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2009 swine flu pandemic timeline

This article covers the chronology of the 2009 novel influenza A (H1N1) pandemic.[1] Flag icons denote the first announcements of confirmed cases by the respective nation-states, their first deaths (and other major events such as their first intergenerational cases, cases of zoonosis, and the start of national vaccination campaigns), and relevant sessions and announcements of the World Health Organization (WHO), the European Union (and its agency the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control), and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC).

Community outbreaks, June 2009
Confirmed cases by U.S. state, June 3, 2009

Unless otherwise noted, references to terms like S-OIV, H1N1 and such, all refer to this new A(H1N1) strain and not to sundry other strains of H1N1 which are endemic in humans, birds and pigs.

Timeline edit

Take note that the date of the first confirmations of the disease or any event in a country may be before or after the date of the events in local time because of the International Dateline.

 
Probable and confirmed Mexican cases by date of illness onset, March 15 – April 26. —CDC

March 2009 edit

  Mexico In La Gloria, Veracruz 60% of the town's population is sickened by a respiratory illness of unknown provenance. The government of Mexico believes it to be caused by H3N2 influenza, though at least one patient in La Gloria tested positive for A/H1N1. Two babies died in the outbreak but both were buried without testing.[2]

March 7 edit

  United States In the ninth week of its routine influenza surveillance, the CDC reports on FluView that thirty-five states have reported widespread influenza activity, and 14 states have reported regional activity, but that although the rate of activity was high, that the proportion of deaths attributed to pneumonia and influenza (P&I) was below the epidemic threshold.[3]

March 14 edit

  United States The CDC reports on the 10th week of FluView that thirty states reported widespread influenza activity and 18 states reported regional activity.[4]

March 17 edit

  Mexico Earliest known onset of a case that is later to be confirmed as Swine-Origin Influenza A (H1N1) Virus Infection.[5][6]

March 21 edit

  United States CDC FluView, Week 11: Widespread influenza activity in twenty-four states; regional activity in 19. Influenza activity continues to decrease.[7]

March 28 edit

 
Confirmed USA cases with known dates of illness onset (April 27, 2009). —CDC

  United States Earliest known onset of a USA case later confirmed as swine flu, that of a nine-year-old girl residing in Imperial County, California.[8][9] Thirteen states reported widespread influenza activity and 19 reported regional activity on the CDC's FluView, Week 12.[10]

March 30 edit

  United States A sample is collected from a nine-year-old female patient which is later confirmed to contain the novel virus strain (genetically sequenced as A/California/05/2009(H1N1)).[11][12]

  United States Onset of illness for a ten-year-old boy residing in San Diego County, California; his case is eventually the first to be confirmed as swine flu in the US.[9]

April 2009 edit

April 1 edit

  United States A nasopharyngeal swab is collected from a ten-year-old male patient in San Diego County, later confirmed as containing the novel virus and the first organism of that strain to be completely sequenced (A/California/04/2009(H1N1)).[9][11][13]

April 2 edit

  Mexico In La Gloria, Veracruz, a four-year-old boy falls ill at the end of the outbreak. Only his sample, which was eventually sent abroad, tested positive for A(H1N1). Veracruz officials state that there were no plans to exhume the bodies of two infants who died in the outbreak.[2]

April 4 edit

  United States CDC FluView, Week 13: Widespread influenza activity in four states, regional activity in 18.[14]

April 5 edit

  European Union The media monitoring website MedISys reports on a Mexican article about the epidemiological alert.[15][16]

April 6 edit

  Mexico Public health authorities begin investigating unusual cases of pneumonia.[17] 400 people had reportedly sought treatment for pneumonia/influenza-like illness (ILI) in La Gloria the preceding week.[17]

  United States Biosurveillance firm Veratect reports the unusual respiratory illness in Mexico.[18][19] Veratect publishes the alert "La Gloria: 'Strange' Respiratory Affects 60% of Local Population; Three Pediatric Deaths May be Associated with the Outbreak."[17][18]

April 11 edit

  United States CDC FluView, Week 14: Widespread influenza activity in one state; regional activity in 14.[20]

April 12 edit

  Mexico The General Directorate of Epidemiology (DGE) reports the outbreak of an ILI in a small community in Veracruz to the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), which is the Regional Office of the World Health Organization (WHO).[5][21] Furthermore, a 39-year-old woman dies of severe viral pneumonia in the city of San Luis Potosí; this is later believed to be the earliest known fatality related to the outbreak.[22]

April 13 edit

  Mexico First death in Oaxaca due to what would later be identified as swine flu.[23]

  United States The U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) is advised of a ten-year-old boy with a respiratory illness in San Diego County, California. Test results revealed an Influenza A virus but were negative for standard human strains. The San Diego County Health Department is notified.[9]

April 14 edit

  United States The CDC receives its first sample from California (from the ten-year-old boy in San Diego County), and identifies the virus as a strain of swine influenza A(H1N1).[9]

April 16 edit

  Mexico Authorities notify the PAHO of the atypical pneumonia.[17]

  United States Veratect publishes the alert "Atypical Pneumonia Cases Reported at Hospital" regarding the Oaxaca cases.[17][18]

April 17 edit

  Mexico A case of atypical pneumonia in Oaxaca prompts enhanced national surveillance. A field investigation is started.[5] Mexico contacts Canada to request more specialized testing.[24]

  United States The CDC receives a second sample from Southern California (taken from the nine-year-old girl in Imperial County), and again identifies the virus as a strain of swine influenza A(H1N1). The California Department of Public Health is notified.[9]

April 18 edit

  Mexico Mexico sends 14 mucus samples to the CDC and dispatches health teams hospitals to look for patients showing severe influenza- or pneumonia-like symptoms.[25]

  United States CDC FluView, Week 15: "Nine states reported regional activity; 17 states reported local influenza activity; the District of Columbia and 22 states reported sporadic influenza activity; and two states reported no influenza activity. Seven human infections with swine influenza A (H1N1) virus have been confirmed." This is the first mention of A(H1N1) in FluView.[26]

April 20 edit

  United States Veratect advises the CDC of the Mexican events.[17][18] The CDC is already investigating the California and Texas cases.[17][18][27]

April 21 edit

  United States The CDC alerts physicians to a similar novel strain of swine influenza A(H1N1) in two cases from Southern California in a Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report Early Release on its website.[28] Local investigations, including investigations in Texas, are already underway, and overall surveillance is enhanced.[9][29] The Associated Press covers the alert, the first mention of the A(H1N1) outbreak in English-language news media.[27][30][31]

April 22 edit

  Canada Canada receives the samples from Mexico for testing.[24]

April 23 edit

  Mexico The Public Health Agency of Canada confirms Mexico cases of swine-origin influenza A (H1N1) virus (S-OIV) infection.[5] Genetic sequence analysis reveals that the Mexican patients were infected with the same S-OIV strain detected in two California children.[5] The PAHO is informed that a cluster in Mexico of severe respiratory illnesses has been laboratory-confirmed as S-OIV infection.[5]

April 24 edit

 The WHO issues its first Disease Outbreak Notice on the matter, confirming the infection of a number of people in Mexico and the United States by "Swine Influenza A/H1N1 viruses... not... previously detected in pigs or humans".[32]

  Mexico The Minister of Health confirms the Mexican cases of human infection by swine influenza and states that it believes that some of these cases had resulted in death.[33] Health authorities implement public health measures for all airport passengers and the vaccination of health care workers with seasonal influenza vaccine.[5]

 
President Obama is briefed in the Situation Room about the H1N1 outbreak.

  United States The CDC tells a press conference that seven of the 14 Mexican samples contained the same virus strain as the known in California and Texas, and that indications suggested that containment in the USA was "not very likely".[33] The novel strain had already been reported on the CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report website.[28]

April 25 edit

  WHO Under the International Health Regulations (IHR), the Emergency Committee convenes for the first time since its establishment in 2007,[34] resulting in the WHO Director-General declaring a formal "public health emergency of international concern,"[35][36] (PHEIC),[37] the first ever.

 The PAHO Vaccination Week In The Americas starts.[38] The 2009 Week was planned to emphasize the vaccination of entire families, and health worker immunization.[38]

  United States First closure of an entire school district, the Schertz-Cibolo-Universal City Independent School District outside San Antonio, Texas.[39][40]

April 26 edit

  United States United States declares a Public Health Emergency.[41]

April 27 edit

 
World Health Organization Regions
  Africa; HQ: Brazzaville, Congo
  Europe; HQ: Copenhagen, Denmark
  Eastern Med.; HQ: Cairo, Egypt
  South East Asia; HQ: New Delhi, India
  Western Pacific; HQ: Manila, Philippines
 
Mexico City Metropolitan Cathedral

  WHO The Emergency Committee meets for the second time. The WHO Director-General issues a statement that containment of the outbreak is not feasible, and elevates the pandemic alert from Phase 3 to Phase 4.[42]

  European Union (EU) Health Commissioner advises Europeans not to travel to the United States or Mexico unless the need is urgent. This follows the first confirmed case in Spain.[43]

  Canada First six cases confirmed, four in Nova Scotia and two in British Columbia.[44]

  Mexico First seven confirmed deaths[45]

  Spain First confirmed case of swine flu, in Almansa, and thus the first case in Europe; A(H1N1) has spread from the WHO Region of the Americas to the WHO European Region.[46]

  (   ) United Kingdom First two confirmed cases, in Scotland.[47]

April 28 edit

  WHO Confirmed cases are now extant in four of six WHO regions (see map). As of 19:15 GMT seven countries have officially reported cases of swine influenza A(H1N1) infection.[48]

  Canada Confirmed: two cases and another four in Alberta and Ontario, respectively.[49]

  Israel First confirmed case in Israel and thus the WHO Eastern Mediterranean Region (color-coded yellow), the third region to be affected.[50]

  New Zealand First three confirmed cases in New Zealand and thus the WHO Western Pacific Region (color-coded red), the fourth region to be affected.[51]

  Spain The second confirmed case in Spain, in Valencia.[52][53]

April 29 edit

  WHO The Emergency Committee meets for the third time,[54] and the WHO raises its pandemic alert level from Phase 4 to Phase 5, its second highest.[55] As of 1800 GMT, nine countries have officially reported 148 cases of swine influenza A(H1N1) infection.[56]

ASEAN ASEAN officials are looking at coordinating measures to address the potential pandemic.[57]

  EU Foreign Relations Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner announces that the halt of all travel to Mexico and disinfecting all airports due to the global flu outbreak is being considered.[58]

  Austria First confirmed case.[56]

  Germany First three confirmed cases, two in Bavaria and one in Hamburg.[59]

  Spain Eight more cases raises the total in Spain to 10, including the first human-to-human intergenerational transmission[60] (in which the patient had not recently been to Mexico but was infected by another patient who had just visited Mexico, namely his girlfriend).[61] This is the first intergenerational transmission to be documented in Europe.

  United States First death outside Mexico, a 23-month-old Mexican child hospitalized in Texas.[62] Ninety-one confirmed cases in the US to date.[63]

  South Africa First two cases reported within South Africa, by two women that travelled in Mexico weeks earlier. The cases were confirmed on 18 June 2009.

