11/20/07-11/27/07|Weekly Bird Flu Thread:Second case of bird flu found in England

JPD

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Second case of bird flu found in England

http://www.independent.ie/world-news/europe/second-case-of-bird-flu-found-in-england-1223439.html

By Emily Beament
Tuesday November 20 2007

A second case of the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu has been found in turkeys in a farm on the Norfolk/Suffolk border, Britain's Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) said yesterday.

The farm was one of four where culls were taking place because of fears of ''dangerous contact'', with the initial case at Redgrave Park Farm discovered last week.

All 9,000 turkeys have already been slaughtered at the new infected premises, which is operated by the same company as the site of the first outbreak.

Border

The site of the new infection, Hill Meadow Farm, Knettishall, on the Norfolk/Suffolk border, is outside the original 3km protection zone set up around Redgrave Park farm, but inside the wider restricted area.

The premises were identified as having "dangerous contact'' with the initial outbreak because staff for Redgrave Poultry, the operator of all five sites where culls have taken place, moved between the farms.

Defra said the birds appeared healthy when they were first inspected, but a precautionary cull was completed on Saturday.

Acting chief veterinary officer Fred Landeg said: "The laboratory test results today highlight the importance of poultry keepers in the area being extremely vigilant.

"It is essential they practise the highest levels of biosecurity and report any suspicions to their local animal health office.''

A new 3km protection zone has been set up around the farm, and an extended surveillance zone which surrounds both sites has also been established.

Cull

The precautionary cull at Grove Farm, Botesdale, Suffolk, inside the initial protection zone, was upgraded to a slaughter on suspicion of having the disease after dozens of birds were found dead by officials.

But initial tests on 5,500 turkeys slaughtered found the site was free of disease.

Officials are still awaiting results following culls at two other farms in Norfolk: Stone House in West Harling, and Bridge Farm, Pulham.

Geoffrey Buchanan, operations director of Redgrave Poultry, said: "Defra has today advised us that a small number of turkeys culled at Hill Meadow Farm have tested positive for the H5N1 strain.

"It stated that on clinical inspection the flock appeared healthy, which indicates the infection was in its early stages.''

He went on: "Defra has also now completed culls at all five farms it identified. We await the test results from the final two farms."
 

JPD

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4 ways to prepare for a flu pandemic

http://www.floridatoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071120/LIFE01/711200310/1023

BY SHARI RUDAVSKY
GANNETT NEWS SERVICE

For a one-stop access to U.S. government avian and pandemic flu information, go to www.pandemicflu.gov.

It's been almost 40 years since the last flu pandemic swept through the world, killing 700,000 people worldwide. Disease trackers fear we are due for another epidemic outbreak -- most likely one caused by an avian flu.

While there's no reason to believe a pandemic is imminent, there are steps everyone can take to prepare before disaster strikes. Judy Moon, immunization program manager for Visiting Nurse Service Inc., offers these pointers.

Make sure you have a two-week supply of food and water: In a pandemic, stores may close or run out of groceries. The water supply may be contaminated and you need to stay hydrated.

Keep enough bottled water and ready-to-eat foods to last two weeks. Think "high protein" foods when you're amassing your supplies to get you through, Moon says.

Some foods to put in the larder: peanut butter, dry cereal, granola, protein bars and canned foods like soups, canned meat and fish, fruits and vegetables.

Make sure the medicine cabinet is stocked with pain and fever relievers, stomach remedies, and cough and cold medicines. Keep soap and water or alcohol-based hand wash in the house.

Don't forget other essentials: In case of emergency or the loss of electricity, you might need a flashlight, battery-operated radio and batteries. And keep a manual can opener on hand as a backup.

Be prepared to stay home: If a flu pandemic hits, one way to keep yourself safe and healthy is to avoid unnecessary contact with large groups of people.

This may mean working from home, so check with your company to see if it has a pandemic flu preparedness plan.

Talk to your family in advance: If your children are old enough to understand, make sure they know about the food supply and what they should do in the event of a pandemic.

You can also use this opportunity to teach them proper hygiene, which will help ward off regular colds and viruses.
 

JPD

Inactive
Culled turkeys test negative for bird flu

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/11/20/nbird120.xml

By Felix Lowe and agencies
Last Updated: 2:30am GMT 21/11/2007

Thousands of turkeys have been culled at two farms in Norfolk in vain after it was announced that they tested negative for bird flu.


The birds at Stone House, in West Harling, and Bridge Farm, in Pulham, were suspected of having the disease following concerns they had "dangerous contact" with the recent outbreak of deadly H5N1 avian flu in Redgrave, Suffolk.

Deadly bird fly hits second farm
Almost 30,000 birds have been slaughtered since last week's initial outbreak in Redgrave

But the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs on Tuesday said initial tests on the turkeys were negative for the virus.

All the farms were operated by the same company, Redgrave Poultry, which runs Redgrave Park farm where the initial outbreak was discovered last week.

Flocks at the four "dangerous contact" farms were assessed as being at risk of having been exposed to the disease because all five sites shared the same staff.

