03/24 | Daily Bird Flu Thread: Technology Tracking Bird Flu

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Link to yesterday's thread: http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?t=190708

Since January, 2004 WHO has reported human cases of avian influenza A (H5N1) in the following countries:

* East Asia and the Pacific:
o Cambodia
o China
o Indonesia
o Thailand
o Vietnam

* Europe & Eurasia:
o Azerbaijan
(see update)
o Turkey

* Near East:
o Iraq

For additional information about these reports, visit the
World Health Organization Web Site.

Updated March 21, 2006

Since December 2003, avian influenza A (H5N1) infections in poultry or wild birds have been reported in the following countries:

* Africa:
o Cameroon
o Niger
o Nigeria

* East Asia & the Pacific:
o Cambodia
o China
o Hong Kong (SARPRC)
o Indonesia
o Japan
o Laos
o Malaysia
o Mongolia
o Myanmar (Burma)
o Thailand
o Vietnam

* Europe & Eurasia:
o Albania
o Austria
o Azerbaijan
o Bosnia & Herzegovina (H5)
o Bulgaria
o Croatia
o Denmark (H5)
o France
o Georgia (H5)
o Germany
o Greece
o Hungary
o Italy
o Poland
o Romania
o Russia
o Serbia and Montenegro (H5)
o Slovak Republic
o Slovenia
o Sweden
o Switzerland
o Turkey
o Ukraine

* Near East:
o Egypt
o Iraq (H5)
o Iran
o Israel

* South Asia:
o Afghanistan
o India
o Kazakhstan
o Pakistan (H5)


For additional information about these reports, visit the
World Organization for Animal Health Web Site.

Updated March 21, 2006

http://www.cdc.gov/flu/avian/outbreaks/current.htm#animals

WHO, Avian Flu Timeline in .pdf: http://www.who.int/csr/disease/avian_influenza/timeline.pdf

:vik:
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
RFID vs Bird Flu

March 23, 2006 (8:48 PM EST)

Technology Tracking Bird Flu

By K.C. Jones, TechWeb News

Smart-tek Solutions announced the completion of an RFID demonstration for tracking and containing the virus in China while other technologies are being deployed for precautions in the United States.

Smart-tek announced this week that more than 50 government, academic and industry experts attended demonstrations in Beijing and officials there are now seeking cost details to implement an RFID tracking program. The system is one of several technologies people are turning to as they try to track and contain the virus that causes bird flu.

"With an estimated 13 billion chickens in China, this is such an extremely critical issue that there was a very high level of interest on the part of the governmental officials who attended," Perry Law, president of Smart-tek Communications, said in a prepared statement. "Frankly, we were overwhelmed with the reception of the system. We've always been confident we had a better mouse trap but the high praise we received in China was third party affirmation that the RFID is a vital tool in combating what may be one of the greatest threats currently facing mankind."

Law said the RFID Tracking Alert Containment and Poultry Monitoring system, or RTAC-PM, appears to be a viable method for monitoring the spread of bird flu. System designers created RTAC-PM to monitor livestock. It provides user-defined alerts to track poultry movement. SES Investment Ltd., an exclusive Chinese licensee, will serve as the liaison with the Chinese government and help implement the system if authorities approve it.

The World Health Organization states that bird flu has not reached pandemic levels. Scientists believe the virus would have to mutate before it would be passed easily from one person to another, which would speed the rate of transmission. As of Tuesday, WHO reported 184 confirmed human cases worldwide and 103 deaths since 2003.

So far, most human cases have been linked to direct contact with infected bird carcasses in markets and on farms, though experts warn that people in affected areas should wash hands frequently during food preparation and thoroughly cook both meat and eggs.

The U.S. Department of the Interior is using satellites, radio transmitting implants and maps from the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration to track wild birds' migration, according to Voice of America. Other federal agents are watching poultry movement at the borders, according to the report.

TIME Magazine health writer Christine Gorman reported earlier this week that U.S. veterinarians are using handheld GPS tools, databases and Google Earth to plot chicken house locations. If the disease shows up, officials will turn to the database before to identify where to quarantine or take other emergency measures. Gorman is also using technology to spread information about bird flu. She has a dedicated archive link on her Global Health Blog.

WHO is running a password-protected Web site where countries can obtain templates and provide daily reports on virus detection and the U.S. government is working with private businesses to come up with systems to deal with an outbreak. Businesses are expected to rely on technology as well.

"To mitigate the risks associated with this type of threat, firms are coming up solutions that include social distancing through enhanced telecommuting and work-from-home strategies involving VPNs and LANs," Alexander Tabb, practice leader of TABB Group's Crisis and Continuity Services, said during a conference on business continuity and security in New York City this week. "A lot can be done remotely, but you need a group of highly trained people, technical experts run the systems that will be grouped together somehow."

http://www.techweb.com/wire/ebiz/183702417

:vik:
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Compliance Newsflashes: U.S. Regulators Warn of Bird Flu, and more

Avian Flu a Threat Say Regulators
By WS&T Staff
Wall Street & Technology
March 23, 2006

Regulators Warn U.S. Institutions to Prep for Bird Flu

The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and Office of Thrift Supervision together issued an advisory notice to financial institutions urging preparation for the possibility of an outbreak of avian flu.


The notice refers to the National Strategy for Pandemic Influenza, which stated that the "private sector should play an integral role in preparedness before a pandemic begins, and should be part of the national response." Financial institutions and their service providers supply essential financial services and should consider their preparedness and response strategy for a potential pandemic, said the joint statement. Institutions should take note of their measures in preparedness, communication, surveillance, detection, response and containment.

"Financial institutions with a global presence and those considered critical to the financial system may have greater preparation and response challenges than those of other financial institutions. However, a pandemic event is a potential threat to any financial institution regardless of size and location," said the notice.

http://www.wstonline.com/news/compl...OFUX34QSNDBCSKH0CJUMEKJVN?articleID=183702257

:vik:
 

JPD

Inactive
People wary of vaccinated chicken meat

http://www.dawn.com/2006/03/24/nat19.htm

By Our Staff Reporter

ISLAMABAD, Mar 23: Chicken meat lovers still reeling from the fears of Bird Flu are now wary of eating meat of vaccinated birds because of concerns about possible side effects. Ever since the virus was detected at a couple of farms in Abbotabad and Charsadda almost a month ago, most of the poultry farm owners have got their flocks vaccinated.

The vaccination drive intensified after tests by the European Union’s Reference Laboratory for Avian Influenza confirmed presence of the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu in last month’s outbreak.

A local representative of the Poultry Association confirmed that all existing flocks of chickens had been administrated the vaccine imported recently.

The concerns about the consumption of vaccinated birds has come as a double blow to the industry already devastated by reports of outbreak. “People were refraining from buying chicken despite it being one of the most popular dishes at the dining tables. But the vaccination, instead of allaying the fears, has rather made matters worse,” a poultry seller in Aabpara market said.

Lack of public information about the issue has been the biggest factor contributing to the fears, Dr Hassan Sarosh of Poultry Association said and claimed there were no side effects of the poultry vaccine.

However, reported adverse effects of the vaccine include hallucinations, confusion, convulsions, brain inflammation and alarming abnormal behaviour.

The European Medicines Evaluation Agency had asked the vaccine manufacturer to carry out a new safety review because of reported side effects.

The US Food and Drug Administration had earlier cleared the drug, saying there was “no concern at all”. However, it had asked the manufacturer to warn the users about possible skin side- effects.
 

JohnGaltfla

#NeverTrump
Bird Flu Kills Cambodian Girl; Shanghai May Report First Death

March 24 (Bloomberg) -- Bird flu killed a 3-year-old girl in Cambodia. The virus may also have infected a 29-year-old woman who died in Shanghai, China's second most-populous city.

Samples from the girl tested positive for the H5N1 avian influenza strain at the Pasteur Institute in Phnom Penh, the Health Ministry and World Health Organization said in a statement today. The WHO asked China's Health Ministry for details on the woman in Shanghai, including any test results and whether she had contact with fowl, said Aphaluck Bhatiasevi, a WHO spokeswoman.

``It's a suspected case and the first found in Shanghai,'' Song Guofan, a spokesman at the city's health bureau, said today.

The H5N1 strain in poultry raises the risk of human cases and creates opportunities for the virus to mutate into a pandemic form that may kill millions of people. Shanghai has a population of about 20 million people, second to Chongqing.

Since 2003, H5N1 has killed at least 103 of 184 people infected, the WHO said on March 21. In almost all human cases, infection was caused by close contact with sick or dead birds, such as children playing with them, or adults butchering them or taking off the feathers, according to the WHO.

Cambodia's latest case takes the number of fatalities from the lethal virus to five in the country.

The girl was from Kong Pisey district in Kampong Speu province and was known to have had contact with sick and dead chickens, the joint statement said. She developed a fever on March 14 and her condition deteriorated rapidly on March 20, when she was taken to a hospital in Phnom Penh, where she died the next day.

Suspected Cases

A field investigation in Kong Pisey found four people with mild symptoms and contact with poultry. They are being monitored. Three others who had mild symptoms and contact with poultry have since died. Laboratory results from the suspected cases may be reported early next week, the statement said.

China has confirmed 15 H5N1 cases, 10 of them fatal. The latest suspected case involves a migrant worker who visited doctors in the city on March 15 complaining of a cough and fever, The Shanghai Daily reported, citing health authorities. Her condition deteriorated quickly and she died late on March 21 of pneumonia from an unknown cause, the report said.

Last year, about 150 people were reported to have died of pneumonia from unknown causes in China, the WHO said.

``Unlike diseases like SARS and avian influenza, pneumonia of unknown cause is not something that needs to be urgently notified to WHO,'' Bhatiasevi said.

More Damage

World health officials are tracking the spread of avian influenza in the event the virus becomes more contagious to humans. While H5N1 doesn't spread easily among people, the disease is hurting local economies and people's welfare in developing countries, the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations said.

``It's done a very large amount of damage,'' Anni McLeod, a livestock policy officer with the FAO in Rome, said in a phone interview yesterday. ``We can assume for the immediate future it's going to continue to do so.''

Niger, which reported avian flu-sickened fowl a month ago in Africa's third outbreak, will need about $23.6 million to control the virus. It has only about $1.5 million for the program, the UN's Integrated Regional Information Network reported yesterday.

``The impact of avian influenza is likely to compound the difficulties facing the population most of whom are already vulnerable,'' the report quoted Gabon President Omar Bongo as telling representatives of UN agencies and 46 African nations attending a three-day conference in Libreville this week.

``It can also weaken national health services and bring a new financial burden to our countries,'' Bongo told delegates.

Nigeria, Cameroon and Egypt also reported initial avian flu outbreaks in birds and poultry since February.

Egyptian Cases

In Egypt, where four people are suspected to have been infected with H5N1, one of whom died, a state of emergency was declared in all virology hospitals ``in anticipation of any human bird flu cases,'' Health Ministry spokesman Abdel Rahman Shahin said in a statement yesterday.

A woman, tested positive for H5N1 by a local laboratory, died in an Egyptian hospital on March 18. A woman from the governorate of El-Qalubia is in the intensive care unit of the El-Abassiya Respiratory Hospital in a stable condition, the ministry said.

A man from El-Qalubia is being treated at the Banha Fever Hospital and his condition is improving, while a man from the governorate of El-Gharbia is being treated at the Tanta Fever Hospital. His condition is also improving, the ministry said.

The virus has been reported in birds and poultry in 18 of the country's 26 governorates, the WHO said on March 20.
 

JPD

Inactive
Be ready for pandemic, state told

http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/journalgazette/news/local/14177013.htm

By Rick Callahan
Associated Press

WEST LAFAYETTE – The nation’s top health official urged Indiana’s local governments, hospitals and businesses Thursday to plan diligently for the threat of an influenza pandemic, warning that a global outbreak – from the headline-grabbing bird flu or some other virus – is inevitable.

U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt told about 400 people who attended a daylong flu pandemic summit at Purdue University that human history is filled with pandemics that killed millions.

