04/21 | Daily BF: Suspected Bird Flu Infected Eggs Destroyed

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Link to yesterday's thread: http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?t=194243

Human Cases

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 Egypt
o Iraq

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

Updated April 3, 2006

Animal Cases

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

* Africa:
o Burkina Faso
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

* South Asia:
o Afghanistan
o India
o Kazakhstan
o Pakistan

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

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


For additional information about these reports, visit the
World Organization for Animal Health Web Site: http://www.oie.int/eng/en_index.htm

Updated April 7, 2006

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

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

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PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Nigeria

Wednesday 19th, April, 2006

Suspected Bird Flu Infected Eggs Destroyed In Bayelsa

By Emma Gbemudu

Correspondent, Yenagoa

One hundred and twenty three crates of eggs suspected to be infected with Avian Influenza otherwise known as Bird Flu have been confiscated at Igbogene, Yenagoa Local Government Area of Bayelsa State, by the state taskforce on the pandemic.

The crates of eggs valued at over N95,000 and brought into the state by a poultry dealer, was immediately destroyed by the taskforce officials at the formal launch of the group during a stop-and-search on vehicles for live birds and other poultry products.

Speaking at the launch, the Commissioner for Health, Frank Akpoebi, said the action was to prevent entry of uncertified birds and products into the state.

The commissioner, who is also chairman of the taskforce, disclosed that the assignment was not aimed at halting inflow of poultry and its byproducts, rather it was to ascertain that such products are duly certified safe and free from the disease.

He appealed to transporters to cooperate with the team in its duties to save the inhabitants from being infected.

The commissioner also directed poultry dealers to clear with the Ministry of Agriculture by presenting authenticated certificate of credibility to enable them convey birds and products from farms that are free from infection.

Earlier, the Commissioner for Agriculture and Natural Resources, Gilbert Adeh, noted that control of influx of poultry products into the state was imperative due to the prevalence of the bird disease in some states of the federation.

Adeh urged residents to assist the taskforce to check the spread of the disease into the state by informing on transporters who bring in poultry illegally.

http://www.independentng.com/nigerdelta/ndapr190601.htm

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PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Sudan

News Article by AP posted on April 20, 2006 at 20:25:50: EST (-5 GMT)

United Nations sends team of experts to Sudan to fight bird flu

KHARTOUM, Sudan (AP) -- The United Nations has sent a team of experts to Sudan to fight an outbreak of bird flu in the country, a U.N. official said Wednesday.

Scientists and technicians from the World Health Organization and the Food and Agriculture Organization had already begun working in the capital, Khartoum, Jan Pronk, the representative for the U.N. Secretary General in Sudan, told reporters.

The announcement came a day after Sudanese authorities confirmed that the H5N1 strain of avian influenza, which can be deadly to humans, had been detected in Khartoum and in central Sudan.

Authorities had previously said the owner of a poultry farm was being treated for the disease at a hospital intensive care unit. But the Health Ministry said in a statement on Wednesday that "after thorough investigation, the only suspected case of bird flu has turned out to be negative." There were no other suspected cases of human infection, the ministry said.

Five large poultry farms were destroyed north of the capital, and tens of thousands of birds have been killed, authorities said.

One egg merchant in the capital, Hassab Al Rasoul, said people had stopped buying his products, even at discounted prices.

"We are hurt and would like the media to help us explain that boiled egg is not harmful," he complained Wednesday on a live broadcast on national television.

In neighboring Egypt, four people have died of bird flu in recent weeks. The H5N1 strain of bird flu has been confirmed in several African countries including Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon and Burkina Faso.

The WHO has reported 190 human cases of bird flu worldwide -- more than 100 of them fatal -- and the strain has forced the slaughter of millions of birds as the disease has spread from Asia to Europe, Africa and the Middle East.

http://www.sudan.net/news/posted/12807.html

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PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Executive Order: Amendment to E.O. 13295

Executive Order: Amendment to E.O. 13295 Relating to Certain Influenza Viruses and Quarantinable Communicable Diseases

By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, including section 361(b) of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 264(b)), it is hereby ordered as follows:

Section 1. Based upon the recommendation of the Secretary of Health and Human Services, in consultation with the Surgeon General, and for the purpose set forth in section 1 of Executive Order 13295 of April 4, 2003, section 1 of such order is amended by adding at the end thereof the following new subsection:

"(c) Influenza caused by novel or reemergent influenza viruses that are causing, or have the potential to cause, a pandemic.".

Sec. 2. This order is not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any party against the United States, its departments, agencies, entities, officers, employees or agents, or any other person.

GEORGE W. BUSH

THE WHITE HOUSE,

April 1, 2005.

http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2005/04/print/20050401-6.html

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PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Quarantine

Questions and Answers on the Executive Order Adding Potentially Pandemic Influenza Viruses to the List of Quarantinable Diseases


* Q.1. What is CDC’s quarantine authority?
* Q.2. Why is an Executive Order necessary?
* Q.3. What does the Executive Order accomplish?
* Q.4. Were any other diseases added to the list?
* Q.5. Have other countries taken similar steps?
* Q.6. When was this quarantine power last used?
* Q.7. What is the difference between isolation and quarantine?
* Q.8. When does CDC intend to use these quarantine powers?
* Q.9. What is the difference between pandemic influenza and annual seasonal influenza?
* Q.10. How would quarantine for pandemic influenza be implemented?
* Q.11. How long would a person exposed to pandemic influenza be quarantined?
* Q.12. Why is this Executive Order important now?