Tests on Monday showed birds at Hill Meadow Farm in Knettishall on the Norfolk/Suffolk border had been infected with H5N1.
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Another of the farms, Grove Farm, Botesdale, Suffolk, close to the first infected site, was upgraded to a slaughter on suspicion of having the disease last week after dozens of birds were found dead by officials.

But initial tests on 5,500 turkeys slaughtered found the premises was free of disease.

In all, almost 30,000 turkeys, ducks and geese have been culled in a bid to prevent the deadly virus spreading.

Protection zones and an extended surveillance zone are in place around the two infected sites, and a wider restricted zone covers Suffolk and most of Norfolk.

The blow to the poultry industry has sparked fears that prices for Christmas turkeys will go through the roof, with consumers having to pay more than £200 for an organic bird.
 

JPD

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WHO chief calls for shared responsibility in tackling flu pandemic

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-11/21/content_7117056.htm

GENEVA, Nov. 20 (Xinhua) -- World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General Margaret Chan urged governments on Tuesday to share their responsibility in dealing with the threat of a flu pandemic.

"A pandemic will, by its very nature, reach every corner of the earth, and it will do so within a matter of months," Chan told a WHO intergovernmental meeting on pandemic influenza preparedness.

"This shared vulnerability calls for shared responsibility, and collective action to fulfill that responsibility. In terms of the risk of disease, we really are all in the same boat," she said.

According to Chan, world preparedness for a possible pandemic has moved forward on multiple fronts, including the capacity to manufacture influenza vaccines, but more needs to be done.

"Countries need to brace themselves for a situation where up to25 percent of the workforce may be ill at a given time. They have to brace themselves for a possible meltdown of basic municipal services and a slowdown of economic activity," she said.

"And this situation will be occurring globally. As I said, the stakes are high and the responsibility resting on our shoulders is great," she added.

The WHO chief stressed that she fully support any effort that leads to greater and more equitable access to pandemic vaccines.

"In terms of preparedness, access to vaccines is almost certainly the greatest concern in countries that lack their own manufacturing capacity," she said.

Chan also highlighted the importance of virus-sharing, which "serves public health in ways that go beyond the development of pandemic vaccines."

"Above all, the sharing of viruses is the foundation of risk assessment. The analysis and comparison of viruses give us the first clues, the first early warning, that the virus may be evolving in a dangerous way," she said.
 

JPD

Inactive
In Search Of An Answer To A Global Pandemic

http://www.thepoultrysite.com/poultrynews/13403/in-search-of-an-answer-to-a-global-pandemic

GLOBE - The politically explosive issue of ensuring everyone benefits from vaccines in the event of an influenza pandemic is the subject of a negotiation underway at the World Health Organization this week. The work of the member governments calls into question a longstanding WHO system for global sharing of disease strains, and involves questions of limitations on access from patents imposed on vaccines, in some cases developed from flu strains shared under the WHO system.

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"Vulnerability is universal. A pandemic will, by its very nature, reach every corner of the earth, and it will do so within a matter of months."

WHO Director General Margaret Chan

The WHO Intergovernmental Meeting on Pandemic Influenza Preparedness: sharing of influenza viruses and access to vaccines and other benefits is being held from 20 to 23 November. The effort was mandated by the May World Health Assembly. Documents and background for the meeting is at http://www.who.int/gb/pip.

“We must never lose sight of what a pandemic can mean under the unique conditions of the 21st century,” WHO Director General Margaret Chan told the meeting. She said pandemic are recurring and that nations must prepare themselves for situations where up to 25 percent of the workforce is incapacitated. There would be a “meltdown” of basic services and a slowdown of economic activity.

“For WHO, the biggest issue is the threat that an influenza pandemic poses for global health security,” Chan said. “Vulnerability is universal. A pandemic will, by its very nature, reach every corner of the earth, and it will do so within a matter of months. This shared vulnerability calls for shared responsibility, and collective action to fulfil that responsibility. In terms of the risk of disease, we really are all in the same boat.”

Under the Global Influenza Surveillance Network (GISN), countries are expected to send H5N1 virus strains from avian flu victims to WHO-operated regional collaboration centres. But this mechanism has been called into question by some developing countries, who suggest it may not be fair to them in case of a crisis.

“In term of preparedness, access to vaccines is almost certainly the greatest concern in countries that lack their own manufacturing capacity,” Chan said. She said the surveillance network was created in 1947 to assess risks through analysis of shared viruses in order to avoid another devastating global influenza pandemic. She said the current process is aimed addressing weaknesses identified in that system and that it is unique that the threats are already known, giving time to prepare.

Countries already have begun developing pandemic preparedness plans, she said, such as Uganda, which used its plan to stop dead an August outbreak of Marburg hemorrhagic fever.
Meeting Labours at Outset

The negotiating meeting, chaired by Jane Halton, who is secretary of the Australian Health and Ageing Department, spent much of the first day on procedural matters, trying to establish a base document from which to work and laying the groundwork for debates to come.

Issues under consideration include benefit sharing, virus sharing, collective action, sovereign rights, capacity building, intellectual property, oversight mechanism, technology transfer, transparency and accountability. The focus turned early to benefit sharing and principles and objectives.

