12/05: H5N1: Indonesian Baby; China Banking & Rural Education

Nuthatch

Inactive
Indonesian baby tests positive for bird flu

An eight-month-old baby is the latest patient to test positive for bird flu in Indonesia.

Doctors believe the baby may have caught the disease from an infected pigeon.

A spokesman at the Sulianti Saroso hospital has told the ABC that preliminary tests, yet to be confirmed by the World Health Organisation (WHO) in Hong Kong, show that the child is suffering from the deadly H5N1 strain of avian influenza.

He was put into an isolation ward at the designated bird flu centre on Sunday, five days after contracting a high fever at his home in north Jakarta.

Six other patients are undergoing tests at the hospital.

While the official death toll from bird flu in Indonesia stands at eight, some experts believe that because of poor surveillance and reporting the number has been underestimated.
 
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Nuthatch

Inactive
From www.forbes.com:
AFX News Limited

China's banking sector helping poultry industry deal with bird flu - CBRC
12.04.2005, 10:06 PM


BEIJING (AFX) - China's banking sector is working to restructure debts in the poultry sector caused by bird flu, said Liu Mingkang, director of the China Banking Regulatory Commission.

Liu said at a press conference that the banking sector will support a government policy aimed at reducing the financial burden of farmers as a result of bird flu.

Liu said the assistance to the sector would be given in a commercial fashion, but did not elaborate.

The debt restructuring will not have a major impact on the financial position of the country's banks, Liu said.
 

Nuthatch

Inactive
Romania discovers new suspect avian flu cases
Mon Dec 5, 2005 11:09 AM GMT

BUCHAREST (Reuters) - Romania has discovered new suspect cases of avian flu in birds in two villages in the Danube delta, the area where the deadly strain of the virus was first detected, the Agriculture Ministry said on Monday.

Avian flu has been found in about a dozen villages in Romania since October, including several places outside the delta which lies on a key migratory route for wild birds.

Three outbreaks have been confirmed as the highly pathogenic H5N1 strain which has killed 69 people in Asia. Samples from other outbreaks are being sent to Britain for testing.

"A few samples from the villages Agighiol and Crisan from the Tulcea county came out positive in the quick diagnosis test," the ministry said in a statement. "The actual virus hasn't been isolated yet."

Agriculture Minister Gheorghe Flutur said the two villages had been quarantined and domestic birds would be culled.

Samples from a virus detected in four outbreaks in Braila county outside the delta last week will be subject to further tests in Britain. However, officials said on Sunday the birds had likely contracted the H5N1 strain.

Disinfection checkpoints were installed on all roads leading out of the county. Around 5,000 birds in Ciocile, where bird flu was discovered on Saturday, have already been culled.

Officials have told people to keep domestic birds isolated so they do not come into contact with wild birds, saying high temperatures for this time of the year mean the peak migration period would be longer, raising contamination risks.

The Danube delta, near the Black Sea, is Europe's largest wetlands and lies on the migratory route of millions of wild birds toward warmer winter climes in North Africa.

Neighbouring Ukraine began destroying birds at the weekend after finding avian flu in the Crimea peninsula.

Scientists fear H5N1 risks sparking a pandemic in which millions could die if it mutates into a form that passes easily among humans. But so far there is no sign the virus has changed in this way.
 

Nuthatch

Inactive
Rural people given human bird flu prevention guide books
www.chinaview.cn 2005-12-05 19:40:18

BEIJING, Dec. 5 (Xinhuanet) -- China's Ministry of Health (MOH) on Monday delivered 300,000 guide books on human bird flu prevention and control to rural areas.

A total of 600,000 sets of pictures and booklets were also jointly delivered by the MOH and China Association for Science and Technology to rural areas along with the guide books.

These books tell in simple words what bird flu is, how it spreads and what symptoms to look like if a human gets infected, intended to help rural people raise their awareness and sense of self-protection against the disease, according to the MOH information office.

Vice Health Minister Jiang Zuojun attended Monday's delivery ceremony, noting that the early detection, reporting, quarantine and treatment are crucial to curbing the epidemic in China's ruralregions.

The ministry will send more publicity materials to the rural regions, according to Jiang.

China has seen about 30 bird flu outbreaks in wild birds and poultry nationwide and three human infections, including two fatalities. The government has vowed to invest hugely in the prevention and control of the disease and strengthened its surveillance of people, especially in the vast rural areas.
 

Nuthatch

Inactive
Posted on Sun, Dec. 04, 2005


Bird flu hype infecting biotech industry​
PAUL ELIAS

Associated Press


SAN FRANCISCO - Two years ago, as fears of a SARS pandemic spread, a San Diego biotech company aided by federal dollars speeded a promising vaccine out of the lab and into human testing.

But when Vical Inc. and the government wrap up the 15-person test next year, the drug is expected to end up on the shelf because the dreaded global epidemic never panned out. Bird flu has now overtaken SARS as the No. 1 feared global death threat.

