06/12-16 | New Weekly Bird Flu Thread

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
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<B><font size=+1 color=red><center>Bird flu found in northeastern Ukraine, first appearance outside of Black Sea region</font>
Jun 12 2006, 17:03
<A href="http://www.kyivpost.com/bn/24623/">www.kyivpost.com</a></center>
(AP) Bird flu was found in a northeastern Ukrainian village, emergency officials said Monday, marking the first confirmation of the virus' spread beyond the country's Black Sea regions.

The virus was confirmed in the Sumy region, which borders Russia, and emergency workers planned to destroy more than 7,000 domestic birds, Emergency Situations Ministry spokesman Ihor Krol said.</b>

Krol said he had no information about what strain had been found, but Ukrainian media reported that it was the H5N1 strain, which is potentially deadly for humans.

A massive outbreak of the H5N1 strain hit Ukraine in December, but the cases were confined to the Black Sea peninsula of Crimea and other Black Sea regions. No human cases have been recorded in Ukraine.

Krol said the current outbreak was confined to the village of Pisky, which is located some distance from neighboring towns. He said emergency officials were taking immediate steps to keep the outbreak isolated.

Bird flu has killed at least 128 people worldwide since it started ravaging Asian poultry farms in late 2003. So far, most human cases have been linked to contact with infected birds.
 
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<B><font size=+1 color=brown><center>Global Center Urged To Fight Pandemics</font>

by Elizabeth Newell and Stephanie Sonntag
Jun 12, 2006
<A href="http://www.postchronicle.com/news/security/article_21222744.shtml">www.postchronicle.com</a></center>
WASHINGTON, May 30, 2006 (UPI) -- Vastly increased international cooperation will be necessary to prevent and contain the threats of future pandemic diseases, experts say.

Though avian flu hasn't materialized yet into a human pandemic, it has alerted scientists to that fact that any pandemic is a security threat that needs to be treated as such.</b>

Dr. Harvey Rubin, director for the Institute for Strategic Threat Analysis and Response at the University of Pennsylvania, used current disease outbreaks, including the millions of people infected with tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS worldwide, to demonstrate the impact of global illnesses.

Rubin told a conference at the Marshall Institute May 30 that the pandemic threat needed to be treated as an international problem. To prevent and reduce the effects of a pandemic, he suggested the creation of an international treaty -- the Framework for the Detection and Containment of Infectious Diseases.

"This is a much more global issue," Rubin said. "The problem clearly calls for solutions that integrate new ideas in science, technology and social and political realities. It has to be a very creative constellation of solutions."

The treaty would use scientific and political leaders to help reduce the threat to international health and includes several framework points to fight possible pandemic threats.

One of the most crucial and potentially controversial facets of the treaty would be the creation of a vaccine treatment center devoted to research and the creation of vaccines for current and possible future infections.

"Let's build an international facility whose sole purpose is to make enough vaccines for the world -- hundreds and hundreds of millions of doses," Rubin said.

Rubin said the research center should be awarded to the country with the most convincing offer, not to the lowest bidder. He also said the scientists would have to agree to some sort of moral code.

The center would "establish codes of conduct for the appropriate use of modern molecular biology -- sort of a Hippocratic oath among biological scientists saying, 'I'm not going to use this for nefarious purposes,'" Rubin said.

Stephen Morrison, executive director of the HIV/AIDS task force at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, agreed that greater global cooperation was needed to combat pandemics. However, he doubted, the feasibility of relying upon one primary international research center. "I don't think you're going to have one single unitary global center," Morrison said. "Instead you are going to have coordinated centers."

Researchers and scientists are rushing to get such a center built and operating.

"The campaign has just begun but is certainly underway," said Steph Rosenfeld, a risk communications consultant who works with Rubin. "It is largely a matter of public information, of laying out (Rubin's) approach. This is not a trial balloon; there is no time for trial balloons because the clock is ticking and time is of the essence."

Rosenfeld said that meetings with elected officials at the federal level, as well as diplomatic officials and groups such as the World Health Organization, Physicians without Borders and the Red Cross, are part of the campaign for the treaty.

Rubin wants to establish routine procedures among countries for quickly reporting outbreaks and establishing the best laboratory methods.

Rosenfeld said geopolitical, not scientific, concerns were the biggest roadblock to the establishment of the treaty. "I think you have to build the sort of intellectual infrastructure that allows you to erect strong bridges and effectively navigate long-standing turf conflicts."

But that is easier said than done.

Because humans are human, political pressures will make Dr Rubin's idea a slippery ring to grasp," said Dr. David Franz, chief biological scientist at the Midwest Research Institute. "There will be those nations which, for pride or fear of loss of tourism income, won't want to share their data on disease incidence. There will be those who will argue that it will cost them too much and those who fear they will not benefit enough. There will be those who won't trust because it was 'made in the USA'."

"However, I believe this is a case for which 'process' will be as important as 'product,'" Franz said. "Science and medicine share a common language internationally. When scientists work together on hard problems, walls of misunderstanding crumble; pandemics are hard problems."

Rubin said an international treaty would help to combat bioterrorism as well as natural pandemics. "We know what we have to prepare for with some of the national pandemics, and what we're all a little worried about are the engineered agents," he told United Press International.

Rubin said the establishment of an international research center would help scientists stay one step ahead of potential engineered agents.

