The jokes, games and other amusements sparked by the current swine flu scare seem to be spreading even faster than the virus itself. The latest is an online game called 'Swinefighter', where you have to inject fast-breeding swine flu bugs.
Try the game here, if you're interested.
While on the subject, I'm amused by a Reuters report.
Humans have it. Pigs don't. At least not yet, and U.S. pork producers are doing everything they can to make sure that the new H1N1 virus, known around the world as the "swine flu," stays out of their herds.
"That is the biggest concern, that your herd could somehow contract this illness from an infected person," said Kansas hog farmer Ron Suther, who is banning visitors from his sow barns and requiring maintenance workers, delivery men and other strangers to report on recent travels and any illness before they step foot on his property.
"If a person is sick, we don't want you coming anywhere on the farm," Suther said.
. . .
"There is no evidence of this new strain being in our pig populations in the United States. And our concern very much is we don't want a sick human to come into our barns and transmit this new virus to our pigs," said National Pork Producers chief veterinarian Jennifer Greiner.
"If humans give it to pigs, we don't have things like Tamiflu for pigs. We don't have antivirals. We have no treatment other than to give them aspirin," said Greiner.
The World Health Organization on Thursday officially declared it would stop calling the new strain of flu "swine flu," because no pigs in any country have been determined to have the illness and the origination of the strain has not been determined.
There's more at the link.
Hey, I thought quarantine was a human health measure - but keeping us away from the pigs, for their sake? How are we supposed to bring home the bacon now?
Peter
From World of Warcraft: Swine Flu
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