CDC Accidentally Ships Deadly Virus, Hopes No One Will Notice
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That wacky CDC is up to its old, potentially fatal-virus-spreading tricks again. But instead of anthrax or dengue,
this time, the Centers for Disease Control brought a deadly strain of
bird flu into its revolving cast of highly contagious characters. While
rushing to get to a meeting, a CDC scientist accidentally tainted a tamer strain of bird flu with a far more deadly one—and then sent it out to another unsuspecting lab. Whoops.
This
most recent set of hijinks took place at CDC Prevention headquarters in
Atlanta in January, when a lab scientist accidentally mixed the two
samples, sending what should have been a benign (at least to
humans) strain of the virus to another lab. Except, you know, it wasn't.
So when that very same virus concoction was given to some unsuspecting
chickens as part of a USDA study in March, and all those chickens
proceeded to immediately die, the USDA officials knew something wasn't
right.
The CDC lab that handled the deadly mixed sample then confirmed that, yes, that virus was actually wildly dangerous, but told absolutely no one. Until June, that is, when a second CDC lab reported a similar problem, and CDC Director Dr. Tom Frieden was finally notified.
Apparently,
the lab scientist who had originally contaminated the sample completed
what should have been 90 minutes of work in 51 minutes in an attempt to
make a meeting on time. Whether that meeting actually did begin as
scheduled, though, remains inconclusive.
To the CDC's credit, though, "the viral mix was at all times contained in specialized laboratories and was never a threat to the public." But then that's what they said last time, too. And the time before that. Here's to hoping Ebola's not next. [AP]
Image: Shutterstock/spflaum



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