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WASHINGTON - Federal health advisers are looking into the deaths of 12 Japanese children who took Tamiflu, part of their annual safety review of the anti-flu medication and seven other drugs. ADVERTISEMENT if (window.yzq_a == null) document.write("");if (window.yzq_a){yzq_a('p', 'P=6mjVkESOwhVe6MV2Qvy2_BUG0SWN_kN83wkABPM.&T=16bmg67mi%2fX%3d1132257033%2fE%3d8903514%2fR%3dnews%2fK%3d5%2fV%3d1.1%2fW%3d8%2fY%3dYAHOO%2fF%3d1970871337%2fH%3dY2FjaGVoaW50PSJuZXdzIiBjb250ZW50PSJoZWFsdGg7Zmx1O2RydWc7RHJ1ZztpdDtJdDtIZWFsdGgi%2fS%3d1%2fJ%3d42C28E44');yzq_a('a', '&U=139vms4s2%2fN%3dJC_8qESOxIg-%2fC%3d369760.7461035.8349724.1442997%2fD%3dLREC%2fB%3d3076474');} There are no reports of deaths in the United States or Europe associated with Tamiflu. "Based on the information we have right now, we cannot say definitively there is a causal relation between the drug and the children's death," Dr. Murray Lumpkin, the deputy commissioner of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, said Thursday. We must learn to live togther as brothers or die togther as fools." Martin Luther King