Q.1. What is CDC’s quarantine authority?

A.1. Title 42 United States Code Section 264 (Section 361 of the Public Health Service [PHS] Act) gives the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) responsibility for preventing the introduction, transmission, and spread of communicable diseases from foreign countries into the United States and within the United States and its territories/possessions. This statute is implemented through regulations found at 42 CFR Parts 70 and 71. Under its delegated authority, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is empowered to detain, medically examine, or conditionally release individuals reasonably believed to be carrying a communicable disease.



Q.2. Why is an Executive Order necessary?

A.2. Under the procedures required under the PHS Act, the list of diseases for which quarantine is authorized must first be specified in an Executive Order of the President, on recommendation of the HHS Secretary. By amending the list to include types of influenza that either cause or have the potential to cause a pandemic, HHS is simply taking the pragmatic step of readying all options as it monitors the emergence of these viruses and makes plans to prevent their spread.



Q.3. What does the Executive Order accomplish?

A.3. In the event a passenger infected with a novel influenza strain were to arrive in the United States on board an international conveyance (e.g., boat, airplane), the Executive Order provides HHS with clear legal authority to isolate an ill passenger to prevent the passenger from infecting others. This authority would be used only if someone posed a threat to public health and refused to cooperate with a voluntary request.



Q.4. Were any other diseases added to the list?

A.4. No, this Executive Order added only influenza viruses that cause or have the potential to cause a pandemic to the list of communicable diseases for which quarantine is authorized. SARS was added to the list of quarantinable diseases by Executive Order in 2003. The other diseases (Cholera; Diphtheria; infectious Tuberculosis; Plague; Smallpox; Yellow fever; and Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers) have been on the list since 1983.


Q.5. Have other countries taken similar steps?

A.5. Some countries have quarantine authority that covers any public health emergency and therefore includes the types of influenza covered by this Executive Order.


Q.6. When was this quarantine power last used?

A.6. Quarantine and isolation tools were last used by state health departments during the SARS 2003 outbreak. Most of this use was on a voluntary basis and affected small numbers of persons. CDC occasionally detains incoming conveyances temporarily and interviews passengers for health reasons.


Q.7. What is the difference between isolation and quarantine?

A.7. Isolation refers to the separation of persons who have a specific infectious illness from those who are healthy and the restriction of their movement to stop the spread of that illness. Quarantine refers to the separation and restriction of movement of persons who, while not yet ill, have been exposed to an infectious agent and therefore may become infectious. Both isolation and quarantine are public health strategies that have proven effective in stopping the spread of infectious diseases.



Q.8. When does CDC intend to use these quarantine powers?

A.8. In general, CDC defers to the state and local health authorities in their primary use of their own separate quarantine powers. Based upon long experience and collaborative working relationships with our state and local partners, CDC continues to anticipate the need to use this federal authority to quarantine an exposed person only in rare situations, such as events at ports of entry or in similar time-sensitive settings.



Q.9. What is the difference between pandemic influenza and annual seasonal influenza?

A.9. An influenza pandemic is a global outbreak of disease that occurs when a new influenza A virus appears or “emerges” in the human population, causes serious illness, and then spreads easily from person to person worldwide. Pandemics are different from seasonal outbreaks or “epidemics” of influenza. Seasonal outbreaks are caused by subtypes of influenza viruses that are already in existence among people, whereas pandemic outbreaks are caused by new subtypes or by subtypes that have never circulated (spread) among people or that have not circulated among people for a long time. Past influenza pandemics have led to high levels of illness, death, social disruption, and economic loss.



Q.10. How would quarantine for pandemic influenza be implemented?

A.10. In general, CDC defers to the state and local health authorities in the primary use of their own separate quarantine powers. Implementation of quarantine may depend on individual state and local health authorities as well as the characteristics (e.g., how widespread, who is affected) of the outbreak. However, in providing guidance to state and local health departments and other partners, CDC would most likely recommend voluntary home quarantine when possible, with exposed persons checking themselves for fever and reporting early symptoms to public health authorities. Antiviral drugs may be recommended in some situations.



Q.11. How long would a person exposed to pandemic influenza be quarantined?

A.11. Quarantine of a person exposed to pandemic influenza would last for one incubation period. For annual influenza, the incubation period usually is as long as 4 days; however, this period could be different for a new type of influenza virus.



Q.12. Why is this Executive Order important now?

A.12. The avian (bird) influenza virus in Asia (H5N1) does not usually infect humans. In 1997, however, the first case of spread from a bird to a human was seen during an outbreak of bird flu in poultry in Hong Kong. The virus caused severe respiratory illness in 18 people, 6 of whom died. Since that time, there have been other cases of H5N1 infection among humans. Most recently, human cases of H5N1 infection have occurred in Thailand and Vietnam during large H5N1 outbreaks in poultry. The death rate for these reported cases has been about 70 percent. Most of these cases occurred from contact with infected poultry or contaminated surfaces; however, it is thought that a few cases of human-to-human spread of H5N1 have occurred.