And he said it’s just a matter of time before the next one strikes with devastating consequences.

“Pandemics happen and when they do they reshape the world,” Leavitt said after reminding the gathering at the Purdue Memorial Union about the “unseen world of viruses that are constantly mutating, constantly changing.”

Leavitt visited Indiana as part of his national tour of states to check on their work to prepare for a pandemic amid growing concerns that the H5N1 bird flu strain that’s killed more than 100 people overseas could mutate into a form that’s transmitted person-to-person.

Nearly all of the people infected with bird flu have had close contact with infected poultry.

Although no cases of bird flu have been reported in the United States, officials say it is likely to arrive this year in migrating birds. The virus has spread recently with migrating birds to Europe, Africa and the Middle East.

Leavitt said no one can predict if and when the bird flu virus or some other deadly virus will mutate and spread across human populations worldwide. He said that fact only heightens the need for hospitals, emergency responders, businesses, government and other entities to be prepared.

The federal government has asked all states to prepare for the possibility of a bird flu pandemic. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has drafted guidelines to help state and local entities with that task.

Gov. Mitch Daniels said the state’s departments of health and homeland security, which co-hosted the summit, continue to work with other agencies on various pandemic plans.

Representatives of law enforcement, the business community, health care providers, universities and others were briefed Thursday on those preparations.

After addressing the gathering, Daniels and Leavitt signed a resolution under which the HHS committed to help the state with guidance technical assistance, and backed that up with about $2 million in funding for planning. Leavitt’s agency also agreed to review Indiana’s plans for the use, storage and distribution of antiviral drugs that could prove effective during an outbreak. For its part, Indiana has agreed to demonstrate its preparedness plan within six months, and create a pandemic planning committee. As Thursday’s summit closed, Daniels signed into law legislation that gives greater authority to state and local officials to impose quarantines aimed at halting the spread of communicable diseases.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu spreads to Jordan

http://www.news.com.au/story/0,10117,18593437-23109,00.html

THE deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu has spread to Jordan but there are no human cases, Jordan's Health Minister Said Darwazeh said today.
He said at least three dead turkeys at a domestic farm in Ajloun had tested positive for the disease but none of the humans tested in the area was infected.

Twenty people were given the Tamiflu vaccine and the area has been cordoned off to prevent the disease from spreading further.

The virus had already been detected in some of Jordan's neighbours and other countries in the region. Iraq, Turkey and Egypt have suffered human cases and infected poultry was found in southern Israel and spread to the densely populated Palestinian Gaza Strip this week.

Jordan had been on high alert since bird flu was detected in Israel, Mr Darwazeh said, adding that Jordan's outbreak had been contained.

"The disease in its current form is more of an economic disease that affects poultry. It has had a very limited effect on human health," he said.

Advertisement:

The H5N1 bird flu virus reached Jordan after rippling out from Asia to the Middle East, Europe and Africa. It can infect people who come into close contact with infected poultry and has killed about 100 people since 2003.

Experts fear the virus will mutate into a form that passes easily from person to person, sparking a pandemic in which millions could die and which could cripple the world economy.
 

JPD

Inactive
Cambodian villagers quarantined after bird flu death

http://www.terra.net.lb/wp/Articles/DesktopArticle.aspx?ArticleID=277033&ChannelId=19

Cambodian health workers have quarantined part of a village near the capital Phnom Penh after a three-year-old girl died of bird flu and seven others were feared to have caught the deadly virus, officials have said.

At least 42 other people who had contact with the suspected victims were also being tested in Cambodia's first outbreak of the H5N1 virus in humans since early 2005, said Ly Sovann, head of the health ministry's infectious disease department.

The girl died Tuesday in a Phnom Penh hospital shortly after falling ill, Ly Sovann said. She was the fifth Cambodian to die of bird flu since 2003.

"She had contact with dead chickens," Ly Sovann told AFP.

Some 200 chickens and ducks in Phum Prich village, Korng Pisey district have been killed by the H5N1 strain of the virus, an agriculture ministry official said on condition of anonymity.

Health workers had disinfected the area and were educating villagers on how to recognise and combat bird flu, according to Ly Sovann.

Three of the suspected cases also had contact with the dead birds, while the other four had come into contact with the dead girl, officials said.

"We are not allowing them to touch the others and are keeping them in one place," Ly Sovann said of the suspected bird flu victims, adding that none of them was in serious condition.

World Health Organisation spokeswoman Megge Miller also confirmed the girl died of the H5N1 virus.

She said the health body had visited the village, 45 kilometers (28 miles) west of Phnom Penh, and found the suspected victims to only be suffering fevers at that point.

"At the moment, none of the suspected cases require hospitalisation," she said.

"They have no respiratory symptoms and health ministry officials are up there every day to monitor their health," she said.

Cambodia's last outbreak of bird flu in animals was reported earlier this month in the eastern province of Kompong Cham. Cases detected in ducks on a family farm in the same province in February triggered the slaughter of hundreds of birds.

Thousands of birds smuggled in from neighbouring Vietnam, where 42 people have died from bird flu since December 2004, have also been destroyed in recent months.

Most poultry in Cambodia is raised on small farms or in backyards, making it difficult to prevent the spread of the virus.

The most recent outbreak "really highlights the fact that the bird flu virus is becoming entrenched in Southeast Asia in some countries", Miller said.

"We know that the virus is circulating in Cambodia and are trying to ramp up public education ... we're really trying to get the message out there," she said.

Bird flu has killed more than 100 people worldwide since 2003, mostly in Asia.
 

JPD

Inactive
Woman cured of bird flu

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/bizchina/2006-03/24/content_551437.htm

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2006-03-24 10:37

The fifth person cured of bird flu in China was discharged from hospital on Thursday, local sources said on Friday.

The woman, surnamed Wang, is the only one of the five cured human cases of bird flu in China who used a respirator and underwent a tracheotomy during the treatment.

A 26-year-old villager of Jitai Village of Yingshang County in the eastern province of Anhui, Wang developed fever and pneumonia symptoms on February 11. She tested H5N1 positive at both the national and provincial centers for disease control and was admitted to the No. 2 People's Hospital of Fuyang City on February 18.

"She was suffering from respiratory failure and a lung infection when she was admitted to hospital," said Ge Yang, head of the expert panel which treated the patient. "She is now fully recovered."

Though thinner after over one month of treatment in hospital, Wang looked sanguine and healthy when she left, sources said.

"I feel as good as any healthy person," Wang was quoted as saying.

To date, China has reported 15 human cases of bird flu. Ten of the patients have died and the five others have been cured, according to experts with the Ministry of Health.

Due to the extent of her illness, doctors first used a respirator to help Wang breathe, but after little improvement doctors conducted a tracheotomy and the operation was a success, Ge said.

Wang's recovery provided valuable experience for and increased people's confidence in curing human cases of bird flu, said Cao Zhixin, deputy head of the respiratory disease department of the Beijing-based Chaoyang Hospital.

Cao said that Wang's recovery was only a single case of successful treatment of human cases of bird flu. He warned that a highly effective and low-cost medical treatment system was urgently needed for possible outbreak of human-to-human infection of bird flu.

The Ministry of Health urged the country's health system to continue the prevention and control efforts against bird flu in humans on Monday.

The ministry demanded that health departments should continue leading and guiding the prevention and control of bird flu, strengthen surveillance, staff training and lab testing, and rigidly carry on the reporting and screening of pneumonia cases of unknown causes.

Treatment of human cases of bird flu should be improved and coordination with other departments is needed, according to the ministry.

The ministry has intensified prevention and control efforts against bird flu since last autumn, such as improving emergency response plans, medical staff training and surveillance, and stockpiling materials for possible outbreaks.

This year, China has reported three outbreaks of bird flu among poultry, a sharp decrease compared with 49 outbreaks in the same period of 2004, according to the Ministry of Agriculture.

A total of 35 outbreaks of bird flu have been reported in China since 2005, which sickened 194,000 fowl and killed 186,000 of them. About 22.8 million fowl were culled to prevent the disease from spreading. All the outbreaks have been contained, the Ministry of Agriculture claimed.

The central government vowed last year to vaccinate all the country's poultry to curb the disease.

The deadly H5N1 strain has killed about 100 people worldwide since late 2003, according to the World Health Organization. Most victims were infected after close contact with sick birds.

The virus currently can only jump from birds to humans, but scientists fear that it could mutate into a form capable of passing easily among humans and thus spark a global human flu pandemic which might kill millions.
 

JPD

Inactive
Maine steps up bird flu planning, monitoring

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N23321672.htm

By Sarah Mahoney

DURHAM, Maine, March 23 (Reuters) - Maine, the closest U.S. state to migration routes for birds coming from Europe, will soon test ducks, geese, loons and other birds for avian flu as the United States steps up preparations for the possible spread of the disease to North America.

Maine is modeling its plan after Alaska, where many expect the first U.S. case of bird flu to be detected, Mark Stadler, director of the wildlife division of Maine's department of inland fisheries and wildlife, told Reuters in an interview.

Bird flu, already spreading across Asia, Europe, the Middle East and Africa, is expected to jump across the Atlantic Ocean to the Americas within a year, the United Nations said this month.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture is expected to release as much as $50,000 to Maine to be to take blood samples from migrating waterfowl, said Stadler. Hunters will also be asked to help obtain blood samples when bird-hunting season begins in late September.

Because of its extensive waterways, Maine is already actively banding and sampling its migratory bird population.

With 7,005 miles (11,270 km) of coastal shoreline -- including 2,479 miles (3,989 km) of island shoreline -- Maine is a magnet for coastal birds, while its extensive inland waterways are rich in fresh-water species.

A senior U.N. official said this month that the leap across the Atlantic Ocean would take place in two stages, carried in the next few months by wild birds flying from West Africa to the Arctic region, and then brought south to North and South America six months later.

The virus could show up in Maine as soon as the late summer, says Donald Hoenig, the state veterinarian.

"The birds will fly north to Canada for the summer, where they could potentially intermix with African and European birds," he said.

Officials fear that an infection among wild birds could spread to the state's poultry industry.

With four million domestic birds, Maine is the nation's leading producer of brown eggs, Hoenig said. In 2004, Maine's brown eggs generated $61 million in sales.

State officials have also been active in preparing contingency plans if the virus spreads to humans.

The H5N1 bird flu virus has led to the deaths of millions of birds in more than 30 countries. It has spread to over a dozen new countries in the past month and infected 175 people since 2003, killing around 100 of them.
 

JPD

Inactive
Some 168 W Java villages affected by AI virus

http://www.antara.co.id/en/seenws/?id=10505

Cirebon, W Java (ANTARA News) - Some 168 villages in West Java province have been affected by the Avian Influenza (AI) virus, an increase by 63 percent from 103 villages last month.

"The number of villages affected by the bird flu virus has increased significantly in the past one month. The situation could be worse but we do not know exactly since it is lack monitoring throughout the Province," Musny Suatmojo, head of the province`s veterinarian health service said here on Friday.

To stop the spread of the bird flu virus, the local authorities have provided 35 million doses of vaccines, he said.

He said the quantity of the vaccines was adequate for injection to around 4,5 million poultry, wich each will get at least three times of injection.

The province has trained around 1,300 officers to carry out the vaccination of poultry.

"The only problem we are facing right now is lack of injection needles. Currently we have only 125 automatic injection tools, which means we need at least some 375 units more," he said.

The Indonesian government would set aside at least Rp300 billion in funds this year to fight bird flu.

Health Minister Siti Fadillah Supari said recently the state budget funds would be spent on bird flu fighting programs through her ministry.

"The funds are intended to enable the thorough handling of the virus by implementing various programs ranging from awareness campaigns to purchase of medicines," she said.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Bird Flu fighting goes high tech

RFID technology tracks bird flu in China
By K.C. Jones

Courtesy of TechWeb.com
24 March 2006 (4:48 a.m. GMT)

Smart-tek Solutions announced the completion of an RFID demonstration for tracking and containing the virus in China while other technologies are being deployed for precautions in the United States.