"We're still a little bit far away from that," he said. "But it's the bad things that people can engineer to make worse that are of great concern."

"It's much like any security," said Don Donahue, executive director for the National Security of Health Policy Center, who is working with Rubin. "The bad guys will always figure out ways to get around what you are doing."

But Donahue, who has been working on emergency preparedness since 1997, said the project is still evolving from an idea to a reality.

"Certainly a project has many challenges," Donahue said. "But clearly any huge project starts with a vision, but it's certainly a vision worth pursuing."

Elizabeth Newell and Stephanie Sonntag are UPI Correspondents
 
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<B><font size=+1 color=green><center>Flu pandemic simulation planned </font>

Monday, June 12, 2006
News Digest
By ALICIA HOLMES, Journal Staff Writer
<A href="http://www.miningjournal.net/stories/articles.asp?articleID=4184">www.minigjournal.net</a></center>
MANISTIQUE — Practice makes perfect, and on Tuesday Manistique health officials will be putting that theory to the test when they practice for a flu pandemic.

For the simulation to work, they will need residents to participate, said Mark McCune, emergency preparedness coordinator in the Luce-Mackinac-Alger-Schoolcraft District Health Department.</b>

The event is from 10 a.m. to noon at Manistique Area High School.

“We’re going to get together as a group and simulate the circumstances involved with a flu pandemic,” McCune said. “This will be an educational opportunity for residents. ... It will help them learn about things they should be thinking about. We need to be able to take care of ourselves at the local level.”

During a pandemic, “hospitals will rapidly fill up — literally — and we need to have some type of alternative center to take people to,” McCune said.

Officials chose the high school because of the large open areas, good ventilation, large restroom facilities, food preparation facilities, he said.

The simulation will act as a test run allowing officials to evaluate how well the school would work as a treatment center, McCune said. Likewise, it will allow officials to evaluate their response and available resources. Officials from the health department, public safety, public works, sheriff’s department and hospital will be involved.
 
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<B><center>Fight or Flight
<font size=+1 color=green>No Man Is an Island</font>

by Bruce Murphy
<A href="http://www.themorningnews.org/archives/fight_or_flight/no_man_is_an_island.php">www.themorningnews.org</a></center></b>
<i>Considering what may lie ahead otherwise, no amount of money is too great to devote to the fight against avian flu. But while everybody’s spending against each other’s contingency plans, we’re all left risking something too precious to lose.</i>

<B>Dr. Juan Lubroth is a hard man to meet. Head of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) Infectious Disease Group, he is often on the road, traveling the world to organize the fight against highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI). It takes more than a month from when we first make contact for us to actually sit down together. So I’ve decided that if I get to ask him only one question, it will be the one that has been uppermost in my mind for weeks: Can we actually contain the H5N1 virus in the animal kingdom through a vigorous international campaign, and thereby avert a human pandemic in the first place? “Pandemic preparedness” has, after all, been headline news, but fighting HPAI in animals is barely a footnote.</b>

Lubroth’s office has a large wooden sliding door, the only one I have seen in the building. It strikes me as appropriately barn-like. Inside he is at his desk, and luckily the phone isn’t ringing—yet. I’m sure he has more pressing things to do than talk to me, but when we sit down at a small conference table he is extremely attentive. Soft-spoken and circumspect, he combines scientific reserve (heading me off when I jump to conclusions) and a passionate interest in his subject, which is the wellbeing of animals.

Only it’s not just animals. Lubroth has a vision of “one world, one health,” in which the health of humans, domestic animals, and wildlife are all connected. There couldn’t be a better example of this than HPAI, and his answer to my first question is an emphatic yes, we can contain the virus. FAO’s strategy is based on the idea of stopping a pandemic by fighting the disease now in the animal kingdom and keeping it there—and hopefully stamping it out.

But that’s hardly the whole story. Lubroth stresses how much we don’t know about H5N1, the virus that causes HPAI. “We’ve had little opportunity to study this virus in the last two years. It’s hard to conduct research when you’re fighting a disease.” He lacks staff and he lacks money; “our appeal is not being heard by the donor community.” Still, he’s working with what he has and is “trying to be proactive.” He has recently been in South America, where FAO is devoting $2 million to setting up a network of labs and staff before the virus gets there. (I think but don’t say that the U.S. Congress, in its most recent pork-filled emergency spending bill, was ready to spend $15 million on a “seafood initiative.”)

To me, it seems that Lubroth’s global view has not so much been opposed as ignored. Discussion in the U.S. has focused almost entirely on pandemic preparedness, not fighting HPAI. But Lubroth gives credit where it’s due: In the recent outbreak in Egypt, there was not one but two labs doing H5N1 testing—the government lab, and an American one. “The U.S. military lab has been a very gracious partner,” he notes.

Living for weeks or months sequestered in an apartment, while the tumbrels go by with cries of “Bring out your dead,” strikes me as a great premise for a surrealist novel, but not a national avian flu strategy. One of Lubroth’s most interesting ideas is to do a study of human H5N1 resistance. Nightmare scenarios picture a human pandemic cutting a swathe like the Black Death. But it’s now been almost 10 years since the first human cases of HPAI emerged in Hong Kong: How many people came in contact with H5N1 and didn’t get sick? How many got sick and recovered, but never sought medical attention or never were recorded? Nobody knows. The terrifying human mortality rate of 50 percent is based only on those we know came in contact with the virus. Lubroth outlines a possible study that would test, say, 1,000 people in each of several heavily populated areas that have been hard-hit by H5N1 over a long period—Vietnam and Thailand, for example. We might get an idea of how many people in the population show antibodies to H5N1. But is any such study under way? No.