April 30 edit

  Canada Confirmed: One more case in Toronto, and eight more cases in Nova Scotia, and Alberta bringing total to 28.[64]

  Ireland First confirmed case.[65]

  Netherlands First confirmed case, a three-year-old child.[66] The child returned from Mexico to the Netherlands on April 27, 2009. The parents test negative for A(H1N1).

  Switzerland First confirmed case.[67]

  United States Four cases are confirmed in an outbreak at the University of Delaware; another 12 cases are deemed "probable". One of the confirmed cases is a baseball player, which results in the university cancelling sporting events, a concert by rapper Young Jeezy, and other school activities.[68]

  United Kingdom Three further confirmed cases of swine flu, giving a total of eight confirmed cases.[69]

May 2009 edit

May 1 edit

  WHO As of 0600 GMT, 11 countries have officially reported 331 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection.[70]

  Canada 51 confirmed cases.[71]

  Hong Kong

  • 300 people are placed under quarantine at a hotel for seven days due to Hong Kong's first confirmed case there.[72]
  • Chief Executive Donald Tsang raises Hong Kong's response level from "serious" to "emergency".[73]
  • The Director of Health, Dr. PY Lam, orders Metropark Hotel in Wan Chai to be isolated for seven days.[74]

  Denmark First confirmed case (in Hvidovre).[75]

  France First two confirmed cases.[76]

  Mexico begins an unprecedented five-day shutdown to fight the spread of the flu.[77]

  United Kingdom First and second case of human to human (or intergenerational) transmission within the UK confirmed.[78]

  United States 155 confirmed cases, including two at George Washington University's Thurston Hall.[79]

May 2 edit

  WHO As of 0600 GMT 15 countries have officially reported 615 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection.[80]

  Canada The Canadian Food Inspection Agency confirms the first human-to-animal transmission of the virus after an Albertan returns from Mexico and infects a pig farm, the first known case of (reverse) zoonosis.[81]

  China suspends flights from Mexico.[82]

  South Korea First confirmed case.[83]

  United States There are more than 430 school closures in 18 states.[84] CDC FluView Week 17: Widespread activity in seven states, regional activity in 12.[85]

May 3 edit

  WHO As of 0600 GMT, 17 countries have officially reported 787 cases of (A)H1N1.[80]

  Arab League Health Ministers meet in Riyadh, to discuss human and technical support to be deployed in any Arab affected place.[86]

  Canada 101 confirmed cases after seven cases in British Columbia, three in Alberta, two in Nova Scotia and Ontario, and one in Quebec were confirmed.[87]

  Colombia First confirmed case in South America.[87]

May 4 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 20 countries have officially reported 985 cases of influenza A (H1N1) infection.[88][89]

  Canada A girl from Edmonton, Alberta was diagnosed with a severe case of the H1N1 virus.[90]

May 5 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 21 countries have officially reported 1,124 cases of influenza A (H1N1) infection.[91]

  United States

  • Second confirmed death, the first of a U.S. resident, a pregnant special education teacher in Texas: Judy Trunnell. The 33-year-old gives birth to her second child via Caesarian section during her eighth month of pregnancy, in a coma whilst on life support.[92][93] Judy Trunnell had several underlying medical conditions, most notably asthma.[94][95][96]
  • Several sailors in San Diego, California fall ill (including a sailor on the USS Dubuque, which results in the cancellation of its deployment). These are the first cases in the U.S. Navy.[97]
  • As the low level of virulence of novel A(H1N1) in the U.S. becomes established, the CDC issues revised criteria for school closures, effectively ending widespread shutdowns.[98]

May 6 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 22 countries have officially reported 1,516 cases of influenza A (H1N1) infection.[99]

  ASEAN A special regional summit to fight possible swine flu pandemic was held in Bangkok and was attended by senior ASEAN health officials along with those from China, Japan and South Korea.[100]

  Guatemala First confirmed case, and the first in Central America.[101][102]

  Poland First confirmed case.[103]

  Sweden First confirmed case.[104]

May 7 edit

  WHO As of 18:00 GMT, 24 countries have officially reported 2,371 cases of influenza A (H1N1) infection.[105]

  Argentina First confirmed case.[106]

  Brazil First four confirmed cases.[107][108]

  Canada Reports suggest that an elderly woman who had swine flu has died in northern Alberta, marking the first death in Canada related to swine flu.[109] Furthermore, an unusual case of zoonosis occurred when a swine flu inspector in improper gear caught the virus from an infected pig.[110]

  Netherlands Second case confirmed, a 53-year-old woman who had recently travelled to Mexico.[111]

  USA The New England Journal of Medicine establishes its H1N1 Influenza Center on its website.[112]

May 8 edit

  WHO As of 16:00 GMT, 25 countries have officially reported 2,500 cases of influenza A (H1N1) infection.[113]

  Japan First three confirmed cases.[114]

  Panama First confirmed case.[115][116][117]

May 9 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 29 countries have officially reported 3,440 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection.[118]

  Australia First confirmed case.[119]

  Brazil Two cases confirmed, one of which is thought to be the first case of human-to-human infection in Brazil.[120]

  Costa Rica First confirmed death, and also the first death outside of North America.[121][122] Three other confirmed cases, all children, were contaminated by the patient who died.[123]

  Japan 4th confirmed case, a schoolmate of the first three cases.[124]

  Norway First two confirmed cases.[125]

  United States Third confirmed death, a Washington man with underlying heart disease.[126] Also, the USA passes Mexico in the number of confirmed cases of infection, 1693 to 1364, thus becoming the nation-state with the most laboratory-confirmed cases of infection; Canada is third with 242 cases.[127] CDC FluView Week 18: Widespread influenza activity in eight states, regional activity in 14.[128]

May 10 edit

  WHO As of 07:30 GMT, 29 countries have officially reported 4,379 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection.[129]

  China First confirmed case.[130]

May 11 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 30 countries have officially reported 4,694 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection.[131]

May 12 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 30 countries have officially reported 5,251 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection.[132]

  Canada The first case in Yukon Territory is confirmed.[133]

  Spain 100 cases confirmed.[134]

May 13 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 13 May 2009, 33 countries have officially reported 5,728 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection.[135]

  Belgium First confirmed case.[136]

  Panama 10 more cases confirmed today. Total: 39.[137]

May 14 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 33 countries have officially reported 6,497 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection.[138]

  Belgium Second confirmed case.[139]

  Colombia First domestic infections with three cases confirmed. Total: 10.[140]

May 15 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 34 countries have officially reported 7,520 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection.[141]

  USA Fourth and fifth deaths confirmed, that of an Arizona woman suffering from a lung condition[142][143] and a Texas man in Corpus Christi, respectively.[144][145]

  Malaysia First confirmed case.[146] Malaysia is the 37th country to be affected by the virus.

  Panama Four new cases confirmed today. Total: 43, 23 of whom are male and 20 of whom are female. 20 of the cases are under 15 years old.[147]

May 16 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT 36 countries have officially reported 8,451 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection.

  India First case confirmed, in Hyderabad.[148] This marks the arrival of A(H1N1) in the fifth of the WHO's six regions, the South-East Asia Region.

  Japan First domestic infection confirmed, in Kobe, a male high school student with no history of travel abroad.[149] The Kobe Festival, planned for May 16 and 17, is cancelled.[150]

  Malaysia Second confirmed case.[151] The first patient is now showing significant improvement from the treatment.

  Panama 11 new confirmed cases. 54 total.[152]

  Turkey First confirmed case, that of an American tourist flying from the United States via Amsterdam, discovered at Istanbul's Atatürk International Airport.[153]

  United States CDC FluView Week 19: Widespread influenza activity in five states, regional activity in 13.[154]

May 17 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT 37 countries have officially reported 8,480 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection.

  Panama With 54 confirmed cases, Panama occupies second place, along with Canada, for the number of cases per country.

May 18 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 40 countries have officially reported 8,829 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection, including 74 deaths.[155]

  ECDC The European Centre for Disease Control releases its early findings on H1N1's pandemic potential.[156]

  Japan reports 96 confirmed cases;[157] it now ranks fourth in the world in the number of infections. Thousands of schools in 21 cities in the Hyogo and Osaka prefectures are temporarily closed.[158][159]

  USA The sixth death in the US, and the first in New York—that of an assistant principal.[160][161]

May 19 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 40 countries have officially reported 9,830 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection, including 79 deaths.[162]

  United States Seventh confirmed death, that of a 44-year-old Missouri man.[163]

  Japan 191 confirmed cases; Hyogo Prefecture has the most at 111.[164]

  Norway One more case confirmed today. Total: three.[165]

  Paraguay confirmed its first case and became the 43rd affected country.[166]

  Taiwan confirmed its first case and becomes the 44th affected country.[167]

May 20 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 40 countries have officially reported 10,243 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection, including 80 deaths.[168]

  United States A patient dies in Arizona,[169] and a 22-year-old man dies in Utah,[170] the nation's eighth and ninth H1N1 fatalities. Roughly half of the influenza viruses detected by the CDC's routine influenza surveillance systems are now that of novel A(H1N1).[1] An unusual number of outbreaks in schools is reported.[171]

  Japan 236 confirmed cases, including the first case in Shiga Prefecture,[172] and the cities of Hachiōji and Kawasaki in the Greater Tokyo Area. Two female high school students from Tokyo who had recently attended a Model United Nations conference in New York are presumed to have become infected abroad.[173][174]

  Norway 1 more case confirmed today. Total: 4.[165]

May 21 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 41 countries have officially reported 11,034 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection, including 85 deaths.[175]

  Japan 279 confirmed cases; more than 4,800 schools are closed in the Kobe region.[176]

May 22 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 42 countries have officially reported 11,168 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection, including 86 deaths.[177]

  Japan 317 confirmed, including first confirmed in Saitama Prefecture.[178] Third confirmed in Tokyo, a 25-year-old man who visited Osaka from May 14-20th.[179]

  Philippines First case confirmed.[180]

May 23 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 43 countries have officially reported 12,022 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection, including 86 deaths.[181]

  Iceland First confirmed case. 4 more cases suspected.[182][183] United States CDC FluView Week 20: Widespread influenza activity in four states; regional activity in 11.[184]

May 24 edit

  Australia Two more confirmed cases, which now brings the national toll to 16.[185]

  Kuwait First confirmed cases, that of 18 U.S. soldiers.[186]

May 25 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 46 countries have officially reported 12,515 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection, including 91 deaths.[187]

  Australia 22 Confirmed Cases.[188]

  Ireland Second confirmed case.[189]

May 26 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 46 countries have officially reported 12,954 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection, including 92 deaths.[190]

  Argentina 14 Confirmed Cases. Total: 19.[191]

  Australia 61 confirmed cases.[192][193][194]

  Puerto Rico First confirmed case.[195]

May 27 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 48 countries have officially reported 13,398 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection, including 95 deaths[196]

  Argentina 37 cases confirmed.[197]

  Dominican Republic First two confirmed cases.[198]

  Greece confirmed two more cases.[199]

  Romania First confirmed case.[200]

  Singapore First confirmed case. A 22-year-old woman picked up the virus after visiting New York.[201]

  United Kingdom Two new cases confirmed. Total: 186.[202]

  Uruguay confirmed its first two cases.[203]

May 28 edit

  Australia 147 confirmed cases.[204]