As biotechnology companies suddenly refocus their profit mission to the new threat - and investors drive stock prices to new highs - some analysts wonder if these endeavors could face the same fate Vical met with its rapid response to severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS.

"There are so many unknowables and a lot of hype," said AG Edwards analyst Al Goldman. "The avian flu potential is something that you can't get your arms around because no one knows if - or when - a pandemic is going to happen."

The particular bird flu strain that now worries health officials has been around since 1997 and has killed 62 people worldwide since 2003, yet it hasn't acquired the genetic changes it needs to start spreading easily from person to person.

What's more, leading scientists now discount the notion that flu pandemics happen in regular intervals and that the world is overdue for a new one.

They don't even agree on how bad it is that bird flu has spread to more types of birds. Instead of an appetite for people, the germ is showing a growing fondness for birds, some say.

Still, there is scientific consensus that vaccine and drug stockpiles should be created in the United States just in case.

To that end, the Bush administration wants $7.1 billion in emergency spending to improve vaccine production systems and to detect and contain a potential pandemic flu strain before it reaches the United States.

So far, the U.S. government has awarded a little more than $162 million this year to drug companies developing bird flu vaccines.

The promise of billions more in government support and continued fears that the country is ill-equipped to deal with an impending pandemic have a slew of biotechnology companies jumping into the flu business.

Vical chief executive officer Vijay Samant says his company is among those pursuing a novel flu vaccine despite its SARS experience, which he said has yielded some benefit.

Samant said federal regulators are now better prepared to handle new viral threats like SARS and that Vical has the ability to restart the SARS project almost immediately if that bug emerges again. Most of the SARS vaccine research costs at Vical were covered by the National Institutes of Health, which reported in September that the experimental vaccine appeared safe - but little other data about its effectiveness has been produced.

"Don't underestimate the value of learning how to deal with that emerging threat," Samant said.

Still, Samant did joke that the "first slide of everybody's" Powerpoint presentation to investors promises to profit from flu fears.

"My single-minded focus is to drive the vaccine program for bird flu," Novavax Inc. chief executive Rahul Singhvi said during a conference call with analysts in November discussing the Malvern, Pa.-based company's new aim at influenza.

The company, like many of its competitors in the new flu market, is developing a faster and less expensive way to manufacture flu vaccine than current methods by using pieces of the flu's genetic material rather than the entire virus to provoke an immune response in people.

But the company is at least two years, and probably even more, from getting its experimental vaccine on the market.

In the meantime, the lion's share of government funding has flowed to the established vaccine makers Sanofi-Aventis and Chiron Corp. The government awarded Sanofi $100 million contract to crank out a bird flu vaccine and Chiron received $62.5 million, even as the Emeryville-based Chiron attempts to overcome manufacturing woes.

Still, Novavax's stock, which dropped below $1 a share in August, soared to a 52-week high of $6.01 a share in October immediately following reports that birds infected with the bird flu were found in Turkey, Romania and Russia and a dead parrot exported from South America was found in Britain with the virus.

Novavax's stock has fallen off nearly 50 percent in the last month, but other companies pursuing novel flu remedies are enjoying heady days on Wall Street.

BioCryst Pharmaceuticals of Birmingham, Ala., soared to a five-year high of $18.42 a share in October on the same news that drove up Novavax's stock. BioCryst is developing a drug that slows the replication of the flu virus, but showed such poor results in human trials that one-time partner Johnson & Johnson abandoned the project and left BioCryst (whose stock was trading around $15 on Friday) to go it alone.

"Whether this is a real market is hard to know," said Ken Trbovich, an analyst with RBC Capital Markets. "There is potential, but it's like holding a lottery ticket right now."
 

Seabird

Veteran Member
Nuthatch said:
Indonesian baby tests positive for bird flu

While the official death toll from bird flu in Indonesia stands at eight, some experts believe that because of poor surveillance and reporting the number has been underestimated.


As I said in another thread, there is no doubt about this aspect of all of the stories coming out of the East. Their communications between cities and even hospitals within the same city is not good.
 

Nuthatch

Inactive
Yushchenko travels to Crimea, where bird flu outbreak detected
Dec 05 2005, 15:04

(AP) - President Viktor Yushchenko arrived in Crimea on Dec. 5 to inspect efforts to contain a large outbreak of bird flu in the Black Sea region.

Yushchenko went immediately to Nekrasivka, one of the worst-infected villages, where all fowl were ordered destroyed. By the morning of Dec. 5, more than 1,350 fowl had been killed in that village.

Ukraine officially recorded its first case of bird flu type H5 on Dec. 3, and Yushchenko declared a state of emergency and quarantine on parts of the Crimean peninsula after more than 2,500 birds were found dead. It was the first appearance of bird flu in this ex-Soviet republic, which borders the European Union.

Samples from the dead birds have been sent to laboratories in Italy and Britain to determine whether the disease could be the deadly H5N1 strain, which is being monitored for fear it could mutate into a form that is easily transferable among humans. Results are expected by Dec. 8.