While we are talking, Lubroth is interrupted by a call from one of his veterinarians in Cote d’Ivoire. HPAI has cropped up there, too. After a brief conversation he ends by telling the vet, “Do good work and be safe.” It reminds me that the work of fighting HPAI is dangerous. But there are people out there doing it; wherever the disease is, there they go. One world, one health.



* * *


The view of H5N1 from Juan Lubroth’s office is very different from that from the Oval Office. Across the Atlantic, the new debate is over who will get the precious flu vaccine (if it exists) first. While “federal officials have said they intend to give vaccine first to health-care workers, followed by the oldest, sickest patients, a policy aimed at saving the most lives,” a federal panel of ethicists is considering the concept of saving not lives, but life years: “If you save a child who is 2, you’ve potentially saved 80 quality years… If you save a 65-year-old, you may have only saved 15 years of quality life.”

Another scheme, published in Science, proposes an “alternative ranking, with medical workers first and young adults next, followed by people ages 41 to 50 and finally those 51 and older.” In the great vaccine sweepstakes, you would think infants—with the most potential years ahead of them—would win a berth right away. But in fact they may not place or even show: “Within this framework, 20-year-olds are valued more than 1-year-olds because the older individuals have more developed interests, hopes and plans but have not had an opportunity to realize them.”

In the midst of this a friend of mine in New York City writes that she is storing up water and cans of tuna because authorities have said to do so. Living off tuna for weeks or months sequestered in an East Side apartment, while the tumbrels go by with cries of “Bring out your dead,” à la Defoe, strikes me as a great premise for a surrealist novel, but not a national avian flu strategy.

But we Americans will all be vaccinated and have our Tamiflu on the bedside table, right? To understand what has gone wrong with the U.S. response to avian influenza, one has to go back to the national strategy. Issued by the Homeland Security Council [PDF], it was inevitable that it would reflect the Bush administration’s usual obsessions. It’s clearly an Americans-only plan; although claiming to address “the full spectrum of events that link a farmyard overseas to a living room in America,” the farmyard got lost in the shuffle, along with the farmers. The plan also makes fighting the virus sound like another war in Iraq: We have to “develop a coalition of strong partners to coordinate actions to limit the spread of a virus with pandemic potential beyond the location where it is first recognized in order to protect U.S. interests abroad.” This literally says the coalition’s purpose shall be to protect U.S. interests. It would have been more gracious to admit that coalition partners might also have a stake in saving the lives of their own people. (All that was required was to insert the word “and” after “recognized.”)

We should especially note the phrase “a virus with pandemic potential.” The money to detect and contain outbreaks is to combat a future human pandemic form, not HPAI as it exists today. “Slowing or limiting the spread of the outbreak” doesn’t refer to the work of FAO, the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE), the World Health Organization (WHO), or other agencies currently on the front lines of the animal epidemic. It means creating a cordon sanitaire around a human-to-human pandemic strain should one pop up in, say, Vietnam or Indonesia. That will give America enough time to create a vaccine and put up the “Keep Out” signs. This, it is hoped, will “prevent a pandemic from reaching our shores.”

Nationalism goes with clueless isolationism just as easily as it does with bumptious jingoism. Republicans may swallow Bush’s flu siege plan as easily as they did pre-emptive war, but no one else should be fooled. The idea that the “most effective way to protect the American population is to contain an outbreak beyond the borders of the U.S.” ignores the ancient truth that you can run but you can’t hide. During the 1918-19 flu, in a world vastly less connected and far more rural, there was nowhere to go, and yet “the 1918 flu reached Alaskan villages where the only way visitors could arrive was by dogsled.”

But we Americans will all be vaccinated and have our Tamiflu on the bedside table, right? Unfortunately, the picture is not quite so rosy. Experimental vaccine results are thus far not encouraging. That’s why it’s crucial to decrease the amount of time it takes to make the correct vaccine once a human flu strain emerges. The government is shooting for being able to produce 600 million doses in six months. Given that the current capacity is zero, that’s a tall order; the target date for achieving it is 2013. And anyway, a lot of people can die in six months, as the history of epidemics from the Black Death to the 1918-19 flu attests.

“No man is an island,” John Donne said; and even if you were an island, a migrating bird could land on you and give you avian flu. As for Tamiflu, useful as it is, questions about resistant H5N1 strains are one of those little worries that have been submerged by issues like whether the National Guard will be called out to cordon off your town. Yet less than a week after George W. Bush unveiled his national strategy back in November 2005, an FAO update reported, “Japanese and Vietnamese researchers analyzed the genes of the virulent H5N1 avian influenza virus taken from a 14-year-old Vietnamese girl, who became infected in February, but recovered. Their laboratory examination [PDF]showed that the virus had a genetic mutation that makes it resistant to Tamiflu.”

Antiviral drugs and vaccines are essential. But the Bush plan encourages the fantasy of the U.S. as an oasis of health amid global devastation and death. “No man is an island,” John Donne said; and even if you were an island, a migrating bird could land on you and give you avian flu. As for Bush’s claim that “we’re doing everything we can,” that’s empirically false. We could do much more to combat the current animal form of HPAI.

