Saturday, August 2, 2014

a virus 97% similar to the Spanish flu

This is not the first time that his work is criticized, even condemned by some scholars. In June, he was able to reconstruct a virus 97% similar to the Spanish flu that killed between 50 and 100 million people in 1918 and 1919.

Anticipate risks

However, the objective of these studies was approved by the Biosafety Committee of Wisconsin. And because Yoshihiro Kawaoka attempts to identify possible natural mutations of the virus that would then him to evade the immune system.

http://droidmonster.webs.com/apps/blog/show/42534892-what-is-the-ultimate-nature-of-reality-
https://mysquidoolenses.wordpress.com/2014/07/31/the-discovery-of-gravitational-waves-s-inflation/
http://myandroidstuff.tumblr.com/post/93391711549/roving-mars

Moreover, to John Oxford, professor of virology interviewed by the Guardian , such mutant strains do exist. "Probably in a duck in Siberia, fortunately for us, but if by chance they got closer, we would be in danger." That is why the Japanese would anticipate these risks by making stronger vaccines.

But the problem lies in the handling of these dangerous viruses in the laboratory. "When the result is a potential pandemic, even a small risk should be strongly considered," says epidemiologist Marc Lipsitch American. He and other researchers from Harvard and Yale, taking ten laboratories conducting such experiments for ten years, the probability of being infected is 20%. Accidents that echo the events of April 2014, when the Institut Pasteur has lost 3,000 tubes containing the SARS virus, a dangerous respiratory illness.

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