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Posts Tagged ‘H1N1’

Having trouble finding H1N1? Harvard Medical School releases Swine Flu tracking app

Monday, October 26th, 2009

Harvard Medical School has developed a H1N1-tracking iPhone app. The app is a project of HMS Mobile, which sounds like a British Navy ship, but says it’s a Harvard Medical group dedicated to helping people deal with day-to-day health emergencies.

Also — that’ll be two bucks. Just around the corner, those anti-capitalist hippies at Children’s Hospital, working with the MIT Media Lab, released their own, free H1N1 tracking app last month.

That’s two H1N1 apps sprouting from about one city block — If things keep up like this, pretty soon you should be able to use your mobile phone to track H1N1 germs chasing you down the street in real-time, or see the normally invisible H1N1 crawling over people’s faces in an augmented reality app, exposing them as the feverish, congested zombies they are.

Antigen Express synthetic H1N1 flu vaccine in the works

Friday, September 25th, 2009

By Julie Donnelly

Julie Donnelly

Worcester-based synthetic vaccine company Antigen Express Inc. is hard at work making the next generation of vaccines against both avian and swine flu.

The company wasn’t among the five pharmaceutical giants to be approved to produce the H1N1 vaccine that will be distributed throughout the U.S. in the next few weeks. In fact, Antigen Express is still waiting for the FDA to approve protocols for clinical trials of its H1N1 vaccine — company President Eric von Hofe said he expects those conversations to happen in the next few weeks. Von Hofe said the company is currently doing trials in Lebanon and is seeking approval to do clinical trials from European Union regulators as well.

The FDA has never approved a synthetic vaccine for prophylactic use. But von Hofe said that he thinks the regulator is starting to warm up to the novel technology.

“Back when there was the H5N1 (avian flu) scare, the FDA was very skeptical of synthetic vaccines. But then they tried to make a vaccine out of eggs and they just couldn’t do it because it was so toxic. Now I think they may be more open new technologies,” von Hofe said.

Antigen Express uses a combination of three peptides, which are strands of linked amino acids, to develop its vaccines. Von Hofe said the company discovered that one of the peptides the company is using for its H5N1 vaccine, also in development, is from a part of the virus that is identical with H1N1. So now the company has to identify the other two peptides for the combination, get approval from U.S. and/or EU regulators to start trials and do the trials. This whole process should take more than a year, which means the company won’t be a player in this year’s fight against pandemic flu.

… Unless things go horribly, horribly wrong. Von Hofe said that if the swine flu mutates halfway through the season, and the vaccines being manufactured now are ineffective, the government could push up the time lines for other vaccines in development, including, perhaps, Antigen Express’ vaccine.

MIT doc student: Easy on the swine flu panic

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

Speaking of swine flu — Peter Doshi, a doctoral student in MIT’s History, Anthropology, and Science, Technology, and Society program (winner of the weirdest placement of “ands” in an organization’s name) says we may be overreacting to H1N1:

The sudden emphasis on laboratory testing for H1N1 in the first weeks of the outbreak, particularly in the U.S., produced what I call concern bias, in which concern and anxiety may drive events more than the disease itself.

ferrara_mike

Microfluidics CEO Mike Ferrara

Meanwhile, New Scientist reports the threat posed by swine flu is deadly serious.  

Whichever view pans out, Newton-based medical devices company Microfluidics is betting on demand for an H1N1 vaccine being big. MHT staff writer Julie Donnelly talked to CEO Mike Ferrara last week:

As demand for seasonal and H1N1 flu vaccine skyrockets, the Newton-based company is aiming to cash in as one of a relatively few companies experienced in mixing vaccines with adjuvants — substances that may be added to the vaccines to make them work better. 

Via Boston.com.

PAX says swine flu is apparently a gaming fan

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

By Rodney Brown

Rodney BrownThe folks behind the Penny Arcade Expo are bringing their gaming conference to Boston next March, but hopefully leaving the swine flu behind in Seattle.

According to the official Twitter feed of PAX, the conference, which ran Sept. 4-6, just confirmed via testing the first case of swine flu. In between sessions with serious titles like “Breaking into the Game Industry the Educated Way” and not-so-serious titles like “How can we make online gaming communities suck less?” apparently at least one conference attendee failed his saving throw versus H1N1 against his constitution (yes, that’s an old-school D&D reference).

PAX East will bring the creators of the Penny Arcade webcomic to the Hynes Convention Center March 26-28 of 2010. Penny Arcade creators Mike Krahulik and Jerry Holkins — known better to the geek community by the names of their webcomic alter egos Gabe and Tycho — say that the Boston version of PAX will share many of the elements of the Seattle conference but have enough of its own character to draw visitors from the West Coast.

Let’s hope they decide not to share the swine flu, and leave it back in the land of Starbucks and Microsoft.

MIT Media Lab, Children’s Hospital develop H1N1 iPhone app

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

H1N1iPhoneIf you’re afraid of contracting H1N1, or  you’re a hypochondriac, or you’re just morbidly curious — and you have an iPhone — then get yourself to the App Store ASAP. Children’s Hospital reports it has developed an H1N1-alerting and reporting iPhone app with the MIT Media Lab:

The new application also features an option for users to submit an outbreak report. This will enable individuals in cities and countries around the world to interact with the HealthMap team and participate in the public health surveillance process. Users may take photos – of situations and scenarios of, and/or leading to, disease – with their iPhone and submit them to the HealthMap system for review and eventual posting as an alert on the worldwide map.

The free app, called OutbreaksNearMe, is based on HealthMap, another Children’s project — in conjunction with MIT and Harvard — marking cases of infectious diseases on an interactive map.

BBJ: Boston man is 2nd H1N1 death in Mass.

Monday, June 29th, 2009

An 84-year-old man is the second Massachusetts resident to die from H1N1, also known as the swine flu, according to the Boston Business Journal. Staff writer Julie Donnelly reports: 

The patient was hospitalized June 12 and died six days later, on June 18. On Monday, his tests results came back positive for H1N1. The patient had several serious underlying health conditions that placed him at high risk of complications from the flu, according to public health officials.

The BBJ’s Mass Roundup blog also notes the Springfield Republican’s piece on H1N1’s effect on pig farming in the Pioneer Valley:

“Due to the overreaction, the pork market took quite a dive for several days after it hit the press. And, it hasn’t come back yet,” said Matthew J. Parsons, a partner with his cousin Earle in  the [Earle M. Parsons & Sons farm in Hadley], which sells about 2,500 pigs a year. 

After the jump, watch the Republican’s video on the economic effects of H1N1.

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