Asian farmers have been bearing the brunt of that battle for 10 years. The disease has already cost the Asian poultry sector $10 billion, not to mention scores of human lives. Dr. Peter Horby of the WHO has said, “The threat to human health will persist as long as the problem persists in animals.” This is a very different outlook from the Bush plan’s. Animal diseases persist for generations—though how quickly we forget: in 1983-84, H5N2 swept through domestic fowl in the United States, and 17 million birds either died or had to be killed. H5N2 struck Mexican fowl in a long outbreak lasting from 1992 to 1995. And in 2003, an outbreak of H7N7 in the Netherlands made 83 people sick and killed one veterinarian. H5N1 is not the only bad guy out there, it’s just the worst. As with most animal diseases, it will require a sustained control and eradication effort over many years to contain and hopefully stamp out H5N1. So how about throwing a billion or two into the fight against current HPAI?

Kill all the chickens and you wipe out their capital. (Invent an investment product for Wall Streeters that pays 700 percent and let’s see you take it away from them.) I make the assumption, following the Republican Congress, that a billion dollars is not a lot of money. It’s only 1/251st of what the Iraq war cost through the end of 2005 [PDF], though it’s 10 times what a recent multinational meeting asked for to fight avian flu in Asia. And it’s only 1/675th of what a bird flu epidemic could cost the U.S. economically, according to Bill Frist, M.D.



* * *


A long-term disease-fighting strategy is perforce a poverty-fighting strategy. An outbreak in a developed country is a different story from an outbreak in a poor one. If bird flu annihilates one of Purdue’s farms, that’s sad, but they write off the loss and I buy someone else’s chicken at the supermarket (as long as the outbreak is contained). But if bird flu kills the chicken that lays the eggs I feed my kids (and which represent, say, half their protein intake), and I have no money to buy a new chicken, that’s catastrophe. It’s also a strong incentive to hide my chicken from inspectors, or take it to market and sell it as soon as it starts to look droopy. The Bush plan talks (of course) about “novel investment strategies.” Here’s one: Pay the man for his chicken so he can buy a new one and keep his family economy and the kids healthy.

Countries like Vietnam and Thailand are already doing this—they’re called compensation strategies—but in Vietnam alone, 8 million rural households keep chickens. They eat some chickens and their eggs, while raising some chicks to be the next generation of egg layers and pot-fillers. It’s an endemic system because it works: the family’s return on investment is a whopping 700 percent. Kill all the chickens and you wipe out their capital and their protein. (Invent an investment product for Wall Streeters that pays 700 percent and then let’s see you take it away from them in the interests of public health.) Hence the need for compensation strategies.

The Bush plan did promise to “work through multilateral health organizations” like the WHO, FAO, and OIE. And in fact, at the Beijing pledging conference in January of this year, the U.S. was the number-one donor at $334 million. That’s a measly $334 million for the entire earth, excluding the United States. The U.S. State Department’s press release on the subject makes it sound like the money is mostly earmarked for pandemic detection, right out of the national strategy. Nothing about compensation programs or other “pro-poor” strategies.

It would be wrong-headed to say that the U.S. government should simply foot the bill for the avian flu fight. And I can understand not wanting to leave it all in the hands of the crisis-ridden and often dysfunctional UN system. So innovate—and that doesn’t mean outsource the job to Halliburton. Speaking of novel strategies, the one thing the Bush administration never asks of the private sector is to pay for anything or contribute to the common good. Exxon-Mobil’s profits for 2005 were $36 billion. Maybe Bush should talk to his base about avian flu—or maybe they should talk to him. The practical argument that his flu plan won’t work is unlikely to move the administration, any more than the obvious failure of its “plan” in Iraq.

There’s also a moral argument. In the same meditation, Donne says, “Any man’s death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind.” Maybe Bush should revisit the doomed national strategy and transform it into an international strategy that tries to stop H5N1 now, rather than plan how to save selected Americans (excuse me, American life-years) in the future. Fighting the virus in the animal kingdom and helping poor countries to do it may not only be a better strategy; it might even be right.

One world, one health.


—Published 12 June 2006
 
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<B><font size=+1 color=blue><center>Flu drill tests WNY readiness for a pandemic</font>

By KATHY KELLOGG
Cattaraugus Correspondent
6/12/2006
<A href="http://www.buffalonews.com/editorial/20060612/1020969.asp">www.buffalonews.com</a></center>
LITTLE VALLEY - The Cattaraugus County Health Department will enter a new phase Tuesday in a month-old mandatory Communicable Disease Exercise Drill for Western New York's eight counties and their health departments along with the state Offices of Homeland Security, Department of Health and Emergency Management. </b>

Cattaraugus County Public Health Director Barbara J. Hastings said the exercise has fanned out from Niagara County, where authorities simulated the emergency room treatment and the later death of a theoretical victim infected with a flulike virus. The patient is thought to have contracted the infection in Asia and then traveled to Las Vegas and Niagara County, spreading the disease to 14 others during four airline flights.

The exercise is designed to prepare for an outbreak of the avian bird flu H5N1 strain that authorities fear could reach Western New York. The script does not confirm the victim is infected with the deadly H5N1 strain but provides an opportunity to prepare for such an outbreak.