  Singapore Three more cases confirmed. Total confirmed cases now stands at four.[205]

  United Kingdom Seventeen more confirmed cases. Total: 203.[206]

  Bolivia First 2 cases confirmed.[207]

  Venezuela First confirmed case.[208]

May 29 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 53 countries have officially reported 15,510 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection, including 99 deaths[209]

  United Kingdom 14 confirmed cases. Total: 217.[210]

  Norway One new confirmed case. Total: 5.[165]

  Hungary First confirmed case[211]

  Uruguay 4 new confirmed cases. Total: 6.[212]

  Greece Another one case confirmed. Total: 4.[213]

May 30 edit

  Estonia First confirmed case.[214]

  United States CDC FluView Week 21: Widespread influenza activity in five states, regional activity in 10.[215]

May 31 edit

  Dominican Republic Nine more cases confirmed, for a total of 11 cases nationwide.[216]

June 2009 edit

June 1 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 62 countries have officially reported 17,410 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection, including 115 deaths.[217]

  Bulgaria First confirmed case.[218]

June 2 edit

  Bermuda First case confirmed.[219]

  Egypt First case confirmed.[220]

  Luxembourg First case confirmed.[221]

  Nicaragua First case confirmed.[222]

June 3 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 3 June 2009, 66 countries have officially reported 19,273 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection, including 117 deaths.[223]

  Saudi Arabia First confirmed case.[224]

June 4 edit

  Barbados First confirmed case.[225]

  Malaysia Three more cases confirmed. One of the patients is a 23-year-old student returned from the United States. Another two patients are German tourists who arrived in Singapore after having gone to Malaysia for holiday. Total: 5.[226]

  Trinidad and Tobago First confirmed case.[227]

June 5 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 69 countries have officially reported 21,940 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection, including 125 deaths.[228]

  Australia 1006 cases confirmed.[229]

  Cayman Islands First case confirmed.[230]

  Dominican Republic First fatality, a 17-year-old pregnant girl. Total number of confirmed cases rises to 44.[231]

  Ukraine First confirmed case.

June 6 edit

  Malaysia One more case confirmed. Total: 7.[232]

  United States CDC FluView Week 22: Widespread influenza activity in eight states, regional activity in nine. "Approximately 89% of all influenza viruses being reported to CDC were novel influenza A (H1N1) viruses."[233]

June 7 edit

  Chile Second death confirmed.

  Martinique First case confirmed.[234]

  New Zealand Authorities have confirmed that a man traveling from North America has Influenza A(H1N1). Total: 14.[235]

June 8 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 73 countries have officially reported 25,288 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection, including 139 deaths.[236]

  Dominica First confirmed case.[237]

  New Zealand Three more confirmed cases, two of which were from international flights. Total: 17.[238]

June 10 edit

  WHO As of 06:00 GMT, 74 countries have officially reported 27,737 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection, including 141 deaths.[228]

  Colombia First death confirmed.[239]

  French Polynesia First confirmed case in the islands.[240]

  Guatemala First death confirmed.[241][242]

June 11 edit

  The WHO raises its Pandemic Alert Level to Phase 6, citing significant transmission of the virus.[243][244][245]

  Australia 1263 cases nationally, with more than 1000 cases in the State of Victoria alone.[246]

  British Virgin Islands First case confirmed in the islands.[247]

  Cuba Sixth case on the island, and that of the first citizen.[248]

  Palestinian Territories First case confirmed in the West Bank.[247]

June 12 edit

  WHO As of 07:00 GMT, 12 June 2009, 74 countries have officially reported 29,669 cases of Influenza A (H1N1) infections, including 145 deaths.

  Morocco First case confirmed.[249]

  Isle of Man First case confirmed.[250]

June 13 edit

  Bolivia First two domestic infections. Total: 7.[251]

  Malaysia One more confirmed case. Total: 12.[252]

  United States Widespread influenza activity in eleven states, regional activity in six. "Over 98% of all subtyped influenza A viruses being reported to CDC were pandemic influenza A (H1N1) viruses."[253]

June 15 edit

  Malaysia Five more cases of H1N1 confirmed. Total: 17.[254]

  United Kingdom First death confirmed.[255]

June 16 edit

  Sri Lanka First confirmed case.[256]

June 17 edit

  Monaco First confirmed case.[257]

  Malaysia Four more cases of H1N1 confirmed. One domestic infection confirmed. Total: 23.[258]

June 19 edit

  Antigua and Barbuda First confirmed case.[259]

  Bangladesh First confirmed case.[260]

  Ethiopia First two cases confirmed.[261]

  Slovenia First confirmed case.[262]

June 22 edit

  Philippines First death in Asia confirmed. H1N1 deaths now confirmed in 3 of 6 WHO regions.[263]

June 24 edit

  Iraq First seven cases confirmed.[264]

  Japan 52 more cases confirmed. Total: 944.

  Serbia First confirmed case.[265]

  United States CDC FluView Week 24: Widespread influenza activity in twelve states, regional activity in seven. "Over 99% of all subtyped influenza A viruses being reported to CDC were pandemic influenza A (H1N1) viruses."[266]

June 27 edit

  United States CDC FluView Week 25: Widespread influenza activity in ten states, regional in 11 states.[267]

June 29 edit

  Bosnia and Herzegovina First case confirmed.[268]

  Denmark First case of Oseltamivir (Tamiflu) resistance found. Confirmed by David Reddy, Roche's pandemic taskforce leader.[269]

  Kenya First confirmed case.[270]

  Mauritius First case confirmed.[271]

  Nepal First three confirmed cases.[272]

  South Africa South Africa National Health Department confirm community outbreak, with 7 new confirmed cases. The total of confirmed cases grew to 12640 within South Africa over the next few months.[citation needed]

July 2009 edit

July 1 edit

  Guam First case confirmed.[273]

July 2 edit

  Australia First confirmed death in NSW. National total: 10.[274]

  Japan Second case found with mutation resulting in Oseltamivir (Tamiflu) resistance.[275]

July 4 edit

  United States CDC FluView Week 26: Widespread influenza activity in nine states, regional influenza activity in 12. "Over 97% of all subtyped influenza A viruses being reported to CDC were novel influenza A (H1N1) viruses."[276]

  Portugal First human-to-human transmission. Total: 38.[277]

  Syria First case confirmed.[278]

July 5 edit

  Peru First two deaths confirmed.[279]

July 6 edit

  WHO 429 deaths worldwide are reported.[280]

July 8 edit

  Belize First five cases confirmed.[281]

July 9 edit

  Tanzania First case confirmed.

July 11 edit

  United States CDC FluView Week 27: Widespread influenza activity in nine states, regional activity in 12. "Over 99% of all subtyped influenza A viruses being reported to CDC were novel influenza A (H1N1) viruses."[282]

July 12 edit

  Colombia 6th death case confirmed out of 165 infected[283]

  Malaysia 39 more cases confirmed. Total: 710.

  United Kingdom Another 2 deaths confirmed. Total Deaths: 17.

July 13 edit

  Brazil One more death confirmed. Total Deaths: 3.[284]

  Ecuador Third death confirmed. Total deaths: 3.[285]

July 14 edit

  Brazil Fourth death confirmed.

  Malaysia 32 more cases confirmed. Total: 804

  New Zealand Two more deaths confirmed. Total deaths 9. Total confirmed cases: 1,984.

July 16 edit

  Singapore First flu-related death confirmed, that of a 49-year-old man with heart problems.[286]

  Sudan First two confirmed cases of H1N1 detected, from flights which had arrived from the U.K.[287]

July 17 edit

  Hawaii First death, that of a sexagenarian with underlying health problems.[288]

July 18 edit

  United States CDC FluView Week 28: Widespread influenza activity in seven states, regional activity in 13. "Over 99% of all subtyped influenza A viruses being reported to CDC were novel influenza A (H1N1) viruses."[289]

  Venezuela First death confirmed, that of an 11-year-old girl.[290]

  Singapore First death with H1N1 involvement confirmed, that of a 49-year-old male who also suffered from diabetes, hypertension and high cholesterol, from a heart attack caused by severe pneumonia.[291]

July 19 edit

  Egypt First death confirmed.[292]

  Georgia First case confirmed.[293]

July 20 edit

  Albania First case confirmed.[294]

  Guam First death confirmed.[295]

  Namibia First two H1N1 cases confirmed.[296]

July 21 edit

  Canada The fourth case of mutation in the world from Tamiflu has been found in a 60-year-old man from Quebec, Canada.[297]

  Federated States of Micronesia First case confirmed, that of a 27-year-old male.[298]

  Northern Mariana Islands First two cases of H1N1 confirmed.[299]

July 22 edit

  Hungary First death confirmed, that of a man with underlying heart and lung disease.[300]

  Tonga First death confirmed.[301]

July 23 edit

  The WHO ceases the tracking of cumulative individual cases.[302]

  Arab League Health Ministers hold a summit after the death of a pilgrim who had returned from the Hajj. New regulations were promulgated for the Hajj: anyone younger than 12 or older than 65 or who have "chronic health problems" shall not be allowed to undertake the pilgrimage to Mecca.[303]

  Bhutan First case confirmed.[304]

  Malaysia First flu-related death confirmed, that of an obese 30-year-old male.[305]

July 24 edit

  Canada Nova Scotia reports its first H1N1 death.[306]

  Cayman Islands First death reported, that of a man with underlying medical conditions.[307]

July 25 edit

  Indonesia First H1N1 death confirmed, that of a 6-year-old girl suffering from severe pneumonia.[308]

  United States It is reported that thousands of Americans are being recruited for H1N1 vaccine testing at several research centers across the country.[309] CDC FluView Week 29: Widespread influenza activity in four states, regional activity in eight. "Over 98% of all subtyped influenza A viruses being reported to CDC were novel influenza A (H1N1) viruses."[310]

July 26 edit

  Norway An international 4H youth camp with 1,700 participants from fifteen nations is shut down after fifty Norwegian participants catch H1N1.[311]

July 27 edit

  WHO 816 deaths worldwide are reported.[312]

  Germany Germany's federal infectious disease center, the Robert Koch Institute, states there were 3,810 confirmed cases of H1N1 in the country; nearly all of the cases are mild.[313]

  Israel First death confirmed, that of a 35-year-old man from Eilat.[314]

  Kosovo First case confirmed.[315]

  Saint Kitts and Nevis First death reported, that of a 28-year-old woman.[316]

  Saudi Arabia First death confirmed.[317]

July 28 edit

  Japan Third case of Oseltamivir (Tamiflu) resistance.[318]

  Thailand In the first reported case of vertical transmission of A(H1N1), a baby is born infected.[319]

July 29 edit

  Swaziland First case confirmed.[320]

  United Kingdom The NHS is not ready for a second wave of swine flu cases expected this autumn, a House of Lords committee has stated. It warned hospitals do not have enough intensive care beds to cope, and furthermore predicted that the recently established A(H1N1) flu helpline could be overwhelmed with calls.[321]

  United States The U.S. military wants to establish regional teams of military personnel to assist civilian authorities in the event of a significant outbreak of the H1N1 virus this fall, according to Defense Department officials.[322]

July 30 edit

  Azerbaijan First two cases of A(H1N1) confirmed, those of people who had been on holiday in France and the U.K., respectively.[323]