Smart-tek announced this week that more than 50 government, academic and industry experts attended demonstrations in Beijing and officials there are now seeking cost details to implement an RFID tracking program. The system is one of several technologies people are turning to as they try to track and contain the virus that causes bird flu.

"With an estimated 13 billion chickens in China, this is such an extremely critical issue that there was a very high level of interest on the part of the governmental officials who attended," Perry Law, president of Smart-tek Communications, said in a prepared statement. "Frankly, we were overwhelmed with the reception of the system. We've always been confident we had a better mouse trap but the high praise we received in China was third party affirmation that the RFID is a vital tool in combating what may be one of the greatest threats currently facing mankind."

Law said the RFID Tracking Alert Containment and Poultry Monitoring system, or RTAC-PM, appears to be a viable method for monitoring the spread of bird flu. System designers created RTAC-PM to monitor livestock. It provides user-defined alerts to track poultry movement. SES Investment Ltd., an exclusive Chinese licensee, will serve as the liaison with the Chinese government and help implement the system if authorities approve it.

The World Health Organization states that bird flu has not reached pandemic levels. Scientists believe the virus would have to mutate before it would be passed easily from one person to another, which would speed the rate of transmission. As of Tuesday, WHO reported 184 confirmed human cases worldwide and 103 deaths since 2003.

So far, most human cases have been linked to direct contact with infected bird carcasses in markets and on farms, though experts warn that people in affected areas should wash hands frequently during food preparation and thoroughly cook both meat and eggs.

The U.S. Department of the Interior is using satellites, radio transmitting implants and maps from the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration to track wild birds' migration, according to Voice of America. Other federal agents are watching poultry movement at the borders, according to the report.

TIME Magazine health writer Christine Gorman reported earlier this week that U.S. veterinarians are using handheld GPS tools, databases and Google Earth to plot chicken house locations. If the disease shows up, officials will turn to the database before to identify where to quarantine or take other emergency measures. Gorman is also using technology to spread information about bird flu. She has a dedicated archive link on her Global Health Blog.

WHO is running a password-protected Web site where countries can obtain templates and provide daily reports on virus detection and the U.S. government is working with private businesses to come up with systems to deal with an outbreak. Businesses are expected to rely on technology as well.

"To mitigate the risks associated with this type of threat, firms are coming up solutions that include social distancing through enhanced telecommuting and work-from-home strategies involving VPNs and LANs," Alexander Tabb, practice leader of TABB Group's Crisis and Continuity Services, said during a conference on business continuity and security in New York City this week. "A lot can be done remotely, but you need a group of highly trained people, technical experts run the systems that will be grouped together somehow."

http://eetuk.com/bus/news/showArtic...GU5YGOQSNDBCSKHSCJUMEKJVN?articleID=183702439

:vik:
 

JPD

Inactive
Local health official warns of flu risk

http://www.ocala.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060324/NEWS/203240345/1009/BUSINESS

Businesses urged to prepare for pandemic

RICK CUNDIFF
STAR-BANNER

OCALA - Whether bird flu becomes a serious threat or not, it's only a matter of time before some type of influenza pandemic threatens lives and businesses worldwide, Marion County's top public health official said Thursday.

"There will be an influenza pandemic in the future," Dr. Nathan Grossman told the Ocala/Marion County Chamber of Commerce board of directors. "It might be bird flu, it might be armadillo flu, but there will be an influenza pandemic."

Businesses need to be prepared for an outbreak that could severely curtail their business operations and leave them without workers at a critical time, Grossman said.

"It's not a matter of if, it's a matter of when," he said.

While avian flu is drawing headlines worldwide, it's still very rare in humans, with about 198 cases and 103 deaths reported worldwide, Grossman said.

There are currently no documented cases in animals or humans in the United States, Grossman said. Person-to-person transmission remains extremely rare, he noted.

But the virus travels on the flight path of migratory birds, and probably will be present in the United States sometime this year, he added.

The impact of a global flu outbreak on businesses could be significant. Grossman cited the effects of what the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention consider a "medium-level" pandemic.

"Fifteen to 35 percent of your work force will be either ill and out of work or caring for someone ill and out of work," he said. "You will have a greatly reduced work force."

Some businesses, such as entertainment and tourism venues probably would have to close temporarily to reduce the spread of disease, he added.

Grossman urged the business community to start making plans.

"Businesses need to start preparing now, and in some cases, think outside the box," he said. "We're asking people to plan, not panic."

In response, the Chamber formed a "pandemic committee" to start developing possible response plans. Paul Franck of Franck's Pharmacy will chair the committee.

In other business, the Chamber board considered a confidentiality policy that would require board members to publicly support Chamber policies once they had voted on them, even if they had dissented before the vote.

"Certainly this is not meant to be a chilling effect," Chamber president Jaye Baillie said.

Board chair Manal Fakhoury said the proposal, which was referred to a committee, was a result of the Chamber currently undergoing its quinquennial accreditation process from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

"It's a best practice," she said. "There may be times when we may not favor a decision, but we need you to support it as a board member."

The proposal wasn't based on any specific episode of a board member disagreeing with board policy, Fakhoury added. The board also has no plans to close meetings now open to the press, she said.
 

Hiding Bear

Inactive
Mexico Agriculture Ministry Denies Speculation on Bird Flu Case
March 23 (Bloomberg) -- Mexico's Agriculture Ministry denied today speculation of a case of bird flu on the U.S-Mexico border.

``Mexico is free of avian flu,'' Jose Angel del Valle, director of the ministry's animal health department said in a telephone interview.

The country has 3,000 veterinarians who monitor full time Mexico's poultry industry, which produces 6 million chickens per day, del Valle said. The ministry also is working closely with Mexico's environment protection agency to prevent the H5N1 strain from arriving through wild birds, he said.

A Brazilian website reported yesterday that a case of bird flu was found in the border city of Nogales and Reuters Group Plc reported on the speculation.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000086&sid=acJXGLIPMEtY&refer=latin_america
 

JPD

Inactive
People Of Permatang Bogak Checked For Bird Flu

http://www.bernama.com/bernama/state_news/news.php?id=187856&cat=nt

KEPALA BATAS, March 24 (Bernama) -- More than 900 people of Permatang Bogak here were checked by the Health Department since March 20 following the detection of the H5N1 bird flu virus in the area to prevent its spread to humans.

Parliamentary Secretary to the Health Ministry Datuk Lee Kah Choon said officials from the department had checked more than 250 houses in Permatang Bogak and also briefed the residents on the dangers of the disease.

He said three of the residents, who were down with temperature of more than 38 degrees Celsius and showed flu symptoms, had been warded at the hospital.

However, he said, the results of the tests on two of the patients, who were admitted to the Penang Hospital and Kepala Batas Hospital respectively, showed up negative for H5N1 and they were discharged from the hospital.

He said the third patient, a girl who is two years and nine months old, who was admitted to the Penang Hospital Thursday was still under treatment while waiting for the outcome of the test from the Institute of Medical Research in Kuala Lumpur.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu detected at second site in Gaza

http://english.pravda.ru/news/world/24-03-2006/77839-Gaza-0

Palestinian officials confirmed an outbreak of the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu at a second farm in the Gaza Strip on Friday, and Israel's foreign minister appealed to U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan for international assistance to the Palestinians to contain the disease.

In all, bird flu has been detected at two farms in the Gaza Strip, one near Gaza City and one near the southern town of Rafah on the border with Egypt, said Deputy Agriculture Minister Azzam Tubaili.

Gaza chicken farmers planned a protest later Friday, after government officials told them they would not be compensated for culled birds. The two affected farms have a total of 80,000 chickens.

"They (the farmers) are preventing the culling because they want compensation before they let us do this," Tubaili said. "This is causing confusion. Any second of delay will really make a difference."

Tubaili said samples had been sent to Israeli labs to check for bird flu. He said Israel has sent the Palestinians poison for killing the chickens.

On Thursday, Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni called World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz to express Israel's concern over the ability of the cash-strapped Palestinian Authority to stop the spread of the flu. On Friday, Livni also appealed to Annan for help, according to a Foreign Ministry statement.

Israel fears that without international involvement, the Palestinian Authority would not take the immediate steps needed to limit the flu's spread.

Bird flu was discovered in Israeli villages not far from the Gaza Strip last week. Almost 1 million birds have been culled in Israel. An outbreak of avian flu was disclosed in Gaza on Wednesday.

On Thursday, Israel's Defense Ministry granted permission for the Palestinians to bring poison into Gaza to cull infected chickens, security officials said, reports the AP.
 

JPD

Inactive
Hiding Bear said:
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000086&sid=acJXGLIPMEtY&refer=latin_america

Mexico Agriculture Ministry Denies Speculation on Bird Flu Case
March 23 (Bloomberg) -- Mexico's Agriculture Ministry denied today speculation of a case of bird flu on the U.S-Mexico border.

``Mexico is free of avian flu,'' Jose Angel del Valle, director of the ministry's animal health department said in a telephone interview.

The country has 3,000 veterinarians who monitor full time Mexico's poultry industry, which produces 6 million chickens per day, del Valle said. The ministry also is working closely with Mexico's environment protection agency to prevent the H5N1 strain from arriving through wild birds, he said.

A Brazilian website reported yesterday that a case of bird flu was found in the border city of Nogales and Reuters Group Plc reported on the speculation.

As posted by JohnGaltfla yesterday:

http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?t=190830

HLTH - Mexican official denies rumor of bird flu on northern border with U.S.

Mods: Please merge with the Avian Flu thread for today when you see fit. I wanted to highlight the U.S. and Mexican government reactions to this "rumor" just to demonstrate that when in fact it does hit here, denial will not just be a river ni Egypt, but what we can expect from governments here in North America. And everyone, check out the comments about the grain futures, etc. This will have a MAJOR economic impact, even if it does not mutate and go H2H.--J.G.]

Mexican official denies rumor of bird flu on northern border with U.S.

Mexico's Agriculture Department on Thursday denied rumors that a case of high-pathogenic avian flu had been found in a town on the U.S. border.

"Mexico is totally free of bird flu," Jose Angel del Valle, the department's head of animal health, said in a telephone interview.

A supposed news item posted on a Web site on Wednesday said there had been a case of H5 bird flu in a duck found dead in the town of Nogales, on the U.S. border.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture said earlier Thursday that the report was a hoax, but the rumor affected Chicago Board of Trade grain prices overnight Wednesday.

Last year, Mexico reported several isolated cases of low-pathogenic bird flu, which doesn't affect humans. The most recent case was in the southern state of Chiapas, near the Guatemalan border, reports AP.

http://www.radiolivre.org/node/2116

Enviado por Anônimo em Qua, 03/22/2006 - 17:53. Rádio Livre

Ciudad de Mexico - México confirmed today its first case of avian flu in a duck found dead in the heart of Nogales, near the US border.

Mexican officials said it was not yet clear if the wild bird, found on Monday, was infected with the H5N1 strain of the virus which can infect humans.

“We have a first case of bird flu. It’s H5,” Federal Veterinary Office spokeswoman Margarita Cruz said.

A sample has been sent to a European reference laboratory in Britain to test for the H5N1 strain and results are expected by the end of the week, she said.

The country this month ordered all poultry be kept indoors for an indefinite period to lessen the risk from the fast-spreading H5N1 virus that has killed millions of birds.

It remains difficult for humans to catch but the strain has killed more than 90 people worldwide since late 2003.

So far most human victims of the virus have had direct or indirect contact with infected birds but there are fears the virus will mutate into a strain easily passed among people, causing a pandemic in which millions could die.

Little human risk

The Mexican Federal Veterinary Office said that in addition to the Nogales case.

Makes you go Hmmmmm.....
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
If these Cambodian villagers all have HSN1 - this will be the first article documenting human to human transmission. HEAD'S UP.


JPD said:
Cambodian villagers quarantined after bird flu death

http://www.terra.net.lb/wp/Articles/DesktopArticle.aspx?ArticleID=277033&ChannelId=19

Cambodian health workers have quarantined part of a village near the capital Phnom Penh after a three-year-old girl died of bird flu and seven others were feared to have caught the deadly virus, officials have said.

