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Description
From 2008: Marsha Hovey of the City of Cupertino Office of Emergency Services presents this overview of the threat of pandemic, the potential impact on our community and the world, and how individuals can prevent the spread. Recorded January 30, 2008 at the Cupertino Community Hall.
This video is one in a series of programs presented as part of the Cupertino City Channel's digital video archive project.
A
Good
evening
my
name
is
Marsha
javi
I'm,
the
emergency
services
coordinator
for
the
city
of
Cupertino
and
I
worked
for
Santa
Clara,
County
Fire
Department
this
evening,
we're
doing
the
first
presentation
pandemic
flu.
What
should
you
know
and
hope
to
fully
be
able
to
do
more
of
them
in
the
future,
as
we
get
more
information
I
want
to
thank
everyone.
A
That's
here
in
the
audience
today
it
it's
a
good
first
step
being
prepared
and
educating
yourself
on
what
you
need
to
know
for
pandemic
flu
is
is
really
key,
because
once
you
have
the
information,
then
you
know
what
you
need
to
do
and
what
just
kind
of
becomes
the
the
hype
of
the
day.
I
want
to
talk
about
the
emergency
procedures
for
this
room.
Even
though
we're
talking
about
pandemic
flu
earthquake
is
always
a
possibility.
A
Let
you
know
which,
depending
on
how
safe
it
is,
and
we
will
convene
out
in
the
in
the
quad
area,
so
that
everyone
can
make
sure
that
everyone's
okay
before
we
look
ahead
to
the
potential
of
pandemics
in
the
21st
century,
I'm
going
to
go
back
in
time
and
show
you
a
wonderful
slide
presentation
that
was
put
together
by
the
the
New
York
Times.
So
let's
start
that
video.
B
The
1918
flu
epidemic
was
the
worst
infectious
disease
epidemic
ever
in
recorded
history.
It's
not
entirely
clear
how
many
people
actually
died,
because
many
countries,
including
the
United
States,
didn't
keep
good
statistics.
Estimates
range
from
20
million
to
more
than
100
million
people,
but
it
was
25
times
more
deadly
than
normal
influenza,
and
if
such
an
epidemic
came
today,
killing
a
similar
number
of
Americans,
5
million
Americans
would
die
and
that's
more
than
the
number
who
were
felled
in
a
single
year
by
heart,
disease,
cancers,
strokes,
chronic
pulmonary
disease,
AIDS
and
Alzheimer's
disease
combined.
B
This
is
Gina
Coolatta
for
The
New,
York
Times,
the
1918
flu
truck
with
a
vengeance.
First,
there
was
no
flu
around
and
then
all
of
a
sudden
is
flu
is
everywhere.
It
was
spreading
from
place
to
place
with
the
speed
that
nobody
could
imagine.
It
wasn't
even
clear
how
it
was
getting
to
some
of
the
places
to
cocktail
and
when
the
death
started
occurring,
they
really
came
fast.
It
came
to
Fort
Devens
in
Massachusetts
about
30
miles
west
of
Boston
on
August
28
1918,
eight
men
had
the
flu.
The
next
day.
B
Fifty
eight
men
were
sick
by
day
four.
There
were
81
sick
people
a
week
later,
119
people
who
were
sick.
Pretty
soon
people
were
dying
person
after
person
after
person.
One
doctor
who
was
there
at
the
time,
said
that
it
was
throwing
to
take
two
special
trains
just
to
carry
away
the
dead.
He
said
in
the
morning
the
dead
bodies
were
stacked,
like
cordwood,
you
seen
in
Fort.
B
Devens
was
of
utter
devastation,
but
pretty
soon
every
city
in
the
United
States
seemed
to
be
struck
by
the
flu,
and
so
did
the
most
remote
areas
places
in
Alaska.
He
could
only
reach
by
dogsled
all
of
a
sudden
village
after
villager
was
dying
of
the
flu.
Ultimately,
the
fluid
comes
to
every
corner
of
the
world.
B
There
was
only
a
couple
places
that
escaped,
and
that
was
because
they
really
literally
quarantined
themselves
and
simply
started
spreading
almost
every
place
where
people
knew
the
flu
was
coming
tried
to
take
precautions,
laws
were
passed,
saying
people
had
to
wear
masks
when
they
went
out
in
public,
spitting
was
barred,
public
gatherings
were
part.
Even
the
draft
was
cancelled
at
one
point:
Supreme
Court
canceled
one
of
his
sessions
instead
of
Congress
and
then
in
places
like
Philadelphia,
they
did
just
what
you
would
think
would
be
the
most
reasonable
thing
to
do.
B
They
said
they
were
going
to
close
the
schools.
They
were
going
to
close
the
churches.
They
were
going
to
bar
all
crowds
and
public
gatherings,
and
yet
nothing
seemed
to
really
work.
Within
a
month
after
the
flu
arrived
in
Philadelphia,
nearly
eleven
thousand
people
had
died
from
the
disease.
One
of
the
other
things
that
was
really
unusual
about
the
1918
flu
was
that
it
was
killing
people
between
the
ages
of
20
and
40.
Most
flu
viruses
affect
every
other
flu
virus
has
been
known,
kills
the
very
young
and
the
very
old.
B
B
At
the
time,
scientists
were
really
baffled,
they
had
an
isolated
flu
virus
and
in
fact
one
common
hypothesis
was
that
the
flu
was
actually
caused
by
bacteria.
Some
people
thought
they
had
even
isolated.
The
bacteria,
of
course
they
hadn't.
No
one
really
had
any
idea
how
to
make
a
flu
vaccine
since
they
didn't
know
what
the
flu
was,
and
it
was
because
of
some
of
this
ignorance
about
influence
and
about
viruses
that
we
knew
so
little
for
so
long
about
the
1918
flu,
but
one
remarkable
researcher,
dr.
B
jeffery
taubenberger,
the
Armed
Forces
Institute
of
Pathology
had
an
idea.
He
actually
managed
to
find
preserved
lung
tissue
from
three
victims
of
that
flu.
Two
of
them
were
soldiers
who,
by
coincidence,
had
died
on
the
same
day
after
autopsy
military
doctors
had
taken
little
snips
of
their
lungs
and
put
them
in
formaldehyde,
wrap
them
in
paraffin
wax
and
they
just
stored
them.
He
dug
them
up
and
found
that
the
flu
virus
was
still
there
broken
into
millions
of
pieces
and
deteriorated,
but
he
decided.
B
Maybe
he
could
fish
it
out
and
figure
out
its
sequence
and
a
third
victim
was
a
woman
who
was
buried
in
the
permafrost
in
Alaska
found
by
a
pathologist
who
gave
some
a
perfect
lung
tissue
to
dr.
taubenberger
and
sure
enough.
He
could
find
the
same
flu
virus
the
period
once
again,
but
still
there
in
her
lung
tissue
as
well,
took
ten
years,
because
there
was
so
little
material
to
work
with.
But
finally,
dr.
taubenberger
and
his
colleagues
have
actually
reconstructed
the
sequence
of
the
1918
flu,
which
now
allows
people
to
start
asking
these
questions.