  Belgium First death confirmed, that of a 34-year-old woman.[324]

  France First death confirmed, a 14-year-old girl in Brest.[325]

  Gabon First case confirmed.[326]

  Lebanon First death confirmed, that of a 30-year-old male.[327]

  Moldova First case confirmed.[328]

  Saudi Arabia Second H1N1 death confirmed, that a 28-year-old Indonesian woman.[329]

  Taiwan First death confirmed, that of a 39-year-old man.[330]

July 31 edit

  WHO 1,154 deaths worldwide are reported.[331]

  France The cruise ship Voyager of the Seas, which had reported dozens of cases of H1N1 flu amongst its 5,000 passengers and crew, docks in France.[332]

August 2009 edit

August 1 edit

  Australia First case of reverse zoonosis confirmed in a piggery in Dunedoo.[333]

  United States CDC FluView Week 30: Widespread influenza activity in four states, regional activity in 11. "Over 98% of all subtyped influenza A viruses being reported to CDC were novel influenza A (H1N1) viruses."[334]

August 3 edit

  South Africa First confirmed death in South Africa. Total number of deaths at end of epidemic 93.[citation needed]

August 4 edit

  India First death confirmed.[335]

  Netherlands First death confirmed, that of a 17-year-old male.[336]

  Solomon Islands First case confirmed.[337]

August 6 edit

  WHO 1,462 deaths worldwide are reported.[338]

August 8 edit

  United States CDC FluView Week 31: Widespread influenza activity in four states, regional activity in 10.[339]

August 11 edit

  Costa Rica President Óscar Arias is confirmed to have swine flu, the first head of state known to have been infected.[340]

August 13 edit

  WHO 1,799 deaths worldwide are reported.[341]

August 14 edit

  Madagascar First case confirmed.[342]

August 15 edit

 
Turkish H1N1 control sheet, here on a German passport, issued in mid-August.

  Democratic Republic of the Congo First H1N1 case confirmed.[343]

  United States CDC FluView Week 32: Widespread influenza activity in two states, regional activity in eight.[344]

August 17 edit

  Malaysia Two more deaths confirmed. Total: 64 deaths.[345]

  Malta First death confirmed.[345]

August 18 edit

  Malaysia Three more deaths confirmed. Total: 67 deaths.[346]

August 19 edit

  Belarus First H1N1 case confirmed.[citation needed]

August 20 edit

  Kuwait First death confirmed.[347]

  Malaysia One more death confirmed. Total: 68 deaths.[348] The unusually high reported death rate, four times the global average,[349] is investigated by the WHO.[350]

  Netherlands Second death confirmed, that of a 58-year-old male.[336]

August 21 edit

  Chile H1N1 is found in turkeys on farms in Chile near the port city of Valparaiso in a unique zoonosis cluster.[351]

  Germany 13,740 A(H1N1) cases confirmed.[352]

  Oman First death confirmed.[353]

  United Arab Emirates First death confirmed.[354]

  United Kingdom First death confirmed in Northern Ireland, that of woman with underlying health conditions.[355]

August 22 edit

  New Caledonia First death confirmed.[356]

  United States CDC FluView Week 33: Widespread influenza activity in two states, regional activity in 13. Activity appears to be increasing in the Southeast.[357]

August 23 edit

  WHO At least 2,185 deaths worldwide are reported.[358]

  Greece First death confirmed.[359]

August 24 edit

  Germany 14,325 H1N1 cases confirmed.[360]

  Kyrgyzstan First two cases confirmed, that of a husband and wife; the man had recently traveled to Dubai.[361]

  Malaysia One more death confirmed. Total: 69 deaths.[362]

August 25 edit

  Malaysia One more death confirmed. Total: 70 deaths.[363]

August 26 edit

  Angola First case confirmed.[364]

  Germany 14,940 H1N1 cases confirmed.[365]

  Iran First death confirmed[citation needed]

  Malaysia One more death confirmed. Total: 71 deaths.[366]

  Syria First death confirmed.[367]

August 27 edit

   UN;Chile The United Nations issues a warning regarding the discovery of H1N1-infected turkeys on farms in Chile, an unusual case of zoonosis which raises concerns about possible increased genetic reassortment of the virus.[368]

August 28 edit

  WHO Most countries in the Southern Hemisphere (represented by Chile, Argentina, New Zealand, and Australia) appear to have passed their peak of influenza activity and returned to baseline activity.[358]

  ECDC Based partially on data from the Southern Hemisphere, the ECDC forecasts a first wave of infections in autumn and winter which stresses hospitals in particular; it is noted, however, that "the overall interruption of essential services in (well-prepared) countries has been manageable".[369]

  Germany 15,567 H1N1 cases confirmed.[370]

August 29 edit

  Bangladesh First death confirmed.[371]

  Brazil 602 H1N1 deaths confirmed, the highest number of any nation-state to date.[372]

  United States CDC FluView Week 34: Influenza activity, which had been largely stable or decreasing in prior weeks, increases in the U.S. "Six states and Puerto Rico reported geographically widespread influenza activity, 13 states reported regional influenza activity, 10 states and the District of Columbia reported local influenza activity, 19 states reported sporadic influenza activity, two states reported no influenza activity, and Guam and the U.S. Virgin Islands did not report." Furthermore, Region IV, i.e. the Southeast, reports increased out-patient ILI above its regional baseline.[373]

August 30 edit

  WHO At least 2,837 deaths worldwide are reported.[374]

  Colombia President Álvaro Uribe is confirmed to have swine flu, the second Head of state known to have been infected.[375]

  Djibouti First seven cases confirmed.[376]

  United Arab Emirates Second death confirmed, that of a thirty-year-old Pakistani expatriate who died following Caesarian section.[377]

August 31 edit

  Argentina The most H1N1 deaths per capita.[378]

  Bahrain First death confirmed, a South East Asian woman in her thirties with underyling medical conditions.[377]

  Sweden First death confirmed.[379]

September 2009 edit

September 2 edit

  Macau First death confirmed.[380]

  Portugal 5,123 cases officially confirmed[381]

September 3 edit

  Malaysia One more death confirmed. Total: 73 deaths.[382]

  Norway First death confirmed.[383]

  United States The CDC in its Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report[384] notes that 67% of thirty-six children who have died from H1N1 early in the epidemic had at least one serious chronic medical condition, with neurodevelopmental conditions such as developmental delay, epilepsy, and cerebral palsy being especially prominent.[385] Roughly one in thirteen deaths have been of school-age children. More than 80% of the children who died were five or older, in contrast with the seasonal flu baseline of half or more of the influenza fatalities being four or younger.[386]

September 4 edit

  Italy First death confirmed.[387]

September 5 edit

  United States CDC FluView Week 35: Influenza increases in the U.S. with widespread influenza activity in 11 states and regional activity in 13; the proportion of outpatient visits for influenza-like illness (ILI) is above the national baseline, with four out of ten HHS Surveillance Regions reporting ILI above region-specific baselines. "97% of all subtyped influenza A viruses being reported to CDC were 2009 influenza A (H1N1) viruses."[388]

September 6 edit

  WHO At least 3,205 deaths worldwide are reported.[389]

September 7 edit

  Ecuador Ecuador's chief of presidential security, Col. John Merino, dies of H1N1 flu[390] after twenty-eight days at Quito Military Hospital.[391]

  Faroe Islands First 44 cases confirmed.[392]

  Namibia First death confirmed, that of a 37-year-old businessman who had fallen ill in Angola.[393]

September 8 edit

  Suriname First death confirmed.[394]

September 9 edit

  Madagascar First death confirmed.[395]

  USA An outbreak is confirmed at the gaming convention PAX in Seattle, Washington.[396][397][398][399]

September 10 edit

  Malawi First case confirmed.[400]

September 11 edit

  Australia First case of Oseltamivir (Tamiflu) resistance found.[401]

September 12 edit

  United States CDC FluView Week 36: Influenza activity continues to increase with widespread influenza activity in twenty-one states, regional influenza activity in nine. Seven of ten HHS Surveillance Regions report ILI activity above region-specific baselines. "99% of all subtyped influenza A viruses being reported to CDC were 2009 influenza A (H1N1) viruses."[402]

September 13 edit

  WHO At least 3,486 deaths worldwide are reported.[403]

September 14 edit

  Mozambique First death confirmed, that of a 29-year-old female with an unspecified chronic illness.[404]

September 17 edit

  Malta Third death confirmed.[405]