Before the exercise is completed, the Western New York region will act out a response to the infection of 1,600 people requiring hospital admission under the assumption that the illness has grown to pandemic proportions.

Wednesday's mock declaration of a state of emergency by the governor was sent out in response to reports that all hospitals were full. Reaching this milestone made the county eligible for funding and resources vital to an effective response in an actual pandemic, said Cattaraugus County Legislator Jon K. Baker, R-Olean, in a report to the Human Services Committee last week.

Tuesday's strategic drill will last all day and test Cattaraugus County's readiness to receive and distribute an antiviral drug, such as Tamiflu, from the National Strategic Stockpile. Responders will run through the steps of communication at all levels from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, state, region and county, to local ham radio operators.

Hastings said her staff has been meeting twice daily to identify all issues and set up an incident command, describing the preparedness exercises as an "awesome" effort.

At 10 a.m. June 29, the county Health Department will stage a Pandemic Planning and Preparedness Forum to launch a communitywide discussion on how individual residents and businesses can prepare for a pandemic.

A review to evaluate the drill's effectiveness is expected by mid-summer.
 
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<B><center>Debate over pets' role in spread of avian flu
<font size=+1 color=purple>No cases passed yet by dogs or cats, but experts want study</font>

Bernadette Tansey, Chronicle Staff Writer
Monday, June 12, 2006
<A href="http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2006/06/12/MNGDPJCKUV1.DTL">www.sfgate.com</a></center>
If the bird flu virus arrives in the United States on the wings of migrating wildfowl, pet owners may need to take special precautions to protect their household members -- both human and animal.

No case has been reported anywhere in the world of a human being infected by a cat or dog, but researchers are calling for heightened study of the question before a potentially deadly avian flu virus extends its global reach. </b>

Scientists are looking at animals in general as possible contributors to the spread of the dangerous H5N1 virus that originated in birds in Asia. Pigs raised close to infected poultry, or wild animals living near sick migratory birds, might help the virus break out of the bird population and invade mammal populations in farms or forests.

But health authorities are also looking at pets because they often live a dual life -- roaming outdoors, chasing birds and then returning home to nuzzle and play with people. Cats have caught the H5N1 virus by eating infected birds, though the reported cases are rare. So far, most experts think the risk is very low that pets could pass the disease to humans. But they can't say for sure.

"Cats can serve as an intermediary to move the virus from essentially a wild bird environment into people's houses,'' said Walter Boyce at the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine.

Health authorities say the most likely scenario would place any risk of infection solely with the pets. People who live near an outbreak of the virus in birds may need to keep their cat or dog indoors for a time, just to protect the animal from getting sick. But other scientists say pets can't be dismissed as possible carriers of the virus into the human population. They also speculate that cats or other animals could incubate an H5N1 strain that would be better equipped to infect mammals, including humans.

So far, the H5N1 virus is still primarily a bird disease that can devastate poultry flocks, but is hard for people to catch. Of the 225 people infected since 2003, almost all have been in close contact with stricken birds. The virus does not appear to have gained genetic traits to ease its direct transmission from person to person. That's the feared mutation that could touch off a deadly human pandemic, making the lethal bird virus as easy to catch as the ordinary winter flu.

But the disease's death rate is so high, even in its current form as a bird-borne virus, that scientists are examining every other possible route by which it could infect people -- even if that route seems unlikely. Of the 225 cases in humans, 128 have died, according to the World Health Organization.

Cat species have come under particular scrutiny because they are known to be vulnerable to H5N1 infection. Tigers and leopards in Thailand zoos died in 2004 after they ate infected raw chickens. By the same route, cats have caught the disease and died in scattered cases in Germany, Iraq and possibly in other countries.

Much less is known about the bird flu's possible impact on dogs. The American Veterinary Medical Association says a single unpublished paper from a health agency in Bangkok noted that dogs can be infected with the virus, but they don't seem to get sick.

The close, affectionate contact between many pets and their owners makes them a candidate for the study of disease transmission. "I know people who get woken up because the cat's lying on top of their nose,'' Boyce said.

Right now, the risk that an animal in the United States will contract the virus by hunting birds is near zero, because the virus hasn't been detected here.

In countries where the virus has arrived, no human infections have been linked to the cats that sickened or died of the disease. At this point, U.S. and world health authorities say it's unlikely that cats will infect people.

"We don't believe that cats pose a risk to humans at this time,'' said Ben Sun, a public health veterinarian with the California Department of Health Services. "But we have so little information that we can't make a confident recommendation that they do not pose any risk.''

A team of scientists from the Netherlands raised a stir in April when they accused government health agencies of doing too little to monitor the presence of H5N1 in cats, dogs and other carnivores. Officials shouldn't downplay the risk to humans when so many questions remain unanswered, said virologists Thijs Kuiken and Albert Osterhaus and their colleagues in a commentary in the science journal Nature.

The research team reported that cats can pass the virus to each other and can also shed virus particles before they show symptoms. Fortunately, cats release far fewer virus particles than chickens, which may make them much less efficient transmitters of the disease. Whether asymptomatic cats or dogs could infect people is still an open question.

That said, the biggest worry about H5N1 is that the virus will mutate into a form that passes easily from one person to another. That's the critical step that scientists fear could unleash a pandemic killing millions worldwide, and that crucial modification, say the virologists in the Netherlands, could take place in a cat or other host animal.