B
Is
it
different
from
the
h5n1,
the
bird
flu?
That's
out
there
now?
The
answer
is
it
is,
but
it
was
a
birth
Lou
and
then
the
next
question
is
what
made
it
so
deadly
and
are
any
flus
out
there,
starting
to
acquire
some
of
the
things
that
made
the
1918
flu
so
dangerous.
Those
are
questions
that
are
still
unanswered,
but
at
least
with
the
1918
flu.
For
the
first
time,
people
actually
have
a
real
sequence
of
a
pandemic
flu
and
they
can
start
to
ask
these
really
important
scientific
questions
for
the
New
York
Times.
A
It's
kind
of
scary,
isn't
it
that
was
90
years
ago
and
there
isn't
a
lot
of
documentation
as
they
said
on
what
happened
or
how
we
can
prevent
it.
So
that's.
What
we're
here
tonight
to
do
is
to
talk
about
what
we
can
do
to
keep
this
from
happening
again.
I
want
to
let
you
know
that
that
I'm,
not
an
expert
on
pandemic
flu,
in
the
information
that
I
am
presenting
to
you,
has
come
from
two
sources.
A
One
is
the
Santa
Clara
County
Public
Health
Officer,
Dr
Martin
Finster,
shy
of
a
large
large
portion
of
the
slides
came
directly
from
him
and
then
the
other
information
is
from
a
very
good
friend
of
mine,
who
is
a
volunteer
for
the
city
and
her
name
is
pandemic.
Patty
I've
nicknamed
her
that,
because
she
knows
more
about
pandemic
flu
than
anyone
I've
ever
met,
and
she
is
my
source
of
information
on
a
day
to
day
basis.
A
The
other
person
I
want
to
point
out
in
the
room
is
Ken
Erickson
ken
is
the
citizen.
Corps
coordinator
for
the
city
and
ken
is
in
charge
of
all
of
the
volunteer
programs
that
we
have
he'll
be
you'll,
see
him
later,
as
he
goes
around
the
room.
If
any
of
you
have
questions
during
the
evening,
just
raise
your
hand
and
he'll
come
around
with
the
microphone.
We
do
want
to
make
sure
you
have
the
microphone
so
that
the
people
at
home
can
hear
what
you
have
to
ask
all
right.
A
So
why
should
we
worry
about
pandemic
influenza?
You
it's
been
on
the
cover
of
every
national
magazine,
it's
been
on
every
newspaper,
they
talk
about
it
on
the
evening
news
almost
every
evening,
but
what
what's
the
big
deal?
It's
not
happening
here,
and
it
doesn't
seem
to
be
that
bad
does
it
well,
an
influence
of
pandemics
are
inevitable.
They
they
are
naturally
occurring.
There
are
naturally
in
the
environment
every
hundred
years,
several
strains
of
new
flu
that
no
one
has
ever
had
before
and
over
the
course
of
time.
A
It
just
keeps
happening
so
the
public
health
officer
and
those
other
experts
around
the
world
have
decided
that
yeah.
We
can't
act
as
if
it's
not
going
to
happen
again.
The
current
strain
of
bird
flu
that
is
is
now
out
in
the
environment
has
a
lot
of
potential.
It
looks
a
lot
like
the
1918
flu,
and
so
this
is
a
prime
time
to
start
preparing.
It
may
not
be
the
flu
that
turns
into
a
pandemic,
but
what
are
we
waiting
for
and
there
will
be
little
warning
when
it
does
happen.
A
This
is
just
a
showing
of
the
flight
plans
for
one
airline
in
one
day,
so
you
can
imagine
once
once
something
that's
contagious
hits
the
human
population
how
quickly
it
can
split,
spread
and
be
worldwide
and
you'll.
Be
you'll,
be
happy
to
know
that
you're
contagious
with
the
flu
two
days
before
you
show
symptoms,
which
means
that
you,
you
could
unknowingly
infect
people.
A
So,
let's,
let's
back
up
a
little
bit
and
talk
about
the
difference,
what
is
a
seasonal
flu?
The
seasonal
flu
is
one
that
it
affects
the
respiratory
system
of
people
and
we
have
vaccines
every
year.
Vaccines
are
developed
so
that
if
we
get
our
flu
shots,
we
can
reduce
the
spread.
We
don't
get
as
sick.
It
doesn't
impact
the
community
I.
Don't
even
know
that
many
people
in
more
that
get
the
flu,
because
we've
gotten
so
good
at
getting
our
flu
shots
and
and
being
proactive.
A
A
A
Now,
this
strain
of
avian
flu
has
not
efficiently
and
sustainably
passed
yet
from
person
to
person.
It
has
actually
passed
from
one
person
to
another,
but
it
hasn't
moved
on
to
the
third
person
and
when
it
does
that,
that's
when
it
will
start
to
rapidly
rapidly
spread-
and
this
is
how
it
spreads.
As
you
see
the
bird
there,
it
can
actually
go
to
human.
A
It
can
infect
humans
two
different
ways:
one
is
it
can
it
can
infect
other
animals
first
and
in
fact,
cats
and
dogs
and
tigers
and
ferrets
have
already
gotten
this
avian
flu
and
when
it
passes
through
one
of
those
animals
it
can.
It
can
also
infect
a
human,
but
usually
it
may
a
less
virulent
strain
at
that
point
it
may
not
be
as
serious,
but
should
it
pass
directly
from
the
bird
to
the
human
and
then
from
human
to
human?
That's
when
it
that's
when
it's
the
most
powerful
and
that's
what
happened
in
1918.
A
A
In
the
last
300
years
there
have
been
10
pandemics
by
definition
10
times
that
the
flu
has
passed
from
human
to
human
and
there
has
been
no
vaccine.
The
average
is
20
every
24
years.
You
can
see
the
three
that
we
had
in
the
20th
century.
1918
was
the
first
then
1957
in
1968
and
69,
and
in
on
this
slide
you
see
the
death
rate
in
the
United
States
for
those
three
flus
I
remembered,
except
for
the
19
I.
Remember
people
talking
about
the
other
two
and
as
a
child,
I
figure.
A
If
they
were
talking
about
it,
it
must
have
been
fairly
serious
for
me
to
hear
it
enough
times
to
remember
it
now.
But
you
can
see
how
much
more
serious
that
Spanish
flu
of
1918
was
now
part
of
that
could
be
because
of
advances
in
medicine.
It's
more
likely
that
it
was
just
not
as
powerful
a
strain
of
the
virus.
A
A
A
This
is
a
slide
of
the
mortality
in
the
United
States
and
the
20th
century,
so
you
can
see
the
the
the
death
rate
in
the
United
States
overall
declined
from
the
1900s
through
1980
and
Beyond
because
of
medical
intervention,
and
because
there
were
advances
in
medicine,
but
the
big
spike
obviously
was
in
1918,
because
this
this
flu
was
there
and
in
1918
of
the
people
that
died.