2009, swine, pandemic, timeline, also, 2009, pandemic, country, 2009, pandemic, tables, main, article, 2009, pandemic, this, article, covers, chronology, 2009, novel, influenza, h1n1, pandemic, flag, icons, denote, first, announcements, confirmed, cases, respe. See also 2009 flu pandemic by country and 2009 flu pandemic tables Main article 2009 flu pandemic This article covers the chronology of the 2009 novel influenza A H1N1 pandemic 1 Flag icons denote the first announcements of confirmed cases by the respective nation states their first deaths and other major events such as their first intergenerational cases cases of zoonosis and the start of national vaccination campaigns and relevant sessions and announcements of the World Health Organization WHO the European Union and its agency the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control and the U S Centers for Disease Control CDC Community outbreaks June 2009 Confirmed cases by U S state June 3 2009 Unless otherwise noted references to terms like S OIV H1N1 and such all refer to this new A H1N1 strain and not to sundry other strains of H1N1 which are endemic in humans birds and pigs Contents 1 Timeline 1 1 March 2009 1 1 1 March 7 1 1 2 March 14 1 1 3 March 17 1 1 4 March 21 1 1 5 March 28 1 1 6 March 30 1 2 April 2009 1 2 1 April 1 1 2 2 April 2 1 2 3 April 4 1 2 4 April 5 1 2 5 April 6 1 2 6 April 11 1 2 7 April 12 1 2 8 April 13 1 2 9 April 14 1 2 10 April 16 1 2 11 April 17 1 2 12 April 18 1 2 13 April 20 1 2 14 April 21 1 2 15 April 22 1 2 16 April 23 1 2 17 April 24 1 2 18 April 25 1 2 19 April 26 1 2 20 April 27 1 2 21 April 28 1 2 22 April 29 1 2 23 April 30 1 3 May 2009 1 3 1 May 1 1 3 2 May 2 1 3 3 May 3 1 3 4 May 4 1 3 5 May 5 1 3 6 May 6 1 3 7 May 7 1 3 8 May 8 1 3 9 May 9 1 3 10 May 10 1 3 11 May 11 1 3 12 May 12 1 3 13 May 13 1 3 14 May 14 1 3 15 May 15 1 3 16 May 16 1 3 17 May 17 1 3 18 May 18 1 3 19 May 19 1 3 20 May 20 1 3 21 May 21 1 3 22 May 22 1 3 23 May 23 1 3 24 May 24 1 3 25 May 25 1 3 26 May 26 1 3 27 May 27 1 3 28 May 28 1 3 29 May 29 1 3 30 May 30 1 3 31 May 31 1 4 June 2009 1 4 1 June 1 1 4 2 June 2 1 4 3 June 3 1 4 4 June 4 1 4 5 June 5 1 4 6 June 6 1 4 7 June 7 1 4 8 June 8 1 4 9 June 10 1 4 10 June 11 1 4 11 June 12 1 4 12 June 13 1 4 13 June 15 1 4 14 June 16 1 4 15 June 17 1 4 16 June 19 1 4 17 June 22 1 4 18 June 24 1 4 19 June 27 1 4 20 June 29 1 5 July 2009 1 5 1 July 1 1 5 2 July 2 1 5 3 July 4 1 5 4 July 5 1 5 5 July 6 1 5 6 July 8 1 5 7 July 9 1 5 8 July 11 1 5 9 July 12 1 5 10 July 13 1 5 11 July 14 1 5 12 July 16 1 5 13 July 17 1 5 14 July 18 1 5 15 July 19 1 5 16 July 20 1 5 17 July 21 1 5 18 July 22 1 5 19 July 23 1 5 20 July 24 1 5 21 July 25 1 5 22 July 26 1 5 23 July 27 1 5 24 July 28 1 5 25 July 29 1 5 26 July 30 1 5 27 July 31 1 6 August 2009 1 6 1 August 1 1 6 2 August 3 1 6 3 August 4 1 6 4 August 6 1 6 5 August 8 1 6 6 August 11 1 6 7 August 13 1 6 8 August 14 1 6 9 August 15 1 6 10 August 17 1 6 11 August 18 1 6 12 August 19 1 6 13 August 20 1 6 14 August 21 1 6 15 August 22 1 6 16 August 23 1 6 17 August 24 1 6 18 August 25 1 6 19 August 26 1 6 20 August 27 1 6 21 August 28 1 6 22 August 29 1 6 23 August 30 1 6 24 August 31 1 7 September 2009 1 7 1 September 2 1 7 2 September 3 1 7 3 September 4 1 7 4 September 5 1 7 5 September 6 1 7 6 September 7 1 7 7 September 8 1 7 8 September 9 1 7 9 September 10 1 7 10 September 11 1 7 11 September 12 1 7 12 September 13 1 7 13 September 14 1 7 14 September 17 1 7 15 September 18 1 7 16 September 19 1 7 17 September 20 1 7 18 September 21 1 7 19 September 23 1 7 20 September 25 1 7 21 September 26 1 7 22 September 27 1 7 23 September 28 1 7 24 September 29 1 7 25 September 30 1 8 October 2009 1 8 1 October 3 1 8 2 October 4 1 8 3 October 5 1 8 4 October 6 1 8 5 October 9 1 8 6 October 10 1 8 7 October 11 1 8 8 October 12 1 8 9 October 13 1 8 10 October 15 1 8 11 October 16 1 8 12 October 17 1 8 13 October 19 1 8 14 October 20 1 8 15 October 21 1 8 16 October 22 1 8 17 October 23 1 8 18 October 24 1 8 19 October 25 1 8 20 October 26 1 8 21 October 27 1 8 22 October 28 1 8 23 October 29 1 8 24 October 30 1 8 25 October 31 1 9 November 2009 1 9 1 November 1 1 9 2 November 2 1 9 3 November 3 1 9 4 November 4 1 9 5 November 5 1 9 6 November 6 1 9 7 November 7 1 9 8 November 8 1 9 9 November 9 1 9 10 November 11 1 9 11 November 12 1 9 12 November 13 1 9 13 November 14 1 9 14 November 16 1 9 15 November 18 1 9 16 November 19 1 9 17 November 20 1 9 18 November 21 1 9 19 November 23 1 9 20 November 24 1 9 21 November 27 1 9 22 November 28 1 9 23 November 30 1 10 December 2009 1 10 1 December 1 1 10 2 December 2 1 10 3 December 5 1 10 4 December 6 1 10 5 December 7 1 10 6 December 12 1 10 7 December 13 1 10 8 December 16 1 10 9 December 17 1 10 10 December 19 1 10 11 December 21 1 10 12 December 23 1 10 13 December 26 1 10 14 December 27 1 10 15 December 29 1 10 16 December 30 1 10 17 December 31 2 2010 2 1 January 2010 2 1 1 January 2 2 1 2 January 8 2 1 3 January 11 2 1 4 January 15 2 1 5 January 20 2 1 6 January 29 2 2 February 2010 2 2 1 February 3 2 2 2 February 5 2 2 3 February 8 2 2 4 February 19 2 2 5 February 25 2 3 March 2010 2 3 1 March 5 2 3 2 March 12 2 3 3 March 19 2 3 4 March 26 2 3 5 March 27 2 3 6 March 31 2 4 April 2010 2 4 1 April 2 2 4 2 April 9 2 4 3 April 12 2 4 4 April 14 2 4 5 April 17 2 4 6 April 19 2 4 7 April 26 2 5 May 2010 2 5 1 May 16 2 6 August 2010 2 6 1 August 6 2 6 2 August 10 3 Summary 4 See also 5 ReferencesTimeline editTake note that the date of the first confirmations of the disease or any event in a country may be before or after the date of the events in local time because of the International Dateline nbsp Probable and confirmed Mexican cases by date of illness onset March 15 April 26 CDC March 2009 edit nbsp Mexico In La Gloria Veracruz 60 of the town s population is sickened by a respiratory illness of unknown provenance The government of Mexico believes it to be caused by H3N2 influenza though at least one patient in La Gloria tested positive for A H1N1 Two babies died in the outbreak but both were buried without testing 2 March 7 edit nbsp United States In the ninth week of its routine influenza surveillance the CDC reports on FluView that thirty five states have reported widespread influenza activity and 14 states have reported regional activity but that although the rate of activity was high that the proportion of deaths attributed to pneumonia and influenza P amp I was below the epidemic threshold 3 March 14 edit nbsp United States The CDC reports on the 10th week of FluView that thirty states reported widespread influenza activity and 18 states reported regional activity 4 March 17 edit nbsp Mexico Earliest known onset of a case that is later to be confirmed as Swine Origin Influenza A H1N1 Virus Infection 5 6 March 21 edit nbsp United States CDC FluView Week 11 Widespread influenza activity in twenty four states regional activity in 19 Influenza activity continues to decrease 7 March 28 edit nbsp Confirmed USA cases with known dates of illness onset April 27 2009 CDC nbsp United States Earliest known onset of a USA case later confirmed as swine flu that of a nine year old girl residing in Imperial County California 8 9 Thirteen states reported widespread influenza activity and 19 reported regional activity on the CDC s FluView Week 12 10 March 30 edit nbsp United States A sample is collected from a nine year old female patient which is later confirmed to contain the novel virus strain genetically sequenced as A California 05 2009 H1N1 11 12 nbsp United States Onset of illness for a ten year old boy residing in San Diego County California his case is eventually the first to be confirmed as swine flu in the US 9 April 2009 edit April 1 edit nbsp United States A nasopharyngeal swab is collected from a ten year old male patient in San Diego County later confirmed as containing the novel virus and the first organism of that strain to be completely sequenced A California 04 2009 H1N1 9 11 13 April 2 edit nbsp Mexico In La Gloria Veracruz a four year old boy falls ill at the end of the outbreak Only his sample which was eventually sent abroad tested positive for A H1N1 Veracruz officials state that there were no plans to exhume the bodies of two infants who died in the outbreak 2 April 4 edit nbsp United States CDC FluView Week 13 Widespread influenza activity in four states regional activity in 18 14 April 5 edit nbsp European Union The media monitoring website MedISys reports on a Mexican article about the epidemiological alert 15 16 April 6 edit nbsp Mexico Public health authorities begin investigating unusual cases of pneumonia 17 400 people had reportedly sought treatment for pneumonia influenza like illness ILI in La Gloria the preceding week 17 nbsp United States Biosurveillance firm Veratect reports the unusual respiratory illness in Mexico 18 19 Veratect publishes the alert La Gloria Strange Respiratory Affects 60 of Local Population Three Pediatric Deaths May be Associated with the Outbreak 17 18 April 11 edit nbsp United States CDC FluView Week 14 Widespread influenza activity in one state regional activity in 14 20 April 12 edit nbsp Mexico The General Directorate of Epidemiology DGE reports the outbreak of an ILI in a small community in Veracruz to the Pan American Health Organization PAHO which is the Regional Office of the World Health Organization WHO 5 21 Furthermore a 39 year old woman dies of severe viral pneumonia in the city of San Luis Potosi this is later believed to be the earliest known fatality related to the outbreak 22 April 13 edit nbsp Mexico First death in Oaxaca due to what would later be identified as swine flu 23 nbsp United States The U S Centers for Disease Control CDC is advised of a ten year old boy with a respiratory illness in San Diego County California Test results revealed an Influenza A virus but were negative for standard human strains The San Diego County Health Department is notified 9 April 14 edit nbsp United States The CDC receives its first sample from California from the ten year old boy in San Diego County and identifies the virus as a strain of swine influenza A H1N1 9 April 16 edit nbsp Mexico Authorities notify the PAHO of the atypical pneumonia 17 nbsp United States Veratect publishes the alert Atypical Pneumonia Cases Reported at Hospital regarding the Oaxaca cases 17 18 April 17 edit nbsp Mexico A case of atypical pneumonia in Oaxaca prompts enhanced national surveillance A field investigation is started 5 Mexico contacts Canada to request more specialized testing 24 nbsp United States The CDC receives a second sample from Southern California taken from the nine year old girl in Imperial County and again identifies the virus as a strain of swine influenza A H1N1 The California Department of Public Health is notified 9 April 18 edit nbsp Mexico Mexico sends 14 mucus samples to the CDC and dispatches health teams hospitals to look for patients showing severe influenza or pneumonia like symptoms 25 nbsp United States CDC FluView Week 15 Nine states reported regional activity 17 states reported local influenza activity the District of Columbia and 22 states reported sporadic influenza activity and two states reported no influenza activity Seven human infections with swine influenza A H1N1 virus have been confirmed This is the first mention of A H1N1 in FluView 26 April 20 edit nbsp United States Veratect advises the CDC of the Mexican events 17 18 The CDC is already investigating the California and Texas cases 17 18 27 April 21 edit nbsp United States The CDC alerts physicians to a similar novel strain of swine influenza A H1N1 in two cases from Southern California in a Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report Early Release on its website 28 Local investigations including investigations in Texas are already underway and overall surveillance is enhanced 9 29 The Associated Press covers the alert the first mention of the A H1N1 outbreak in English language news media 27 30 31 April 22 edit nbsp Canada Canada receives the samples from Mexico for testing 24 April 23 edit nbsp Mexico The Public Health Agency of Canada confirms Mexico cases of swine origin influenza A H1N1 virus S OIV infection 5 Genetic sequence analysis reveals that the Mexican patients were infected with the same S OIV strain detected in two California children 5 The PAHO is informed that a cluster in Mexico of severe respiratory illnesses has been laboratory confirmed as S OIV infection 5 April 24 edit nbsp The WHO issues its first Disease Outbreak Notice on the matter confirming the infection of a number of people in Mexico and the United States by Swine Influenza A H1N1 viruses not previously detected in pigs or humans 32 nbsp Mexico The Minister of Health confirms the Mexican cases of human infection by swine influenza