What's more is that, so far, this flu has been a very minor flu, with about 5,000 documented cases and 6 deaths. The blog of record relays that the "regular" flu has already killed something like 13,000 people in the US this year (it's not clear whether this is derived from the CDC's annual estimate of 36,000). This amounts to about 100 people a day.
While one CDC scientist estimates the number of people with the swine flu are 50,000 or so, this estimate assumes that under-reporting of swine flu is the same as under-reporting of flu in general. Given the focus on swine flu, I expect that under-reporting of it is far lower than of general flu, and thus, the true number with the swine flu is far fewer than 50,000. The CDC's currently weekly flu report shows about one-third of the 1,286 new cases as swine flu (novel H1N1). The same report has a great graph, showing an irregular spike in flu diagnosis, just at the time when reported flu usually falls.
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Thus, Swine flu has so far killed a documented 6 people in the U.S. out of more than 5,000 confirmed cases.
In conclusion, though our own hysteria may drive documented cases up some, and lead to my children having to bring a water bottle to school, the swine flu does not appear to be particularly dangerous or deadly.
1 comment:
cdc reports 27 deaths -- june 5th
my rough count is 32 -- june 9th
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