You
can
see
this
spike,
it
says
5
to
14
and
then
it
kind
of
tails
off
at
45
to
54.
A
So
this
this
flu
actually
killed
more
people
that
were
between
20
and
40
years
old
I,
don't
know
about
you,
but
that's
that's
a
little
disturbing
to
me,
mainly
because
you
think
that
that's
the
strong
part
of
the
society.
Why
would
they
be
the
ones
that
were
being
impacted,
I'm
going
to
show
you
another
little
internet
link
here?
If
I
can
get
it
to
come
up.
A
Alright,
I'm
not
going
to
show
you
the
internet
Lee,
but
else
I'll
just
go
on
right
to
this
one.
So
this
is
January
2008.
This
is
the
number
of
people
that
have
died
from
the
h5n1
virus,
so
this
was
either
bird
to
human
contact
or
human
to
human
in
the
same
family
that
we're
also
very
closely
working
with
the
bird.
So
it's
hard
to
tell
now
the
so
again
you
can
see
that
this
new
bird
flu
looks
a
lot.
It's
behaving
a
lot
like
the
1918
pandemic.
It's
killing
the
same
age
group.
A
C
There
is
a
medical
term
called
cytokine
storm
which
refers
to
a
massive
reaction
and,
in
fact,
overreaction
of
an
immune
system.
So
what
people
speculate
happened
in
1918
and
what
has
been
observed
to
be
happening
with
the
younger
age
groups
so
far
with
h5n1
is
that
throughout
their
body
and
most
particularly
in
the
lungs,
where
the
virus
settles
and
begins
to
attack
cells.
Inside
of
your
lungs,
the
immune
system
begins
to
turn
out
and
turn
out
and
turn
out
and
not
turn
itself
off.
C
All
of
the
elements
that
it
can
create
to
fight
an
invader
and
when
that
continues
to
happen
and
the
feedback
loop
to
to
moderate,
doesn't
doesn't
work
and,
and
these
these
immune
system
components
continue
to
be
put
out
and
put
out
and
put
out.
That
makes
a
sort
of
a
battleground
of
the
tissues
and
what
happens
out
of
that
is
a
viral
pneumonia
that
is
very,
very
serious
and
fills
up
the
lungs
with
fluid,
and
this
tends
to
happen
in
people
who
have
a
really
strong
immune
response.
C
A
You
can
get
more
information,
we
we've
given
you
a
handout
at
which
we
will
also
put
up
on
the
Internet
of
some
really
good
resources,
some
of
the
best
of
the
best
places
on
the
internet
that
you
can
find
information
and
books
you
can
read,
and
so
there
is
a
book
called
the
pandemic
influenza.
That
is
an
excellent
book
that
explains
some
of
this
type
of
behavior.
A
Now
the
World
Health
Organization,
also
known
as
who
are
monitoring
this
very
closely
they've
created
threat
levels
just
like
homeland
security,
so
that
we
can
see
the
progress
because
there
are
six,
it
doesn't
mean
that
it
couldn't
go
from
one
to
six
in
a
day,
because
you
see
that
the
you
have
evidence
of
increased
human
to
human
transmission
and
then
you've
got
significant
increase
and
then
it's
sustained
and
it's
going
from
human
to
human.
That
could
happen
over
the
period
of
just
a
few
days.
A
A
So
let's
bring
this
into
santa
clara
county
and
talk
about
how
the
disease
is
spread.
It's
spread
by
close
contact
by
sneezing
on
people
by
coughing
it
can
you
can
touch
a
surface,
you
coffin
your
hand,
you
touch
a
surface.
Someone
else
touches
the
surface,
they
put
their
hand
to
their
mouth,
and
now
they
have
the
germ
in
Santa
Clara
County.
A
These
are
the
estimates,
and
this
is
with
doing
nothing
and
I-
want
to
stress
that
that
this
is
the
worst
case
scenario
that
if
there
is
a
major
pandemic,
that
we
would
have
25
to
35
percent
of
our
population
ill,
and
that
would
be
over
the
course
of
about
18
months
and
of
those
between
61
thousand
and
a
hundred
and
forty
three
thousand
would
need
to
be
hospitalized
and
of
those
up
to
twenty-two
thousand
could
die.
Those
are
huge
numbers
and.
A
This
is
what
our
hospital
system
looks
like
in
Santa,
Clara,
County,
first
I
want
you
to
actually
look
at
the
the
top
graph,
the
at
the
bottom,
where
there's
a
little
yellow
bar
and
it
says,
illnesses
and
watch
how
fast
the
disease
spreads
the
first
week,
1100
cases
the
second
week
4500
cases
the
third
week
7800
the
fourth
week
11,000
it's
you
know
it's
just
a
germ.
It
passes
from
person
to
person
and
at
in
that
same
graph
you
can
see
the
the
red
bar
is
the
hospitalizations
and
then
the
little
black
bar
is
deaths.
A
Now,
even
though
that
little
black
bar
like
on
week,
5
&
6,
it's
not
very
big,
it's
still
almost
a
thousand
people
a
week.
Our
coroner's
office
is
not
really
set
up
to
manage
that
kind
of
death
rate.
So
we
have
to
do
something
to
slow
it
down
now
in
the
bottom
graph.
This
is
showing
the
available
hospital
beds
in
Santa
Clara
County.
We
don't
usually
have
a
lot
of
hospital
beds
available
in
Santa,
Clara,
County
they're
all
filled
up,
and
so
you
can
see
that
by
the
end
of
week,
two
we're
at
a
deficit.
A
We
have
filled
every
bed
in
the
county
with
sick
people
and
then
and
the
intensive
care
beds.
Also
now
there
aren't
enough,
and
so
what
happens
to
the
people
in
week,
four:
five,
six,
seven,
eight
nine
ten
that
need
hospitalization
and
there's
no
place
to
put
them,
and
even
though
we're
just
looking
at
Santa,
Clara
County
right
now.
This
is
happening
across
the
world.
Every
hospital
bed
is
full.
A
So
on
the
healthcare
system
here
and
around
the
world
it'll
we'll
have
staffing
shortages,
obviously,
because
the
nursing
staff
and
the
doctors
are
sick
too.
They're
part
of
that
35%,
the
supplies
and
equipment
antivirals,
which
is
something
that
can
slow
the
spread
or
it
can
reduce.
The
effects
of
a
flu,
will
be,
in
short,
short
supply,
probably
none
and
then
ventilators,
which
is
what's
used
for
people
that
have
pneumonia,
have
the
respiratory
complications.
A
There
are
only
a
few
in
the
county
right
now
and
even
though
they're
trying
to
buy
more,
it's
not
going
to
be
enough
to
handle
this
surge
of
people.
So
the
demands
going
to
outpace
the
supplies
that
could
last
up
to
two
years
18
months
to
two
years
and
then
the
vaccine
is
not
available
because
until
it
hits
human
to
human
form,
a
vaccine
can't
be
developed.
Now,
that's
the
current
statement.
There
scientists
are
trying
to
figure
out
a
way
to
come
up
with
something
that
will
at
least
reduce
the
effect.