The meeting took note of an expert report commissioned by the WHO secretariat on patent issues related to influenza viruses and their genes. The report, which sought to be neutral, described the current situation, where there has been a “rapid, recent increase in patenting activity” relating to avian flu, both in the context of vaccines but also in diagnosis and treatment.

Several possibilities were explored for a starting document. Some sought to discuss new proposals by Indonesia and Thailand, some supported the unapproved chair’s report from a mid-summer meeting in Singapore of a subgroup on the issue, and Brazil suggested working from the text of the May Health Assembly Resolution 60.28, which had provoked this group’s creation. The discussion will continue on Wednesday.
Indonesian, Thai Proposals

There also were new proposals on the first morning from Indonesia and Thailand. Indonesia’s proposal is to “urgently develop a new system for virus access and fair and equitable sharing of benefits arising from the use of the virus.” The new system, which would replace the existing system, would emphasise the national sovereign rights of members over their biological resources. It would involve creation of a WHO stockpile of vaccines, and allow access to specimens or viruses through standard material transfer agreements with a number of other conditions. These include requiring manufacturers to get origin country consent to obtain seed virus from the system, and the prevention of intellectual property rights on the virus or any part of it.

Thailand laid out draft standard terms and conditions for “the transfer and use of influenza biological materials and fair and equitable benefits sharing between member states the WHO.” Its proposal would establish a global influenza vaccine fund with weighted contributions that would involve advanced purchase agreements to obtain vaccines. The terms would establish the sovereignty of governments and provide free access to information on viruses, and oblige countries to participate in the fund, which would be managed by a board.
Indonesia Charges Unfair Treatment

The government of Indonesia took a strong position at the outset of the meeting in favour of ensuring equal access for developing countries, and charged unfairness in the WHO system. Indonesia has come under pressure for withholding samples of the avian flu strain occurring there out of concern that sharing it to the WHO process would lead it to be expensive and unavailable for its population.

“As an organisation which governs health care of the world, WHO needs a fair, transparent and equitable mechanism,” Indonesian Health Minister Siti Fadilah Supari told the meeting. “Ironically, since avian influenza existed in Indonesia, we have been experiencing unfair and non-transparent mechanisms in virus sharing which has been linked to vaccine production.”

By sharing virus samples with the global flu network, developing countries are requested to release their viruses but then lose their right to them and do not know what they are used for, Supari said.

“The moment when developing or poor countries need vaccines, they have to purchase them at high prices, and, one of the financial consequences is that they may need loans from other developed countries,” Supari continued. “The unfairness that was given by the WHO could threaten global health security and also is a new type of oppression to developing nations by developed countries.”

Supari named three ways in which her country was treated unfairly. She charged that when Indonesia needed to procure Tamiflu, seen as potentially effective against avian flu, it had all been stockpiled by developed countries. Secondly, the DNA sequence for risk assessment and vaccine production was held exclusively by WHO-affiliated scientists, which Indonesia corrected by releasing the H5N1 sequence data to gene banks. Finally, Supari said, several developed country companies offered her vaccine and diagnostic kit developed from the Vietnamese flu strain.

Supari painted an unfavourable image of grieving family members in Vietnam learning that the viruses shared with the WHO mechanism ended up as a “commercial commodity” for developed countries. In sum, Indonesia suggested that a new mechanism is needed.
The Problem with IP and Vaccines

The European Union through its current president Portugal took issue with an aspect of the WHO secretariat’s suggestion to pursue with member states and vaccine manufacturers an advance commitment mechanism. This mechanism sets a pre-defined quantity of vaccine to be released by producers, which would guarantee access for countries lacking manufacturing capacity.

The United States said the “sense of urgency” must be maintained, and pointed to a variety of preparations for a possible pandemic that reach beyond access to vaccines, such as rapid response or measures to mitigate the spread at the community level. It also criticised any withholding from the global system, but said countries sharing their samples should not expect something in return every time. Instead, they could get technical assistance. Finally, the US said, “We cannot accept any approach that undermines intellectual property rights.”

Edward Hammond of the Sunshine Project prepared a report on IP issues related to avian flu viruses that tracked the recent “dramatic rise” in patent applications related to influenza. As developed countries funnel public funds into a biomedical research and development system based on patents, “some key government players in the WHO GISN are fuelling the patent surge and, in fact, are politically and legally obligated to encourage such claims because they are an integral component of their health systems,” Hammond wrote.

The Third World Network and the Sunshine Project, nongovernmental groups, circulated views at the meeting urging the prevention of patenting of flu viruses in the global system. In a brief paper that appeared to echo the Indonesian proposal, they stressed the importance of national sovereignty over how its viruses are used, and commitments to fair and equitable benefit sharing from research. The groups called for the rewriting of terms of reference between the WHO and the collaborating centres, and material transfer agreements for the movement of viruses. Furthermore, there should be no IP rights related to influenza, and tracking of virus transfers by WHO.

Separately, the World Intellectual Property Organization last week issues a technical report on patents related to influenza viruses and their genes. It did not advocate any position but provided background, WIPO said.
Seasonal Vaccine

Another key issue at the meeting is the increasing use of seasonal vaccines and efforts to reduce prices and increase availability as manufacturing capacity increases.