At least 42 other people who had contact with the suspected victims were also being tested in Cambodia's first outbreak of the H5N1 virus in humans since early 2005, said Ly Sovann, head of the health ministry's infectious disease department.

Three of the suspected cases also had contact with the dead birds, while the other four had come into contact with the dead girl, officials said.

"We are not allowing them to touch the others and are keeping them in one place," Ly Sovann said of the suspected bird flu victims, adding that none of them was in serious condition.

World Health Organisation spokeswoman Megge Miller also confirmed the girl died of the H5N1 virus.

She said the health body had visited the village, 45 kilometers (28 miles) west of Phnom Penh, and found the suspected victims to only be suffering fevers at that point.

"At the moment, none of the suspected cases require hospitalisation," she said.

"They have no respiratory symptoms and health ministry officials are up there every day to monitor their health," she said.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Fowl play: RFID to compete with Smart-Tek to track bird-flu in China
By Dwight Arant
24 Mar 2006 at 08:05 AM

Smart-Tek Solutions, Inc. announced the branding of its H5N1 tracking solution RTAC-PM (short for 'RFID Tracking Alert Containment and Poultry Monitoring) solution on March 21, 2006; after first publicly disclosing entry into the Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) market in early November 2005.

According to press releases, Smart-Tek Solutions, Inc. estimates China holds a total of 13 billion chickens that could be exposed to bird-flu.

http://www.resourceinvestor.com/pebble.asp?relid=18164

:vik:
 

New Freedom

Veteran Member
http://www.loma.org/res-04-06-AvianFlu.asp

Special Report:
  • Avian Flu and Insurers

Part 1: Is Your Company Prepared?
Part 2: Conversation with a Medical Director


Avian Flu: Is Your Company Prepared?

With the rapid spread of the deadly H5N1 strain of avian (bird) flu from Asia to Europe in the last few months, governments and businesses around the globe have begun devising contingency plans so that their business could continue to function if the virus were to cause a pandemic. Five insurers recently participated in a LOMA survey that asked them to explain the status of their contingency plans and what steps they’re taking to prepare for the worst. Here’s what they had to say.

By Stephen Hall

If the avian (bird) flu becomes a pandemic, is your company prepared? The last major pandemic occurred in 1918, when an influenza strain known as “Spanish flu” killed somewhere between 20 million and 40 million people. According to science, pandemics occur every 10 to 50 years, and the world is long overdue for its next one. Many scientists say that H5N1, a deadly strain of avian (bird) flu that first appeared in Hong Kong in 1997, will likely trigger the next pandemic. In the last few months, it has spread from Asia across Europe and into Africa at an alarming rate, primarily through bird migratory routes.

Scientists say human infection is currently possible only when people come in close contact with infected chickens or wild birds. But scientists are concerned that H5N1 could mutate into a form that is easily transmitted among people and set off a pandemic that could kill anywhere from 25 to 165 million people worldwide, according to the World Health Organization’s (WHO) projections.

As for the potential economic impact, the World Bank estimates that such a pandemic could cost as much as $800 billion worldwide. In addition, the Insurance Information Institute (III) estimates that such a pandemic could result in $133 billion more in death claims for life insurers than would be expected in the absence of a pandemic—a figure that doesn’t even include claims from other insurance products, such as health care.

In January, LOMA sent out an informal “Quickie Question” (QQ) Survey to 22 of its larger member companies (organizations with total assets of $30 billion or greater) that included the following four questions:

1) Is your company reviewing policies, pay practices and business continuity plans in case the avian flu becomes a pandemic event? If so, what additions and/or changes are you making in the event of a pandemic?

2) Do you feel your current policies, pay practices and business continuity plans adequately address an event such as this, or do you expect that some changes, exceptions and/or new policies will be made, such as travel restrictions, restricted access to company property, sick pay, work at home schedules, and screening of employees and visitors?

3) Do you have expatriate employees on assignment in or near an affected area? If so, what actions have you taken or may be considering for their safety (i.e., evacuation back to the U.S. or another “safe” location, early/additional home leave visits)?

4) If an expatriate employee asks to leave their assignment, contrary to company-initiated action, how would their request be handled (i.e., transfer, repatriation, termination of the assignment)? Also, would expenses associated with the relocation be at the company or employee’s expense?

Five of the 22 companies who received the survey agreed to participate, and of those five, four consented for their survey responses to be reprinted for this story: Manulife Financial Corp., Nationwide Financial Services Inc., and two companies that did not wish to be named (and will be referred to here as “Company X” and “Company Y”). In addition, the chief medical officer of Nationwide consented to a separate phone interview with Resource in which he discussed his thoughts on avian (bird) flu and the measures that Nationwide is taking to be prepared in case a pandemic occurs. (To read his comments, please see “Pandemic Preparations at Nationwide: A Conversation with Dr. Michael Moore” following this article.)

Manulife Financial Corp.

In her response to the LOMA survey’s question about possible changes in company policy, pay practices and/or business continuity plans if a pandemic occurs, a representative for Manulife wrote: “Active planning efforts are under way. Broadly speaking, we are bolstering existing plans and policies. We are creating new documentation to help us assess the severity of the impact to our business and aligning this with the WHO model. Business units are specifically addressing the need to keep key business functions operational with a potentially severely reduced staff. Policies and pay practices were updated to address health concerns during the SARS epidemic [in 2002] and are presently considered adequate for an avian flu pandemic.”

According to the Manulife representative, work from home would be a major component of their response to an avian (bird) flu outbreak. “A move to that strategy is not considered a policy change so much as the implementation of an existing planned response,” she wrote. “Many of the items mentioned are already planned responses, and implementation will remain fluid to meet a presently unknown impact of the situation.”

Addressing the survey question about expatriate employees on assignment in or near an affected area, the Manulife representative wrote: “The safety of all employees, including expatriates, is of extreme importance to the company. The action taken to protect those in affected areas will be gauged to the threat. The suggestions listed above are all options for how to deal with the crisis and will be used according to a judgment about their effectiveness.” If an expatriate employee asked for permission to leave their assignment due to a potential threat of infection, then according to the Manulife representative, “In a bona fide crisis, either the employee or the company may initiate a request to leave an assignment to protect the employee’s well-being. The company would pay the cost. As in the other responses, the exact nature (transfer, repatriation, etc.) will be dictated by the assignment and severity of the threat.”

Nationwide

Dr. Michael Moore, M.D., FACP, vice president—chief medical director for Nationwide, completed the survey on Nationwide’s behalf. In his response to the first question, he wrote that Nationwide has actively reviewed all of its disaster planning and is in the process of addressing staffing shortfalls that could occur as the result of a pandemic and how the company would deal with such an issue. “We have modified our attendance policy to allow supervisors (with nurse consultation) to send sick employees home,” he wrote. “We have ordered N95 masks for all of our occupational nurses, met with state and local health officials to review our plans, and have created the Avian Flu Working Group, an internal task force made up of members from health, business recovery, employee safety and HR to oversee preparations.”

Regarding whether current policies, pay practices and business continuity plans are adequate, Moore wrote: “We are trying to anticipate what might happen, but will likely need to adjust to situations on the fly. Travel restrictions are likely with regard to affected areas if person-to-person transmission arrives.” There are currently no expatriate employees of Nationwide on assignment in or near an affected area, according to Moore, but if a situation arose in which an expatriate employee was working near an affected area and a pandemic were to start, “we would likely approve either work from home, temporary transfer to a ‘safe’ location, or return them to the U.S., likely at company expense,” he wrote.

“Company X”

“Company X” indicated that it is actively reviewing policies, pay practices and business continuity plans in case the avian (bird) flu becomes a pandemic event, “but this work has just started so we can’t provide an all-inclusive list of additions and changes.” On the question of whether it considers its current policies, pay practices and business continuity plans to be adequate in addressing a pandemic scenario, it wrote: “No, we are reviewing our business plans and all appropriate policies and pay practices, including topics noted in the question.” The possibility of imposing travel restrictions in the event of a pandemic has been put on the table for further discussion, they said. Finally, they noted that the possibility of expatriate employees requesting to leave an assignment in order to avoid infection is a matter that has not yet been addressed, but will be as part of the company’s overall review of its pandemic preparedness plan.

“Company Y”

“Company Y” wrote that it is “actively working on a plan and considering several changes to policies, such as increasing the number of paid sick days, implementing additional telecommuting, providing hand sanitizers, masks and gloves, limiting travel, and providing information and tips for how to prevent the spread of the virus, et cetera.” They said they “expect some changes” to their current policies, pay practices and business continuity plans to adequately address a pandemic event. In addition, they noted that a scenario in which expatriate employees would be on working in or near an affected area “does not apply” to them. Finally, with regard to an expatriate employee requesting removal from an assignment due to a pandemic threat, “Company Y” wrote: “We don’t have policy wording yet.” ■

[sidebar]

[head:] Planning for a Pandemic: Where Should You Start?

As the industry begins moving to address the threat of a potential flu pandemic and the alarming costs that could result from such an event, there is probably some confusion about where to begin. Dan Murphy, vice president of enterprise continuity at MassMutual, has a few suggestions:

■ “A great starting place would be the Business Pandemic Influenza Planning Checklist that was developed by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),” he said. This checklist can be found at http://www.cdc.gov/business.

■ Murphy also suggests working with city and state public health agencies and emergency preparedness organizations.

■ “Each company should perform an internal risk assessment to identify the unique issues that they would face, given the impact caused by high absenteeism rates for an extended period,” Murphy said. “The projected impact of a pandemic does present a situation that will require a review of various policies as well as a review of existing business continuity plans.”

■ Finally, as with any emergency planning activity, “Having discussions and plans developed in advance of the situation allows a more thoughtful response when an event occurs,” Murphy said.

For additional planning resources, please visit the following Web sites:

www.cdc.gov

www.healthyamericans.org

www.pandemicflu.gov



Part 2:
Pandemic Preparations at Nationwide: A Conversation with Dr. Michael Moore

The vice president and chief medical director for Nationwide discusses what his organization is doing to prepare for a possible flu pandemic, and what he suggests for the rest of the industry.

By Stephen Hall

With the Insurance Information Institute’s (III) recent estimate that a flu pandemic could cost the insurance industry as much as $133 billion in death claims, many in the industry are scratching their heads and wondering what they can do to prepare their organizations for such a possibility. But at Nationwide, work has already begun in earnest.

For starters, a task force called the Avian Flu Working Group has been assembled to help assess the ways a pandemic could affect Nationwide’s business functions and to help create and implement contingency plans that would help Nationwide continue to function in the face of such an event. The company has also created a “green-yellow-red” worksheet—a device similar to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s color-coded advisory system—that specifies a series of actions and protocols that would go into effect as certain conditions pertaining to avian (bird) flu arose. The Columbus, Ohio-based company has also been in regular communication with federal, state, and local health agencies in order to develop good working relationships between the agencies and Nationwide in anticipation of a pandemic scenario, in which time would likely be a critical factor.

Dr. Michael Moore, M.D., FACP, vice president—chief medical director for Nationwide, spoke with Resource about these and other steps his company is taking to prepare itself for the conditions that could arise if the deadly H5N1 strain of avian (bird) flu, which has been spreading rapidly from Asia across Europe and into Africa in recent months, triggers a pandemic that could threaten the lives of millions around the globe. His comments are below.

Q: Can you elaborate on the Avian Flu Working Group that’s been created at Nationwide?

MOORE : In creating the Avian Flu Working Group, we tried to recruit employees who were representative of the areas of the company that would be affected if a pandemic occurred. I was involved in starting it up, and then we brought in our HR group, who deals with employee affairs, regulations and so forth. And then it expanded to address business recovery for those employees who might be affected.

