses.
A
three-month-long investigation by CBS News, released earlier
this week that included state-by-state test results,
revealed some very different facts. The CBS study found that
H1N1 flu cases are NOT as prevalent as feared. A CBS article
even states:
"If you've been diagnosed "probable" or "presumed" 2009 H1N1
or "swine flu" in recent months, you may be surprised to
know this:
odds are you didn't have H1N1 flu. In fact, you probably
didn't have flu at all."
Obviously CBS News and the CDC are completely contradicting
each other. So who is right?
Well, CBS reports that in late July 2009 the CDC advised
states to STOP testing for H1N1 flu, and they also stopped
counting individual cases.
Their rationale for this, according to CBS News, was that it
was a waste of resources to test for H1N1 flu because it was
already confirmed as an epidemic.
So just like that virtually every person
who visited their physician with flu-like symptoms since
late July was assumed to have H1N1, with no testing
necessary because, after all, there's an epidemic.
It's interesting to note that at the same time as the CDC
decided the H1N1 epidemic warranted no further testing for
cases due to its epidemic status, Finnish health authorities
actually
downgraded the threat of .
In late July the health ministry and the National Institute
for Health and Welfare (THL) in Finland actually removed
swine flu from a list of diseases considered dangerous to
the public because the majority of cases recovered without
medication or hospital care!
And, as the CDC continues to use fear to motivate and
control Americans with their worst-case swine flu scenarios,
they say nothing of the experience of those in the southern
hemisphere, which just finished their flu season and found
it was not as bad as expected.
CBS
News Finds H1N1 Tests "Overwhelmingly Negative"
Before beginning their investigation, CBS News asked the CDC
for state-by-state test results prior to their halting of
testing and tracking. The CDC did not initially respond so
CBS went to all 50 states directly, asking for their
statistics on state lab-confirmed H1N1 prior to the halt of
individual testing and counting in July.
What did they find? CBS reported:
"The results reveal a pattern that surprised a number of
health care professionals we consulted.
The vast majority of cases were negative for H1N1 as well as
seasonal flu, despite the fact that many states were
specifically testing patients deemed to be most likely to
have H1N1 flu,
based on symptoms and risk factors, such as travel to
Mexico."
As you can see from this CBS News graphic, not only are most
cases of suspected flu-like illnesses not H1N1, they're not
even the flu but more likely some type of cold or upper
respiratory infection!
Where
is the CDC Getting Their Data?
Given CBS News' findings that most cases of flu-like
illnesses are neither H1N1 nor the flu, it begs the
question: Why is the CDC reporting that
most flu in the United States is in fact H1N1?
Barbara Loe Fisher, founder of the
National Vaccine Information Center who I spoke with in
the interview above, was a consumer representative on the
FDA Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory
Committee in 2003, and she asked the head of the influenza
branch of the CDC how much of the flu-like illness that
occurs in America every year is actually due to the flu.
Bob
Harris
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