The Federation of Pharmaceutical Manufacturers and Associations (IFPMA), and the Developing Country Vaccine Manufacturers Network are recognised by the meeting to provide comments if called upon. IFPMA said in materials provided to negotiators that its Influenza Vaccine Supply task force members have invested billions of dollars in developing capabilities to deliver vaccines against seasonal, avian and pandemic influenza. The group said increased manufacturing for seasonal flu also will increase manufacturing capabilities for a pandemic. Industry should have the capacity to produce several billion doses of pandemic vaccines by 2010, IFPMA said.

“I fully support any effort that leads to greater and more equitable access to pandemic vaccines. Vaccines are the best insurance policy for public health,” said Chan, later adding. “Millions of people outside this hall depend on us to make progress.”
 

JPD

Inactive
UK: thousands more slaughtered in sixth farm bird flu culling

http://www.worldpoultry.net/news/id...aughtered_in_sixth_farm_bird_flu_culling.html

Yet another cull is underway at a sixth poultry farm in Suffolk as nearly 70,000 birds are culled in an effort to control the outbreak of bird flu in the country.

According to Defra officials, the latest cull - more than double the number of birds slaughtered than the other five culls combined - is a precautionary measure and falls within the existing surveillance zone. The move comes along with fears that workers at the farm have travelled to other farms that are deemed a bird flu risk. This farm supplied poultry to the farm at the centre of the outbreak.

This cull will see the slaughter of approx. 68,000 birds including 56,000 ducks, 9,000 turkeys and 3,000 geese. A 3km protection zone and 10km surveillance zone were immediately set up, and remain in place.

A spokeswoman at Defra has stated that the farm is owned by the same company that operates Redgrave Park Farm near Diss, on the Norfolk-Suffolk border, where the virus was first detected earlier this month.

Previous culls – test results

On 14 November it was confirmed that highly pathogenic H5N1 strain of avian influenza had infected turkeys on the Redgrave Park Farm in Suffolk, England.
On 20 November, tests showed birds at Hill Meadow Farm in Knettishall on the Norfolk/Suffolk border had been infected with H5N1, a second premises.

On 21 November it was reported that turkeys culled at two other farms (Stone House, in West Harling, and Bridge Farm, in Pulham, both in Norfolk) over fears they had been exposed to the disease tested negative.

Another of the farms, Grove Farm, Botesdale, Suffolk was upgraded to a slaughter site on suspicion of having the disease last week, after dozens of birds were found dead by officials. However, initial tests on 5,500 turkeys slaughtered found the premises were free of disease.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird-flu alert as workers get jabs

http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/Story.asp?Article=200826&Sn=BNEW&IssueID=30248

MANAMA: Bahrain is now on high alert after Saudi Arabia slaughtered more than 3.5 million birds following an outbreak of bird flu.

Poultry workers are now being given flu jabs to help boost their immunity levels, officials told the GDN. The Health Ministry is also updating its procedures to help it cope in the event of a bird flu outbreak here.

"We are urgently updating ourselves in the light of the reports," Health Ministry communicable diseases section head Dr Muna Al Mousawi said yesterday.
 

New Freedom

Veteran Member
JPD, how are you doing? Did you have a nice Thanksgiving? How is your health? Hopefully you are feeling better and on the road to a complete recovery!
 

JPD

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Myanmar reports bird flu outbreak at chicken farm in northeast

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/11/24/asia/AS-GEN-Myanmar-Bird-Flu.php

YANGON, Myanmar: Myanmar has reported an outbreak of the deadly H5N1 bird flu virus at a chicken farm in the northeast, state media and an international livestock health agency said Saturday.

Unusual deaths of chickens at a farm in a village in Shan State's Keng Tung township were reported on Nov. 18, and laboratory tests confirmed that H5N1 was detected in some of them, the state-run New Light of Myanmar newspaper reported.

According to the Myanmar government's report to the Paris-based World Organization for Animal Health, 2,058 of the farm's 2,591 susceptible birds had died in the outbreak, and the other 533 were slaughtered to prevent the virus from spreading.

Authorities imposed other control measures including a quarantine on the farm, limits on movement of poultry in the area, and disinfection of affected premises, it said.

H5N1 began ravaging Asian poultry stocks in late 2003, leading to the death or slaughter of millions of birds. The virus has also killed at least 206 people worldwide. Myanmar has reported no human H5N1 cases.

Experts believe most human victims of the virus were infected through direct contact with sick birds. Although bird flu is difficult for humans to catch, experts fear it could mutate into a form that spreads easily among people and spark a flu pandemic.

Myanmar last reported an H5N1 outbreak in October in poultry farms in eastern Bago, about 80 kilometers (50 miles) north of the nation's largest city, Yangon. H5N1 was also found in some farms in Yangon in February and March, and in Mon State and western Bago in July, the New Light Of Myanmar reported.
 

JPD

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WHO official says Asia should remain alert for bird flu,
but some countries unprepared

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/storie...ME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2007-11-24-05-18-44

By CHISAKI WATANABE
Associated Press Writer

TOKYO (AP) -- Some Asian countries have yet to devise a plan on how to respond to a bird flu outbreak, a disease that continues to be a threat for the whole region, a World Health Organization health official warned Saturday.