So far, spread of the avian (bird) influenza virus (H5N1) from person to person has been rare, and spread has not continued beyond one person. However, because all influenza viruses have the ability to change, scientists are concerned that the H5N1 virus could one day be able to infect humans and spread easily from one person to another. Because these viruses do not commonly infect humans, there is little or no immune protection against them in the human population. If the H5N1 virus were able to infect people and spread easily from person to person, an “influenza pandemic” (worldwide outbreak of disease) could begin. No one can predict when a pandemic might occur. However, experts from around the world are watching the H5N1 situation in Asia very closely and are preparing for the possibility that the virus may begin to spread more easily and widely from person to person.

Given these conditions, HHS has recommended that influenza caused bynew or re-emerging influenza viruses that are either 1) causing a pandemic or 2) are not in global circulation among humans and have the potential to cause pandemics should be added to the list of communicable diseases for which apprehension, isolation, detention, or conditional release are authorized. This recommendation is based not on intent to impose any quarantine restrictions right now, but rather so that the United States is prepared to respond efficiently and effectively in case of an emergency outbreak situation caused by these influenza viruses, which pose a real threat of global pandemic.

http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dq/qa_influenza_amendment_to_eo_13295.htm

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Kim99

Veteran Member
US to Allow Chinese Processed Poultry Imports

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060420/...hina_poultry_1

WASHINGTON - Poultry processed in China will be allowed to enter the United States despite outbreaks of deadly bird flu in China, the Bush administration said Thursday.

Critics said the imported poultry will put public health at risk. The Agriculture Department said the meat would be fully cooked and perfectly safe.

"It will have been processed," said Richard Raymond, the department's undersecretary for food safety. "Cooking will kill the virus, if there is any virus, in poultry meat."

The U.S. does not accept live poultry from countries where the virulent flu strain is present. That policy has not changed.

The poultry would be raised and slaughtered in the U.S. or other countries from which the U.S. accepts poultry. It would be fully cooked and packaged or canned in China. Imports will be allowed beginning May 24.

Critics say the U.S. cannot guarantee that Chinese processing facilities will keep Chinese poultry from mixing with U.S. poultry.

"It's not clear to me the two will be effectively kept separate," said Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin (news, bio, voting record), the top Democrat on the Senate Agriculture Committee.

Rep. Rosa DeLauro (news, bio, voting record), D-Conn., said the imports are dangerous.

"It is an outrage that the U.S. is going to open our borders to imports of poultry from China — a country that lacks the fundamental safety functions in its processing plants, has questionable export practices, and a country where a deadly animal disease and possible pandemic is running rampant," said DeLauro, top Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee's agriculture subcommittee.
--snip--
 

New Freedom

Veteran Member
Kim99 said:
US to Allow Chinese Processed Poultry Imports

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060420/...hina_poultry_1

WASHINGTON - Poultry processed in China will be allowed to enter the United States despite outbreaks of deadly bird flu in China, the Bush administration said Thursday.

Critics said the imported poultry will put public health at risk. The Agriculture Department said the meat would be fully cooked and perfectly safe.

"It will have been processed," said Richard Raymond, the department's undersecretary for food safety. "Cooking will kill the virus, if there is any virus, in poultry meat."

The U.S. does not accept live poultry from countries where the virulent flu strain is present. That policy has not changed.

The poultry would be raised and slaughtered in the U.S. or other countries from which the U.S. accepts poultry. It would be fully cooked and packaged or canned in China. Imports will be allowed beginning May 24.

Critics say the U.S. cannot guarantee that Chinese processing facilities will keep Chinese poultry from mixing with U.S. poultry.

"It's not clear to me the two will be effectively kept separate," said Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin (news, bio, voting record), the top Democrat on the Senate Agriculture Committee.

Rep. Rosa DeLauro (news, bio, voting record), D-Conn., said the imports are dangerous.

"It is an outrage that the U.S. is going to open our borders to imports of poultry from China — a country that lacks the fundamental safety functions in its processing plants, has questionable export practices, and a country where a deadly animal dise
ase and possible pandemic is running rampant," said DeLauro, top Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee's agriculture subcommittee.
--snip--


Good catch Kim99...........but bad news.....this just doesn't make any sense!
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
France

France Registers Two New Bird Flu Cases

21 April 2006 | 14:17 | FOCUS News Agency

Paris. Two new cases of the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu virus were found in dead wild swans in eastern France, AFP reported citing the Ministry of Agriculture.

Since the beginning of the year, 64 wild fowls infected with H5N1 have been found in France. There are no cases of people infected with the disease in the country.

http://www.focus-fen.net/index.php?catid=135&newsid=86881&ch=0&datte=2006-04-21

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hillbilly

Membership Revoked
bull sh?t the eggs are sterile more head games
they going to starve us into their NWO total control

i heard g bush's very own voice say if he could make a depression like 1929 they would own all the farm land looks like it starting :dstrs: we are in trouble folks
 

JPD

Inactive
Delmarva poultry experts:
USDA avian flu plan is appalling


http://www.capegazette.com/storiescurrent/0406/avianflu042106.html

Delmarva poultry industry is way ahead of the Department of Agriculture
By Molly Albertson
Cape Gazette staff

Delmarva’s poultry industry is leading the world in depopulation.

Destroying an entire flock of birds, called depopulation, is necessary when the birds are infected with a virus, such as avian flu, to prevent further spreading.

So when the USDA proposed processes that are decades old, the Delmarva poultry industry rolls its eyes, and continues on its own path.

“This plan is appalling,” said Bill Satterfield, Delmarva Poultry Industry executive director. He objected to the plan’s recommendation of depopulating and disposing of carcasses.