A
But
at
this
moment
we
are,
you
know.
If
we
plan
for
worst-case,
there
is
no
vaccine
for
six
to
eight
months,
so
everyone
that
gets
it
in
the
first
six
to
eight
months
is
going
to
have
to
go
through
the
two-week
cycle
of
being
sick
and
then
most
of
the
people
then,
because
the
beds
are
all
overwhelmed,
are
going
to
have
to
be
taken
care
of
in
some
other
manner,
hopefully
at
home.
If
you
can
keep
people
from
having
complications,
you
can
care
for
them
at
home.
A
But
now
the
health
officers
around
the
world
have
come
up
with
an
intermediate
level
of
care.
They
call
it
an
influenza
care
center.
It
would
look
a
lot
like
those
old
black-and-white
pictures
caught
after
car.
After
caught
after
caught
of
people
that
are
sick,
beacon
there
there
either
because
there
they
lived
alone,
they
had
no
one
to
care
for
them
and
they're
too
weak
to
care
for
themselves,
or
they
had
some
kind
of
complication,
but
it
wasn't
quite
to
the
level
that
they
were
able
to
take
them
to
a
hospital.
A
Because
that's
what
you
do
when
you
have
the
flu,
you
have
to
stay
hydrated
and
you
want
to
give
them
some
kind
of
an
oral
antibiotic,
not
for
the
flu,
because
an
antibiotic
is
not
going
to
stop
the
flu
but
to
stop
the
infection,
the
pneumonia.
So
that's
what
you
would
be
doing
at
home.
You
could
also
give
them
over-the-counter
medicines.
A
Obviously
you're
going
to
be
fighting
fevers,
so
you're
going
to
continue
to
give
them
fever
medication
you're,
going
to
give
them
maybe
the
same
thing
for
pain,
because
you
know
remember
what
the
flu
feels
like:
that's
a
key
and
you're
sore
and
you're
weak,
and
so
you
need
to
have
all
of
those
medicines
on
hand
so
that
the
flu
doesn't
get
the
best
of
you.
You
have
to
stay
on
top
of
it
and
then
the
influenza
care
centers
is
the
immediate
intermediate
care.
So
they're
going
to
have
a
few
nurses
and
a
few
doctors
there.
A
We
sure
would
like
to
have
more
we're
looking
to
the
private
practice
community
to
come
forward
and
identify
themselves
as
potential
helpers,
medical
volunteers,
and
then
we
would
also
use
board
and
care
homes
or
I'm.
Sorry,
that's
not
true.
What
it
would
be
is
like
a
board-and-care
you.
It
would
just
be
to
help
people
that
couldn't
help
themselves
or
there
was
no
one
to
help
them
at
home.
They
would
be
hydrated,
maybe
intravenously.
It
depends
on
how
many
IVs
we
have
available
and
then
oxygen,
but
no
ventilators.
A
So
there's
a
little
bit
more
capability
there
again
we've
we're
trying
in
this
county
to
identify
locations
where
we
might
be
able
to
set
up
these
centers
and
they're
pretty
much
big
auditoriums
high
school
gyms
in
those
kind
of
places
it
it
won't
just
be
staffed
by
doctors
and
nurses.
It's
going
to
be
have
to
have
to
be
stopped
by
community
members
as
well,
because
when
you
have
hundreds
of
people
you
you
just
can't
keep
overworking
the
doctors
and
nurses
and
the
level
of
treatment
that's
being
given.
A
It
doesn't
require
their
level
of
skill,
so
we
can
keep
them
for
the
hospital
care
and
then
at
the
hospital.
That's
the
most
critical.
The
people
that
they're
really
trying
to
do
something
to
intervene.
They've
got
to
put
them
on
ventilators.
They
can
do
x-ray
and
lab
work
to
to
make
diagnosis
and
that's
how
that
cycle
works.
So
your
goal
is
to
never
have
to
go
to
an
influenza
care
center.
Your
goal
is
to
just
write
it
out
at
home.
A
These
are
the
planning
assumptions.
Then
this
is
not
business
as
usual.
This
is
a
worldwide
event,
nothing's
going
to
look
the
same
I
every
time.
I
imagined
this.
It
just
sounds
like
a
science
fiction
movie
to
me,
the
whole
society
and
the
government
is
going
to
be
involved.
There
won't
be
anybody
to
come
and
help
because
everyone's
in
the
same
boat
we're
all
fighting
it
together,
it's
going
to
be
a
long-term
response,
so
we're
going
to
get
really
tired.
A
A
On
the
infrastructure,
the
state
and
federal
governments
have
already
told
the
locals.
This
will
be
your
problem.
We
do
not
have
the
resources
to
come
and
help
you,
because
they
will
be
fighting
the
flu
themselves
with
their
staff
and
so
initially,
probably
the
first
six
months
until
they
can
help
get
the
vaccine
available.
No
one
will
be
coming
to
help
we're
on
our
own
with
what
we
have
here
in
our
county,
what
we've
planned
and
what
we've
done
in
advance
the
disruptions
of
Transportation
and
commerce
and
utilities
Public
Safety
and
communications.
A
Is
it's
not
really
that
the
infrastructure
is
going
to
break,
but
if
it
does
break,
they
may
not
have
the
staff
to
fix
it
right
away.
So
there
could
be
disruptions
while
they're
waiting
for
people
to
get
well
and
get
out
of
bed
and
come
back
to
work
and
fix
things.
So
there
is
a
possibility
that
the
the
utilities
would
be
looking
to
the
public
for
people
with
expertise
that
they
could
have
come
in
and
help
to
get
things
back
up
and
running
again
and
then
the
final
one,
social,
distancing,
our
public
health
officer.
A
All
health
officers
have
the
legal
authority
to
prevent
people
from
meeting.
We
couldn't
have
this
meeting.
You
can't
have
a
City
Council
meeting.
You
can't
have
people
in
a
room
together
because
they
can
infect
each
other
and
he
has
already
guaranteed
us
in
this
county
that
the
second
that
there's
a
case
identified
here.
He
will
close
all
schools,
because
children
will
pass
it
more
than
anyone
else
and
the
schools
could
be
closed
for
six
weeks
12
weeks
at
a
time
and
then
a
wave
of
the
flu
will
go
through
and
then
it
will
start.
A
A
Daycare
centers
will
close
all
public
events
will
close,
so
I'm
going
to
stop
there
for
just
a
second-
and
you
know,
these
are
big
impacts
to
the
community
and
I
just
want
to
hear
from
the
audience
and
for
this
part,
work,
I'll
repeat
what
you
say
so
they
so
that
ken
doesn't
have
to
run
around
really
fast.
Let's
say
that
the
schools
closed
today
and
what
would
that
mean
to
you.
A
That
no
school
yay,
no
school
yay
for
six
weeks,
yes
high
school
seniors,
saying,
am
I
gonna
graduate
on
time
or
saying.
A
Anybody
have
any
other
thoughts
on
that.
Just
schools.
Schools
can
have
a
ripple
effect
on
the
whole
community.
