Swine flu
July 24, 2009Joerg Hacker, president of the Robert Koch Institute, confirmed the number when he appeared on the national news program ZDF-Morgenmagazin on Friday.
Hacker said that they are watching it carefully and there was no need to panic, adding that it was a little strange that the virus is showing such virility during the summer months, blaming the phenomenon on vacationers returning from foreign countries.
This figure may sound high, but it is actually far less than the 637 cases confirmed in the previous 24 hour period.
Hacker stressed that more cases are expected and that some of them could result in serious illness, as has been the case in Great Britain.
Vaccines on order
It was announced Friday that the German states have together ordered 50 million doses of swine flu vaccine, which would be enough to protect 30 percent of the population, or 25 million people, since everyone has to be vaccinated twice.
According to the German news agency dpa, Juergen Banzer, health minister of the state of Hessen confirmed that the vaccine is currently being developed, and won't be ready until the end of September. First on the list to be vaccinated are people in especially high risk groups like asthmatics, the chronically ill and people who work in the health industry.
The total cost for this batch of vaccine is expected to be 700 million euros ($992 million), which will eventually be paid by the individual health insurance agencies. Buying enough doses to cover the entire population of Germany would cost 2 billion euros.
Numbers up across Europe
A European health agency has reported 1,671 new cases of swine flu within one 24-hour period across Europe this week, a sharper rise than had been recorded in recent days.
The rise, reported Thursday by the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), was monitored in the 24-hour period leading up to 5 pm (1500 GMT) Thursday. The group had only monitored 552 new cases in the prior 24-hour period, and 212 in the one before that.
The ECDC focuses on the 31 countries that make up the European Union and the European Free Trade Association (EFTA). As of Thursday, it had recorded 19,404 total cases in 30 of those countries, with 35 deaths.
Of those countries, Britain continues to have the most cases, at 11,159. Next came Germany, with 2,455 cases.
Worldwide there have been 151,656 cases reported, with 868 of them being fatal.
mrm/AP/dpa/AFP
Editor: Neil King