Some scientists postulate that pigs are the mammals most likely to incubate a human-adapted pandemic virus. In Asian countries where bird flus in the past have evolved into human influenza strains, pigs are often kept in close proximity to poultry and people. A pig might simultaneously become infected with a deadly bird virus and an ordinary human-adapted seasonal influenza, the theory goes. Viruses in the same host have the ability to swap genes, so the bird flu could acquire genes that make it easily transmissible from person to person.

If those key mutations occur, in no matter what host, it would be people -- not animals -- who would become the most effective vehicles spreading the disease worldwide, as they cram into commuter trains or hop on jets to other countries.

"Then we may be the ones spreading it to the cats,'' said Bruno Chomel, a UC Davis expert on zoonoses, the study of the role of animals in disease transmission.

No vaccine against H5N1 is available at doctors' offices, although the government has ordered a stockpile of experimental vaccines that it would carefully dole out in the event of a U.S. outbreak in people. In addition, antiviral drugs like Tamiflu might alleviate symptoms of avian flu.

Although experts aren't able to give definitive answers about the possible role of pets in bird flu transmission, Boyce at the UC Davis veterinary school wants cat and dog owners to learn about the issue now. Then they can take appropriate precautions, he said, but avoid wild overreactions if and when the bird flu arrives here.

Boyce fears that Americans will act on the same fearful impulse that led scores of Europeans to surrender their cats unnecessarily to overwhelmed animal shelters. Authorities had only ad- vised cat owners to keep their cats inside in regions where the bird flu had cropped up in wildfowl.

"What I hope will not happen is that people will abandon their animals because they're afraid of them,'' Boyce said.

Even if no risk of pet-to-human transmission ever proves real, cat owners can guard against the known risk that their animal companions could become infected by sick birds.

In the United States, owners who are already concerned about H5N1 exposure can maintain a cat's risk at zero by keeping it indoors. Many veterinarians already recommend this to protect cats from cars, fleas, fights with other animals, and germs other than the bird flu virus.

"Indoor cats live a lot longer than outdoor cats,'' said Heather Coburn, medical director of Tony La Russa's Animal Rescue Foundation in Walnut Creek.

Other owners may want to wait and watch the news. The avian virus has not yet appeared in this country, though surveillance teams are testing poultry and wildfowl to detect its arrival.

Sun, the state public health veterinarian, said there's no vaccine against the deadly H5N1 avian flu virus for dogs or cats. But owners can limit contact between wild birds and their cats, dogs and pet birds. Cat owners should wash their hands thoroughly after changing kitty litter, Sun said.

Keep away from feral or unknown cats and minimize your cat's contact with them, he said.

If your cat is sick, call the vet. Cats infected with H5N1 virus may become weak, inactive and feverish. Their breathing may become labored, and they can die suddenly.

If your cat dies, avoid direct contact with the body. Call the local animal control agency for disposal instructions, Sun advises.

At some point, if the bird flu risk seems high in a certain region, local health agencies might take measures to control feral cat populations, Sun said. But no such moves are contemplated now. "Most people don't have intimate contact with feral cats,'' said Sun.

Chomel of UC Davis said people shouldn't be kissing their cats, or allowing them on the kitchen counters. He said he was appalled at a recent survey reporting that nearly half of pet owners slept with their animals. "That should not be done,'' he said.

Cat owners in rural areas may be more likely to face the need to confine their animals indoors, Chomel said, because bird flu outbreaks are more likely to arise there. But the danger may pass, allowing the cat to go out again.

Pet owners should stay updated on the issue, but avoid panic, said Chomel.

"We are right to be concerned, but we should not be overly alarmed,'' he said.
 
=





<B><center>Monday, June 12, 2006. 6:39pm (AEST)

Pandemic preparations:
<font size=+1 color=red>Professor Plant says good hygiene helps prevent the flu spreading. </font>
(Reuters)

<A href="http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200606/s1661185.htm">www.abc.net.au</a></center>
'Hygiene better than drugs' in bird flu fight
Health professionals at a conference in Perth have been told anti-viral medication offers little protection against any future influenza pandemic.

At a bird flu seminar, doctors have been told too much emphasis is placed on drugs such as Tamiflu, and stringent hygiene routines offer better protection from viruses.

Infectious diseases expert Aileen Plant told the conference she has been surprised by the number of medical professionals she has seen ignoring infection control procedures.

Professor Plant says basic cleanliness is needed to fight the spread of any future flu pandemic because anti-viral drugs offer limited protection and may not reduce the number of deaths.

"The anti-virals are good for stopping people getting infection, so in other words if they take them before they are exposed to somebody who's sick or even after they're exposed to somebody who's sick, if they take them quickly they're useful," she said.

"We're still not really sure what's going to happen in terms of whether that will affect hospitalisation and mortality, we hope so but we don't know yet."

Pandemic preparations

Professor Plant says even though the virus has not reached birds in Australia, people need to prepare for a possible pandemic.

"We've never seen anything like we've seen with the birds this year where we've seen it go from about 13 countries at the beginning of the year to well over 30," she said.

"We are concerned to see that many places with both bird cases and a few human cases of course have spread to more countries too."

She says health professionals need to be vigilant.

"A pandemic is eventually inevitable and the best thing to ameliorate it is to be well prepared," she said.

