H1N1 Outbreak: 25 States in The U.S. Reporting Widespread Flu – ‘These Patients Are Very, Very Ill’ – Several Deaths Reported – Alberta: Five Dead, 965 Infected

If you have been given a vaccine containing squalene last year (which I told you to avoid at all cost), then you may be in trouble this flu season and here’s why:

– Dr. Russell Blaylock:

“No one should take the swine flu vaccine–it is one of the most dangerous vaccines ever devised. It contains an immune adjuvant called squalene (MF-59) which has been shown to cause severe autoimmune disorders such as MS, rheumatoid arthritis and Lupus. This is the vaccine adjuvant that is strongly linked to the Gulf War syndrome, which killed over 10,000 soldiers and caused a 200% increase in the fatal disease ALS (Lou Gehreg disease). This virus H1N1 kills by causing a “cytokine storm”, which means that it cause the body’s immune system to overreact and that is why it is killing young people and is a mild disease in the elderly. (The elderly have weakened immune systems.) This vaccine is a very powerful immune stimulator and carries the real possibility of making the lethality of the virus much greater.

Related info:

Study: Flu Vaccine Causes 1,400 Percent Increased Risk Of Narcolepsy

Shocking H1N1 Swine Flu Vaccine Miscarriage Stories From Pregnant Women

Doctor, cited on FOX News as expert on infectious diseases, would not give highly toxic swine flu vaccine to his children:

Doctor: “I have more concern about the vaccine than I do about the swine flu.”
‘Vaccine has 25,000 times the level of mercury then would be considered toxic if it was food or water.’

Squalene: The Swine Flu Vaccine’s Dirty Little Secret Exposed

To me flu is not a big deal.

I’ve never seen a patient that didn’t recover very fast with acupunture, homeopathy, propolis, herbs etc.


CDC: 25 states reporting widespread flu (CNN, Jan 3, 2014):

The number of states reporting widespread seasonal flu activity jumped from 10 to 25 last week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Friday.

Widespread activity was reported in Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Colorado, Connecticut, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nebraska, Nevada, New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington state and Wyoming, according to the CDC’s weekly flu advisory report, covering the week ending December 28.

“Widespread” means that more than 50% of geographic regions in a state — counties, for example — are reporting flu activity. It addresses the spread of the flu, not its severity.

However, 20 states experienced a high proportion of outpatient visits to health care providers for flu-like illnesses. The most severe activity seems to be located in the Southeastern states.

So far, “it’s a typical influenza season, if I can use that word,” Dr. Michael Jhung, a medical officer in the CDC’s flu division, told CNN last week.

Five dead, 965 infected with H1N1 after outbreak in Alberta  (National Post, Jan 3, 2014):

CALGARY — Health officials are confirming five people have died from an outbreak of H1N1 influenza in Alberta.

Three of the deaths were in Edmonton, two in Calgary.

There are now 965 confirmed cases of the flu in Alberta and 270 of those people are in hospital.

Dr. Gerry Predy, senior medical officer of health, says the largest numbers have been seen in the last three weeks, which is typical in the development of a flu outbreak.

Swine flu vaccinations urged after California death (San Jose Mercury News, Jan 3, 2014):

VENTURA, Calif. — Health officials are urging people to be vaccinated for swine flu after a woman died in Southern California and more than a dozen people were hospitalized with flu-like symptoms in Central California.

Portland family says H1N1 virus killed their sister (FOX12 Oregon, Jan 3, 2014):

This flu season is turning deadly and one family says their loved one died from the H1N1 virus.

The Lincoln family says their loved one was admitted to Adventist Medical Center with the flu in mid-December and four days later, they say, she died.

“She was my baby sister,” said Daryl Lincoln.

Daryl Lincoln has a lot of good memories of his sister Vernitta Lincoln, who was only 53 when she died.

“Vernitta was real down to earth and everybody liked her. She had no enemys,” said Daryl Lincoln.

On Dec. 19, Vernitta ended up in the hospital because of the H1N1 virus.

Daryl said Vernitta had been taking over-the-counter medications for almost two weeks but they didn’t seem to work.

One night Vernitta passed out and never regained consciousness, Daryl said.

“The doctors were saying that both lungs had pneumonia in them and that she somehow had contracted the H1N1 virus,” said Daryl.

Vernitta eventually died in the hospital.

H1N1 Outbreak In Ann Arbor: “These Patients Are Very, Very Ill” (CBS Detroit, Jan 2, 2013):

Health officials at University of Michigan Hospital in Ann Arbor say they’re dealing with a severe outbreak of the flu.

A minimum of six people were in the intensive care unit on Thursday, as doctors dealt with what was believed to be multiple cases of H1N1, also know as “Swine Flu.”

According to Dr. Lena Napolitano, director of the University of Michigan’s Surgical Critical Care and Intensive Care units, several  patients — mostly young or middle-aged — are not doing well.

“They are on very advanced life support,” Napolitano told WWJ Newsradio 950.

“There are other intensive care units — our medical ICU, our pediatric ICU — who also have other patients,” she added.” And I don’t have those exact numbers; but suffice it to say, it is a striking increase, and these patients are very, very ill.”

Napolitano said the outbreak reminds her of a similar outbreak of the H1N1 virus in 2009.

 

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