The Delmarva poultry industry uses a high-tech method that involves chemical polymers similar to the foam used to extinguish fires.

Local industry is also leading the nation in its efforts of disposal of the dead flocks and cleaning the chicken houses once the birds are removed. The USDA suggests burying the carcasses or setting them on fire.

But Delmarva poultry experts say that increases the risk of viruses spreading because the carcasses get loaded into a truck and driven to a burial site.

The virus can also get into the groundwater.

Instead, local experts use a process of composting waste and carcasses at high heats, killing the heat-sensitive avian virus as well as disposing of the bodies.

The Delmarva poultry industry designed and instituted an effective procedure for dealing with outbreaks when a virus struck two years ago in several Delaware farms.

The long USDA handbook on how to handle an outbreak is antiquated, according to a group of Delmarva veterinarians and agriculture experts.

The book is useless to the local industry, Satterfield said. But other states are counting on it.

“I don’t believe it’s too late as long as the USDA listens to what we’ve said and written about failures in their plan,” said Michael Scuse, Delaware Secretary of Agriculture.

A roundtable event was originally designed so Congressman Mike Castle could help Delmarva prepare, but after comments from experts, Castle recognized Delmarva is well beyond federal prevention regulations, which need to be updated.

“I’m going to take a run at it and try to change this,” Castle said

Local experts don’t even agree that Delmarva will see the flu in birds.

Nine out of 10 industry experts who attended the roundtable said U.S. birds would get the flu and one was certain it would not spread.

The group agreed that good procedures can stop avian flu from spreading to commercial flocks if it does spring up in migratory birds, which some say will happen as early as this summer.

Rapid Response is also a major issue in the case of an outbreak.

“Being able to remove the red tape to respond in a clear, coordinated, and cohesive fashion, including access to adequate personnel and supplies is imperative,” said Dr. Robin Morgan, dean of the College of Agriculture & Natural Resources at University of Delaware.

Experts said surveillance is the only way to prevent a major outbreak in commercial flocks.

Monitoring, identifying, and isolating the potential outbreaks in migratory birds, backyard flocks, live bird markets, and the commercial poultry industry is necessary.

Beyond prevention and handling an outbreak, public education is also needed.

The USDA, state and local government has to ensure consumers on the safety of the commercial poultry industry, Satterfield said.

Morgan said poultry sales are down in other countries that have avian flu in wild birds, such as France. But eating poultry is not dangerous, she said.

“We can’t scare people,” Morgan said.

Castle said he will communicate recommendations to the federal government, “so the national response plan can be strengthened to focus more on prevention and containment at the agricultural level before avian flu becomes a human health problem.”
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Egypt

Four bird flu deaths in Egypt

April 21, 2006

THE World Health Organisation (WHO) confirmed today that there have been 12 human cases of bird flu in Egypt, four of them fatal.

This took the global total to 113 deaths out of 204 cases since 2003, the United Nations agency said. Egyptian officials had previously announced all 12 cases, including the fourth fatality, an 18-year-old girl from a province north of Cairo who died a week ago.

The WHO said one of its collaborating laboratories in Britain had now "fully validated" the test results obtained in Egypt.

The highly pathogenic H5N1 virus was detected in birds in Egypt in February and the first human infection was reported in mid-March. All four victims have been women, who are often responsible for slaughtering and cooking domestic poultry.

"Of the 12 cases in Egypt, four patients have died and one remains hospitalised in stable condition,"
the WHO said.

The remaining seven patients had fully recovered, it added.

http://www.dailytelegraph.news.com.au/story/0,20281,18889881-5001028,00.html

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New Freedom

Veteran Member
http://www.thestandard.com.hk/news_detail.asp?pp_cat=11&art_id=16929&sid=7570224&con_type=1


Alert as risk of avian flu rises in SAR


Chester Yung

Thursday, April 20, 2006

In an attempt to defuse a threatened boycott of chicken sales today, the government has urged traders to consider the public interest and warned that the threat of an avian influenza outbreak has grown.

Vendors had earlier announced they will boycott today's sales at the Cheung Sha Wan wholesale market in a bid to push the government to increase the number of live chickens that can be imported from the mainland.

Currently, only 20,000 birds are brought in each day, compared with 30,000 before supplies were temporarily cut off following an avian flu outbreak in Guangdong.

Hong Kong Poultry Wholesalers and Retailers Association chairman Steven Wong Wai-chuen said about 400 chicken sellers will take part in the boycott.

Wong said that the cutback in imports has pushed up the price of chicken and that this, in turn, is affecting sales.

"The wholesale price has been doubled from HK$7 per catty to more than HK$15. I expect it will go beyond HK$20," Wong said, adding that poultry traders are also planning a rally next Tuesday and are threatening to use lorries to block roads in Central.

However, Health, Welfare and Food Bureau deputy secretary Eddy Chan Yuk-tak Wednesday asked the traders not to take radical action and to instead consider "the interest of the public and the citizens" from a public health perspective.

"We expect them to understand that there was a fresh case [of bird flu] in the mainland recently and that the risk of an outbreak has not diminished," Chan said. "We need to be very careful in considering the number of imported chickens."

On Tuesday, Xinhua News Agency reported that a 21-year-old man in Central China's Hubei province had been infected with the H5N1 avian flu virus and is now in a critical condition. The man, surnamed Lai, is a migrant worker in Wuhan, capital of Hubei.