At least 68 people have died from the H5N1 bird flu virus since it emerged in Asia in 2003, and the deadly strain has been recorded in birds in Romania, Turkey, Croatia and Russia.

No human infections have been recorded in Ukraine, Health Ministry spokeswoman Anna Trubacheva said. Nineteen medical teams were to visit the five Crimean villages where the outbreak was registered. Some 901 people, including 150 children, who may have handled the sick birds are under medical observation, Trubacheva said.

Ukraine plans to give regular flu vaccinations to all 6,669 people who live in the five villages by Dec. 12.

Ukrainian officials acknowledged Dec. 3 that they had begun recording large numbers of dead birds in October, but only received positive confirmation of bird flu on Saturday. The center of the outbreak is Lake Sivash, a marshy region on the peninsula popular with migratory birds.

Ukrainian authorities began culling and burning fowl on Sunday. Television showed footage of emergency workers clad in white protective suits in village courtyards, as domestic fowl scrambled around them.

Viktor Baloga, minister of emergency situations, told regional officials that the situation was stabilizing and the cull should be complete by Dec. 7 morning, his office said.

Ukraine's Parliament said it would hold a special session Dec. 6 to discuss the bird flu outbreak. Speaker Volodymyr Lytyvn said the goal should be to gather information, "not to scare each other."

Most villagers in this rural nation keep domestic fowl, and government control over small, street markets where birds are sold has been patchy. So far, most of the human cases in Asia have been traced to contact with sick birds, but experts fear a mutation that could spread easily between humans.

Yushchenko initially had planned Dec. 5 to visit the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, site of the world's worst nuclear accident, to inspect continuing efforts to cope with the aftermath of the 1986 explosion. He changed his plans after the bird flu outbreak, his spokeswoman said.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
Perhaps rather than concentrating on a vaccine, they should work on a drug that would reduce the incidence of cytokine storm that makes the effects of the virus so severe.
 

Nuthatch

Inactive
marsh, I have a rudimentary understanding of that aspect, but isn't what you are referring to basically a weakening of the immune system? Wouldn't that compromise folks in regards to other diseases/issues for their health? Or were you hoping for one that reduces the immune response in a preventive way or as soon as the flu is detected in a person?
 

Nuthatch

Inactive
Ukraine leader orders top vet sacked over bird flu
05 Dec 2005 16:22:23 GMT

Source: Reuters

By Gleb Garanich

NEKRASOVKA, Ukraine, Dec 5 (Reuters) - President Viktor Yushchenko, angry over delays in reporting a virulent strain of bird flu, ordered the dismissal on Monday of Ukraine's top veterinarian officer.

Yushchenko was touring one of several villages in the Crimea peninsula where he ordered the imposition of emergency measures at the weekend following the discovery of a virus that killed more than 1,500 birds within hours.

But villagers have complained that their birds had been dying since September with officials taking no action.

"In the early stages, the local and central veterinary services proved unable to cope. As a result of this trip I am ordering the dismissal of the chief veterinarian ...," Yushchenko told reporters in Nekrasovka village.

"What happened in these villages is clearly a professional error of the veterinary service and it must accept responsibility."

Yushchenko also said he had asked the local government in the Crimea peninsula, an autonomous region jutting out into the Black Sea, to dismiss its top veterinary official.

Ukrainian troops were rounding up and destroying domestic fowl in five villages near Lake Sivash in Crimea, a major stopping point on migratory flight routes, after experts detected a bird flu strain identified so far as H5.

Chief veterinarian Petro Verbytsky, speaking at the weekend, said the strain was unlikely to harm humans, but samples have been sent to Britain for further tests.

The deadly H5N1 strain of avian flu has been found in birds in neighbouring Romania and Russia. H5N1 is endemic in poultry in parts of Asia where it has killed almost 70 people.

Experts fear the virus could mutate into a form which can be transmitted easily from person to person, sparking a pandemic in which millions of people could die.

POULTRY BAN

Verbytsky had offered to resign a month ago after being accused of inaction in keeping Ukraine free of bird flu.

Russia on Monday banned poultry imports from Ukraine. The European Union's Executive Commission said the 25-nation trading bloc was likely to impose a temporary ban on feather imports -- its only poultry-related import from the ex-Soviet state.

Yushchenko ordered the imposition of three-km (two mile) exclusion zones around the villages, patrolled by Interior Ministry troops, while the birds were incinerated with napalm left from the Soviet era and dumped in hastily dug pits.

Further 10-km monitoring zones were imposed around affected areas. The sale of privately-raised poultry was banned in Crimea, tough checks were ordered on farms and restrictions placed on the movement of livestock.

Residents received cash compensation for handing over birds. Doctors were vaccinating villagers against seasonal flu.

"Today, the issue is totally under control. All the birds are being destroyed and by Dec. 12 and all residents of these villages will be vaccinated," Yushchenko, accompanied by five members of the cabinet, told reporters.

"It can therefore be said that Ukraine dealt with problem in a very organised fashion."
 
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