numbercruncher
Beware of Dropbears
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The AMA is pushing for all flu sufferers to wear masks in public as infection levels skyrocket and a worldwide pandemic looms.
Only trouble with that is that you really need to be going home at the first hint that you might have the flu rather than waiting for any firm evidence.if youve got one of those Goody Goods in the office that comes to work "even when they are sick" make sure you smash them in the head with knuckledusters erm i mean tell them to go home ....
Creditcrunch and a pandemic all at once, now thatd be an interesting combo!
Certain strains of the flu can be very threatening.
I had a serious bout 10 or 15 years ago, lasted one week with raging temperatures and could hardly move let alone get out of bed. Had 3 blood tests as a result as I thought I had contracted something really bad.
From Wikipedia:The Spanish flu pandemic lasted from 1918 to 1919. Older estimates say it killed 40–50 million people[2] while current estimates say 50 million to 100 million people worldwide were killed.
regards YN
Yeah I agree with that, something about an incubation period? Urban myth?Only trouble with that is that you really need to be going home at the first hint that you might have the flu rather than waiting for any firm evidence.
Somehow I just don't see the average employer granting the 50 or so sick days a year (with no medical certificate since you won't get one of those for a sneeze) that would be needed. And the economy would grind to a halt if they did.
By the time someone has visible symptoms, they may just as well be at work to my understanding since they will already have done most of their share of the virus spreading.
Is this media hype again? My girlfriend is a nurse at Gold Coast Hospital and hasn't had or mentioned a flu let alone an epidemic.
Is this media hype again? My girlfriend is a nurse at Gold Coast Hospital and hasn't had or mentioned a flu let alone an epidemic.
Gold Coast Mayor Ron Clarke is undergoing medical tests after being taken to hospital this morning.
Flu to hit surgical lists - QUEENSLAND public hospitals are free to suspend elective surgery to relieve pressure on their emergency departments, Health Minister Stephen Robertson says.
A GROUP of Gold Coast primary school students on excursion to Canberra are expected to return home this weekend after an Influenza A outbreak on the trip.
Thirty-nine children and seven adults from Marymount Primary School at Burleigh Heads went to Canberra Hospital this morning with flu symptoms after becoming ill during the excursion.
Queensland Health says the state is in the midst of its worst influenza outbreak in six years.
A KILLER flu could hit Queensland in a matter of days, health experts have warned.
Three Perth children have died from what is believed to be a severe form of flu, sparking fears the virus could soon spread here.
Only trouble with that is that you really need to be going home at the first hint that you might have the flu rather than waiting for any firm evidence.
Somehow I just don't see the average employer granting the 50 or so sick days a year (with no medical certificate since you won't get one of those for a sneeze) that would be needed. And the economy would grind to a halt if they did.
By the time someone has visible symptoms, they may just as well be at work to my understanding since they will already have done most of their share of the virus spreading.
Australia will almost certainly experience a flu pandemic one day, federal Health Minister Tony Abbott says.
Mr Abbott is refusing to make influenza vaccine stockpiles available this flu season despite the deaths of six children to influenza A because he does not consider it a national emergency.
He said Australia had to be prepared for the possibility of being swamped by a dangerous strain, possibly of bird flu.
"One day there will be a flu pandemic - that is almost certain," he told ABC Radio.
The influenza outbreak sweeping Australia has now claimed nine victims, including a Queensland woman who died just two days after showing the first symptoms.
Mother-of-two Deborah Miller, 33, of Caboolture, north of Brisbane, died last Sunday after being rushed to hospital, Queensland's The Sunday Mail newspaper reported.
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