She says if bird flu infects people in Australia it will be difficult for doctors to recognise because its symptoms are like those of any other influenza.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Here's a :dot5: , these folks are taking Bird Flu very seriously! -pcv

Paris Anti-Avian Influenza 2006 World Congress- Latest Advances on Prevention, Therapies and Protective Measures - Institut Pas

PARIS, June 12 /PRNewswire/ -- For the first time, more than two hundred international specialists (ministry of health, police and army, crisis management, transports companies, public association, mayors, researchers, pharmaceutical laboratories) will gather on June 29-30 2006 at the Institut Pasteur in Paris, France, to discuss about the latest advances on Avian Influenza, especially on new therapeutic targets for treatment and prevention in humans, and plan the strategies to avoid or stop a human pandemic. A special session will be reserved to discuss the management of a catastrophic scenario, in the case of a pandemic outbreak.

The following topics will be approached:

1) Overview about the Avian Influenza propagation in the world

2) Focus on H5N1

3) Treatments and perspectives

4) New detection tools and kits

5) Prevention of influenza

6) Alternative Solutions and Pathways in Influenza Prevention and Treatments

7) Disaster management response

Dr Marvin Edeas, Chairman of the Organising Committee of Paris Anti-Avian Influenza 2006 announced that, "Our aim is to launch the discussion between the different actors involved in the fight against Avian Influenza starting from medical and scientific specialists to government crisis management specialists and we will try to answer many questions: is the medical profession ready to fight against a pandemic? Is the world ready to face a human avian flu pandemic? How to manage the crisis at all levels and sectors? "

Paris Anti-Avian Influenza 2006 will also gather: government members of several foreign countries, the different international organisations involved in he fight against human and avian influenza (WHO, OIE, World Bank, EISS, GROG), the world specialists in the field (A. Osterhaus, S. Van der Werf, M. De Jong, E. DeClerq, D. Swayne, E. Hoffmann)

Paris Anti-Avian Influenza 2006 will also provide the opportunity to scientists and industrials to present their work on H5N1, new targets, new tracks or products that have shown their efficiency in the fight against influenza or new tools and kits to detect the virus.

Many International Companies will be present at this meeting: Applied Biosystems, Battelle, Baxter, Biomerieux, Biorad, Boeing, Combimatrix, GSK, Green Hills Biotechnologies, Procter and Gamble, Roche, Rockeby Biomed, Sanofi Pasteur, Solvay Pharma, Triosyn.

Programme and useful information on http://www.isanh.com/avian-influenza

DATASOURCE: Paris Anti-Avian Influenza 2006 World Congress

http://orange.advfn.com/news_Paris-...atest-Advances-on-Prevention--T_15753542.html

:vik:
 
=
<i>It would appear, on the 'face' of this article PCVing. That various PTB are indeed 'sitting on' developing H5N1 news, in some cases.

The test of it, IMO, is can they 'sit on' said news, when it begins readily to pass H2H?</i>



<B><font size=+1 color=brown><center>Agriculture Minister Tightens Precautions on Bird Flu News in Hungary </font>

10.06.2006 19:32 [Export service]
<A href="http://www.tasr.sk/indeng.php?mode=single&id=NTc4NzY0Ng==">www.tasr.sk</a></center>
Bratislava, June 10 (TASR-SLOVAKIA)- Agriculture Minister Zsolt Simon had tightened veterinary precautions across the country as a result of bird flu presence in the farm poultry in Hungary, he told reporters on Saturday.</b>


Simon ordered that as of Saturday the poultry and poultry products imported from Hungary be inspected at border-crossings. For monitoring purposes, sixty wild ducks will be shot in the borderland with Hungary and in large bodies of water, and checks for adherence to the veterinary measures released in the past will be carried out.


On Friday the Hungarian agriculture ministry said it believes the virus of bird infection broken out in the Hungarian poultry is that of H5 strain. "We suspect it is the highly pathogenic bird flu virus H5," said senior veterinarian Lajos Bognar. The Hungarian agriculture ministry had 300,000 birds - mainly goose and duck - culled in the south-eastern region Bacs-Kiskun.


"This is the first case in the European Union when over 300,000 heads of poultry had to be culled. It is very serious reason that we take all precautions and verify that those adopted are appropriate," Simon stressed.


Simon said he was not contemplating a ban on imports from Hungary as the ban within single market is very hard to adopt. At the moment I think that the steps we have undertaken are adequate and sufficient," he said.


"I consider these measures necessary to take mainly in order to make sure that whatever reaches shops will be safe and the population may safely buy and consume such goods," he added.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
The Flying Dutchman said:
It would appear, on the 'face' of this article PCVing. That various PTB are indeed 'sitting on' developing H5N1 news, in some cases.

The test of it, IMO, is can they 'sit on' said news, when it begins readily to pass H2H?

Dutch, IMO, TPTB are sitting on news... and they're going to sit on news (and pray nothing happens) until they no longer can...

It became obvious after H5N1 was discovered in Scotland... BF was effecting business... people were buying less chicken, changing travel plans, etc. then miraculously BF was out of the news... We've seen it also in Turkey and Indonesia... BF breaks out... WHO shows up, and like a miracle, no new news...

Whatever TPTB say, the world economy(s) is fragile... SARS threw the Pacific Rim into a bad spin... and they are more concerned about BF making that happen again, than being on the level with us...