Preparedness in some Asian developing countries remains inadequate, said Dr. Shigeru Omi, western Pacific director of the World Health Organization.

"There have been outbreaks of bird flu among birds in many countries. It's not something you can just pick up on one country as being threatened," Omi said in an interview with The Associated Press.

It was important for countries to improve the quality of sanitation for the general public and livestock, as well as to report incidents to authorities promptly, Omi said.

Australia, New Zealand, Japan and Singapore were ready to tackle outbreaks, but preparations were inadequate elsewhere, Omi said. He declined to identify where.

Governments also need to address how to compensate farmers whose livestock has been hit by an outbreak, he said.

The H5N1 strain of bird flu has killed or led to the slaughter of millions of birds in recent years. It remains difficult for humans to catch, but has killed at least 206 people worldwide since late 2003, according to the WHO.

Most human cases of H5N1 have so far been traced to contact with infected birds, but experts fear that the strain could mutate into a form that spreads easily between people and trigger a global flu pandemic.

Omi was in Tokyo to launch a health initiative to overhaul health systems in the Asia-Pacific region.
 

JPD

Inactive
Hong Kong finds egret with bird flu in city park

http://africa.reuters.com/commodities/news/usnPEK278700.html?rpc=401&

HONG KONG, Nov 24 (Reuters) - A little egret found in a Hong Kong park has tested positive for the H5N1 bird flu virus, the government said on Saturday.

The bird was collected at the Tuen Mun Park in the New Territories on Nov. 18, the city's agriculture, fisheries and conservation department said in a brief statement.

It urged Hong Kong residents to avoid personal contact with wild birds and live poultry, and to clean hands after any contact.

It is not the first appearance of the disease in the territory: at least 17 infected birds were discovered in the first half of this year.

The virus has caused more than 200 deaths globally since 2003, according to World Health Organisation data.

Although most people who have caught bird flu have had direct or indirect contact with infected fowl, experts fear the constantly mutating virus could change into a form easily transmitted from person to person. This could sweep the world, killing millions.

Earlier this month, an Indonesian man from Riau province on Sumatra island died of bird flu, taking that country's death toll from the disease to more than 90, the highest in the world. (Reporting by Jeffrey Hodgson; Editing by John Chalmers)
 

JPD

Inactive
South Korea confirms first bird flu outbreak in eight months

http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/11/24/apworld/20071124175053&sec=apworld

SEOUL, South Korea (AP): South Korea's first bird flu outbreak in eight months forced the slaughter of thousands of ducks in the country's south Saturday, although the deadly H5N1 virus was not involved, the government said.

The virus that caused the latest outbreak was a "low pathogenic'' H7 strain that has not been known to spread to humans, said an official at the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry.

Quarantine workers slaughtered about 17,000 ducks at the farm in Gwangju, about 330 kilometers (205 miles) southwest of the capital, Seoul, the official said on condition of anonymity, citing office policy.

The outbreak, South Korea's first since March, was confirmed on Friday, the ministry official said.

Seven outbreaks of the lethal H5N1 virus hit poultry farms across South Korea between November 2006 and March this year, resulting in the slaughter of about 2.8 million birds.

The country declared itself free of bird flu in June after reporting no new outbreaks for three months. The latest outbreak does not affect South Korea's bird flu-free status because it involves a "low pathogenic'' virus, the ministry official said.

Since H5N1 re-emerged in 2003, it has led to the death or slaughter of hundreds of millions of birds and has killed 206 people worldwide, according to the World Health Organization.
 

JPD

Inactive
Plans set for fighting killer flu epidemic

http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20071125/NEWS01/711250066

If it happens, health officials say many will be treated at home, but when hospitals are full, others will be treated at three regional centers.

By Sharon Salyer, Herald Writer

If flu sweeps through Snohomish County as part of a pandemic, an estimated 200,000 people could become ill – about 2,000 people each day.

Hospitals in Everett, Edmonds, Monroe and Arlington would quickly be overwhelmed with sick people needing care.

During such an overwhelming public emergency, people couldn't just call 911 for medical help.

So how would the sick get medical care?

A new disaster medical care plan from the Snohomish Health District's calls for:

Treating people who are moderately ill at home;

Setting up a call center staffed by nurses to help answer questions from the public;

Establishing seven sites in the county for people who need basic medical care;

And outfitting three large buildings in Arlington, Everett and Edmonds with medical staff and supplies to treat seriously ill patients who can't be treated in hospitals.

"A pandemic is inevitable and so we must plan for it," said Dr. Gary Goldbaum, health officer for the Snohomish Health District.

The number of people in Snohomish County seeking medical care -- up to 100,000 patients -- "will severely stress the health care system," he said. "Our response will have to involve the entire medical community."

A critical part of the response will also depend on individuals and families being able to provide initial care at home, since more people would seek medical care than hospitals and health care clinics would be able to treat, he said.

That's one reason state health officials advised people earlier this year to begin stocking up on basic supplies that could be used in a pandemic.

These include nonprescription medications for fever (such as ibuprofen and acetaminophen), stomach remedies, cough and cold medicines, fluids with electrolytes, and vitamins. A thermometer, cold packs, blankets and humidifiers also are recommended.

The plan was generally praised by members of the Snohomish Health District board.