If
you
have
kids
just
think
about
what
that's,
what
that
would
do
when,
when
school
takes
a
day
off
and
you're
still
working
just
that
little
that
little
disruption,
imagine
it
for
six
weeks
and
then
at
work,
high
absenteeism,
forty
percent,
maybe
more
because
of
this
impact
that
the
schools
closing
will
have.
A
So
they
may
not
all
be
sick,
but
they
may
not
be
able
to
come
in
and
do
the
employers
want
to
say
we'll
just
bring
your
kids
with
you?
No,
because
the
kids
might
be
sick.
They
just
may
not
have
symptoms
yet
and
huge
psychological
impacts,
because
the
news
is
going
to
this
is
going
to
be
on
the
news.
It's
going
to
look
very
scary
and
people
are
going
to
be
afraid.
They
may
be
afraid
to
leave
their
houses.
A
A
It
is
the
country's
problem.
It
is
absolutely
the
country's
problem,
but
the
country
is
us
and
I'm
going
to
give
you
some
answers
here:
changes
in
the
workplace
now
that
the
employer
is
also
because
they're
trying
to
protect
those
that
are
at
work
that
are
well,
they
it's
very
likely
that
they
will
tell
people
if
you're
sick,
you
stay
home,
you
stay
home
for
two
weeks.
Your
child
is
sick,
don't
come
to
work
because
you
probably
have
been
infected.
A
You've
been
around
the
child
before
they
were
were
ill,
and
so
now
that
causes
the
problem,
because
they
may
not
have
enough
sick
leave
to
cover
that.
So
there
are
a
lot
of
policy
decisions
that
are
going
to
have
to
be
made
at
the
government
level
at
the
business
level
on
what
do
we
do
if
we're,
if
we're
trying
to
preserve
the
public
health?
What
do
we
do
with
for
people
that
can't
afford
to
stay
home.
A
Our
goal
is
to
delay
this
disease
we're
going
to
delay
its
spread,
and
we
can
do
that
by
using
some
very
common-sense
easy
to
implement
procedures,
and
so
you
can
see
the
the
high
peak
there
is
without
intervention.
If
we
do
nothing
but
watch
the
news.
This
is
how
bad
it's
going
to
get,
but
if
we,
if
we
practice
good
hygiene
and
we
and
we
stay
on
top
of
the
flu
and
we
stay
away
and
we
practice
social
distancing,
we
can
slow
it
down.
A
We
can
slow
it
down
long
enough
to
get
get
more
antivirals
produced
and
we
can
slow
it
down
enough
to
get
vaccines
introduced
so
that
we
don't
have
as
many
people
sick
and
that's
very
doable.
Here
is
a
perfect
example
from
1918
in
1918
Philadelphia
had
719
people
per
100,000
died.
They
allowed
large
public
gatherings,
including
a
citywide
parade
in
support
of
World
War,
one,
the
a
bond
drive
and
they,
so
they
let
it
go
on
as
planned
and
in
four
months
12,000
people
died
in
Philadelphia.
A
A
You
are
first
responders
for
any
disaster,
so
you
educate
yourself
and
you
stay
informed
and
you
limit
the
spread,
and
this
is
the
first
step
you're
here
and
you're
hearing
it
and
you
go
home
and
think
about
it
and
then
ask
questions,
but
you
want
to
know
how
to
isolate
ill
people
in
your
house
how
to
do
that
without
spreading
it
to
everyone
else
in
your
family
and
practice,
good
hand,
hygiene
and
hand
awareness.
This
is
huge.
You
have
to
start
right
now
and
teach
all
your
kids
right.
A
Now
you
wash
your
hands
for
20
seconds.
Every
twits
up
or
with
a
60%
alcohol-based
hand
cleaner,
like
Purell
all
the
time.
If
you
touch
something,
you
shake
someone's
hand,
get
out
the
Purell
and
think
about
where
your
hands
are.
If
you
touch
your
face
like
I,
do
you
have
to
start
stopping
that
from
happening
because
you're
gonna
feed
yourself
the
germ
eventually,
if
you
keep
doing.
A
You're
gonna
practice
covering
your
coughs
and
your
sneezes
so
I'm
going
to
show
a
video
in
just
a
second
on
that
you're
gonna
stay
three
to
five
feet
away
from
other
people
white
because
when
they
sneeze
it
doesn't
spray
that
far.
So
you
want
to
be
far
away
from
people
that
are
sneeze,
sneezing
or
coughing
and
when
you're
sick
stay
home.
So
it's
important
that
you
know
the
fever
is
the
clue.
A
So
as
soon
as
you
start
to
get
a
fever,
you
need
to
have
a
thermometer
so
that
you
can
regularly
check
that
because
you
may
not
feel
it
when
it
starts
to
come
on.
But
the
second
that
you
have
a
temperature
you've
got
to
isolate
yourself
and
stay
home.
Don't
send
your
kids
to
school,
sick,
don't
send
them
to
days
care,
sick
and
then
get
your
flu
shot
because
you
sure
don't
want
to
get
one
of
the
other
flus
and
be
in
a
weakened
condition
and
then
get
this.
A
E
Millions
of
disease-causing
germs
are
launched
into
the
atmosphere
every
time
someone
coughs
or
sneezes.
It
is
customary
to
cough
and
sneeze
into
ones
hands
supposedly
to
prevent
the
spread
of
germs,
but
germs
get
on
to
the
coffers
hands
and
are
spread
to
telephones
and
doorknobs
and
from
there
they
are
spread
to
other
people's
hands
and
mouths,
and
who
knows
where
else?
The
best
place
to
cough
is
into
fabric
such
as
one's
sleeve,
where
germs
are
trapped,
while
they
desiccate
and
die,
but
people
in
polite
society
do
not
coffin
to
their
sleeves.
E
Such
behavior
is
frowned
upon.
The
purpose
of
this
video
is
to
make
coughing
into
one's
sleeve
fashionable
and
even
patriotic.
It's
the
right
thing,
the
polite
thing
to
do.
You
will
now
see
for
excellent,
slightly
different
coughing
techniques
executed
first
into
the
right
sleeve
and
then
into
the
left.
E
E
A
F
D
D
E
E
F
E
E
From
an
infection
control
standpoint,
the
perfect
answer
would
be
an
armband
that
could
be
changed
after
each
use.
However,
society
is
not
yet
ready
for
such
a
radical
change.
So
in
keeping
with
the
recommendations
of
the
Center
for
Disease
Control,
why
don't
we
just
do
it
in
our
sleeves?
It's
the
right
thing.
It's
the
polite
thing
to
do
and
remember.
If
you
make
a
mistake
and
cough
or
sneeze
into
your
hands,
please.
A
A
You
can
also
purchase
it
if
you
like,
I,
think
it's
about
15
dollars,
but
it
you
can
share
it
email
it
to
people,
it's
a,
even
though
it's
kind
of
funny
when
you
look
at
when
you
actually
watch
people
coughing
sneeze,
it's
pretty
obvious
that
it's
not
effective,
and
so
just
start
thinking
about
that
and
practicing
better
hygiene.
