on Mon, Oct 22, 2001 at 12:14:29PM -0700, Eric Cordian (emc@artifact.psychedelic.net) wrote:
Tim wrote:
Looks like the "toast" and "goner" comments are right on...as expected.
I've been watching a press conference of D.C. politicos, mayor and company, on CNN. Looks like several inhalational anthrax cases confirmed, and *two deaths* of postal workers over the weekend with "suspicious" symptoms and test results.
(Don't know if one of them is the postal worker already diagnosed with inhalational anthrax since last Friday...it's possible this is one of the people. Sounds like the two deaths were of others, though, with anthrax only being suspected post mortem.)
Yes, this is very worrisome. I've been waiting for the day when we have less anthrax cases than the day before, and apparently we've not seen the peak yet.
antrax: n. AKA mailsorter's disease
(Future dictionary entry)
There is a vaccine for anthrax. It's not generally distributed, though
military and vetinary personnel may receive it. The CDC's fact sheet
states that it requires six doses (three at two week intervals, then six
months), protects against cutaneous and inhalation anthrax, and
requires an annual booster. There are some risks of the vaccine, though
exposure risks are higher, the worst is a sever allergic reaction,
observed in less than 1 in 100,000 doses.
Might it make sense to vaccinate mailroom personnel? Like high-end
routers on the 'Net, this is where the current delivery mechanism is
bottlenecked.
Peace.
--
Karsten M. Self