Bothell Mayor Mark Lamb said that in his city, seniors in particular are concerned about pandemic flu.

"I think it's essential to be prepared for these issues," Lamb said.

However, Dave Somers, a Snohomish County Council member, wondered if the three acute care centers should be expanded to include a site near the U.S. 2 corridor.

"We have Sultan, Monroe, Snohomish and Gold Bar," he said. "Everett wouldn't be convenient for a sick population."

Goldbaum said he understands these concerns. But the demands on the health care system would be so high that "we can't open up more" of these treatment centers, he said. "Being able to support three would be pushing the limits."

So one of centers now proposed in Everett, Arlington and Edmonds would have to be moved, a suggestion that he said will be considered.

As now proposed, the three centers would be based at either a middle or high school in Arlington, the Comcast Arena at Everett Events Center, and Edmonds Community College.

They would care for people for two to five days, treating both people who are expected to recover and those expected to die.

These centers would provide oxygen and intravenous fluids for patients as well as 24-hour food service, a chapel, a morgue and rest areas for family caregivers.

The plan calls for the Snohomish County Chapter of the American Red Cross to provide cots and blankets for these centers as well as feed the community, said Chuck Morrison, executive director.

In Snohomish County, the push to begin planning for a worldwide flu epidemic began last year. It is part of an effort now under way throughout the nation and even internationally.

Flu periodically transforms from a typical winter bug into a killer virus.

The most deadly of these outbreaks occurred in 1918 and 1919, when an estimated 50 million people were killed worldwide.

During a typical year, influenza kills about 50 people in Snohomish County. During a pandemic, up to 4,000 people could die.

Health officials worry that bird flu, which has killed 60 percent of the 335 people infected so far throughout the world, could trigger the next global outbreak.

Since no one now knows how many people would actually get sick, no one can estimate how much it would cost to put the pandemic flu plan into action, Goldbaum said.

Health officials in Snohomish, King and Pierce counties are working to establish a single phone number people could call to get help with medical care questions, Goldbaum said.

People who couldn't care for themselves at home could go to one of seven "triage centers" in Stanwood, Arlington, Marysville, Everett, Monroe, Mill Creek and Edmonds.

People could get basic medical information at these sites, speak to a health care worker, get fluids "and hopefully be returned to home," Goldbaum said.

The plan also calls for use of medical volunteers, including retired medical workers and people who work in health care who can be used temporarily to help battle a flu pandemic.

But just how many might be needed is just one of the questions that for now can't be answered.

"A lot is unknown," Goldbaum acknowledged. "We will not know until a pandemic actually begins spreading."
 

JPD

Inactive
Indonesian Health Minister blasts US doctor for taking patient's blood samples

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/11/26/asia/AS-GEN-Indonesia-Virus-Sharing.php

JAKARTA, Indonesia: Indonesia's health minister lambasted a U.S. doctor for taking home blood and tissue samples from a patient to diagnose his illness, saying they could be used to make vaccines that the poor could not afford.

Siti Fadilah Supari — who has also steadfastly refused to share bird flu samples with international scientists — argued that developing nations risk exploitation unless they maintain control over their virus strains.

Dr. Anthony Gaspari, a dermatologist at the University of Maryland, acknowledged that samples belonging to the patient, who has massive root-like warts growing from his arms and legs, were sent to the United States.

But he said the sole motivation was getting treatment for the man, who came into the international spotlight after appearing on television this month. The man, who goes by the single name of Dede, had gone untreated for years.

"We did take samples, and the reason we did was to render a diagnosis. We did it for humanitarian reasons, to help the patient," Gaspari said by telephone, adding that he would be willing to put in writing that the samples were not for commercial use.

Supari made her comments Sunday upon returning from Geneva, where she had been attending a World Health Organization intergovernmental conference aimed at rebuilding a global system for sharing viruses.

"We are offended because the samples were taken from Dede without our permission," she told reporters at the hospital where the man was being treated. "If they are taken abroad, they could become lucrative commodities."

Supari, whose nation has been hardest hit by bird flu with 91 human deaths, says she will only share samples of the H5N1 virus if she gets assurances they will not be used to make expensive pandemic vaccines.

WHO says it needs to make sure the virus has not mutated to a form that spreads more easily between people.
 

JPD

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Indonesia says no to bird flu virus sharing

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20071126/hl_nm/birdflu_indonesia_dc

JAKARTA (Reuters) - Indonesia will not share bird flu virus samples unless there is a guarantee developing nations will have control over their use and have access to cheap vaccines, a health ministry spokeswoman said on Monday.
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Indonesia, the nation worst hit by bird flu with 91 human deaths, has held back its virus samples since August and wants guarantees from richer nations and drugmakers that poor countries get access to affordable vaccines derived from their samples.

Health officials from around the world failed to reach an agreement on a new virus sharing system at talks hosted by the World Health Organisation (WHO) in Geneva last week.

Health Minister Siti Fadillah Supari insisted on "equitable sharing of benefits arising from the use of viruses" at the meeting.

Sharing samples is deemed vital to see if viruses have mutated, become drug resistant or grown more transmissible.

