Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Swine Flu Cases in U.S States updated June 01 2009

U.S States wise Statistics of Swine Flu cases

updated: Jun 01, 2009

States Confirmed/ Probable Cases Deaths
Wisconsin 1641
Texas 1403 3
Illinois 1103 3
California 804
New York 605 4
Washington 575 1
Arizona 547 4
Massachusetts 470
Utah 247 1
Michigan 234
Connecticut 196
Florida 166
Oregon 148
Indiana 146
Pennsylvania 123
Louisiana 122
Delaware 121
New Mexico 108
Tennessee 104
Nevada 102
Alabama 84
Oklahoma 82
Kansas 79
Kentucky** 77
New Jersey 74
Hawaii 73
Iowa 71
Colorado 61
Minnesota 60
Maryland 48
South Carolina 46
Nebraska 43
New Hampshire 40
Missouri 36 1
Virginia 31
Georgia 29
Ohio 23
Washington, D.C. 20
Mississippi 16
Montana 14
North Carolina 14
Rhode Island 14
Idaho 13
Maine 11
Arkansas 7
South Dakota 7
North Dakota 6
Vermont 3
West Virginia 3
Wyoming 2
Alaska 1
Total (51) 10053 17

The total 10053 Swine Flu (H1N1) cases have been reported in 51 U.S states including 17 deaths.

Sources by: CDC

Swine (H1N1) Flu Cases in 62 Countries

updated: June 01 2009

Mexico: 119 more new Swine flu cases have been reported in Mexico including 12 deaths, the total of 5029 H1N1 flu laboratory confirmed cases reported with 97 deaths in Mexico.

USA: There are 1048 new confirmed Swine (H1N1) flu cases reported in United States including 4 deaths. The cumulative total reach to 8975 cases with 15 deaths.

Canada: 218 new Swine Flu cases reported in Canada with 0 death. The cumulative total reach to 1336 H1N1 flu cases with 2 deaths.

Australia: 150 newly confirmed cases reported in Australia with 0 deaths. Australia reaches to 297 cases of Swine Flu.

The more new cases of H1N1 flu reported in countries.

China 22, Chile 85, Colombia 3, Costa Rica 4, Cyprus 1, Ecuador 7, El Salvador 16, Estonia 1, France 3, Germany 9, Greece 1, Guatemala 7, Honduras 1, Ireland 1, Israel 8, Italy 3, Jamaica 2, Japan 6, Belgium 4, Bolivia 3, Brazil 8, Paraguay 5, Peru 5, Philippines 10, Russia 1, Singapore 1, Slovakia 1, Spain 35, Switzerland 4, Turkey 2, United Kingdom (UK) 26, Argentina 63, Bahamas 1.

The cumulative total 17398 of Swine (H1N1) flu confirmed cases have been reported in 62 countries including 115 deaths.

Country Cumulative Cases Deaths
USA 8975 15
Mexico 5029 97
Canada 1336 2
Japan 370
Australia 297
Chile 250
UK 229
Spain 178
Panama 107
Argentina 100
China 52
Ecuador 39
Costa Rica 37 1
Peru 36
Korea 33
Italy 29
Germany 28
El Salvador 27
France 24
Colombia 20
Israel 19
Brazil 18
Kuwait 18
Philippines 16
Belgium 12
Guatemala 12
Uruguay 11
New Zealand 9
Switzerland 8
Paraguay 5
Singapore 5
Cuba 4
Greece 4
Ireland 4
Norway 4
Poland 4
Sweden 4
Turkey 4
Bolivia 3
Finland 3
Netherlands 3
Romania 3
Russia 3
Dominican Republic 2
Honduras 2
Jamaica 2
Malaysia 2
Slovakia 2
Thailand 2
Venezuela 2
Austria 1
Bahamas 1
Bahrain 1
Cyprus 1
Czech Republic 1
Denmark 1
Estonia 1
Hungary 1
Iceland 1
India 1
Portugal 1
Viet Nam 1
Total (62 countries) 17398 115

Soruces by: WHO

Swine Flu Treatment

In humans
If a person becomes sick with swine flu, antiviral drugs can make the illness milder and make the patient feel better faster. They may also prevent serious flu complications. For treatment, antiviral drugs work best if started soon after getting sick (within 2 days of symptoms). Beside antivirals, palliative care, at home or in hospital, focuses on controlling fevers and maintaining fluid balance. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends the use of Tamiflu (oseltamivir) or Relenza (zanamivir) for the treatment and/or prevention of infection with swine influenza viruses, however, the majority of people infected with the virus make a full recovery without requiring medical attention or antiviral drugs. The virus isolates in the 2009 outbreak have been found resistant to amantadine and rimantadine.

In swine


As swine influenza is rarely fatal to pigs, little treatment beyond rest and supportive care is required. Instead veterinary efforts are focused on preventing the spread of the virus throughout the farm, or to other farms. Vaccination and animal management techniques are most important in these efforts. The modern pork industry also uses antibiotics, which although they have no effect against the influenza virus, do help prevent bacterial pneumonia and other secondary infections in influenza-weakened herds.
source : www.swinefluvirus.wordpress.com