and states that it believes that some of these cases had resulted in death 33 Health authorities implement public health measures for all airport passengers and the vaccination of health care workers with seasonal influenza vaccine 5 nbsp President Obama is briefed in the Situation Room about the H1N1 outbreak nbsp United States The CDC tells a press conference that seven of the 14 Mexican samples contained the same virus strain as the known in California and Texas and that indications suggested that containment in the USA was not very likely 33 The novel strain had already been reported on the CDC s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report website 28 April 25 edit nbsp WHO Under the International Health Regulations IHR the Emergency Committee convenes for the first time since its establishment in 2007 34 resulting in the WHO Director General declaring a formal public health emergency of international concern 35 36 PHEIC 37 the first ever nbsp The PAHO Vaccination Week In The Americas starts 38 The 2009 Week was planned to emphasize the vaccination of entire families and health worker immunization 38 nbsp United States First closure of an entire school district the Schertz Cibolo Universal City Independent School District outside San Antonio Texas 39 40 April 26 edit nbsp United States United States declares a Public Health Emergency 41 April 27 edit nbsp World Health Organization Regions Africa HQ Brazzaville Congo Americas HQ Washington DC USA Europe HQ Copenhagen Denmark Eastern Med HQ Cairo Egypt South East Asia HQ New Delhi India Western Pacific HQ Manila Philippines nbsp Mexico City Metropolitan Cathedral nbsp WHO The Emergency Committee meets for the second time The WHO Director General issues a statement that containment of the outbreak is not feasible and elevates the pandemic alert from Phase 3 to Phase 4 42 nbsp European Union EU Health Commissioner advises Europeans not to travel to the United States or Mexico unless the need is urgent This follows the first confirmed case in Spain 43 nbsp Canada First six cases confirmed four in Nova Scotia and two in British Columbia 44 nbsp Mexico First seven confirmed deaths 45 nbsp Spain First confirmed case of swine flu in Almansa and thus the first case in Europe A H1N1 has spread from the WHO Region of the Americas to the WHO European Region 46 nbsp nbsp United Kingdom First two confirmed cases in Scotland 47 April 28 edit nbsp WHO Confirmed cases are now extant in four of six WHO regions see map As of 19 15 GMT seven countries have officially reported cases of swine influenza A H1N1 infection 48 nbsp Canada Confirmed two cases and another four in Alberta and Ontario respectively 49 nbsp Israel First confirmed case in Israel and thus the WHO Eastern Mediterranean Region color coded yellow the third region to be affected 50 nbsp New Zealand First three confirmed cases in New Zealand and thus the WHO Western Pacific Region color coded red the fourth region to be affected 51 nbsp Spain The second confirmed case in Spain in Valencia 52 53 April 29 edit nbsp WHO The Emergency Committee meets for the third time 54 and the WHO raises its pandemic alert level from Phase 4 to Phase 5 its second highest 55 As of 1800 GMT nine countries have officially reported 148 cases of swine influenza A H1N1 infection 56 ASEAN ASEAN officials are looking at coordinating measures to address the potential pandemic 57 nbsp EU Foreign Relations Commissioner Benita Ferrero Waldner announces that the halt of all travel to Mexico and disinfecting all airports due to the global flu outbreak is being considered 58 nbsp Austria First confirmed case 56 nbsp Germany First three confirmed cases two in Bavaria and one in Hamburg 59 nbsp Spain Eight more cases raises the total in Spain to 10 including the first human to human intergenerational transmission 60 in which the patient had not recently been to Mexico but was infected by another patient who had just visited Mexico namely his girlfriend 61 This is the first intergenerational transmission to be documented in Europe nbsp United States First death outside Mexico a 23 month old Mexican child hospitalized in Texas 62 Ninety one confirmed cases in the US to date 63 nbsp South Africa First two cases reported within South Africa by two women that travelled in Mexico weeks earlier The cases were confirmed on 18 June 2009 April 30 edit nbsp Canada Confirmed One more case in Toronto and eight more cases in Nova Scotia and Alberta bringing total to 28 64 nbsp Ireland First confirmed case 65 nbsp Netherlands First confirmed case a three year old child 66 The child returned from Mexico to the Netherlands on April 27 2009 The parents test negative for A H1N1 nbsp Switzerland First confirmed case 67 nbsp United States Four cases are confirmed in an outbreak at the University of Delaware another 12 cases are deemed probable One of the confirmed cases is a baseball player which results in the university cancelling sporting events a concert by rapper Young Jeezy and other school activities 68 nbsp United Kingdom Three further confirmed cases of swine flu giving a total of eight confirmed cases 69 May 2009 edit May 1 edit nbsp WHO As of 0600 GMT 11 countries have officially reported 331 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection 70 nbsp Canada 51 confirmed cases 71 nbsp Hong Kong 300 people are placed under quarantine at a hotel for seven days due to Hong Kong s first confirmed case there 72 Chief Executive Donald Tsang raises Hong Kong s response level from serious to emergency 73 The Director of Health Dr PY Lam orders Metropark Hotel in Wan Chai to be isolated for seven days 74 nbsp Denmark First confirmed case in Hvidovre 75 nbsp France First two confirmed cases 76 nbsp Mexico begins an unprecedented five day shutdown to fight the spread of the flu 77 nbsp United Kingdom First and second case of human to human or intergenerational transmission within the UK confirmed 78 nbsp United States 155 confirmed cases including two at George Washington University s Thurston Hall 79 May 2 edit nbsp WHO As of 0600 GMT 15 countries have officially reported 615 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection 80 nbsp Canada The Canadian Food Inspection Agency confirms the first human to animal transmission of the virus after an Albertan returns from Mexico and infects a pig farm the first known case of reverse zoonosis 81 nbsp China suspends flights from Mexico 82 nbsp South Korea First confirmed case 83 nbsp United States There are more than 430 school closures in 18 states 84 CDC FluView Week 17 Widespread activity in seven states regional activity in 12 85 May 3 edit nbsp WHO As of 0600 GMT 17 countries have officially reported 787 cases of A H1N1 80 nbsp Arab League Health Ministers meet in Riyadh to discuss human and technical support to be deployed in any Arab affected place 86 nbsp Canada 101 confirmed cases after seven cases in British Columbia three in Alberta two in Nova Scotia and Ontario and one in Quebec were confirmed 87 nbsp Colombia First confirmed case in South America 87 May 4 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 20 countries have officially reported 985 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection 88 89 nbsp Canada A girl from Edmonton Alberta was diagnosed with a severe case of the H1N1 virus 90 May 5 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 21 countries have officially reported 1 124 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection 91 nbsp United States Second confirmed death the first of a U S resident a pregnant special education teacher in Texas Judy Trunnell The 33 year old gives birth to her second child via Caesarian section during her eighth month of pregnancy in a coma whilst on life support 92 93 Judy Trunnell had several underlying medical conditions most notably asthma 94 95 96 Several sailors in San Diego California fall ill including a sailor on the USS Dubuque which results in the cancellation of its deployment These are the first cases in the U S Navy 97 As the low level of virulence of novel A H1N1 in the U S becomes established the CDC issues revised criteria for school closures effectively ending widespread shutdowns 98 May 6 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 22 countries have officially reported 1 516 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection 99 nbsp ASEAN A special regional summit to fight possible swine flu pandemic was held in Bangkok and was attended by senior ASEAN health officials along with those from China Japan and South Korea 100 nbsp Guatemala First confirmed case and the first in Central America 101 102 nbsp Poland First confirmed case 103 nbsp Sweden First confirmed case 104 May 7 edit nbsp WHO As of 18 00 GMT 24 countries have officially reported 2 371 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection 105 nbsp Argentina First confirmed case 106 nbsp Brazil First four confirmed cases 107 108 nbsp Canada Reports suggest that an elderly woman who had swine flu has died in northern Alberta marking the first death in Canada related to swine flu 109 Furthermore an unusual case of zoonosis occurred when a swine flu inspector in improper gear caught the virus from an infected pig 110 nbsp Netherlands Second case confirmed a 53 year old woman who had recently travelled to Mexico 111 nbsp USA The New England Journal of Medicine establishes its H1N1 Influenza Center on its website 112 May 8 edit nbsp WHO As of 16 00 GMT 25 countries have officially reported 2 500 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection 113 nbsp Japan First three confirmed cases 114 nbsp Panama First confirmed case 115 116 117 May 9 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 29 countries have officially reported 3 440 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection 118 nbsp Australia First confirmed case 119 nbsp Brazil Two cases confirmed one of which is thought to be the first case of human to human infection in Brazil 120 nbsp Costa Rica First confirmed death and also the first death outside of North America 121 122 Three other confirmed cases all children were contaminated by the patient who died 123 nbsp Japan 4th confirmed case a schoolmate of the first three cases 124 nbsp Norway First two confirmed cases 125 nbsp United States Third confirmed death a Washington man with underlying heart disease 126 Also the USA passes Mexico in the number of confirmed cases of infection 1693 to 1364 thus becoming the nation state with the most laboratory confirmed cases of infection Canada is third with 242 cases 127 CDC FluView Week 18 Widespread influenza activity in eight states regional activity in 14 128 May 10 edit nbsp WHO As of 07 30 GMT 29 countries have officially reported 4 379 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection 129 nbsp China First confirmed case 130 May 11 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 30 countries have officially reported 4 694 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection 131 May 12 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 30 countries have officially reported 5 251 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection 132 nbsp Canada The first case in Yukon Territory is confirmed 133 nbsp Spain 100 cases confirmed 134 May 13 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 13 May 2009 33 countries have officially reported 5 728 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection 135 nbsp Belgium First confirmed case 136 nbsp Panama 10 more cases confirmed today Total 39 137 May 14 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 33 countries have officially reported 6 497 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection 138 nbsp Belgium Second confirmed case 139 nbsp Colombia First domestic infections with three cases confirmed Total 10 140 May 15 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 34 countries have officially reported 7 520 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection 141 nbsp USA Fourth and fifth deaths confirmed that of an Arizona woman suffering from a lung condition 142 143 and a Texas man in Corpus Christi respectively 144 145 nbsp Malaysia First confirmed case 146 Malaysia is the 37th country to be affected by the virus nbsp Panama Four new cases confirmed today Total 43 23 of whom are male and 20 of whom are female 20 of the cases are under 15 years old 147 May 16 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 36 countries have officially reported 8 451 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection nbsp India First case confirmed in Hyderabad 148 This marks the arrival of A H1N1 in the fifth of the WHO s six regions the South East Asia Region nbsp Japan First domestic infection confirmed in Kobe a male high school