"Talks hit a deadlock because the health minister was relentless in pushing for a material transfer agreement for each virus sample, but not everyone agreed to that," ministry spokeswoman Lily Sulistiowati told Reuters.

"We hope that negotiations will continue," she said. "But for her (the Indonesian health minister) one thing remains unnegotiable. We will not send samples overseas without an

MTA."

Indonesia wants a "material transfer agreement" for each virus sample sent to foreign labs, that specifies the sample is used only for diagnostic purposes and not for commercial gain.

Under this proposal, any commercial use of the virus would require prior consent of the country providing it. Jakarta said would retain the intellectual property rights and allow access to global vaccine stockpiles at an affordable price.

The WHO agreed last May to revamp its 50-year-old system for sharing flu virus samples with researchers and drug firms. It had wanted its 191 member states to adopt an agreement by May but divisions remain.

Experts fear the constantly mutating H5N1 virus could change into a form easily transmissible among humans and sweep the world and kill millions of people.

Sharing samples are vital for tracking the deadly H5N1 virus and developing vaccines against a potential pandemic, according to the WHO.

Jakarta has shared just two specimens this year, both from Indonesian women who died in the popular tourist resort of Bali in August, according to the WHO.

Sixteen companies are at various stages of licensing a vaccine against H5N1. These include GlaxoSmithKline which announced last June it would donate 50 million doses of its "pre-pandemic" bird flu vaccine to WHO's global stockpile.

The Indonesian government and a unit of the U.S. firm Baxter International Inc have agreed to develop a vaccine. Under the accord, Jakarta has been supplying virus specimens while Baxter is providing technology to develop the vaccine.
 

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Brits gear up for pandemic while FDA warns about flu jabs side-effects

http://www.news-medical.net/?id=32850

The British government says it plans to double its stockpile of antiviral drugs such as Tamiflu to cope with the possibility of a flu pandemic.

Roche the Swiss drug manufacturer which makes Tamiflu is apparently geared up to meet the increased demand.

The Health Department has already ordered enough of the drug to protect half the population once a strain has been identified.

Many health experts believe a global influenza pandemic is almost inevitable and the most likely candidate at present appears to be the H5N1 avian flu virus currently attacking birds across Asia, Africa and parts of Europe.

Should a pandemic strike as much as 50% of the population could be affected and experts say up to 2.5% of those infected could die.

The Health Minister Alan Johnson says a flu pandemic is "one of the most severe risks" that Britain faces.

The Department of Health has awarded contracts to GlaxoSmithKline and U.S. group Baxter International worth 155.4 million pounds over four years to supply a pandemic flu vaccine as soon as the strain is identified and made available by the World Health Organisation.

The British government is also buying 14.7 million courses of antibiotics, 34 million respirators and 350 million face masks.

Meanwhile in the United States the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are saying that both Tamiflu and Relenza, another flu drug, should carry warnings about possible psychiatric side-effects.

The warning follows reports from Japan that children in particular have experienced delirium, psychosis and hallucinations, after taking the drugs; apart from these side effects there have also been reports of deaths.

Three Japanese adults committed suicide while on Tamiflu and five children died, also since 1999, when Relenza was first approved, there have been 115 reports of psychiatric related events, of which 74 were children.

Tamiflu (oseltamivir) is a pill, while Relenza (zanamivir) is inhaled.

The safety of the treatments are about to be reviewed by a panel of experts but the FDA says the warning should be directed at patients of all ages and not just children and the products will continue to be monitored.

The threat of a pandemic in recent years has prompted many governments throughout the world to amass stocks of Tamiflu as a precaution.

Japanese Health authorities already warn against the use of Tamiflu and Relenza in patients aged 10-19.

Roche says there is no definite proof of a causal relationship between Tamiflu and abnormal behavior and says clinical and non-clinical studies are currently being conducted.

The Australian inventor of the original flu jab created more than 40 years ago, Dr. Graeme Laver has voiced fears over the vaccine's effectiveness.

Dr. Laver has warned it will do little to prevent a flu epidemic in Britain this winter, and says he believes it should not be relied upon to protect from a potentially severe flu epidemic.

The Australian scientist claims that people's lives could be saved if drugs such as Tamiflu and Relenza were used instead, once the disease has already struck.

Dr. Laver suggests both prescription-only drugs should be sold over the counter so that they were more readily available to flu sufferers.

Laver says the seasonal flu was severe in Australia this year and the number of flu victims tripled compared to last year.

His comments lend support to a recent study by the Health Protection Agency (HPA) which found the vaccine had no "protective effect" on lowering numbers of elderly people admitted to hospital with respiratory infections.
 

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More bird flu cases in Saudi

http://www.ameinfo.com/139876.html

More cases of bird flu have been found at a poultry farm in Saudi Arabia, reported Reuters. A statement published on the official Saudi Press Agency said all birds at the farm 150km south of Riyadh, were culled after the H5N1 strain was found there. Saudi authorities killed 50,000 birds in the same area earlier this month after 1,500 birds died of unknown reasons. Estimates state that the total loss for bird owner in the country hover around $1.3m.
 

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Japan offers Indonesia bird flu laboratory

http://www.vnanet.vn/Home/EN/tabid/119/itemid/224988/Default.aspx

Jakarta (VNA) – The Japanese government has decided to give a laboratory of international standard as a gift to help Indonesia increase its efforts in the fight against bird flu.

