It is expected that one of the types of flu that will be prevalent in the 2010-2011 flu season in the Northern Hemisphere and US is H1N1/09 Pandemic Swine Flu again/still. It is still infecting people who have not had the vaccination. H1N1/09 will be among the viruses that the 2010 seasonal flu shot will protect against.
There is still risk for those who get this type of flu in 2010 to die from the infection, but, hopefully, more people will get the vaccination and protect themselves and those they come in contact with against it. Those at high risk of complications and death from the flu should be vaccinated now as we go into the new flu season or it may well be the cause of death of more people in 2010.
See the related question below about the high risk groups.
No!
Noone really nos it depends if it gets stronger or we can kill it but quite a while.
Yes, Swine flu (A-H1N1/09) can kill people. For more information go to the related links below.
In Britain the Swine Flu motto is: CATCH IT BIN IT KILL IT
I Kill People was created on 2010-11-15.
Yes, and if you are taking oral contraceptives and the doctor gives you an anti-biotic it can kill not only the bug, but the effectiveness of your pill.
Yes. If not treated correctly it could cause death, as many people in the U.S. have died from it!
Normal flu does kill. In the USA alone it killed over 36,000 people in 2008! So if you were to find out the death numbers from flu in other countries the total would very high! http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/2240054/posts Swine flu is just more of a concern as it is a new type of flu containing both bird flu and swine flu. Only very few people if anyone at all will have immunity from Swine flu.
Catch it Bin it Kill it
Swine Flu will go eventually but scientist are guessing maybe in two to three years. It also depends on how many people in the world have it because the more it spreads the harder it is to kill. I know it is horrible!
The Swine Flu is similar to the regular seasonal flu, many adults and children have died from it around the world, but the majority recover. Unlike the seasonal flu, however, less elderly people have been killed by the A-H1N1/09 swine flu than the regular seasonal flu. People over 65 are much less at risk from the swine flu than seasonal flu.
No, antibiotics are for bacteria and swine flu is a virus. See the related question below for more information.