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date: Tue, 16 Sep 2008 10:13:22 +0100,    group: uk.business.agriculture        back       
Warning over 'community superbugs'   
Pat's Note: But they are neglecting their duties and will have to
account for their actions in due time.

They still won't release the results of testing Britain's pigs for
MRSA. 

That does not take an increase in staff, merely a normal dose of
courage, integrity and honesty.

Many British officials and scientists are going to get themselves
prosecuted in front of an international court for mass manslaughter.

We pay them to do a job and they are not doing it.

Britain's pigs are still being treated with abnormal quantities of
antibiotics to control the consequences of the PMWS epidemic nine
years after the mutated form first surfaced.

The Dutch have protected their hospitals, from pigs and pig people for
the last four years and, as a consequence, have few problems outside
the pig farms.

http://ukpress.google.com/article/ALeqM5i8sEzrSLKuONgPhRcn57KnJ05wag

Warning over 'community superbugs'
6 hours ago

Britain faces a major outbreak of new strains of community superbugs
unless action is taken, a leading scientist has warned.

Professor Hugh Pennington told BBC Radio 4 the Health Protection
Agency lacked the staff for the greater surveillance of such virulent
and mutating bacteria.

But the Government's leading infection adviser said he was assured its
monitors could cope with the workload. He told the broadcaster: "If we
do neglect these bugs, we neglect them at our peril.

"The scandal here is that we know what to do, the technology's there
to spot these things as they're appearing and we know how to react to
them. It would be quite wrong if we allow these things to develop."

Concerns are growing among microbiologists about PVL (Panton-Valentine
leukocidin), produced by some bacteria from the family staphylococcus
and which destroys white blood cells.

Unlike hospital-acquired MRSA, which mainly affects older people and
those who are vulnerable, it strikes children and people under 40 who
are otherwise fit and healthy.

Transmitted by close contact, at its worst it can lead to blood
poisoning infections and a severe type of pneumonia, which can prove
fatal.

Professor Brian Duerdan, the government's inspector of infection
control in England and Wales, told the BBC those infections were
getting priority attention.

"There is an urgency for people to recognise this is occurring in the
community. We do know that it spreads in the community amongst close
contacts, families, people who share the same sporting events." 

-- 
Regards
Pat Gardiner
Release the results of testing British pigs for MRSA and C.Diff now!
www.go-self-sufficient.com  and http://animal-epidemics.blogspot.com/
date: Tue, 16 Sep 2008 10:13:22 +0100   author:   Pat Gardiner

Re: Warning over 'community superbugs'   
In article , Pat Gardiner 
 writes
>
>Many British officials and scientists are going to get themselves
>prosecuted in front of an international court for mass manslaughter.
>
I sometimes wonder whether you actually believe what you post.

I'll bet you £50 that this prediction of yours will never come to pass. 
And I'll even give you odds of 10 to 1.

So, how about it, Pat? Do or don't you believe what you've just posted?

-- 
Malcolm
date: Tue, 16 Sep 2008 11:57:12 +0100   author:   Malcolm

Re: Warning over 'community superbugs'   
On Tue, 16 Sep 2008 11:57:12 +0100, Malcolm
 wrote:

>
>In article , Pat Gardiner 
> writes
>>
>>Many British officials and scientists are going to get themselves
>>prosecuted in front of an international court for mass manslaughter.
>>
>I sometimes wonder whether you actually believe what you post.
>
>I'll bet you £50 that this prediction of yours will never come to pass. 
>And I'll even give you odds of 10 to 1.
>
>So, how about it, Pat? Do or don't you believe what you've just posted?

I see that you have not started any treatment for your obsession with
stalking.

I don't gamble. Life it quite chancy enough given the unbalanced
nature of some of the scientists in government employ.

-- 
Regards
Pat Gardiner
Release the results of testing British pigs for MRSA and C.Diff now!
www.go-self-sufficient.com  and http://animal-epidemics.blogspot.com/
date: Tue, 16 Sep 2008 12:55:47 +0100   author:   Pat Gardiner

Re: Warning over 'community superbugs'   
Pat Gardiner wrote:
> On Tue, 16 Sep 2008 11:57:12 +0100, Malcolm
>  wrote:
> 
>> In article , Pat Gardiner 
>>  writes
>>> Many British officials and scientists are going to get themselves
>>> prosecuted in front of an international court for mass manslaughter.
>>>
>> I sometimes wonder whether you actually believe what you post.
>>
>> I'll bet you £50 that this prediction of yours will never come to pass. 
>> And I'll even give you odds of 10 to 1.
>>
>> So, how about it, Pat? Do or don't you believe what you've just posted?
> 
> I see that you have not started any treatment for your obsession with
> stalking.
> 
> I don't gamble. Life it quite chancy enough given the unbalanced
> nature of some of the scientists in government employ.
> 
Hmmm!  You obviously don't believe what you post.  Typical troll behaviour.

-- 
Old Codger
e-mail use reply to field

What matters in politics is not what happens, but what you can make 
people believe has happened. [Janet Daley 27/8/2003]
date: Tue, 16 Sep 2008 17:53:19 +0100   author:   Old Codger

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