We have a lot of business recovery plans if, for example, a hurricane hits Tampa or an earthquake hits San Francisco . We’ve never dealt with anything before that would hit every company or every outlet at the same time. The public officials we’ve met with have told us to prepare for a 40 percent absence rate for at least a couple of months, if indeed a worst-case scenario occurred. And as our conversations started to occur, we realized that we really didn’t have a lot of the things we thought we had. For example, we always assumed we had the right to send a sick employee home. So we pulled out our employee handbook and looked for a sentence or passage that states that. It wasn’t there. And so we modified our internal regulations to say that if a person reports to work and exhibits such symptoms as coughing, fever and vomiting, then in consultation with a nurse, a manager can send that person home.

We’ve tried to model our working plan after what the federal government has done. And I use a mnemonic device called “PMIT,” which stands for “prepare, monitor, isolate and treat.” One of the things the federal government is telling people is that if you have a vital substance that is the lifeblood of your company, then you should make sure you have a supply of it that will last from two to four weeks, because your supply chain may not be reliable. Suppliers are going to have 40 percent absence rates, just like everybody else. So we want to raise awareness of that reality. We also want to get word out to our employees and say, “Make sure you have a survival kit at home.” So we’re going to include a post on our internal Web site that specifies what a survival kit should include, such as how much water per individual per day, and for how many days. We will advise them to make sure they have enough of the medicine that they would normally take during a two- to four-week period, because their drugstore may not be open. We will advise them to make sure they have enough food, flashlights and other necessities. We’re also working on putting together a plan, which we’ll send out to all of our offices, that covers issues like monitoring and isolation. I’ve been monitoring information from the CDC and the WHO and forwarding that information to our Avian Flu Working Group. If the situation with bird flu starts to heat up, what we would probably do is start sending that information out to supervisors, managers, and anyone else who needs it.

Q: Explain the “green-yellow-red” worksheet that Nationwide’s Avian Flu Working Group has devised.

MOORE : Here’s how it works: If situation X happens, we’re in Condition Green; if situation Y happens, we’re in Condition Yellow; and if situation Z happens, we’re in Condition Red. We’re in Condition Green right now, because there’s been no person-to-person transmission and nothing here in North America yet. We would go to Condition Yellow if person-to-person transmission developed outside of the U.S. , or if a case of avian flu is reported in North America . Finally, we would go to Condition Red if person-to-person transmission were to hit North America . And each one of those events triggers a certain level of action on our part.

For example, Condition Green is basically preparation; it’s about making sure you have cleaning supplies. A lot of the things that the government is recommending are very simple steps: Make sure you have cleaning supplies with antibacterial agents that you can use to clean common touch areas, such as doorknobs, stair railings and elevator buttons. Make sure you have gloves available so that if you find something that’s been exposed, you don’t inadvertently expose more people while trying to clean it up. Make sure you have hand cleaner available for people so that they can frequently sanitize their hands.

If we were to ever go to Condition Yellow, only the most essential business travel would be permitted. We would certainly minimize, if not outright ban, travel to any place in which there is person-to-person transmission. We would begin to look at alternative work environments so that people can work from home. A lot of what we do can be done on a computer. Approximately half of our people have VPN (virtual private network) access, so they can get into our systems to do what they need to do to properly do their job from an alternative location. VPN is what our systems people do so that employees can safely get into our systems and still have a secure environment. The idea is that we try to keep the people who are healthy away from the people who are sick, and keep the people who are sick at home and out of the office.

Condition Red would take effect if person-to-person transmission were to occur in North America . In that situation, we would be utilizing what we call “social distancing,” or keeping people from congregating. For example, instead of having a meeting, you would have a teleconference. You wouldn’t shake hands with people. Instead of me walking over to the other side of the building to tell somebody something, I would call them. People who would normally be going to conferences or meetings would dial in instead. We would try to keep people that are able to work out of the office, out of the office so that they are not exposed and are not exposing people to different elements.

Q: Has Nationwide had any discussions with federal, state and/or local agencies in formulating its contingency plans?

MOORE : We’ve met with both the state of Ohio and the Columbus city health departments to get a sense of how they would react if a pandemic were to start. That way, we would know what they plan to do, and we wanted them to know what we had planned as well. We actually let them review our plan and see what they thought, and we took their suggestions to heart. Those meetings also provided us with contact information; now we know who to call in each of those two organizations and how to reach them. Similarly, they know who to call in our organization and how to reach them. And that’s already been paying dividends. We’ve had a couple of instances where they have been sending us information—not about avian flu, but just about seasonal flu. So we’re able to monitor that here in the county that we’re located in. I recently gave a presentation to the ACLI’s 2006 Executive Roundtable, and one of my recommendations was to meet with local health officials where your business is located, because they are really going to be your entrance into the government treatment system.

If there is a pandemic, the two elements that I hope are going to happen are vaccinations and treatment with Tamiflu. The federal government is not going to be the distributor of those resources. They will hold a stockpile, but they will then give that to local health departments, who will in turn determine how it gets distributed. So it would be very useful for them to know how to get into your organization and who the right people to talk to are. Similarly, it would be nice for you to know who the appropriate contacts are in your local health department. When we met with both the state of Ohio and the Columbus city health departments, we asked them, “How are you going to function if you have 40 percent of your nursing staff out with the flu?” They hadn’t thought about that. So we said, “Well, we have an occupational nursing service. We have a number of nurses here in Columbus and around the country. Perhaps we could help bolster your distribution efforts, if indeed it comes down to a question of manpower, in terms of trying to get medicine out to the right people.”

So here’s where we are on our planning timetable: We’ve designed the plan, we’re putting the finishing touches on it, and our next step is to meet with senior management and say, “This is what we’ve got planned, and this is how we are planning to handle this.” We think it’s a fairly non-controversial plan, because it’s following basically the same guidelines that are part of the federal government’s plan. It’s fiscally responsible, because the most that we’re really asking people to do is stock up on some cleaning supplies. So if the pandemic does not hit—and frankly, the odds are that it won’t—they haven’t invested in anything more than some cleaning supplies, which they’re going to use anyway. It’s a plan in which we are following all the guidelines that the federal government is suggesting.

In other words, we’re not recommending that people stockpile Tamiflu. We held that discussion for about a minute-and-a-half and said, “Is this something that we want to even look into, even if we could get it?” And the general conclusion was that stockpiling Tamiflu would not constitute the behavior of a good corporate citizen, because in stockpiling Tamiflu, you’re potentially keeping it from people who really do need it. So we’re not going to stockpile it. We’re just working with the local health department and following their guidelines.

Q: Overall, what kind of grade would you give the industry, as far as their development of contingency plans in the event of a flu pandemic?

MOORE : I think they’re probably a grade C, and on their way up to a B. Ever since I gave my presentation on pandemic flu to the ACLI’s Executive Roundtable, I’ve had half a dozen organizations call me and ask for reprints of the handout that accompanied my presentation. I talked to the ACLI a week or so ago, and they said my handout has been the most requested piece of literature that they’ve had in at least the past several months. So the word is getting out that this is something that needs attention and is potentially very serious on two levels: for us as employers, and for us as life insurers. I think the Insurance Information Institute’s (III) recent estimate that a pandemic could cost the industry $133 billion got everybody’s attention as well. If my words of warning weren’t enough, that certainly got the attention of the CFOs.

Q: Are there any particular stages or aspects of preparation that you think are being overlooked by many companies?

MOORE : At this point, I think that if anything, people are not giving it the attention it deserves. The reaction I received after talking with some of the CEOs at the ACLI Executive Roundtable was, “Well, I heard about this, and I knew it could be a problem—but I never knew it could be that big a problem.” I think many people are thinking of it in terms of localized, weather-related disasters that we’ve dealt with in the past and saying, “Well, we did fine with the hurricane.” Well, a flu pandemic is not like a hurricane. True, it’s not going to knock down buildings, but when you start talking about a 50 percent mortality rate among people who have tested positive for bird flu, you realize this is a different scenario. Also, most people think of flu as affecting just the very young and the very old, but among those who have contracted bird flu, the people who are having the highest mortality rate are ages 15 to 40. That always surprises people. Most people who remember the Hong Kong flu outbreak look back on it and say, “Yeah, that was that funny disease back in 1968.” But most people don’t realize that Hong Kong flu had 10 times the lethality of normal seasonal flu. About 30,000 Americans die from flu each year; 300,000 died from Hong Kong flu. So while there was an upward blip on the mortality chart, it really didn’t get a lot of people’s attention. But even if that scenario arose again, a flu strain that has 10 times the lethality of seasonal flu is not an insignificant problem.

Q: What advice would you have for a company that wants to start working on contingency plans for a potential pandemic, but doesn’t know where to begin?

MOORE : There are two Web sites that I advise people to go to. One is pandemicflu.gov; that’s the official federal government Web site for that. There’s another one called healthyamericans.org, which has a pamphlet titled “It’s Not Flu as Usual.” It has a lot of useful advice, including how you can tell annual flu from pandemic flu, what to do in the event of an outbreak, and 10 steps your businesses can take. And I think it is probably one of the best things I’ve seen in a very compact brochure.

The other thing I would tell people is, begin now. If you wait until we start to see person-to-person transmission, even in Europe , you’re going to be so far behind, you’ll never catch up. There is a possibility that a pandemic won’t occur, and a few years from now, we may look back and say, “Boy, what were we all worried about?” But this is a disaster for the poultry industry overseas. They’re reporting that about 200 million chickens have been killed in an attempt to stamp out bird flu. The other news item that broke recently is a reported case of H5N1 in Iraq . And one of the main vehicles by which the Spanish flu spread back in 1918 was GIs returning from World War I. So when I read about the H5N1 case in Iraq , that sent a chill up my spine, because we’ve got hundreds of thousands of American soldiers over there who are rotating back after their tours of duty, not to mention all the private construction people and other expatriates over there who keep returning to the U.S. That sounds eerily similar to what happened in 1918.

I think that we at Nationwide are probably ahead of the curve, in terms of being prepared. But even then, at times it feels like we’re playing catch-up. So if you haven’t begun to think about this, it’s time to put this on the fast track. ■
 

New Freedom

Veteran Member
Read the highlighted text below........ :rolleyes:



http://www.loma.org/res-04-06-Avian...ersation%20with%20Dr.%20Michael%20Moore%20%A0

Pandemic Preparations at Nationwide: A Conversation with Dr. Michael Moore

The vice president and chief medical director for Nationwide discusses what his organization is doing to prepare for a possible flu pandemic, and what he suggests for the rest of the industry.

By Stephen Hall

With the Insurance Information Institute’s (III) recent estimate that a flu pandemic could cost the insurance industry as much as $133 billion in death claims, many in the industry are scratching their heads and wondering what they can do to prepare their organizations for such a possibility. But at Nationwide, work has already begun in earnest.

For starters, a task force called the Avian Flu Working Group has been assembled to help assess the ways a pandemic could affect Nationwide’s business functions and to help create and implement contingency plans that would help Nationwide continue to function in the face of such an event. The company has also created a “green-yellow-red” worksheet—a device similar to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s color-coded advisory system—that specifies a series of actions and protocols that would go into effect as certain conditions pertaining to avian (bird) flu arose. The Columbus, Ohio-based company has also been in regular communication with federal, state, and local health agencies in order to develop good working relationships between the agencies and Nationwide in anticipation of a pandemic scenario, in which time would likely be a critical factor.

Dr. Michael Moore, M.D., FACP, vice president—chief medical director for Nationwide, spoke with Resource about these and other steps his company is taking to prepare itself for the conditions that could arise if the deadly H5N1 strain of avian (bird) flu, which has been spreading rapidly from Asia across Europe and into Africa in recent months, triggers a pandemic that could threaten the lives of millions around the globe. His comments are below.

Q: Can you elaborate on the Avian Flu Working Group that’s been created at Nationwide?

MOORE : In creating the Avian Flu Working Group, we tried to recruit employees who were representative of the areas of the company that would be affected if a pandemic occurred. I was involved in starting it up, and then we brought in our HR group, who deals with employee affairs, regulations and so forth. And then it expanded to address business recovery for those employees who might be affected.