student with no history of travel abroad 149 The Kobe Festival planned for May 16 and 17 is cancelled 150 nbsp Malaysia Second confirmed case 151 The first patient is now showing significant improvement from the treatment nbsp Panama 11 new confirmed cases 54 total 152 nbsp Turkey First confirmed case that of an American tourist flying from the United States via Amsterdam discovered at Istanbul s Ataturk International Airport 153 nbsp United States CDC FluView Week 19 Widespread influenza activity in five states regional activity in 13 154 May 17 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 37 countries have officially reported 8 480 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection nbsp Panama With 54 confirmed cases Panama occupies second place along with Canada for the number of cases per country May 18 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 40 countries have officially reported 8 829 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection including 74 deaths 155 nbsp ECDC The European Centre for Disease Control releases its early findings on H1N1 s pandemic potential 156 nbsp Japan reports 96 confirmed cases 157 it now ranks fourth in the world in the number of infections Thousands of schools in 21 cities in the Hyogo and Osaka prefectures are temporarily closed 158 159 nbsp USA The sixth death in the US and the first in New York that of an assistant principal 160 161 May 19 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 40 countries have officially reported 9 830 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection including 79 deaths 162 nbsp United States Seventh confirmed death that of a 44 year old Missouri man 163 nbsp Japan 191 confirmed cases Hyogo Prefecture has the most at 111 164 nbsp Norway One more case confirmed today Total three 165 nbsp Paraguay confirmed its first case and became the 43rd affected country 166 nbsp Taiwan confirmed its first case and becomes the 44th affected country 167 May 20 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 40 countries have officially reported 10 243 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection including 80 deaths 168 nbsp United States A patient dies in Arizona 169 and a 22 year old man dies in Utah 170 the nation s eighth and ninth H1N1 fatalities Roughly half of the influenza viruses detected by the CDC s routine influenza surveillance systems are now that of novel A H1N1 1 An unusual number of outbreaks in schools is reported 171 nbsp Japan 236 confirmed cases including the first case in Shiga Prefecture 172 and the cities of Hachiōji and Kawasaki in the Greater Tokyo Area Two female high school students from Tokyo who had recently attended a Model United Nations conference in New York are presumed to have become infected abroad 173 174 nbsp Norway 1 more case confirmed today Total 4 165 May 21 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 41 countries have officially reported 11 034 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection including 85 deaths 175 nbsp Japan 279 confirmed cases more than 4 800 schools are closed in the Kobe region 176 May 22 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 42 countries have officially reported 11 168 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection including 86 deaths 177 nbsp Japan 317 confirmed including first confirmed in Saitama Prefecture 178 Third confirmed in Tokyo a 25 year old man who visited Osaka from May 14 20th 179 nbsp Philippines First case confirmed 180 May 23 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 43 countries have officially reported 12 022 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection including 86 deaths 181 nbsp Iceland First confirmed case 4 more cases suspected 182 183 United States CDC FluView Week 20 Widespread influenza activity in four states regional activity in 11 184 May 24 edit nbsp Australia Two more confirmed cases which now brings the national toll to 16 185 nbsp Kuwait First confirmed cases that of 18 U S soldiers 186 May 25 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 46 countries have officially reported 12 515 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection including 91 deaths 187 nbsp Australia 22 Confirmed Cases 188 nbsp Ireland Second confirmed case 189 May 26 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 46 countries have officially reported 12 954 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection including 92 deaths 190 nbsp Argentina 14 Confirmed Cases Total 19 191 nbsp Australia 61 confirmed cases 192 193 194 nbsp Puerto Rico First confirmed case 195 May 27 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 48 countries have officially reported 13 398 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection including 95 deaths 196 nbsp Argentina 37 cases confirmed 197 nbsp Dominican Republic First two confirmed cases 198 nbsp Greece confirmed two more cases 199 nbsp Romania First confirmed case 200 nbsp Singapore First confirmed case A 22 year old woman picked up the virus after visiting New York 201 nbsp United Kingdom Two new cases confirmed Total 186 202 nbsp Uruguay confirmed its first two cases 203 May 28 edit nbsp Australia 147 confirmed cases 204 nbsp Singapore Three more cases confirmed Total confirmed cases now stands at four 205 nbsp United Kingdom Seventeen more confirmed cases Total 203 206 nbsp Bolivia First 2 cases confirmed 207 nbsp Venezuela First confirmed case 208 May 29 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 53 countries have officially reported 15 510 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection including 99 deaths 209 nbsp United Kingdom 14 confirmed cases Total 217 210 nbsp Norway One new confirmed case Total 5 165 nbsp Hungary First confirmed case 211 nbsp Uruguay 4 new confirmed cases Total 6 212 nbsp Greece Another one case confirmed Total 4 213 May 30 edit nbsp Estonia First confirmed case 214 nbsp United States CDC FluView Week 21 Widespread influenza activity in five states regional activity in 10 215 May 31 edit nbsp Dominican Republic Nine more cases confirmed for a total of 11 cases nationwide 216 June 2009 edit June 1 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 62 countries have officially reported 17 410 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection including 115 deaths 217 nbsp Bulgaria First confirmed case 218 June 2 edit nbsp Bermuda First case confirmed 219 nbsp Egypt First case confirmed 220 nbsp Luxembourg First case confirmed 221 nbsp Nicaragua First case confirmed 222 June 3 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 3 June 2009 66 countries have officially reported 19 273 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection including 117 deaths 223 nbsp Saudi Arabia First confirmed case 224 June 4 edit nbsp Barbados First confirmed case 225 nbsp Malaysia Three more cases confirmed One of the patients is a 23 year old student returned from the United States Another two patients are German tourists who arrived in Singapore after having gone to Malaysia for holiday Total 5 226 nbsp Trinidad and Tobago First confirmed case 227 June 5 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 69 countries have officially reported 21 940 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection including 125 deaths 228 nbsp Australia 1006 cases confirmed 229 nbsp Cayman Islands First case confirmed 230 nbsp Dominican Republic First fatality a 17 year old pregnant girl Total number of confirmed cases rises to 44 231 nbsp Ukraine First confirmed case June 6 edit nbsp Malaysia One more case confirmed Total 7 232 nbsp United States CDC FluView Week 22 Widespread influenza activity in eight states regional activity in nine Approximately 89 of all influenza viruses being reported to CDC were novel influenza A H1N1 viruses 233 June 7 edit nbsp Chile Second death confirmed nbsp Martinique First case confirmed 234 nbsp New Zealand Authorities have confirmed that a man traveling from North America has Influenza A H1N1 Total 14 235 June 8 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 73 countries have officially reported 25 288 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection including 139 deaths 236 nbsp Dominica First confirmed case 237 nbsp New Zealand Three more confirmed cases two of which were from international flights Total 17 238 June 10 edit nbsp WHO As of 06 00 GMT 74 countries have officially reported 27 737 cases of influenza A H1N1 infection including 141 deaths 228 nbsp Colombia First death confirmed 239 nbsp French Polynesia First confirmed case in the islands 240 nbsp Guatemala First death confirmed 241 242 June 11 edit nbsp The WHO raises its Pandemic Alert Level to Phase 6 citing significant transmission of the virus 243 244 245 nbsp Australia 1263 cases nationally with more than 1000 cases in the State of Victoria alone 246 nbsp British Virgin Islands First case confirmed in the islands 247 nbsp Cuba Sixth case on the island and that of the first citizen 248 nbsp Palestinian Territories First case confirmed in the West Bank 247 June 12 edit nbsp WHO As of 07 00 GMT 12 June 2009 74 countries have officially reported 29 669 cases of Influenza A H1N1 infections including 145 deaths nbsp Morocco First case confirmed 249 nbsp Isle of Man First case confirmed 250 June 13 edit nbsp Bolivia First two domestic infections Total 7 251 nbsp Malaysia One more confirmed case Total 12 252 nbsp United States Widespread influenza activity in eleven states regional activity in six Over 98 of all subtyped influenza A viruses being reported to CDC were pandemic influenza A H1N1 viruses 253 June 15 edit nbsp Malaysia Five more cases of H1N1 confirmed Total 17 254 nbsp United Kingdom First death confirmed 255 June 16 edit nbsp Sri Lanka First confirmed case 256 June 17 edit nbsp Monaco First confirmed case 257 nbsp Malaysia Four more cases of H1N1 confirmed One domestic infection confirmed Total 23 258 June 19 edit nbsp Antigua and Barbuda First confirmed case 259 nbsp Bangladesh First confirmed case 260 nbsp Ethiopia First two cases confirmed 261 nbsp Slovenia First confirmed case 262 June 22 edit nbsp Philippines First death in Asia confirmed H1N1 deaths now confirmed in 3 of 6 WHO regions 263 June 24 edit nbsp Iraq First seven cases confirmed 264 nbsp Japan 52 more cases confirmed Total 944 nbsp Serbia First confirmed case 265 nbsp United States CDC FluView Week 24 Widespread influenza activity in twelve states regional activity in seven Over 99 of all subtyped influenza A viruses being reported to CDC were pandemic influenza A H1N1 viruses 266 June 27 edit nbsp United States CDC FluView Week 25 Widespread influenza activity in ten states regional in 11 states 267 June 29 edit nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina First case confirmed 268 nbsp Denmark First case of Oseltamivir Tamiflu resistance found Confirmed by David Reddy Roche s pandemic taskforce leader 269 nbsp Kenya First confirmed case 270 nbsp Mauritius First case confirmed 271 nbsp Nepal First three confirmed cases 272 nbsp South Africa South Africa National Health Department confirm community outbreak with 7 new confirmed cases The total of confirmed cases grew to 12640 within South Africa over the next few months citation needed July 2009 edit July 1 edit nbsp Guam First case confirmed 273 July 2 edit nbsp Australia First confirmed death in NSW National total 10 274 nbsp Japan Second case found with mutation resulting in Oseltamivir Tamiflu resistance 275 July 4 edit nbsp United States CDC FluView Week 26 Widespread influenza activity in nine states regional influenza activity in 12 Over 97 of all subtyped influenza A viruses being reported to CDC were novel influenza A H1N1 viruses 276 nbsp Portugal First human to human transmission Total 38 277 nbsp Syria First case confirmed 278 July 5 edit nbsp Peru First two deaths confirmed 279 July 6 edit nbsp WHO 429 deaths worldwide are reported 280 July 8 edit nbsp Belize First five cases confirmed 281 July 9 edit nbsp Tanzania First case confirmed July 11 edit nbsp United States CDC FluView Week 27 Widespread influenza activity in nine states regional activity in 12 Over 99 of all subtyped influenza A viruses being reported to CDC were novel influenza A H1N1 viruses 282 July 12 edit nbsp Colombia 6th death case confirmed out of 165 infected 283 nbsp Malaysia 39 more cases confirmed Total 710 nbsp United Kingdom Another 2 deaths confirmed Total Deaths 17 July 13 edit nbsp Brazil One more death confirmed Total Deaths 3 284 nbsp Ecuador Third death confirmed Total deaths 3 285 July 14 edit nbsp Brazil Fourth death confirmed nbsp Malaysia 32 more cases confirmed Total 804 nbsp New Zealand Two more deaths confirmed Total deaths 9 Total confirmed cases 1 984 July 16 edit nbsp Singapore First