The
more
that
you
are
are
improving
that
trait
now
the
better
off
you're
going
to
be
when
it
really
really
matters,
but
it's
going
to
reduce
the
spread
of
germs.
A
A
and
we
would
continue
to
broadcast
information
anything
that
you
would
need
to
know
to
try
to
give
you
some
guidance
offers
suggestions
on
hygiene
and
suggestions
on
how
to
care
for
people
at
home,
so
that,
if,
if
your
friends
or
relatives
didn't
get
to
come
to
this,
this
training
this
evening
that
you
could
point
them
to
that.
Also
1590
a.m.
and
7:40
a.m.
are
our
two
backup
stations.
The
whole
world
is
going
to
be
talking
about
this,
but
if
you
want
to
know
Cupertino
specific
1670
a.m.
A
and
then
also
our
cable
channel,
26
would
be
putting
information
up,
probably
slides
of
things
that
you
can
do
to
minimize
the
situation.
We
also
have
a
website
Cupertino
org
and
on
that
website,
on
the
home.
Page
is
a
link
that
says
emergency
information
and
that
would
be
posted
with
businesses
or
services
that
were
open.
Whether
schools
were
open
or
closed.
We
would
keep
that
up
to
date
to
let
you
know
what
what
the
status
of
the
city
was
and
then.
A
Finally,
our
most
recent
acquisition
is
a
telephone
notification
system
that
some
of
you
may
have
experienced.
We've
sent
out
a
couple
of
citywide
telephone
calls.
So
if
you
do
hear,
if
you
do
get
a
phone
call-
and
it
says
stand
by
for
an
important
message
from
the
city
of
Cupertino-
that's
a
real
important
message
and,
and
it's
a
way
for
us
to
communicate
with
you
without
having
to
be
person-to-person,
and
so
that's
another
way
that
we
could
send
out
warning
and
warning
and
alert
information
to
you
for
all
kinds
of
emergencies,
all
right.
A
So
what
kind
of
supplies
do
you
need?
This
is
an
earthquake
kit
on
steroids,
because
it's
not
we're
not
talking
about
a
three-day
supply
now
for
survival.
We're
talking
about
at
least
two
weeks.
We're
gonna
start
with
two
weeks,
because
you
want
to
be
able
to
stay
in
the
house
with
your
family
if
possible
until
you're
well.
But
your
goal
is
to
plan
for
three
months
because
of
these
waves
of
flu.
That
happened.
You
want
to
try
to
be
able
to
stay
there
for
three
months
now.
A
This
is
probably
not
going
to
be
the
most
appetizing
food,
because
you
want
something:
that's
not
perishable!
It's
gonna
last
for
a
while
and
doesn't
take
up
a
lot
of
space,
but
a
lot
of
dried
foods.
Maybe
beans,
maybe
rice,
but
you
can
think
about
that.
I
just
want
you
to
think
about
it.
Now,
so
we're
going
to
start
with
the
food
and
water
and
then
you
would
want
your
prescription
medications.
A
Reducer
keep
it
in
stock
all
the
time,
because
what
do
you
suppose
is
going
to
happen
to
the
grocery
store
shelves
of
all
cold
and
flu
medication
once
this
hits
and
truck
drivers
are
not
going
to
be
driving
around
delivering
to
the
grocery
stores,
because
they're
all
afraid
to
be
out
in
this
germ
to
rehydration
for
adults
and
kids.
Pedialyte
is
listed
here,
which
is
a
a
child's
it's
it's
a
fluid.
A
That's
got
minerals
in
it,
because
if
you're
vomiting
and
you
have
diarrhea-
which
this
flu
will
cause,
you
want
to
make
sure
that
you're
replenishing
those
minerals
in
your
body
and
then
for
adults.
Gatorade
works
really
well,
and
then
there
are
homegrown
solutions
we
put
actually
in
your
handout,
there's
a
list
of
how
to
make
a
home
hydration
solution,
cell
phone
and
charger.
A
You
do
want
to
be
able
to
communicate,
I,
don't
know
what
will
happen
to
the
landline
systems.
You
know
anything
can
break
and
if
they
don't
have
people
to
work
on
them,
then
your
home
phone
may
not
work
or
the
power
could
go
out.
So
if
you
have
cordless
phones,
it's
possible
that
you
wouldn't
be
able
to
use
them
if
the
Power
has
gone
out
and
they
don't
have
any
want
anyone
to
repair
the
transformer
that
blue
for
for
an
extended
period
of
time.
A
So
it's
always
good
to
add
backup,
communication,
face
maps
and
gloves
and
disinfectant
so
I'm,
going
to
walk
over
here
now
and
I'm
actually
going
to
also
put
up
a
slide
of
some
supplies,
and
is
there
anything
here
that
you'd
that
you
don't
understand
or
anything
that
you
see
in
the
slide
that
you
don't
quite
see
what
the
application
would
be,
because
this
is
a
good
time
to
to
understand
why
they're
important,
because
up
on
the
slide,
that's
the
the
minimum.
That's
what
that's
the!
What
I
bought
my
children.
That
was
what
they
got
there.
A
Their
most
recent
gift
was
a
pandemic
flu
supply
kit.
Yes,
they
think
their
mother
is
crazy,
but
maybe
not
one
of
the
things
that
I
like
to
point
out,
and
this
is
pandemic
nice
kid
and
it's
very
good,
very
good.
This
is
actually
an
herbal
remedy
and
I
pick
it
up
only
because
there
are
certain
things
that
you
have
found
over
the
course
of
your
life,
that
are
your
home
remedies,
the
things
that
help
you
feel
good
during
a
flu
and
I
really
recommend
that
you
keep
those
on
hand.
A
So
this
you
know
this
is
just
any
any
home
remedy.
That
I
just
wanted
to
remind
you
of
make
sure
that
all
of
your
pills
right,
an
expiration
date
or
right
the
day
you
purchased
it
and
then
check
again
in
a
year
or
so,
but
just
don't
let
them
expire
because
they're
not
gonna.
Do
you
any
good
that
way
either
the
masks
here?
We're
actually
gonna
give
every
one
that
came
this
evening,
a
mask
just
to
remind
you
to
get
started.
A
They
look
like
this
and
it
has
a
little
n95
on
the
side
that
tells
you
that
this
is
a
it.
It
will
protect
you
from
the
sneezing
and
the
coughing,
and
you
want
to
put
this
on
the
sick
person
too.
These
will
probably
run
out
I'm
guessing
that
these
will
also
be
off
the
shelves.
So
the
second-best
mask
is
the
one
that
you
see
up
on
the
slide,
the
one
that's
a
medical
mask.
A
It
looks
like
a
surgical
mask,
so
you
want
to
have
those
and
then
of
the
n95,
this
one
that
has
the
little
valve
on
the
front.
It's
a
little
bit
more
comfortable
to
wear
because
it
allows
filtered
air
to
come
in
and
out
where
the
one
without
the
valve.