We have a lot of business recovery plans if, for example, a hurricane hits Tampa or an earthquake hits San Francisco . We’ve never dealt with anything before that would hit every company or every outlet at the same time. The public officials we’ve met with have told us to prepare for a 40 percent absence rate for at least a couple of months, if indeed a worst-case scenario occurred. And as our conversations started to occur, we realized that we really didn’t have a lot of the things we thought we had. For example, we always assumed we had the right to send a sick employee home. So we pulled out our employee handbook and looked for a sentence or passage that states that. It wasn’t there. And so we modified our internal regulations to say that if a person reports to work and exhibits such symptoms as coughing, fever and vomiting, then in consultation with a nurse, a manager can send that person home.

We’ve tried to model our working plan after what the federal government has done. And I use a mnemonic device called “PMIT,” which stands for “prepare, monitor, isolate and treat.” One of the things the federal government is telling people is that if you have a vital substance that is the lifeblood of your company, then you should make sure you have a supply of it that will last from two to four weeks, because your supply chain may not be reliable. Suppliers are going to have 40 percent absence rates, just like everybody else. So we want to raise awareness of that reality. We also want to get word out to our employees and say, “Make sure you have a survival kit at home.” So we’re going to include a post on our internal Web site that specifies what a survival kit should include, such as how much water per individual per day, and for how many days. We will advise them to make sure they have enough of the medicine that they would normally take during a two- to four-week period, because their drugstore may not be open. We will advise them to make sure they have enough food, flashlights and other necessities. We’re also working on putting together a plan, which we’ll send out to all of our offices, that covers issues like monitoring and isolation. I’ve been monitoring information from the CDC and the WHO and forwarding that information to our Avian Flu Working Group. If the situation with bird flu starts to heat up, what we would probably do is start sending that information out to supervisors, managers, and anyone else who needs it.

Q: Explain the “green-yellow-red” worksheet that Nationwide’s Avian Flu Working Group has devised.

MOORE : Here’s how it works: If situation X happens, we’re in Condition Green; if situation Y happens, we’re in Condition Yellow; and if situation Z happens, we’re in Condition Red. We’re in Condition Green right now, because there’s been no person-to-person transmission and nothing here in North America yet. We would go to Condition Yellow if person-to-person transmission developed outside of the U.S. , or if a case of avian flu is reported in North America . Finally, we would go to Condition Red if person-to-person transmission were to hit North America . And each one of those events triggers a certain level of action on our part.

For example, Condition Green is basically preparation; it’s about making sure you have cleaning supplies. A lot of the things that the government is recommending are very simple steps: Make sure you have cleaning supplies with antibacterial agents that you can use to clean common touch areas, such as doorknobs, stair railings and elevator buttons. Make sure you have gloves available so that if you find something that’s been exposed, you don’t inadvertently expose more people while trying to clean it up. Make sure you have hand cleaner available for people so that they can frequently sanitize their hands.

If we were to ever go to Condition Yellow, only the most essential business travel would be permitted. We would certainly minimize, if not outright ban, travel to any place in which there is person-to-person transmission. We would begin to look at alternative work environments so that people can work from home. A lot of what we do can be done on a computer. Approximately half of our people have VPN (virtual private network) access, so they can get into our systems to do what they need to do to properly do their job from an alternative location. VPN is what our systems people do so that employees can safely get into our systems and still have a secure environment. The idea is that we try to keep the people who are healthy away from the people who are sick, and keep the people who are sick at home and out of the office.

Condition Red would take effect if person-to-person transmission were to occur in North America . In that situation, we would be utilizing what we call “social distancing,” or keeping people from congregating. For example, instead of having a meeting, you would have a teleconference. You wouldn’t shake hands with people. Instead of me walking over to the other side of the building to tell somebody something, I would call them. People who would normally be going to conferences or meetings would dial in instead. We would try to keep people that are able to work out of the office, out of the office so that they are not exposed and are not exposing people to different elements.


Q: Has Nationwide had any discussions with federal, state and/or local agencies in formulating its contingency plans?

MOORE : We’ve met with both the state of Ohio and the Columbus city health departments to get a sense of how they would react if a pandemic were to start. That way, we would know what they plan to do, and we wanted them to know what we had planned as well. We actually let them review our plan and see what they thought, and we took their suggestions to heart. Those meetings also provided us with contact information; now we know who to call in each of those two organizations and how to reach them. Similarly, they know who to call in our organization and how to reach them. And that’s already been paying dividends. We’ve had a couple of instances where they have been sending us information—not about avian flu, but just about seasonal flu. So we’re able to monitor that here in the county that we’re located in. I recently gave a presentation to the ACLI’s 2006 Executive Roundtable, and one of my recommendations was to meet with local health officials where your business is located, because they are really going to be your entrance into the government treatment system.

If there is a pandemic, the two elements that I hope are going to happen are vaccinations and treatment with Tamiflu. The federal government is not going to be the distributor of those resources. They will hold a stockpile, but they will then give that to local health departments, who will in turn determine how it gets distributed. So it would be very useful for them to know how to get into your organization and who the right people to talk to are. Similarly, it would be nice for you to know who the appropriate contacts are in your local health department. When we met with both the state of Ohio and the Columbus city health departments, we asked them, “How are you going to function if you have 40 percent of your nursing staff out with the flu?” They hadn’t thought about that. So we said, “Well, we have an occupational nursing service. We have a number of nurses here in Columbus and around the country. Perhaps we could help bolster your distribution efforts, if indeed it comes down to a question of manpower, in terms of trying to get medicine out to the right people.”

So here’s where we are on our planning timetable: We’ve designed the plan, we’re putting the finishing touches on it, and our next step is to meet with senior management and say, “This is what we’ve got planned, and this is how we are planning to handle this.” We think it’s a fairly non-controversial plan, because it’s following basically the same guidelines that are part of the federal government’s plan. It’s fiscally responsible, because the most that we’re really asking people to do is stock up on some cleaning supplies. So if the pandemic does not hit—and frankly, the odds are that it won’t—they haven’t invested in anything more than some cleaning supplies, which they’re going to use anyway. It’s a plan in which we are following all the guidelines that the federal government is suggesting.

In other words, we’re not recommending that people stockpile Tamiflu. We held that discussion for about a minute-and-a-half and said, “Is this something that we want to even look into, even if we could get it?” And the general conclusion was that stockpiling Tamiflu would not constitute the behavior of a good corporate citizen, because in stockpiling Tamiflu, you’re potentially keeping it from people who really do need it. So we’re not going to stockpile it. We’re just working with the local health department and following their guidelines.

Q: Overall, what kind of grade would you give the industry, as far as their development of contingency plans in the event of a flu pandemic?

MOORE : I think they’re probably a grade C, and on their way up to a B. Ever since I gave my presentation on pandemic flu to the ACLI’s Executive Roundtable, I’ve had half a dozen organizations call me and ask for reprints of the handout that accompanied my presentation. I talked to the ACLI a week or so ago, and they said my handout has been the most requested piece of literature that they’ve had in at least the past several months. So the word is getting out that this is something that needs attention and is potentially very serious on two levels: for us as employers, and for us as life insurers. I think the Insurance Information Institute’s (III) recent estimate that a pandemic could cost the industry $133 billion got everybody’s attention as well. If my words of warning weren’t enough, that certainly got the attention of the CFOs.

Q: Are there any particular stages or aspects of preparation that you think are being overlooked by many companies?

MOORE : At this point, I think that if anything, people are not giving it the attention it deserves. The reaction I received after talking with some of the CEOs at the ACLI Executive Roundtable was, “Well, I heard about this, and I knew it could be a problem—but I never knew it could be that big a problem.” I think many people are thinking of it in terms of localized, weather-related disasters that we’ve dealt with in the past and saying, “Well, we did fine with the hurricane.” Well, a flu pandemic is not like a hurricane. True, it’s not going to knock down buildings, but when you start talking about a 50 percent mortality rate among people who have tested positive for bird flu, you realize this is a different scenario. Also, most people think of flu as affecting just the very young and the very old, but among those who have contracted bird flu, the people who are having the highest mortality rate are ages 15 to 40. That always surprises people. Most people who remember the Hong Kong flu outbreak look back on it and say, “Yeah, that was that funny disease back in 1968.” But most people don’t realize that Hong Kong flu had 10 times the lethality of normal seasonal flu. About 30,000 Americans die from flu each year; 300,000 died from Hong Kong flu. So while there was an upward blip on the mortality chart, it really didn’t get a lot of people’s attention. But even if that scenario arose again, a flu strain that has 10 times the lethality of seasonal flu is not an insignificant problem.

Q: What advice would you have for a company that wants to start working on contingency plans for a potential pandemic, but doesn’t know where to begin?

MOORE : There are two Web sites that I advise people to go to. One is pandemicflu.gov; that’s the official federal government Web site for that. There’s another one called healthyamericans.org, which has a pamphlet titled “It’s Not Flu as Usual.” It has a lot of useful advice, including how you can tell annual flu from pandemic flu, what to do in the event of an outbreak, and 10 steps your businesses can take. And I think it is probably one of the best things I’ve seen in a very compact brochure.

The other thing I would tell people is, begin now. If you wait until we start to see person-to-person transmission, even in Europe , you’re going to be so far behind, you’ll never catch up. There is a possibility that a pandemic won’t occur, and a few years from now, we may look back and say, “Boy, what were we all worried about?” But this is a disaster for the poultry industry overseas. They’re reporting that about 200 million chickens have been killed in an attempt to stamp out bird flu. The other news item that broke recently is a reported case of H5N1 in Iraq . And one of the main vehicles by which the Spanish flu spread back in 1918 was GIs returning from World War I. So when I read about the H5N1 case in Iraq , that sent a chill up my spine, because we’ve got hundreds of thousands of American soldiers over there who are rotating back after their tours of duty, not to mention all the private construction people and other expatriates over there who keep returning to the U.S. That sounds eerily similar to what happened in 1918.

I think that we at Nationwide are probably ahead of the curve, in terms of being prepared. But even then, at times it feels like we’re playing catch-up. So if you haven’t begun to think about this, it’s time to put this on the fast track. ■
 

JPD

Inactive
Utah Holds Bird Flu Summit Today

http://www.ksl.com/?nid=148&sid=180861

March 24th, 2006 @ 6:55am

(KSL News) Health, education, community and business leaders in Utah will all try to get on the same page to get ready in case the bird flu comes to Utah. A summit on that subject is being held today.

Utah education officials say they need to plan for the bird flu just like any other emergency. State Superindendant Patti Harrington tells KSL Newsradio if a child was found with bird flu, people would have to act quickly.

Harrington says a plan against the bird flu pandemic will most likely include quarantines. She says educators should know more after today's summit with state and health leaders.

http://www.pandemicflu.utah.gov/
 

JPD

Inactive
Polish Lab Confirms New Case Of H5N1 Bird Flu Virus

http://www.cattlenetwork.com/content.asp?contentid=25340

WARSAW (AP)--Laboratory tests have confirmed a new case of the H5N1 bird flu virus in Poland, in a dead hawk found in Kostrzyn near the German border, officials said Friday.

The hawk was discovered earlier this week in the same town where authorities found infected dead swans earlier this month, said Tadeusz Wijaszka, head of the National Veterinary Research Institute in Pulawy.

Poland confirmed its first cases of H5N1 March 6 in dead swans found in the entral city of Torun.

The H5N1 strain of bird flu has killed or forced the slaughter of more than 140 million chickens and ducks across Asia since 2003, and has recently spread to Europe, Africa and the Middle East.

At least 104 people have died from the disease worldwide, two-thirds of them in Indonesia and Vietnam, according to World Health Organization figures.
 

Kim99

Veteran Member
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/SHA141802.htm

China says bird flu killed woman in Shanghai
24 Mar 2006 15:43:22 GMT

Source: Reuters

SHANGHAI March 24 (Reuters) - China's Health Ministry confirmed on Friday that a 29-year-old woman in Shanghai had died of bird flu, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

The woman, surnamed Li, was a migrant worker who was initially said to have died of "pneumonia of unknown cause." The city government said it suspected bird flu on Thursday.

The latest death is the first known case in Shanghai and brings to 16 the number of human bird flu cases and to 11 the number of deaths confirmed in China. China reported its first death from the virus in November of last year.