flu related death confirmed that of a 49 year old man with heart problems 286 nbsp Sudan First two confirmed cases of H1N1 detected from flights which had arrived from the U K 287 July 17 edit nbsp Hawaii First death that of a sexagenarian with underlying health problems 288 July 18 edit nbsp United States CDC FluView Week 28 Widespread influenza activity in seven states regional activity in 13 Over 99 of all subtyped influenza A viruses being reported to CDC were novel influenza A H1N1 viruses 289 nbsp Venezuela First death confirmed that of an 11 year old girl 290 nbsp Singapore First death with H1N1 involvement confirmed that of a 49 year old male who also suffered from diabetes hypertension and high cholesterol from a heart attack caused by severe pneumonia 291 July 19 edit nbsp Egypt First death confirmed 292 nbsp Georgia First case confirmed 293 July 20 edit nbsp Albania First case confirmed 294 nbsp Guam First death confirmed 295 nbsp Namibia First two H1N1 cases confirmed 296 July 21 edit nbsp Canada The fourth case of mutation in the world from Tamiflu has been found in a 60 year old man from Quebec Canada 297 nbsp Federated States of Micronesia First case confirmed that of a 27 year old male 298 nbsp Northern Mariana Islands First two cases of H1N1 confirmed 299 July 22 edit nbsp Hungary First death confirmed that of a man with underlying heart and lung disease 300 nbsp Tonga First death confirmed 301 July 23 edit nbsp The WHO ceases the tracking of cumulative individual cases 302 nbsp Arab League Health Ministers hold a summit after the death of a pilgrim who had returned from the Hajj New regulations were promulgated for the Hajj anyone younger than 12 or older than 65 or who have chronic health problems shall not be allowed to undertake the pilgrimage to Mecca 303 nbsp Bhutan First case confirmed 304 nbsp Malaysia First flu related death confirmed that of an obese 30 year old male 305 July 24 edit nbsp Canada Nova Scotia reports its first H1N1 death 306 nbsp Cayman Islands First death reported that of a man with underlying medical conditions 307 July 25 edit nbsp Indonesia First H1N1 death confirmed that of a 6 year old girl suffering from severe pneumonia 308 nbsp United States It is reported that thousands of Americans are being recruited for H1N1 vaccine testing at several research centers across the country 309 CDC FluView Week 29 Widespread influenza activity in four states regional activity in eight Over 98 of all subtyped influenza A viruses being reported to CDC were novel influenza A H1N1 viruses 310 July 26 edit nbsp Norway An international 4H youth camp with 1 700 participants from fifteen nations is shut down after fifty Norwegian participants catch H1N1 311 July 27 edit nbsp WHO 816 deaths worldwide are reported 312 nbsp Germany Germany s federal infectious disease center the Robert Koch Institute states there were 3 810 confirmed cases of H1N1 in the country nearly all of the cases are mild 313 nbsp Israel First death confirmed that of a 35 year old man from Eilat 314 nbsp Kosovo First case confirmed 315 nbsp Saint Kitts and Nevis First death reported that of a 28 year old woman 316 nbsp Saudi Arabia First death confirmed 317 July 28 edit nbsp Japan Third case of Oseltamivir Tamiflu resistance 318 nbsp Thailand In the first reported case of vertical transmission of A H1N1 a baby is born infected 319 July 29 edit nbsp Swaziland First case confirmed 320 nbsp United Kingdom The NHS is not ready for a second wave of swine flu cases expected this autumn a House of Lords committee has stated It warned hospitals do not have enough intensive care beds to cope and furthermore predicted that the recently established A H1N1 flu helpline could be overwhelmed with calls 321 nbsp United States The U S military wants to establish regional teams of military personnel to assist civilian authorities in the event of a significant outbreak of the H1N1 virus this fall according to Defense Department officials 322 July 30 edit nbsp Azerbaijan First two cases of A H1N1 confirmed those of people who had been on holiday in France and the U K respectively 323 nbsp Belgium First death confirmed that of a 34 year old woman 324 nbsp France First death confirmed a 14 year old girl in Brest 325 nbsp Gabon First case confirmed 326 nbsp Lebanon First death confirmed that of a 30 year old male 327 nbsp Moldova First case confirmed 328 nbsp Saudi Arabia Second H1N1 death confirmed that a 28 year old Indonesian woman 329 nbsp Taiwan First death confirmed that of a 39 year old man 330 July 31 edit nbsp WHO 1 154 deaths worldwide are reported 331 nbsp France The cruise ship Voyager of the Seas which had reported dozens of cases of H1N1 flu amongst its 5 000 passengers and crew docks in France 332 August 2009 edit August 1 edit nbsp Australia First case of reverse zoonosis confirmed in a piggery in Dunedoo 333 nbsp United States CDC FluView Week 30 Widespread influenza activity in four states regional activity in 11 Over 98 of all subtyped influenza A viruses being reported to CDC were novel influenza A H1N1 viruses 334 August 3 edit nbsp South Africa First confirmed death in South Africa Total number of deaths at end of epidemic 93 citation needed August 4 edit nbsp India First death confirmed 335 nbsp Netherlands First death confirmed that of a 17 year old male 336 nbsp Solomon Islands First case confirmed 337 August 6 edit nbsp WHO 1 462 deaths worldwide are reported 338 August 8 edit nbsp United States CDC FluView Week 31 Widespread influenza activity in four states regional activity in 10 339 August 11 edit nbsp Costa Rica President oscar Arias is confirmed to have swine flu the first head of state known to have been infected 340 August 13 edit nbsp WHO 1 799 deaths worldwide are reported 341 August 14 edit nbsp Madagascar First case confirmed 342 August 15 edit nbsp Turkish H1N1 control sheet here on a German passport issued in mid August nbsp Democratic Republic of the Congo First H1N1 case confirmed 343 nbsp United States CDC FluView Week 32 Widespread influenza activity in two states regional activity in eight 344 August 17 edit nbsp Malaysia Two more deaths confirmed Total 64 deaths 345 nbsp Malta First death confirmed 345 August 18 edit nbsp Malaysia Three more deaths confirmed Total 67 deaths 346 August 19 edit nbsp Belarus First H1N1 case confirmed citation needed August 20 edit nbsp Kuwait First death confirmed 347 nbsp Malaysia One more death confirmed Total 68 deaths 348 The unusually high reported death rate four times the global average 349 is investigated by the WHO 350 nbsp Netherlands Second death confirmed that of a 58 year old male 336 August 21 edit nbsp Chile H1N1 is found in turkeys on farms in Chile near the port city of Valparaiso in a unique zoonosis cluster 351 nbsp Germany 13 740 A H1N1 cases confirmed 352 nbsp Oman First death confirmed 353 nbsp United Arab Emirates First death confirmed 354 nbsp United Kingdom First death confirmed in Northern Ireland that of woman with underlying health conditions 355 August 22 edit nbsp New Caledonia First death confirmed 356 nbsp United States CDC FluView Week 33 Widespread influenza activity in two states regional activity in 13 Activity appears to be increasing in the Southeast 357 August 23 edit nbsp WHO At least 2 185 deaths worldwide are reported 358 nbsp Greece First death confirmed 359 August 24 edit nbsp Germany 14 325 H1N1 cases confirmed 360 nbsp Kyrgyzstan First two cases confirmed that of a husband and wife the man had recently traveled to Dubai 361 nbsp Malaysia One more death confirmed Total 69 deaths 362 August 25 edit nbsp Malaysia One more death confirmed Total 70 deaths 363 August 26 edit nbsp Angola First case confirmed 364 nbsp Germany 14 940 H1N1 cases confirmed 365 nbsp Iran First death confirmed citation needed nbsp Malaysia One more death confirmed Total 71 deaths 366 nbsp Syria First death confirmed 367 August 27 edit nbsp nbsp UN Chile The United Nations issues a warning regarding the discovery of H1N1 infected turkeys on farms in Chile an unusual case of zoonosis which raises concerns about possible increased genetic reassortment of the virus 368 August 28 edit nbsp WHO Most countries in the Southern Hemisphere represented by Chile Argentina New Zealand and Australia appear to have passed their peak of influenza activity and returned to baseline activity 358 nbsp ECDC Based partially on data from the Southern Hemisphere the ECDC forecasts a first wave of infections in autumn and winter which stresses hospitals in particular it is noted however that the overall interruption of essential services in well prepared countries has been manageable 369 nbsp Germany 15 567 H1N1 cases confirmed 370 August 29 edit nbsp Bangladesh First death confirmed 371 nbsp Brazil 602 H1N1 deaths confirmed the highest number of any nation state to date 372 nbsp United States CDC FluView Week 34 Influenza activity which had been largely stable or decreasing in prior weeks increases in the U S Six states and Puerto Rico reported geographically widespread influenza activity 13 states reported regional influenza activity 10 states and the District of Columbia reported local influenza activity 19 states reported sporadic influenza activity two states reported no influenza activity and Guam and the U S Virgin Islands did not report Furthermore Region IV i e the Southeast reports increased out patient ILI above its regional baseline 373 August 30 edit nbsp WHO At least 2 837 deaths worldwide are reported 374 nbsp Colombia President Alvaro Uribe is confirmed to have swine flu the second Head of state known to have been infected 375 nbsp Djibouti First seven cases confirmed 376 nbsp United Arab Emirates Second death confirmed that of a thirty year old Pakistani expatriate who died following Caesarian section 377 August 31 edit nbsp Argentina The most H1N1 deaths per capita 378 nbsp Bahrain First death confirmed a South East Asian woman in her thirties with underyling medical conditions 377 nbsp Sweden First death confirmed 379 September 2009 edit September 2 edit nbsp Macau First death confirmed 380 nbsp Portugal 5 123 cases officially confirmed 381 September 3 edit nbsp Malaysia One more death confirmed Total 73 deaths 382 nbsp Norway First death confirmed 383 nbsp United States The CDC in its Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 384 notes that 67 of thirty six children who have died from H1N1 early in the epidemic had at least one serious chronic medical condition with neurodevelopmental conditions such as developmental delay epilepsy and cerebral palsy being especially prominent 385 Roughly one in thirteen deaths have been of school age children More than 80 of the children who died were five or older in contrast with the seasonal flu baseline of half or more of the influenza fatalities being four or younger 386 September 4 edit nbsp Italy First death confirmed 387 September 5 edit nbsp United States CDC FluView Week 35 Influenza increases in the U S with widespread influenza activity in 11 states and regional activity in 13 the proportion of outpatient visits for influenza like illness ILI is above the national baseline with four out of ten HHS Surveillance Regions reporting ILI above region specific baselines 97 of all subtyped influenza A viruses being reported to CDC were 2009 influenza A H1N1 viruses 388 September 6 edit nbsp WHO At least 3 205 deaths worldwide are reported 389 September 7 edit nbsp Ecuador Ecuador s chief of presidential security Col John Merino dies of H1N1 flu 390 after twenty eight days at Quito Military Hospital 391 nbsp Faroe Islands First 44 cases confirmed 392 nbsp Namibia First death confirmed that of a 37 year old businessman who had fallen ill in Angola 393 September 8 edit nbsp Suriname First death confirmed 394 September 9 edit nbsp Madagascar First death confirmed 395 nbsp USA An outbreak is confirmed at the gaming convention PAX in Seattle Washington 396 397 398 399 September 10 edit nbsp Malawi First case confirmed 400 September 11 edit nbsp Australia First case of Oseltamivir Tamiflu resistance found 401 September 12 edit nbsp United States CDC FluView Week 36 Influenza activity continues to increase with widespread influenza activity in twenty one states regional influenza activity in nine Seven of ten HHS Surveillance Regions report ILI activity above region specific baselines 99 of all subtyped influenza A viruses being reported to CDC were 2009 influenza A H1N1 viruses 402 September 13 edit nbsp WHO At least 3 486 deaths worldwide are reported 403 September 14 edit nbsp Mozambique First death confirmed that of a 29 year old female with an unspecified chronic illness 404 September 17 edit nbsp Malta Third death confirmed 405 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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