It
gets
a
little
steamy
in
here
and
if
you're,
sick,
you're,
probably
not
going
to
be
real
thrilled
about
having
this
thing
on
your
face,
gloves
you
want
to
make
sure
that
you're
practicing
really
good
sanitation
at
home.
A
So
you
want
to
have
medical
gloves
and
let's
see
what
else
do
we
have
this
that
the
propane's
here
it
could
be
in
your
earthquake
kit
too,
because
if
the
power's
out
you
may
want
to
be
able
to
still
heat
up
some
food.
So
if
you
have
a
camping
equipment
or
camp
stove
that
that's
good,
you
will
need
to
have
bleach
because
we
have
to
kill
the
germs,
and
so
when
your,
when
you
have
somebody
in
the
house,
that's
ill,
you
want
to
make
sure
that
all
surfaces
get
disinfected.
A
A
So
the
best
thing
to
do
for
the
care
of
someone
in
your
home
is
to
put
them
in
a
room
with
hardly
any
furniture
or
stuff
in
it,
because
everything
that's
in
the
room
with
them
needs
to
be
disinfected,
so
just
make
that
look
like
a
hospital
room.
Maybe
there's
a
little
tray
there
and
the
bed
and
that's
it.
A
The
public
health
office
in
Santa,
Clara
County,
has
some
places
that
you
can
go
to
get
information.
This
is
listed
on
your
resource
list,
so
you
don't
have
to
write
it
down,
but
the
public
health
org
is
their
website
and
then
they
have
a
hotline
and
it's
a
recording.
So
you
have
to
leave
a
message
and
they'll
call.
You
call
you
back.
They
don't
have
24
hours
staffing,
but
there
is.
A
There
is
a
hotline
where
you
can
get
your
questions
answered
and
we're
also
giving
you
today
they're
out
in
the
lobby
of
the
pandemic,
preparing
for
the
pandemic
flu.
That
was
a
guide
that
our
health
department
created.
It's
it's
pretty
comprehensive
and
it's
actually
been
copied
by
a
lot
of
the
rest
of
the
country,
because
we
did
it
first
one
of
the
things
that
it
doesn't
talk
about,
though
it
talks
about
having
two
weeks
of
supplies,
dried
beans
and
rice,
and
you
know
things
that
you
would
think
might
be
in
an
earthquake
kit.
A
A
Soup
liquids,
jello
chicken
soup,
you
know
any
anything,
that's
easy
on
the
stomach,
maybe
some
crackers,
because
you're
gonna
have
to
start.
You
know
getting
yourself
back
used
to
eating
so
keep
those
kind.
Those
are
gonna
all
go
off
the
shelves
in
the
store
too
so
just
get
them
and
eat
them
and
keep
doing
that
on
your
resource
kit.
Again,
we've
picked
out
or
on
your
resource
list.
We
picked
out
the
best
of
the
best.
The
one
the
very
first
website
that's
listed
is
called
get
ready,
know.
D
A
A
Why
don't
we
do
it
in
our
sleeves,
but
one
that's
done
by
the
Red
Cross
and
a
couple,
others
that
we
thought
would
be
interesting:
a
list
of
books
and
the
access
Cupertino
information,
so
access
Cupertino
is
Sun
on
the
Cupertino
org
website
right
from
Cupertino
org.
You
click
on
access,
Cupertino,
you
log
in
so
you
have
to
come
up
with
a
password
and
a
username,
but
this
is
the
same
place
that
you
go
to
complain
about
anything
in
the
city
or
to
praise
anything
in
the
city.
So
it's
not
bad
to
be
registered
there.
A
A
It
doesn't
matter
what
it
is
or
any
suggestion
in
there
and
we
can
get
it
to
Patti
and
she
will
research
it
and
get
the
information
back
to
you
so
that
we
can,
you
know,
do
whatever
we
can
to
help
you
get
prepared.
So
the
last
thing
we're
going
to
cover
is
the
symptoms
and
care
of
someone
with
the
flu
and
we'll
go
through
this
pretty
fast.
These
are
flu
symptoms
listed
here.
A
So
if
and
the
fever
is
again
the
big
clue,
if
you
have
a
fever
and
any
of
these
other
symptoms,
you
have
you
are
now
in
battle
mode.
You
have
to
start
fighting
to
stay
as
well
as
you
possibly
can
to
reduce
complications.
You
cannot
get
complications
unless
you
are
the
first
person
to
get
sick
and
then
you
can
go
to
the
hospital,
but
everyone
else
is
going
to
end
up
in
a
home,
so
you're
gonna.
Let
you
have
to
have
complete
rest.
Your
body
has
to
fight,
so
you
can't
keep
caring
for
the
family.
A
You're
not
gonna,
go
to
work,
you're,
not
keeping
the
house
clean,
you're,
lying
down,
resting
drinking
fluids
and
and
taking
something
to
keep
the
fever
down.
Don't
let
the
fever
go
up
and
again,
antibiotics
are
not
going
to
cure
this.
We
have
information
available
on
how
to
again
make
rehydration
solutions
that
you
don't
have
to
buy,
but
it
is
easy
to
buy
them
and
they
last
a
pretty
long
time.
A
Person
should
wear
a
mask.
You
should
wear
a
mask.
You
wear
gloves
washing
your
hands
before
and
after
you
care
for
the
person
and
then
cleaning
the
surfaces,
everything
with
the
bleach
and
water
door,
knobs
refrigerators,
cabinets,
faucets,
light
switches,
toilet
seats,
everything
has
to
be
wiped
off.
The
the
germ
can
stay
on
a
surface
alive
as
long
as
the
moisture
is
there,
so
it
might
take
five
minutes.
A
It
might
take
ten
minutes
and
if
there's
any
other
moisture
on
the
surface,
it
can
stay
alive
longer
and
your
cleaning
supplies
again
lots
of
hot
water
and
soap
and
bleach
and
paper.
Towels
and
plastic
bags,
because
anything
that
you
clean
with
in
this
room,
you
want
to
make
sure
it
doesn't
get
into
anything
else
in
your
house.
So
all
of
the
Kleenex
and
the
paper
towels
need
to
go
in
a
bag
and
and
sealed
to
be
properly
disposed
of,
make
sure
you've
got
Kleenex
and
the
disposable
gloves
aren't
very
expensive.
A
These
masks
aren't
very
expensive
a
couple
dollars.
You
can
get
a
hundred
gloves
for
less
than
$10
and
then
to
help
the
community
after
you
get
over
the
flu
and
I
expect
everyone
in
this
room
will
survive
the
flu.
You
are
immune,
you
can't
get
it
again
and
you
become
golden
to
your
community
because
you
you're
invincible,
you
can
walk
out.
A
If
you
know,
if
we
ask
somebody
that
hasn't
had
the
flu
yet
to
please
go
take
this
food
over
to
the
the
people's
house
that
they're
worth
everyone
sick.
Well,
maybe
they'll
drop
it
on
the
front
door
and
run,
but
after
a
while
you
know
we
need
somebody
that
can
go
in
and
give
a
little
care
or
come
to
the
influenza
care
center.