Epidemiologists fear that bird flu could mutate to a form where it could pass easily among humans, potentially triggering a pandemic in which millions could die.

The Shanghai Municipal Center for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed that Li tested positive for H5N1, Xinhua said.

It is not known how the woman contracted the disease. The city government has not said where she was from, nor how long she had lived in Shanghai.

There have been no known outbreaks of bird flu among poultry or other birds in Shanghai. Some of the other human cases in China have also occurred in areas with no reported outbreak among birds.

There have been more than 30 outbreaks in poultry in a dozen provinces over the past year in China.

Shanghai has about 17 million people and is a wealthy city by Chinese standards, located on the eastern coast in the Yangtze River delta.

Those who had close contact with Li were put under medical observation, Xinhua said. So far, no abnormal symptoms have been reported, it added.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Danmark

New Case of H5N1 Registered in Denmark

24 March 2006 | 18:46 | FOCUS News Agency

Copenhagen. The authorities in Denmark announced that the 11th case of bird flu was registered in the country of the dangerous for humans H5N1 virus, AFP reports. The tests from a dead swan discovered on 16th March West of Copenhagen proved positive for the deadly strain of the illness. The local authorities undertook exceptional measures in order to prevent the dissemination of the bird flu. Danmark

http://www.focus-fen.net/index.php?catid=135&newsid=85070&ch=0&datte=2006-03-24

:vik:
 
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<B><center>Friday, Mar 24, 2006
<font size=+1 color=brown>Jordan confirms first cases of bird flu</font>

<A href="http://www.mytelus.com/news/article.do?pageID=cbc/world_home&articleID=2208443">www.mytelus.com</a></center>
(CBC) - Jordan has reported its first cases of bird flu after a few turkeys died on a poultry farm, but it says the deadly disease has not spread to any farm workers who came into contact with the birds.</b>

Jordan's Health Ministry announced the cases on Friday, saying tests have confirmed that the strain is H5N1. The farm is north of the capital Amman.

Officials have ordered people in the Jordan Valley to eat poultry from their farms within a week or risk of having their birds culled. Authorities in Israel and the Palestinian territories imposed a similar measure after finding the virus in their poultry stocks.

Officials have also increased monitoring of birds on poultry farms in the valley.

Jordan had already imposed a ban on imports of poultry products and pet birds before the discovery this week.

The Middle Eastern country has reportedly imported 60,000 doses of Tamiflu, the frontline drug used to treat humans who develop bird flu, and it has set aside significant funds to handle a possible outbreak. It has said it would use the money to vaccinate poultry and to compensate farmers for the loss of their flocks.

Turkey, Iraq and Egypt, all of which have reported cases of bird flu, are the only countries in the region where the disease has been transmitted to humans who later died. The countries have engaged in extensive culling after finding the disease in their domestic birds.

In other bird flu news, a three-year-old Cambodian girl has died of the disease, becoming the first human victim of bird flu in the country in almost a year. The World Health Organization confirmed the death on Friday.

According to statistics compiled by the World Health Organization, 103 people in eight countries, mainly in Asia, have died of bird flu.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Africa: Benin

Voodoo Magic May Be Stumped by Bird Flu
Benin's Fight Against Evil Spirits With Chicken Rituals May Endanger More People

By DAVID WRIGHT
ABOMEY, Benin, March 22, 2006 — - Along the back roads of Abomey, bird flu is more than just a public health hazard. It threatens a way of life that has survived for centuries: voodoo.

And despite chasing evil spirits, people here are at a loss as to how to counter the potential devastation of a deadly virus.

Abomey, once as famous as Timbuktu, is known for two things: the birthplace of the African slave trade and of voodoo.


Bird Flu at the Door?
Benin's king seems worried about the bird flu virus spreading across Africa and infecting birds in Benin, wedged between Nigeria and Togo in western Africa. "We're almost sure to catch it," Majesty King Behanzin II said in French.

"I hope a vaccine arrives quickly," he said, sitting in his palace, where the walls are said to be sealed with human blood.

Two neighboring countries have already reported cases of the H5N1 virus and Benin will likely be hit next.

People here have special reason to fear, because the national religion is voodoo and chickens figure prominently in most rituals.

Voodoo Cocktail: Bird Blood and Gin
One ceremony, for example, is supposed to summon up the spirit named Kokoo, which involves killing something precious to appease the gods.

Each of the participants receives a blessing from the birds being sacrificed in a sort of baptism of feathers.

Then each person drinks blood straight from the chicken's neck.

The rest goes into a glass full of gin.

Participants then fall into trance. People believe the person is no longer a man but a fetish -- a human body inhabited by a spirit.

The spirit apparently likes to play with the body, which leads to a frenzy of dancing.

A local priest doesn't seem to think bird flu will ever affect his followers.

"We know bird flu is sweeping across Africa and around the world, but it has no effect on us," he insists. "There's no problem."

"I am sure of that," he adds after being questioned again.

"They have to stop killing chickens," a relief worker said. "They should stop it at once!"


Fighting Evil Spirits
Benin voodoo priests changed their practices about 15 years ago, but seem unwilling to do anything now.

Until the early 1990s, human beings were sacrificed instead of chickens. But change seems unlikely now as superstition runs rampant.

At the fetish market in Porto Novo, a foul-smelling hodge-podge of stalls, salesmen say they sell exotic cures for every ailment.

Protection against evil spirits clutter the stalls and most salesmen wear talismans on their belts, but none of them have a cure for bird flu.

At a nearby voodoo convent, the priests showed off their night watchmen: spooky straw figures.

"They have guarded Benin since the beginning of time," the priest said. "They never sleep."

He warned not to point at the figures because it could lead to a finger falling off.

Even under the watchful eye of the guardians, the priest admits knowing very little about a potential pandemic and all of its dire consequences.

The priest wondered what they should do if they encounter a sick bird? Where they should go for help? Who will compensate them?

Relief workers are supposed to be out educating people, but most people seemed to be in the dark.

The Benin government, including the King of Voodoo, have no answers.

"What will voodoo do?" asked Mito Akplogan, the Minister of the Voodoo Cult. "If voodoo can't eat chicken, voodoo will starve."

Akplogan stopped eating chicken a month ago when he first heard about bird flu, but that's all he can think of doing.

Now more than ever, Benin needs all the magic it can muster.

http://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/International/story?id=1755228&page=1&CMP=OTC-RSSFeeds0312

:vik:
 
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<B><font size=+1 color=green><center>Deadly bird flu spreads in Gaza Strip</font>

Published: 3/24/2006
<A href="http://www.turkishpress.com/news.asp?id=114812">www.turkishpress.com</a></center>
GAZA CITY - The Palestinians were grappling on Friday with a spreading outbreak of the highly pathogenic H5N1 strain of bird flu, which is also deadly to humans, with a second case detected in the Gaza Strip. </b>

"The H5N1 virus has been discovered in Rafah," deputy agriculture minister Azzam Tbeileh told AFP. He said measures were being taken to kill all the chickens on the farm in the southern area where the virus had been discovered.

On Wednesday, Israeli tests confirmed the first case of the H5N1 strain in the impoverished territory, in the eastern village of Juhr al-Dik.

The following day, H5N1 was found in an Israeli settlement in the occupied West Bank. Israel itself is battling with the strain on six farms.

In an interview with the top-selling Yediot Aharanot newspaper, Israel's Acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said every assistance was being offered to the Palestinians in order to help them deal with the bird flu attack.

"I have instructed the foreign and defence ministries to be in touch with the Palestinians and offer them assistance, including medicine and equipment. I have also turned to the UN and other international bodies such as the World Bank," he told the daily.

The acting leader, whose centrist Kadima party is tipped to win Israel's general election on Tuesday, also confirmed he was still tucking into chicken despite falling poultry sales in a country fearful of contracting the virus.

"Definitely -- I eat any chicken that is tested and bought in stores," he told the interviewer when asked whether poultry was still on his menu.

Israeli Agriculture Minister Zeev Boim on Friday spoke to his Jordanian counterpart Muzahem Muheisen to offer aid and cooperation in fighting Jordan's own outbreak of the deadly flu, the online edition of Yediot reported.

The Israeli authorities blame migratory birds which have been passing through the Holy Land in their hundreds of thousands as they make their way to Europe from Africa.
 
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<B><font size=+1 color=blue><center>Bird Flu Update: Govt preparing for worst-case scenario</font>

By Deborah Loh
<A href="http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/nst/Friday/National/20060324080917/Article/index_html">www.nst.com.my</a></center>
PUTRAJAYA: Health and agriculture authorities are drafting a national bird flu epidemic plan in the event the H5N1 virus becomes widespread.

The virus, which has so far emerged in isolated areas of Perak, Gombak and Penang, will pose a different scenario if it spreads and affects places close to each other.</b>

Such an epidemic would strain manpower and equipment resources to cull birds, monitor public health and test virus samples over a wider area, warned Agriculture and Agro-Based Industry Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin.

He said the draft plan to address the deployment of resources in an epidemic would be ready in a week.

The previous plan released by the two ministries was on handling an outbreak in an isolated area. It involved culling birds in the index area and active health surveillance of people living within a 300m radius of the index area.

"At the moment, there is no epidemic as the virus is only in a few places, but we have to plan early for the worst-case scenario," Muhyiddin said yesterday at a joint Press conference with Health Minister Datuk Dr Chua Soi Lek.

The ministers said the current situation was manageable for their officials to conduct health surveillance and to cull birds.

"But if every State has three or four affected areas, it will be a different scenario," Dr Chua said. "How would we cope with culling and surveillance in so many areas at once?"

The Veterinary Research Institute laboratory, where samples are tested for the virus, is at the moment able to produce results within three or four days. Muhyiddin said a plan was necessary to ensure the laboratory performed speedily with an even higher number of samples in an epidemic.

The bird flu virus appeared earlier this week in three new places in Perak. Dr Chua said there had been no human infections so far.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Bird Flu Virus is One Mutation Away from Airborne;
Time to Stockpile Supplies to Prepare for Major Global Catastrophe


An airborne strain of the H5N1 virus would have the ability to spread across the globe in mere days.

(PRWEB) March 23, 2006 -- Leading researchers have indicated that the bird flu virus is now just one mutation away from changing into a form that can be easily transmitted among humans. Once the virus mutates into an airborne form, there may be very little warning that a pandemic has begun. An airborne strain of the H5N1 virus would have the ability to spread across the globe in mere days.

Some experts feel that this new super-influenza strain could transform the world into a situation resembling the New Orleans catastrophe after the Katrina hurricane. All deliveries to stores, restaurants and gas stations would immediately cease because people would either be too sick or too scared to attend their jobs. This would cause huge shortages in a matter of days.

The best way to survive a Bird Flu pandemic would be to minimize contact with other people. This would require people to stay in their homes for an extended period of time. Without adequate food and water, this can not be accomplished. In addition, if people wait too long before they begin buying extra supplies they may find that there are no supplies left once the pandemic begins.

If you would like more information on how to immediately prepare, there is a pandemic flu website that provides live help in answering your questions. This website has various different discussion forums designed to provide real time answers to your questions. Whether you would like the latest news on the quickly unfolding developments, or if you would like help in preparing, we recommend that you immediately visit this site at: www.Avianflutalk.com.

http://www.prweb.com/releases/2006/3/prweb362651.htm

:vik:
 

JPD

Inactive
Azerbaijan warns of new bird flu outbreak

http://en.rian.ru/world/20060324/44784513.html

BAKU, March 24 (RIA Novosti, Gerai Dadashev) - The head of Azerbaijan's veterinary service said Friday that there was a high probability of a fresh outbreak of bird flu during the spring bird-migration season.

Following World Health Organization confirmation that five out of seven people earlier infected with bird flu in Azerbaijan had died, Ismail Gasanov said disturbing reports about growing risks were coming in from some parts of the country. He added that domestic poultry would be vaccinated and control over poultry farms would be tightened.

At the same time he said there were substantially fewer wildfowl deaths in the republic because migratory birds were already leaving the country.