He developed fever and was suffering from pneumonia when admitted to hospital on April 1, the Health Ministry said.

Lai brings to 17 the total number of human cases of bird flu reported in China, 11 of whom have died.

Hong Kong University microbiology professor Yuen Kwok-yung said it is possible that the latest mainland victim may have contracted the virus through - what he called- casual contact.

Yuen said it is possible for people to catch the virus just by walking through a wet market near seemingly healthy chickens.

Scientists and health officials fear that avian influenza - which has already killed more than 70 people in Asia since 2003 - may mutate into a form that can be transmitted between humans - a development they fear could trigger a pandemic that could kill millions of people.

Meanwhile, ministers from the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation group will meet in Vietnam May 4-6 to coordinate measures that will be put into effect should there be an outbreak of avian or other influenza pandemics.

" The H5N1 avian influenza virus is the greatest known emerging infectious disease threat currently facing the global community" said Cao Duc Phat, Vietnam's minister for Agricultural and Rural Development, adding that it had the potential to kill an unimaginable number of people and cause enormous economic damage.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Poll: Americans doubt U.S. bird flu plans

Updated 4/21/2006 11:33 AM ET

WASHINGTON (AP) — Only half of Americans are confident their government will deal effectively with the bird flu if it reaches the U.S., and they want strong steps including human quarantine and closed schools if there's an outbreak in the population, according to a poll.

The AP-Ipsos survey, out Friday, found widespread expectation that birds will become infected in this country in the next year, as the government predicts. One third worry someone in their family will get it.

The virulent strain of bird flu spreading through Asia, Europe and Africa has killed 110 people, and more than 200 million birds have died from the disease or been slaughtered in efforts to contain it. Scientists fear it could mutate into a form that spreads more easily among people.

The U.S. government is stepping up inspection of migratory wild birds and poultry companies are testing nearly every flock for the first signs the virus has come. Federal officials have expressed confidence that they can keep the virus out of the human food chain if domestic flocks become infected.

Americans aren't so sure. In the poll, 52% said they were not confident the government would handle an outbreak properly; 48% were confident. Almost two-thirds expect U.S. birds to become infected.

Fear is likely to spread if the virus is detected in the United States: Half of the people questioned said they thought the bird flu would kill them if they got it.

The survey found strong majorities in favor of these steps to contain any outbreak among humans: quarantining those who have been exposed to the bird flu, closing the borders to visitors from countries that have experienced the flu, closing schools, offering experimental vaccines or drugs, and encouraging people to work from home.

The poll of 1,001 adults was conducted Tuesday to Thursday with a margin of sampling error of plus or minus three percentage points.

http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2006-04-21-bird-flu-poll_x.htm

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New Freedom

Veteran Member
http://www.boston.com/yourlife/heal..._warn_flu_drug_may_lose_efficacy_in_pandemic/

Studies warn flu drug may lose efficacy in pandemic


By John Lauerman, Bloomberg News | April 21, 2006

NEW YORK -- Widespread use of Roche Holding AG's Tamiflu and other antivirals to stem a flu pandemic will lead to the emergence of strains that resist the drugs' effects, researchers said in a commentary in the journal Science.

More studies are needed to understand the impact of drug-resistant strains in a widespread human outbreak, said Sebastian Bonhoeffer, who cowrote the commentary to be published today. The threat of a lethal pandemic also demands answers to other questions related to the flu's spread in people and birds, researchers said in separate commentaries.

The World Health Organization in Geneva and governments around the world are building stockpiles of antivirals such as Tamiflu and Relenza to fight a feared worldwide outbreak in humans of a virus spreading now in birds. Heavy use of other flu drugs, called amantadine and rimantadine, led to resistant strains before, said Bonhoeffer, a theoretical biologist at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich.

''We could end up with the same problem all over again" with Tamiflu and Relenza, he said. ''If you look at antinfectives used to treat malaria, HIV, viral hepatitis, it's often the case that when drugs are used heavily, resistance emerges and resistant strains become transmissible."

Researchers are monitoring a strain of avian influenza called H5N1 that has spread from Asia to Africa, the Middle East, and Europe. The virus has infected 196 people, mainly through close contact with domestic poultry, and killed 110 of them, according to the WHO.

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention noted in March that sales of Tamiflu surged 66 percent in New York in October, with almost 1,000 prescriptions filled weekly.
 

JPD

Inactive
New outbreak of deadly bird flu in Pakistan


http://www.thedailystar.net/2006/04/22/d60422014027.htm

Afp, Islamabad

Pakistani authorities yesterday confirmed a new outbreak of deadly H5N1 bird flu at a chicken farm, the country's fourth, and destroyed at least 10,000 birds at five more suspect sites.

Test results confirmed earlier suspicions that the virus was present at a farm in Tarlai, a village on the outskirts of the capital Islamabad, said a spokesman for the Food, Agriculture and Livestock Ministry.

"The farm was infected with H5N1 virus and we have already culled 15,000 birds there and taken all protective measures," the spokesman, Mohammad Afzal, told AFP.

Authorities took samples at over two dozen nearby farms at Tarlai and found another five that are suspected of having H5N1.

"Our veterinary staff have destroyed chickens at five more farms, each having 2,000 to 3,000 birds, as we suspected they were also infected with the deadly virus," Afzal said.