You
can
help
your
family.
A
You
can
help
your
friends,
so
that's
huge
that
once
once
you're
over
it
you're
over
it
and
then
you
can
help
the
rest
of
us
get
over
it
communications
again.
Not
we
don't
know
what
our
communication
system
is
going
to
be
like.
So
even
just
passing
out
flyers
or
you
know,
distributing
information,
public
information,
garbage
collection.
If
the
garbage
company
is
not
able
to
function
because
the
staff
are
all
sick,
we
can't
leave
our
garbage
there,
so
we're
gonna
have
to
think
of
something
and
the
city
it.
A
You
know
what
we
have
some
staff,
but
it
you
know
it
may
be
a
community
effort.
There'll
be
a
lot
of
pulling
together.
I!
Don't
want
this
to
happen,
but
I
think
we
would
be
a
better
place
when
it
was
done
because
we
all
get
through
it
together,
translations
going
to
be
huge
because
we
have
a
population
that
continues
to
come
in
and
out
and
that
and
not
everyone
speaks
English
when
they
get
here,
and
we
want
to
make
sure
that
nobody
doesn't
get
the
information
that
they
need.
A
So
my
challenge
to
you
is
to
ask
questions.
Ask
questions
now
that
you
know
ask
the
schools
what
their
plans
are.
How
are
they
going
to
continue
to
educate
your
kids
while
they're
closed?
Ask
your
employers,
what
their
plans
are:
ask
the
government
what
the
plans
are
and
you
can
ask
pat
patty
pandemic.
A
A
So,
in
closing,
this
is
just
a
nice
quote
that
I
found
from
the
World
Health
Organization.
This
is
again.
This
is
the
first
time
in
history
that
we
are
actually
smart
enough
to
plan
this
in
advance
and
we
can
make
a
difference.
We
can
change
the
look
of
that
curve
so
that
we
can
we
can
get
through
it
and
I,
don't
know
when
it's
going
to
happen.
I
encourage
you
not
to
wait
and
I'm
opening
the
floor
up
to
any
questions
before
we
close
for
the
evening
questions
it's
like
drinking
out
of
a
fire
hydrant!
C
A
The
flu
to
last
the
flu
will
last
two
weeks:
you'll
be
sick,
sicker
than
a
dog
for
about
two
weeks
and
then
maybe
another
two
weeks
to
get
your
strength
back.
So
it's
again,
it's
a
it's
a
battle
and
you
really
have
to
don't
let
the
fever
get
ahold
of
you
and
don't
don't
get
the
respiratory
problems.
So
you
got
to
make
sure
that
you've
got
decongestant,
decongestants
and
things
so
that
you
can
keep
from
having
fluid
buildup.
G
A
C
No,
the
flu
always
have
a
new
box
right.
Seasonal
flu
has
a
season
which
is
usually
during
the
cold
months
right
so
the
winter
in
the
northern
hemisphere,
which
is
the
opposite
in
the
southern
hemisphere
right
yeah
pandemic
flu
of
a
new
virus
that
appears
on
the
global
scene
does
not
follow.
It
does
not
know
about
calendars
and
seasons,
it's
quite
possible
for
a
pandemic
to
start
in
May
and
continue
to
build
through
summer
months
pandemic.
Flu
is
a
different
horse
of
a
different
color.
C
This
was
also
true
in
1918
with
the
severe
pandemic
that
happened
then,
the
worst
there
were.
There
was
one
wave
of
the
flu
in
the
spring
of
1918
from
March
through
May.
Then
it
seemed
to
disappear
during
the
summer
months
or
not
be
so
active
in
the
northern
hemisphere.
Okay,
then
the
end
of
August,
it
appeared
again
and
all
through
September
and
building
into
the
first
weeks
of
October
it
raged,
and
that
was
the
deadliest
wave
of
that
pandemic.
C
B
C
Can
we
get
a
flu
shot
for
a
pandemic
influenza?
You
will
need
to
wait
until
a
vaccination
can
be
developed
manufactured
and
distributed
and
when
it
begins
to
be
distributed
after
about
five
or
six
months
after
pandemic
has
begun.
There
will
be
very
clear
priority
guidelines
for
who
gets
vaccination
first,
because
they're
not
gonna,
make
300
million
doses
all
coming
off
the
manufacturing
line
the
same
day
right.
So
there
will
be
very
clear
guidelines
coming
out
from
the
federal
government
about
who-
and
you
can
imagine
who
gets
them.
C
First,
health
care
workers,
senior
fire,
firefighters,
law
enforcement,
people,
military
uh-huh,
political
leaders
that
we
need
to
still
have
a
functioning
government
for
okay.
So
if,
if
I'm
not
in
any
of
those
categories,
I'm
coming
farther
down
the
list,
utility
workers
I
hope
get
the
vaccine
before
I.
Do
because
I
really,
like
my
electricity,
you
know,
and
so
there
there
will
be
occupational
groups
that
will
be
at
the
front
of
the
line
for
them
for
the
vaccine
as
well.
They
should
be
because
it's
their
job
to
protect
everybody
else
and
their
I
personally
I.
C
Personally,
if
this
pandemic
were
to
take
off
tomorrow
for
me
personally
in
my
family,
since
we
don't
have
health
care
workers
or
utility
workers
or
military
people,
or
anything
like
that
in
my
family,
I
would
not
expect
a
vaccine
for
me
and
my
children
until
minimum
eight
months
after
pandemic
starts.
Maybe
as
long
as
one
year,
that's
very
possible
with
current
vaccine
technology.
A
There's
there's
something
else
that
we
really
didn't
touch
on
an
antiviral
now.
Antivirals
are
something
that
can
actually
prevent
you
from
getting
the
the
flu
and
you
and
it
will
minimize
the
effects
if
you
get
it
within
the
first
24
hours
of
symptoms,
but
no
one
will
prescribe
them
ahead
of
time
and
again
they're
going
to
be
prioritized,
the
use
of
them
will
get
prioritized
just
like
the
vaccine,
so
there
is.
A
There
is
some
hope
there
that
that,
as
the
government
is
getting
more
educated
to
the
value
of
the
antivirals,
that
they
will
come
up
with
some
plans
to
have
a
sustained
supply
to
at
least
get
the
people
that
are
sick
for
the
first
six
months
through
it
with
with
you,
know,
minimal
effects,
and
that
also
will
reduce
the
effects.
Any
other
questions,
thank
you
so
much
for
coming
and
we
just
stay
in
touch.
We
I
left
you
with
an
evaluation
sheet
to
get
a
little
bit
more
information.
A
We
are
planning
to
do
some
focus
groups
to
talk
about
specific
issues
on
how
to
reach
the
community
and
how
to
think
through
some
of
these
prioritizations,
to
give
some
guidance.
We
don't
have
all
the
answers
yet
and
we
sure
could
use
some
other
great
minds
working
on
the
subject.
So
thank
you
again
and
we
hope
to
talk
to
you
under
very
pleasant
circumstances.
Next
time,
Thanks.