According to Antara news agency of Indonesia , the laboratory is designed to conduct tests for the H5N1 virus as well as do research on the deadly disease of bird flu.

The laboratory, located in Surabaya , East Java , has a total investment of 1.7 million USD.-Enditem
 

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Pandemic panic

http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/mark_honigsbaum/2007/11/pandemic_panic.html

When a flu pandemic strikes Britain, human panic will only make it worse
Mark Honigsbaum

November 27, 2007 10:30 AM |

In the summer of 1918, while awaiting the orders that would return him to the Front, the poet Wilfred Owen wrote to his mother, Susan, warning her of a new disease.

"STAND BACK FROM THE PAGE! and disinfect yourself," Owen began his letter from Scarborough army camp.

"Quite 1/3 of the Batt and about 30 officers are smitten with the Spanish Flu. The hospital overflowed on Friday, then the gymnasium was filled, and now all the place seems carpeted with huddled blanketed forms ... The boys are dropping on parade like flies in number."

At first glance, Owen's bold capitals and self-conscious underlinings read like genuine alarm. But, as the next passage made clear, far from taking the disinfectant measures seriously, Owen considered Spanish influenza something of a joke.

"The thing is much too common for me to take part in. I have quite decided not to!

"Scottie [a regimental friend], whom I still see sometimes, went under today, & my servant yesterday. Imagine the work that falls on unaffected officers."

Reading health secretary Alan Johnson's latest warnings about an imminent flu pandemic I was reminded of Owen's earlier insouciance. In parliament last week Johnson announced he was placing an order for 34 million respirators and 350 million surgical masks. In addition, he is to double the government's stockpile of the main flu medication, Tamiflu, and has contracted with GlaxoSmithKline to deliver supplies of a vaccine. But the government's main advice to those who might contract the pandemic strain is to stay at home to avoid spreading the virus and dial a special flu hotline.

"A pandemic will break out," Johnson told parliament. "It is not a question of if, it is a question of when and it is right that this country is properly prepared."

Johnson's determination not to make it three in a row for the government is to be commended - the last thing Gordon Brown needs after the Northern Rock debacle and the lost data scandal is to be caught unprepared by an outbreak of pandemic flu that according to experts is long overdue and could afflict up to half the British population. But for all that government scientific advisers have been urging Johnson to prepare for the worst, I cannot help thinking that a dose of what Owen had may be what the nation really needs.

Yes, Owen's attitude was cavalier - for all the mildness of the June outbreak at Scarborough camp, four months later the disease was back, and in a form that had no one laughing (between the summer of 1918 and the spring of 1919, the Spanish flu claimed the lives of some 250,000 Britons; today, given the growth in Britain's population, a strain with similar attack and mortality levels could kill 750,000).

But for all that Owen was wrong to deprecate the threat of Spanish influenza and think that resistance was simply a matter of willpower; he was surely right not to put too much faith in disinfectant measures and other so-called protective measures - and nor should we. For the truth is that although virology has come a long way since 1918 and deadly pneumonic complications of flu can now be treated with antibiotics, we are just as powerless to halt the spread of the influenza "germ" as doctors were during the first world war. Indeed, you could argue that with growth in global commerce and global communications any attempt to halt the spread of a pandemic virus by, say, erecting human quarantine zones like the ones imposed on poultry in Norfolk earlier this month, are doomed to failure. Nor, as doctors first noted in 1918, are surgical masks much use against a virus just 120 nanometers in diameter - one eight-hundredth the width of a human hair.

Respirators are undoubtedly life-savers - it was thanks, in part, to a respirator that the prime minister David Lloyd George survived flu in Manchester in September 1918, and in recent cases of human infections of the bird flu virus, H5N1, in Southeast Asia, patients on respirators have been far less likely to develop fatal pneumonias. Despite concerns that some strains of H5N1 may be becoming resistant to Tamiflu, there is also little doubt that if the drug is given early enough, and in sufficient quantities, it can dramatically reduce viral loads.

But let's not kid ourselves that any of these measures - practical as they may seem now - will be much use in an actual pandemic. Britons are no longer as stoical as they were in 1918. And as we saw from the recent run on Northern Rock, these days it takes very little to spook the nation. Indeed, the recent Home Office document, Planning for a Possible Influenza Epidemic, predicts that, not withstanding the government's advice to stay put, GP practices would be quickly overwhelmed by demand from the "worried well". Even assuming an attack rate of just 25% and 250,000 dead the report predicts that doctors would have to be dragged out of retirement to tend to the sick and funeral homes would be reduced to basic "no-frills" ceremonies. Eventually, the sheer volume of cases, coupled with staff illness and death, would make normal processes "unsustainable", forcing local councils to appeal to the Army for help in burying the dead, just as they did in 1918.

Faced with people collapsing in the street "like sheep" - as one paper described the dreadful scenes in London at the height of the 1918 pandemic - Britons would have little alternative but to cultivate an attitude of disdain, just as Owen did, and fall back on their own resources. Not much of a prescription, I know, but still perhaps the best we've got.
 
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