A healthcare worker has become the third person in Missouri to contract an illness after having contact with a patient infected with bird flu. It sure looks like they might actually be going to push this bird flu as the next plandemic.
Be careful, because this time, there might actually be something other than a cold and people may actually get sick or worse.
After the third close contact of a patient in Missouri, who was hospitalized with H5N1 bird flu, has reported that they also experienced symptoms, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Friday that the concern is still “low.”
The person, who is a health care worker, was not tested because their symptoms resolved before the investigation into the illnesses began, according to the CDC. So there’s no way to know for certain if their symptoms were bird flu related. And that relies on whether or not the PCR tests used to check for bird flu are accurate or not, and all evidence points to them being irrelevant at best.
The CDC ADMITS: PCR Tests CANNOT Differentiate Between Coronaviruses!Cent
But this is far from a cut-and-dried case, according to a report by WSVN News Miami. The patient had underlying medical conditions that compromised their lung function, and when tested, the concentration of virus in a sample taken from them was low, which would normally suggest a mild or perhaps waning infection.
“At this point, my index of concern is still low,” said Dr. Michael Osterholm, who directs the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota. He is not involved in the Missouri investigation. There are plenty of cold viruses going around at all times the could mimic the symptoms of bird flu, Osterhold admitted. Interesting how they never admitted that with COVID.
They Admit It: The Flu Has Disappeared Now That COVID Is Here
“At the same time, we’ve had tremendous activity with Covid at that very time, as well as RSV, and so you would expect to see potentially several percent of the population having respiratory symptoms not due to influenza,” Osterholm added. In a hospital setting, workers would be even more likely to encounter those bugs.
Still, the discovery of additional suspect cases this late into the investigation raises questions.
“It’s unclear why this wasn’t reported with the other cases, and moves to identify influenza cases early are needed,” said Dr. Seema Lakdawala, an associate professor of microbiology and immunology at Emory University School of Medicine.
“We need more details of whether this is influenza infection or another respiratory virus. Serology will be useful in all these cases, as well as other contacts that may not have had symptoms,” said Lakdawala, who studies transmission of the H5N1 virus but also is not involved in the Missouri investigation.
“It is imperative that we identify any and all cattle herds that may have H5 in all states,” she said. “It is ridiculous that this information is still not known this many months after the first cattle cases were identified.”
So the mass testing phase has started. We know what that means. They will find this virus literally everywhere and in that it is spreading from person to person.
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