Pakistan Sunday confirmed an H5N1 outbreak at another chicken farm near Islamabad.

Its first two bird flu cases were confirmed last month at two chicken farms in North West Frontier Province bordering Afghanistan.

No human cases have yet been reported.

The H5N1 strain has killed about 100 people in seven countries since 2003. Scientists fear a global pandemic if the virus mutates and becomes easily transmissible between humans.
 

JPD

Inactive
Human burd flu cases top 200


http://www.eecho.ie/news/bstory.asp?j=77103318&p=77yx36zx&n=77103698

21/04/2006 - 18:18:04

The number of people worldwide who have been infected with the deadly H5N1 strain bird flu since 2003 has risen above 200, the UN health agency said today.

The World Health Organisation said the total number of confirmed human infections since the current outbreak began has reached 204, adding eight people who previously tested positive for the disease in Egypt.

WHO raised to 113 its official death toll from H5N1, adding two Egyptians and a Chinese man whose deaths already had been announced by national authorities. Virtually all the individuals were exposed to the disease in poultry.

The health agency’s tally has generally lagged behind reports in individual countries because it had waited for further confirmation on samples sent to its partner laboratories.

WHO spokeswoman Maria Cheng said the agency has changed that policy and will now accept results from approved national laboratories.

In some cases long delays occurred because health officials in some countries were unable to arrange acceptable shipping of samples to reference labs.

The eight new cases occurred in Egypt and all were verified only in the country, Cheng said.

“The new guideline is that the initial cases of an outbreak of H5N1 should be tested in an external lab or have verification done on site – as long as one or the other is available,” Cheng said.

“We had two teams that went to Egypt and they verified that the laboratories there do have the ability to make an H5N1 diagnosis.”

Egypt’s Health Ministry considers a case confirmed after tests come back positive for H5N1 from either the country’s national public health laboratory or the US Naval Medical Research Unit 3 (NAMRU-3).

There have been 12 confirmed human cases of H5N1 in Egypt, four of them fatal, WHO said. The virus has infected 17 people, killing 12, in China since last year, according to the agency’s figures.



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Fuzzychick

Membership Revoked
If you put together today's news from Kim99, PCV, JPD and NewFreedom it equals the not so unexpected that we are effectively screwed when it goes H2H, sidebar watch Alaska and Seattle when the migration begins:shkr:
 

JPD

Inactive
Vet dies of suspected bird flu


http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/1499663.cms

MUMBAI: Aday after the death of an Akola-based 50-year-old veterinary surgeon, the public health department has sent the samples of his organs to the Pune-based National Institute of Virology (NIV) to determine if he was suffering from bird flu.

Following the outbreak of avian influenza (H5N1) in several areas of Maharashtra, the vet was deployed at Jalgaon to supervise the massive culling operations on March 29. He was relieved on April 4 and subsequently resumed duty in Akola. However, a week later, he complained of high fever and giddiness.

Since he had worked in the bird flu-affected areas of northern Maharashtra, he was immediately admitted to the intensive care unit of the civil hospital, where he succumbed to his illness onWednesday.

His death has created panic in the entire veterinary fraternity, prompting many veterinary officers to abandon duty in the bird flu-affected areas.

Public health secretary Vijay Satbir Singh confirmed that since doubts were raised about the cause of death, samples of the vet’s lung tissue had been sent to the NIV.

"We are awaiting the report from the NIV. We are monitoring the investigations.

But in my opinion, it wasn’t a case of bird flu, since he had absolutely no symptoms of bird flu," Singh told TOI.
 

JPD

Inactive
What’s really scary about bird flu


http://msnbc.msn.com/id/12411469/

Government botched vaccine planning even for the ordinary flu season

By Arthur Caplan, Ph.D.
MSNBC contributor
Updated: 4:36 p.m. ET April 21, 2006

We are being told not to worry about bird flu, that our politicians are right on top of the situation and know just what to do if the first human-to-human transmission of bird flu happens.

Oh, really?

Let’s take a look at their track record in this area. Back in the fall of 2004 when the vaccine against ordinary, mundane, plain-old nasty winter flu was in very short supply, this same group in the White House and Congress performed miserably.

That was a warning shot. But no one in Washington seems to have heard it, and that’s what is truly scary about the threat of a bird flu pandemic.

Here’s a reminder how the flu vaccine shortage played out: As this nation geared up to face the annual challenge of the flu, a disease that kills about 35,000 Americans every year and hospitalizes 200,000 more, Chiron Corp. announced that the British government had shut down its vaccine production plant in Liverpool, England.

Tommy Thompson, then head of Health and Human Services, stated in October 2004, that the U.S. government would make sure that the scarce supply of flu shots “reaches those who are most vulnerable.” This meant rationing vaccines so that those over 65, pregnant women, children under age 2, health care workers and those with serious health problems could get vaccinated first. Shortly thereafter, all hell broke loose.

Questions and answers about avian influenza
By January 2005 many people in these high-risk groups still had not gotten a flu shot. Instead, college kids were getting vaccinated at their student health services. People were lying about their health to get a shot. Hundreds lined up at Wal-Mart and other locations where everyone who showed up got vaccinated. Doctors gave shots to their favorite patients. Some hospitals simply vaccinated everyone on the premises; others hoarded their supply, refusing to share with other hospitals and clinics.