Veterinary services have destroyed 26,000 dead wild birds since the latest outbreak began.

The WHO said Thursday that tests conducted by experts showed that all the seven people known to have been infected with the potentially lethal H5N1 strain of the virus had fallen ill after coming into contact with wild birds.

There was some good news, though, as a 10-year-old boy has recovered and been discharged from the hospital, while a 15-year-old girl is still being treated.

Earlier this month, Azerbaijan confirmed the deaths of three people, who like the recent victims came from two villages in the east of the country.
 

JPD

Inactive
Colorado, U.S. ‘overdue and unprepared’ for flu pandemic, health official says

http://www.coloradoan.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060324/NEWS01/60324005/1002

DENVER — Colorado and the United States are “overdue and underprepared” for an influenza pandemic, U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt said today.

Leavitt and Gov. Bill Owens signed an agreement spelling out the responsibilities the state and federal government would have during a pandemic. The agreement includes $1.6 million from the federal government to help state and local planners around Colorado.

The money is part of $7.1 billion Congress has authorized to help state and federal governments stockpile drugs and medical equipment and plan and train to respond to pandemic flu or other widespread disease.

Leavitt and other Health and Human Services officials are on a national tour to sign similar agreements with states and provide them with their share of $100 million to continue planning — and training — to respond to pandemic disease. The Bush administration plans to distribute an additional $250 million to states later.

Officials today stressed that government will need help from businesses, churches, families and other organizations to be fully prepared.

“A pandemic is a global event,” said state health department Executive Director Dennis Ellis. “It’s a local crisis happening everywhere at one time. Every community will have to rely on its own planning and its own resources.”

Leavitt appeared at a conference that drew an estimated 1,000 public health, law enforcement and emergency responders from around the state. He said each state and the government is working to stockpile appropriate pharmaceuticals and other supplies.

“Any community that fails to prepare with an expectation that the federal government will come to their rescue will be sadly disappointed,” Leavitt said.

Owens said planning is an ongoing project.

“It’s always a moving target, you never know exactly what’s going to hit,” Owens said. “You try to plan for those things you can foresee.”

The avian flu virus that is known to have infected nearly 200 people — mostly in Asia — so far does not easily pass from animals to humans or from person to person. Scientists fear the virus could mutate and spread more easily, touching off a pandemic that could infect tens of millions of people.

The known human death toll from the H5N1 strain of bird flu reached 103 this week after five people in Azerbaijan died, the World Health Organization said. The virus was first detected in Hong Kong in 1997 and has killed or forced the slaughter of tens of millions of chickens and ducks across Asia since 2003. It has spread more recently with migrating birds to Europe, Africa and the Middle East.

Federal health and wildlife officials have begun reinforcing programs to monitor the health of migratory birds entering the United States, especially through Alaska.

In Colorado, officials said bioterrorism planning and preparedness that was under way before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and the anthrax scare a few months later has helped as they modify plans and train to respond to widespread influenza.

Health officials have said flu pandemics occur every 20-30 years. Every year in the U.S., ordinary influenza causes about 200,000 hospitalizations and about 36,000 deaths.

Originally published March 24, 2006
 

JPD

Inactive
Mass death of chicks triggers panic

http://www.newindpress.com/NewsItem...e=T&Title=Southern+News+-+Tamil+Nadu&Topic=0&

Saturday March 25 2006 00:00 IST

COIMBATORE/CHENNAI: Over 500 chickens died in a private farm in Periyamupperipalayam hamlet near Karumathampatti, some 20 km from here on Thursday night, caused panic among the villagers and triggering off fear of the bird flu crisis.

Alarmed villagers who spotted dead birds being dumped in a narrow lane near the farm at 11 p.m. on Thursday, informed officials. A worker at the farm said that the birds had started dying since late Thursday evening and continued till the wee hours of Friday.

However, Regional Joint Director of Animal Husbandry Department K Murthi, who headed a team that visited the farm on Friday morning, said that the birds showed injuries caused by pecking. Murthi added that samples of the dead birds would be sent to the Central Referral Laboratory of the department in Chennai for tests.

Meanwhile, addressing reporters in Chennai, Department of Animal Husbandry director Palanivelu said Ganeshan, the owner of Valarmathi Hatcheries near Coimbatore, could not sustain his business after incurring huge losses during the bird flu panic.

He had stopped feeding the 6,800 odd birds in his farm. It was found out that the birds were not provided the usual feed for the last three weeks, with only 40 bags of feed instead of the usual 90 being supplied. Moreover, no feed was provided during the last five days.

This caused pecking and cannibalistic behaviour among the birds. The dead birds showed several injuries to the extent that internal organs like intestines were seen hanging out, Palanivelu said.

A meeting between the poultry farm and hatchery owners would be conducted soon to find ways to help revive the business, he assured. The department had asked 32 hatcheries to reduce production till the market for chicken picked up.

“It is a difficult scenario and the market can only be revived when people start consuming chicken without fear,” he said. In Coimbatore, Murthi said that a task force set up by the department was closely monitoring the situation by regularly visiting chicken farms.

The president of Broiler Coordination Committee in Coimbatore, R Lakshmanan, assured that there was no “cause for panic”, and added that the farm owners had been advised to continue supplying feeds.

However, industry insiders claimed that unless the market situation stabilised, there was no hope for farm owners and workers as they were not in a position to feed the birds with the price of chicken having dropped considerably. Palanivelu told reporters that 30 lakh chicks were produced every week at the 6,089 poultry farms in the State till Thursday.

Appealing to the public not to panic, he said that the State had banned the import of bird feed from Maharashtra and Gujarat. The State had lost an average of Rs 3 crore per day for the last one month due to bird flu panic.
 

JPD

Inactive
FACTBOX-Bird flu's rapid march around the globe

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L24725662.htm

(Updates with new Chinese death)

March 24 (Reuters) - China's Health Ministry and the World Health Organization (WHO) confirmed on Friday that a 29-year-old woman in Shanghai had died of bird flu.

Earlier on Friday Jordan became the latest country in the Middle East to confirm cases of H5N1 but said no humans had been infected and the outbreak was under control.

Bird flu has spread rapidly since late 2003 from Asia to Europe, the Middle East and Africa. The United States fears it will arrive on its shores before year's end.

Following are some facts about the H5N1 avian flu virus and its spread around the globe.

-- Since the virus re-emerged in Asia in 2003, outbreaks have been confirmed in more than 45 countries and territories, according to data from the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE).

-- Since the beginning of January, 2006, more than 30 countries have reported outbreaks, in most cases involving wild birds such as swans.

-- The virus has killed 105 people since 2003 in eight countries and territories, according to WHO. Countries with confirmed human cases are: Azerbaijan, Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Iraq, Thailand, Turkey and Vietnam.

-- In total, the virus is known to have infected 186 people since 2003, according to the WHO. Many of those who have died are children and young adults.

-- Vietnam and Indonesia have the highest number of cases, accounting for 64 of the total deaths.

-- The H5N1 virus is not new to science and was responsible for an outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza in Scotland in 1959.

-- Nor is H5N1 the only bird flu virus. There are numerous strains. For example, an outbreak in 2003 of the H7N7 bird flu virus in the Netherlands led to the destruction of more than 30 million birds -- a quarter of the country's poultry stock. About 2.7 million were destroyed in Belgium, and around 400,000 in Germany. In the Netherlands, 89 people were infected with the H7N7 virus, of whom one (a veterinarian) died.

-- The H5N1 virus made the first known jump into humans in Hong Kong in 1997, infecting 18 people and killing six of them. The government ordered the immediate culling of the territory's entire poultry flock, ending the outbreak.

-- Symptoms of bird flu in humans have ranged from typical influenza-like symptoms, such as fever, cough, sore throat and muscle aches, to eye infections (conjunctivitis), pneumonia, acute respiratory distress, viral pneumonia, and other severe and life-threatening complications. (Sources: OIE, WHO, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
 

Onebyone

Inactive
I thought this map of the time line of the 1918 flu was interesting. I think when BF breaks out it will come in those areas that were first for 1918 flu and also in the areas around the international airports over the country.

flumap.jpg
 

JPD

Inactive
Onebyone said:
I thought this map of the time line of the 1918 flu was interesting. I think when BF breaks out it will come in those areas that were first for 1918 flu and also in the areas around the international airports over the country.

flumap.jpg

In the 1918 “Spanish Flu” Pandemic early outbreaks (after the original) all followed the major railways (Indianapolis was called the "crossroads of America") and population centers. Now, we have airports. Much faster travel than trains....................Back in 1918 they didn't have airplanes… so what took 3 - 7 days to travel then, now takes hours. Nice map!
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu virus found in Rafah

http://www.kuna.net.kw/Home/Story.aspx?Language=en&DSNO=842032

GAZA, March 24 (KUNA) -- The deadly bird flu virus was found on Friday on a poultry farm in Rafah in southern Gaza Strip, announced Palestinian medical sources.

The sources said the farm had 13,000 birds, most of which were infected with the virus and would be thus destroyed by the Ministry of Agriculture.

Destroying the birds is part of a procedure followed by the Palestinian authority to prevent the spread of the disease especially after discovering the virus in Gaza Strip and the West Bank.

On Thursday, the Palestinian Authority announced a state of emergency in the West Bank and Gaza Strip after discovering a number of bird flu cases.

All birds in the area of Juhr Al-Deek in central Gaza Strip will be destroyed, while a three kilometer radius in Tobas in northern Gaza Strip will be quarantined, where birds infected with the disease were found. (end) zt.
 

Kim99

Veteran Member
U.N.'s Nabarro says prepare to hunker down

http://usinfo.state.gov/xarchives/d.../wf-latest.html
24 March 2006

United States Helping Lead War on Bird Flu, says U.N. Envoy
Nation expanding international cooperation, increasing monitoring for disease
By Todd Bullock
Washington File Staff Writer
...

International officials are issuing warnings about preparedness because the avian influenza epidemic among animals could evolve into a human influenza pandemic. With an eye toward that potential crisis, Nabarro also discussed the need for governments to develop contingency plans for maintaining continuity of government as well as the rule of law.

"In the event of a pandemic, public services are going to be stretched to their limits and certain regions in the world will be vulnerable to a breakdown in law and order," he said.

According to Nabarro, avian influenza has spread to 20 countries during the last six weeks alone and has recently moved into the Gaza Strip as well as settlements in the West Bank.

"We are very vulnerable," he warned. "Most of us, I think, feel that it's best to be preparing to hunker down."
 

Hiding Bear

Inactive
PCViking said:
Bird Flu Virus is One Mutation Away from Airborne;
Time to Stockpile Supplies to Prepare for Major Global Catastrophe


An airborne strain of the H5N1 virus would have the ability to spread across the globe in mere days.

(PRWEB) March 23, 2006 -- Leading researchers have indicated that the bird flu virus is now just one mutation away from changing into a form that can be easily transmitted among humans. Once the virus mutates into an airborne form, there may be very little warning that a pandemic has begun. An airborne strain of the H5N1 virus would have the ability to spread across the globe in mere days.

Some experts feel that this new super-influenza strain could transform the world into a situation resembling the New Orleans catastrophe after the Katrina hurricane. All deliveries to stores, restaurants and gas stations would immediately cease because people would either be too sick or too scared to attend their jobs. This would cause huge shortages in a matter of days.

The best way to survive a Bird Flu pandemic would be to minimize contact with other people. This would require people to stay in their homes for an extended period of time. Without adequate food and water, this can not be accomplished. In addition, if people wait too long before they begin buying extra supplies they may find that there are no supplies left once the pandemic begins.

If you would like more information on how to immediately prepare, there is a pandemic flu website that provides live help in answering your questions. This website has various different discussion forums designed to provide real time answers to your questions. Whether you would like the latest news on the quickly unfolding developments, or if you would like help in preparing, we recommend that you immediately visit this site at: www.Avianflutalk.com.

http://www.prweb.com/releases/2006/3/prweb362651.htm

:vik:

So basically, we go from an orderly interdependent society to a breakdown of social order in a few days.:shk: Seems like all preparations must be done in advance.
 
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