Viruses, like the Swine Flu Virus, are not really "alive", but in order for them to replicate, they need a compatible host (such as a person or animal like a pig) or other environmental conditions that enable them to not dry up or run out of fuel. Most viruses last about two hours on a non-animate surface, mostly depending on the humidity or other sources of moisture.
Since dollars are paper and fabric, they could hold some additional moisture, so they may remain dormant but viable on that surface a little longer than if they were on a metal doorknob, for instance. Money is a known location for microbes, including bacteria and viruses, to collect and even reproduce, so any time you handle money, it is wise to wash your hands as soon as possible after wards.
One of the often unknown methods of disease transmission is money handling by customers and servers in restaurants. Carrying waterless hand sanitizer with you to use in those circumstances before putting your hands to your mouth again, is a good practice. Responsible restaurants disallow servers from handling money and assign that responsibility to a different worker to avoid contamination to your food and utensils. For more information about common methods of microbe transmission and methods to avoid them, see the related question below.
The chances are you won't. As of Monday 20th July 2009, the only people who have died from swine flu (or pig flu) in the UK have had underlying health problems or have recently given birth to a child. Also, it depends on where you live in the UK; if you live in Scotland, the West Midlands or London, you have a greater chance of contracting the virus. Nevertheless, even in those three most infected areas of the United Kingdom, the probability of catching swine flu is still minimal, so you need not worry too much yet. Scientists are preparing a vaccine for swine flu, work is well underway, but it may not be ready until October. Until then, there is a drug called Tamiflu which can be taken to reduce the effects of swine flu, but it will not protect you from catching the virus itself.
you should not worry. you should follow all the procedures and reccomendations to avoid getting sick by the flu.
Swine flu began in China. Pigs (swine ) live with humans thus "swine" flu mutated and transferred to humans.
Swine that are raised on farms.
The swine flu H1N1/09 virus survives as do all viruses, by invading a host to support it and do its work to reproduce. Viruses can not live without a host to infect. That is why some viral diseases have been eliminated by vaccination programs, if everyone is vaccinated, no one becomes a host. Don't let flu viruses survive inside you, get a flu vaccination every year prior to flu season.
Not to my knowledge, and I live there.
Farms, and other livestock locations.
Larry King Live - 1985 Swine Flu was released on: USA: 27 April 2009
"Million Dollar Bill", from the album "I Look to You"
No, in the US the injection forms of the vaccines are made from inactivated "dead" virus. The nasal spray vaccine contains weakened virus that can not make you get the flu but is called a Live Attenuated Influenza Vaccine (LAIV). There is a new form of injected vaccine for the flu in the 2011-2012 flu season in the US that is intradermal instead of the intramuscular route, it also contains inactivated virus particles. See the related question below.
most of the people who had swine flu have gotten better. its only a few who have died
No. It is a virus. Viruses are small (smaller than bacteria. You cannot view them with anything less than the Electron Microscope which I really doubt you will be allowed to use).They consist of a small outer chemical shell (similar to a cell wall, but its still even smaller) and inside is a fluid containing mutating strandss of RNA. The RNA is injected into the cells of your body by the virus, which then takes over the assaulted cell and mutates it. The RNA is also species specific. This means, it will only affecct humans, as that's what its RNA recognizes to react with. Similar to a computer program. However, in rare cases the virus itself will mutate and adapt to a new environment if exposed long enough. In this case the swine flu was infecting pigs in Mexico and south America. Farmers there were exposed to the virus and carried it. The virus did not know how to survive, so it mutated to allow itself to live in humans. Thus we have te swine flu.