Rhetoric about the orderly and carefully thought-out rationing of a scarce life-saving resource — flu vaccine — turned into a cacophony of cheating, hoarding, lying and selfishness.

Plus, it was never clear who exactly had the authority to enforce rules about rationing — the CDC, the White House, governors, state health departments or mayors?

So what do we face should there be a pandemic of avian flu? Initially, there would be a couple of months of relying on existing flu vaccines (still in short supply) and anti-viral medicines (also in somewhat short supply) without really knowing if they would do anyone much good. We also might need a lot of hospital beds and ventilators to support those who get sick. But not much discussion has gone on to tell us how these supplies would be rationed.

Later, as scientists and vaccine companies began to figure out how to make vaccines that will work against whatever strain of avian flu is killing people, we would still face shortages. Who gets vaccinated first, and why? Do you know? I don’t, either.

But that is the point. We need transparent and understandable discussion of what the rules for rationing are going to be if the worst-case scenario occurs.

The antidote to hoarding, cheating, lying, confusion and selfishness is clear-cut policies that each of us understands. We also need to know who has the authority to enforce the rules and how they will do so.

The recent experience with flu vaccine was not promising. Your politicians should do more than promise things will go better the next time. They need to stop promising and start acting.
 

JPD

Inactive
Update 2: Poll Shows Fear of Bird Flu Widespread


http://www.forbes.com/work/feeds/ap/2006/04/21/ap2688003.html

By CALVIN WOODWARD , 04.21.2006, 04:02 PM

Their expectations shaken by Katrina, Americans are divided over whether the government is likely to do a good job handling the bird flu if it reaches the U.S., a poll finds. People want a resolute response that includes quarantines if Americans do become infected.P

The AP-Ipsos survey, out Friday, found widespread belief that birds will become infected in this country in the next year, as the government has predicted. One-third worry someone in their family will get the bird flu.

Fear is certain to spread if the virus is found in the United States: Half of the people questioned said they thought the bird flu would kill them if they contracted it. Among the most concerned: women, older people, minorities, poorer people and the less educated.

The actual chances of death from the virulent strain of the bird flu spreading through Asia, Europe and Africa are not known, mainly because there is no way to tell how many contract the virus. It's possible some who get it recover without the virus even being detected.

Among the 204 known cases so far overseas since 2003, 113 people have died, according to new World Health Organization figures Friday.

The poll found only one in 10 people has prepared for an outbreak in any way despite federal recommendations that Americans make contingency plans to work from home, to deal with school closings and put away at least modest amounts of food and water for any emergency.

Overall, more than 200 million birds have died from the disease or been slaughtered in efforts to contain it.

Right now, the danger comes from handling sick chickens, not from eating properly cooked poultry. The health concern is that the strain will mutate so it can be easily spread among people. This is considered most likely to happen in Asia and be carried from there by travelers.

The U.S. government is stepping up inspection of migratory wild birds, and poultry companies are testing nearly every flock for the first signs of the virus.

Americans are far from reassured that if an outbreak among humans happens, the government can control it.

In the poll, 52 percent said they were not confident the government would handle an outbreak among humans properly; 48 percent were confident. About six in 10 expect U.S. birds to become infected.

"I saw what happened to the Hurricane Katrina people," said Stephen Barbas, a 61-year-old food distributor in Rochester, N.Y., who rated his confidence in the government as "not good" when it comes to the bird flu.

As one who delivers food to hospitals, nursing homes and schools, he is sensitive to the risks of the virus and says, "I've been getting ahead on stocking up the freezer."

In Cle Elum, Wash., Katia Merkel, 42, is less worried about an outbreak but no more convinced federal officials will be up to the task. "Everyone has been talking about the hurricane response to Katrina - don't think it was timely or appropriate," she said. "Lots of government officials are burying their heads in the sand."

The poll findings are consistent with others indicating a diminished faith in the government's ability to deal with emergencies. In an AP-Ipsos poll in February, measuring public opinion fallout from the last hurricane season, 52 percent said they were not confident about the government's ability to handle a future disaster; 47 percent were confident.

The new survey found strong majorities in favor of all options presented to them to contain any outbreak among humans.

These were: quarantining those who have been exposed to the bird flu, closing the borders to visitors from countries that have experienced the flu, closing schools, offering experimental vaccines or drugs, and encouraging people to work from home.

No proven vaccine can be developed until the bird flu starts spreading from person to person, revealing the exact H5N1 strain that must be fought. Brewing a precise match would take months; the government is slowly stockpiling doses of vaccine against an earlier H5N1 strain that might buy some time.

Most people in the poll realized they can't depend on the regular winter flu vaccine to protect them from the bird flu.

Lisa Crisson, 40, a Republican consultant who lives in Virginia Beach, Va., near the waterfowl-rich reaches of Chesapeake Bay, worries about "another hit to the food supply" in an era of periodic shellfish concerns as well as mad cow disease. (The U.S. has had three cases of mad cow disease in cattle.)

She worries, too, about her three cats getting bird flu. Authorities overseas have reported several cases of house cats and wild cats getting the virus from eating an infected bird, but little is known about the risk of that happening on a larger scale.

In Sanford, Fla., Kim Medlong, 53, has taken the prospect of bird flu seriously, especially since he heard that President Bush was reading a book about the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic that killed millions. "That put a real exclamation point on it," he said.

