A experienced bird flu doctor from Vietnam says Tamiflu, the drug being stockpiled for treatment of avian flu, is useless against the virus.
Dr. Nguyen Tuong Van of the Centre for Tropical Diseases in Hanoi has treated 41 victims of H5N1, following World Health Organization guidelines and administering Tamiflu to her patients. She told the Sunday Times of London that the medicine had no effect.
"We place no importance on using this drug on our patients," she said. "Tamiflu is really only meant for treating ordinary type A flu. It was not designed to combat H5N1."
The Sunday Times said the finding casts doubt on the British government's pandemic flu policy. The government has ordered 15 million doses of Tamiflu be stockpiled in England. The U.S. government has orders for millions more.
Van said the only way to keep avian flu patients alive is to "support" all their vital organs -- including the liver and kidneys -- with modern technology like ventilators and dialysis machines, the Sunday Times reported.
The World Health Organization has acknowledged Tamiflu has not been "widely successful in human patients," but said it believes it would have been more effective in many Asian countries if it had been used earlier in the illness.
If a pandemic starts, we will have the opportunity to discover if they are right.
12/03/05
About the Author:
William Prescott is a health care researcher and author, focusing on science-based CAM (Complimentary and Alternative) healthcare solutions to contemporary medical challenges. |