over 1900!
The media is saying 22 million in the United States, but many credible sources also point toward this being a "hoax" in order to encourage people into taking the Vaccine which could be "toxic".
That is unknown. The specifics and counts of cases are no longer being tracked by CDC, WHO, and most US states now that the pandemic has been declared over. Influenza cases are monitored, but specific H1N1/09 counts aren't available separately from other influenza reporting any longer.
too many
6 billion
2
The H1N1/09 pandemic swine flu virus causes influenza. The symptoms are the same as most other types of flu. It has caused millions of people world-wide to become sick with the flu and thousands of deaths. It is a milder disease than some other types of flu, including the regular seasonal flu that, while not the same number of cases like the more easily transmitted swine flu, the seasonal flu typically causes the death of more of those infected than swine flu has so far. In the US there are approximately 36,000 deaths from the seasonal flu each year. See the related question below for more on the symptoms and death rates of swine flu.
There are no statistics from either the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) or from the McHenry County health statistics web page about the number of cases specific to that county. The IDPH site does have a map that shows McHenry County among the counties that have had have cases of swine flu confirmed, and it is shown among the counties that did not have associated deaths.The total cumulative count of confirmed cases in Illinois is 405 as of August 28, 2009 with 17 deaths state wide.
there are about 56
The pandemic has been declared over but there are still outbreaks in limited locations world wide. The specifics and counts of cases are no longer being tracked by CDC, WHO, and most US states. Influenza cases are monitored but specific H1N1/09 counts aren't available separately from other influenza reporting any longer.
The pandemic has been declared over but there are still outbreaks in limited locations world wide. The specifics and counts of cases are no longer being tracked by CDC, WHO, and most US states. Influenza cases are monitored, but specific H1N1/09 counts aren't available separately from other influenza reporting any longer.
On 1/6/10, the following countries rank as the top three countries with the most cases of the pandemic flu:Germany with 209,885 casesPortugal with 166,922 casesArgentina with 142,592 casesWorld-wide to date there have been 1,562,049 cases and 16,665 deaths.
number 1 in Arab world number 50 world wide
Since the beginning of the suspected and reported cases in late March 2009, there are now cases of the Novel H1N1 influenza in most corners of the world (late June 2009). For a list showing where the current reported and confirmed cases have been and where they are, see the related question below: "Which cities states or countries have deaths or cases of swine flu?". The time line of the spread is now available from the World Health Organization (WHO) with an interactive map on their web pages that gives a very good representation of how the spread moved across the countries of the world in the pandemic, to which locations and how fast as of the current time period. The map requires a flash player to view. See the related link below to the WHO Interactive map.
2 billion
Number one
Infinite number
No. It was not number one.