Medlong planted 18 varieties of fruits and vegetables in his backyard and stockpiled medicine and water in case of bird flu or the usual Florida curse. "If not the bird flu, then the hurricanes," he said.

The poll of 1,001 adults was conducted Tuesday to Thursday with a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.
 

JPD

Inactive
How long can Tamiflu hold out against bird flu?


http://www.swissinfo.org/eng/front/...l?siteSect=105&sid=6648892&cKey=1145646356000

A Swiss study predicts that the deadly bird flu virus will develop resistance to new anti-viral drugs, if a pandemic breaks out.

The mathematical model used by researchers at Zurich's Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) to plot the likely course of an outbreak showed that resistance is more likely if drugs are used as prophylactics.



The study, commissioned by the respected journal, Science, used data from previous influenza outbreaks combined with recent information about bird flu and the results of clinical trials on resistance to so-called neuraminidase inhibitor drugs such as Tamiflu, made by Switzerland's Roche.

The model then calculated the likely consequences of a hypothetical bird flu outbreak in a school containing 500 people.

The programme was repeated to theorise how the virus would spread if the victims were only treated once they showed symptoms compared to people who had also taken drugs as a prophylactic.

The results showed that the virus displayed a greater resistance to Tamiflu when it had been used as a first line of defence as well as a treatment, according to study author professor Sebastian Bonhoeffer of ETH.


Resistance



"If you are going to use neuraminidase inhibitors such as Tamiflu as a prophylactic then, in my view, the inevitable consequence will be the likelihood of a faster emergence of resistance," he said.

"Reviewing the [medical] literature we had the feeling that a considerable fraction of the medical community hoped that with neuraminidase inhibitors the situation would be different."

But Bonhoeffer warned against using the results of the study to draw too many conclusions.

"This should not be interpreted that they should not be used as a prophylactic because they are the only first line of defence in the absence of a vaccine," he said.

"By using neuraminidase inhibitors as a first line of defence, hopefully resistance will not happen too fast, buying enough time to develop a vaccine."


Mutated



Bonhoeffer also conceded that it is so far unknown how effective mutated forms of the virus could be at transmitting from one person to another.

The World Health Organization played down the report, saying more research needs to be done to obtain a clear picture.

"This is a mathematical model that is not based on real life experience," said spokeswoman Maria Cheng.

"We have never said Tamiflu is a silver bullet. We do not recommend its widespread use as past evidence shows that the general distribution of medicaments among populations increases the chance of resistance."

swissinfo, Matthew Allen in Zurich
 

dreamseeer

Membership Revoked
Kim99 said:
US to Allow Chinese Processed Poultry Imports

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060420/...hina_poultry_1

WASHINGTON - Poultry processed in China will be allowed to enter the United States despite outbreaks of deadly bird flu in China, the Bush administration said Thursday.

Critics said the imported poultry will put public health at risk. The Agriculture Department said the meat would be fully cooked and perfectly safe.

"It will have been processed," said Richard Raymond, the department's undersecretary for food safety. "Cooking will kill the virus, if there is any virus, in poultry meat."

The U.S. does not accept live poultry from countries where the virulent flu strain is present. That policy has not changed.

The poultry would be raised and slaughtered in the U.S. or other countries from which the U.S. accepts poultry. It would be fully cooked and packaged or canned in China. Imports will be allowed beginning May 24.

Critics say the U.S. cannot guarantee that Chinese processing facilities will keep Chinese poultry from mixing with U.S. poultry.

"It's not clear to me the two will be effectively kept separate," said Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin (news, bio, voting record), the top Democrat on the Senate Agriculture Committee.

Rep. Rosa DeLauro (news, bio, voting record), D-Conn., said the imports are dangerous.

"It is an outrage that the U.S. is going to open our borders to imports of poultry from China — a country that lacks the fundamental safety functions in its processing plants, has questionable export practices, and a country where a deadly animal disease and possible pandemic is running rampant," said DeLauro, top Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee's agriculture subcommittee.
--snip--
This is pure lunacy. What does it cost to send (I assume) frozen chickens to China so they can supposedly package and can them and then turn around and ship them back here. Does that make any sense to you......? It sure doesn't to me. This has to be a lie......a bald face lie.

What can of chicken will you now deem safe for your family to eat. I am willing to bet there will be no indication on the can where the chicken was canned.....just the distributor for it here in the states.

I think insanity rules the world now.........insanity.....that is the real pandemic.
 

gisgaia

Veteran Member
NBC Dateline Special this Sunday

Not anybody I've met or asked is doing a single thing to prepare for this = ZERO! Seems that none have even heard much about it, if at all. Guess very few people read papers or actually watch the news anymore?

It is sooooo weird that hardly anyone even knows about this supposed Pandemic threat ,,, like being in an episode of the "Outer Limits" or "Twilight Zone"!

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This is the working link to article from yahoo, "US to Allow Chinese Processed Poultry Imports"
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060420/ap_on_go_ot/us_poultry_1

I don't trust 100 % evil Red Chinese government one hoot --- anyone that does is INSANE! So imho, this is example of another NWO deliberate set-up to destroy the American people from within!

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NBC News is doing special focus on Bird Flu preparedness this weekend. Also...

DATELINE ON NBC: "OUTBREAK - COULD IT HAPPEN HERE?" SUNDAY APRIL 23, 2006 7PM EDT / 6PM CDT --- SPECIAL ON BIRD FLU WITH TOP EXPERTS
 
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