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Tamiflu
and Relenza are medicines to treat INFLUENZA - the flu. Tamiflu attacks the flu at
its source and stops it from spreading in the body. Purchase
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Tamiflu
is for treating adults with the flu whose
flu symptoms
started within the last day or two.
OSELTAMIVIR - ORAL (oss-el-TAM-eh-veer)
COMMON BRAND NAME(S): Tamiflu
USES:
This
medication is used to treat illness (symptoms) caused by the flu virus
(influenza). Oseltamivir is also used to prevent the flu (e.g., in
household members exposed to a flu sufferer).
HOW TO USE:
Take this medication by mouth as directed by your doctor. You may take
this with food or milk to minimize stomach upset. Take it as soon as flu
symptoms appear or as soon as possible after you have been exposed (both
within 48 hours). If you have the flu:
Take oseltamivir (Tamiflu) twice
a day for 5 days; once in the morning and once in the evening. Complete
the entire treatment of 10 doses. To prevent the flu: Take oseltamivir (Tamiflu)
once a day for at least 7 days or take it exactly as prescribed by your
doctor. This medication works best when the amount of medicine in your
body is kept at a constant level. Therefore, take this drug at the same
time(s) each day. Take this medication until the full prescribed amount
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condition worsens or if new symptoms appear.
SIDE
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Nausea may occur. If this effect persists or worsens, notify your doctor
promptly. Tell your doctor immediately if you have any of these unlikely
but serious side effects: dizziness, persistent cough. Tell your doctor
immediately if you have any of these very unlikely but serious side
effects: persistent weakness, fever, sore throat. If you notice other
effects not listed above, contact your doctor or pharmacist.
PRECAUTIONS:
Tell your doctor your medical history, including: allergies, kidney
problems. This drug may make you dizzy or drowsy; use caution engaging
in activities requiring alertness such as driving or using machinery.
Limit alcoholic beverages. This medication should be used only when
clearly needed during pregnancy. Discuss the risks and benefits with
your doctor. It is not known if this drug passes into breast milk.
Consult your doctor before breast-feeding.
European Commission Urges Calm Over
Spread of Bird Flu
The European Union has agreed on urgent new steps to counter outbreaks
of potentially lethal bird flu, but urged consumers not to panic or
avoid eating chicken despite the likelihood of new cases developing.
The European Commission, the 25-nation bloc's executive
arm, also said it expects more cases as warm spring weather brings a
seasonal migration of swans and other wild birds carrying the disease
into Europe.
As Germany became the latest EU country to confirm the lethal H5N1
strain of the disease, EU health experts agreed to ban all imports of
untreated feathers to further reduce the "high risk" of the disease
spreading.
"(Wednesday's) decision ... was taken in light of the rapid spread of
avian influenza over the past months and the current high risk of the
disease spreading further," said the European Commission in a statement.
So far, the H5N1 virus -- which in its highly pathogenic form can be
fatal to humans -- has been detected within Europe in Austria, Bulgaria,
Croatia, Germany, Greece, Italy, Romania, Slovenia and Ukraine.
Health commissioner Marko Kyprianou, attending the two days of talks
with health experts from EU member states, underlined that there is
unlikely to be an early end to the cases of bird flu.
"Given that the spring migration will begin soon we will review again
the situation to see if there's need for additional methods ... We
shouldn't be surprised if we have more migratory wild birds with this
virus," he said.
"There's no need to panic," he warned. "We have to advise the European
public to stay calm...There's no reason not to consume chicken."
The potentially lethal H5N1 strain has killed at least 90 people --
almost half those who caught it -- mostly in Southeast Asia and China
where it first erupted but also in Turkey and northern Iraq.
EU fears transmission of virus into human food chain
The big fear in the EU -- which is the world's third biggest exporter of
poultry after the United States and Brazil -- is that the virus passes
from migratory swans to chickens, or other birds in the human food
chain.
The avian virus, first reported on Europe's southeastern flanks in early
January, re-erupted with a vengeance last week, starting in Italy and
Greece but now with almost daily cases in a string of European
countries.
In Germany, authorities Wednesday set up the now-standard 10-kilometer
(six-mile) surveillance zone around the site where the dead wild swans
were found on the island of Rügen in the Baltic Sea.
Hours later Hungary confirmed that it had detected the H5-type virus in
the bodies of three dead swans in the south of the country.
--courtesy dw-world.de Germany
Confirms Bird Flu
Berlin, Feb. 16 (Guardian News Service): European countries began
shutting away their poultry flocks yesterday as Germany and Austria
became the latest countries to confirm cases of avian influenza.
German officials said yesterday that two swans found on a beach on the
Baltic island of Rugen had died from H5N1, the highly pathogenic avian
form of the virus. They are the first cases of bird flu in Germany. Last
night Danish officials were carrying out tests on nine dead swans found
on aDanish island close to Rugen.
Last night the UN's World Animal Health Organisation (OIE) urged other
European countries to strengthen their surveillance of domestic poultry
and to keep them clear of wild birds.
``It is very possible that we will see other cases. Little can be done
about the migratory patterns of wild birds, therefore we emphasise the
importance of minimising the opportunity for domestic birds to come into
contact with wild birds," an OIE spokeswoman said in Paris.
Germany's coalition government introduced a series of emergency measures
yesterday to prevent the virus in wild birds from infecting domestic
poultry. The agriculture minister, Horst Seehofer, brought forward a ban
on keeping poultry outdoors which was originally due to take effect on
March1.
Austria, Sweden and Norway ordered farmers to keep chickens and turkeys
indoors, and yesterday the Netherlands and France extended their bans
nationally. The Danish veterinary and food administration ordered all
flocks of more than 100 birds to be locked up. A restricted zone of
nearly two miles was set up around the dead swans found in Austria.
With thousands of birds due to migrate over the next few weeks, experts
warned that its spread throughout Europe was unavoidable.
The deadly strain of bird flu has so far killed 91 people in Asia, the
Middle East and Turkey.
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