Q: How does it tie to the current outbreak?Previous to that was the the 1998 swine flu outbreak when there WAS a triple reassortment:
R.D.: Where does all this talk about avian and human genes come from? I was describing a fully swine virus. For [the] last 10 years, this has been a fully swine virus.
Q: So where are avian and human sequences?Significantly, Donis, at least, has NOT absolved the Smithfield facility in Veracruz, Mexico as a possible source:
R.D.: We have to step back [to] 10 years ago. In 1998, actually, Chris Olsen is one of the first that saw it, and we saw the same in a virus from Nebraska and Richard Webby and Robert Webster in Memphis saw it, too. There were unprecedented outbreaks of influenza in the swine population. It was an H3.
Q: What do you think about the pig farm in Veracruz?Smithfield isn't off the hook quite yet. So says the CDC.
R.D.: I don't know the details. They said they had a huge operation and the workers were not getting sick; that's what the company claims. The only suspicious thing in that story is this is the largest farm in Mexico. The fact that the index case also is from the area makes it interesting
[Update:] The AP agrees. It's swine flu. Although, Michael Shaw of the CDC clearly didn't get the memo: "We have no idea where it came from... Everybody's calling it swine flu, but the better term is 'swine-like.' It's like viruses we have seen in pigs, it's not something we know was in pigs." Um, Mike? Read. My. Blog. It's really is swine flu -- DNA doesn't lie. People do, though.

1 Comments:
Actually, there's another possibility: Humans could be the final mixing pot for this particular flu. After all, it is spreading so easily among them and found in so many. Time will tell.
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