The fact that the only news out there is about governments prepping, is a dot! and indicates something is happening (or has happened) that we're not hearing about.

I will be continuing th keep my ear to the rail, and I encourage others who are following BF to do so... when the stories pop again, it'll be with a vengance.

:vik:
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
H5N1 and H1N1

PCViking and Dutch: Thank you both again along with all the others who have kept this post front and center. The Johns Hopkins report had many good graphics that help the layman to understand the complexity of what we are all collectively up against. Thanks again. Fine effort.:chg:
 

JPD

Inactive
China issues emergency bird flu control order

http://www.todayonline.com/articles/124127.asp

Time is GMT + 8 hours
Posted: 13-Jun-2006 05:43 hrs
A chicken pokes its head out of a crate. China's Ministry of Agriculture issued an emergency order for local governments to tighten controls over poultry stocks to prevent bird flu contamination by migratory birds, state press reported.


China's Ministry of Agriculture issued an emergency order for local governments to tighten controls over poultry stocks to prevent bird flu contamination by migratory birds, state press reported.
.
The order calls for strict supervision of areas below flight paths of migratory birds, lakes and other sites with a record of bird flu infection, Xinhua news agency said.
.
Farmers living in these areas have been advised to keep their poultry in coops to avoid contact with the migratory birds.
.
The ministry also ordered immediate reporting of any dead poultry or wild birds to county-level animal epidemic prevention agencies, and suspected cases must be reported to the state-level bird flu laboratories.
.
A new case of H5N1 bird flu was discovered in Xinjiang's Hotan County last Wednesday, but it had been contained by Friday, a source with the Ministry of Agriculture was quoted as saying.
.
Experts and veterinarians had disinfected the area and more than 17,100 poultry birds were culled to prevent further contamination. No new suspected cases had been discovered near the infected area, said the ministry in the report.
.
Hotan County is on a flight path for migratory birds between East Africa and West Asia, said the ministry source.
.
More than 80 cases of the virus have been reported in China since February 2004, affecting 24 provinces, it added. — AFP

China's Ministry of Agriculture issued an emergency order for local governments to tighten controls over poultry stocks to prevent bird flu contamination by migratory birds, state press reported.
.
The order calls for strict supervision of areas below flight paths of migratory birds, lakes and other sites with a record of bird flu infection, Xinhua news agency said.
.
Farmers living in these areas have been advised to keep their poultry in coops to avoid contact with the migratory birds.
.
The ministry also ordered immediate reporting of any dead poultry or wild birds to county-level animal epidemic prevention agencies, and suspected cases must be reported to the state-level bird flu laboratories.
.
A new case of H5N1 bird flu was discovered in Xinjiang's Hotan County last Wednesday, but it had been contained by Friday, a source with the Ministry of Agriculture was quoted as saying.
.
Experts and veterinarians had disinfected the area and more than 17,100 poultry birds were culled to prevent further contamination. No new suspected cases had been discovered near the infected area, said the ministry in the report.
.
Hotan County is on a flight path for migratory birds between East Africa and West Asia, said the ministry source.
.
More than 80 cases of the virus have been reported in China since February 2004, affecting 24 provinces, it added. — AFP
China's Ministry of Agriculture issued an emergency order for local governments to tighten controls over poultry stocks to prevent bird flu contamination by migratory birds, state press reported.
.
The order calls for strict supervision of areas below flight paths of migratory birds, lakes and other sites with a record of bird flu infection, Xinhua news agency said.
.
Farmers living in these areas have been advised to keep their poultry in coops to avoid contact with the migratory birds.
.
The ministry also ordered immediate reporting of any dead poultry or wild birds to county-level animal epidemic prevention agencies, and suspected cases must be reported to the state-level bird flu laboratories.
.
A new case of H5N1 bird flu was discovered in Xinjiang's Hotan County last Wednesday, but it had been contained by Friday, a source with the Ministry of Agriculture was quoted as saying.
.
Experts and veterinarians had disinfected the area and more than 17,100 poultry birds were culled to prevent further contamination. No new suspected cases had been discovered near the infected area, said the ministry in the report.
.
Hotan County is on a flight path for migratory birds between East Africa and West Asia, said the ministry source.
.
More than 80 cases of the virus have been reported in China since February 2004, affecting 24 provinces, it added. — AFP
China's Ministry of Agriculture issued an emergency order for local governments to tighten controls over poultry stocks to prevent bird flu contamination by migratory birds, state press reported.
.
The order calls for strict supervision of areas below flight paths of migratory birds, lakes and other sites with a record of bird flu infection, Xinhua news agency said.
.
Farmers living in these areas have been advised to keep their poultry in coops to avoid contact with the migratory birds.
.
The ministry also ordered immediate reporting of any dead poultry or wild birds to county-level animal epidemic prevention agencies, and suspected cases must be reported to the state-level bird flu laboratories.
.
A new case of H5N1 bird flu was discovered in Xinjiang's Hotan County last Wednesday, but it had been contained by Friday, a source with the Ministry of Agriculture was quoted as saying.
.
Experts and veterinarians had disinfected the area and more than 17,100 poultry birds were culled to prevent further contamination. No new suspected cases had been discovered near the infected area, said the ministry in the report.
.
Hotan County is on a flight path for migratory birds between East Africa and West Asia, said the ministry source.
.
More than 80 cases of the virus have been reported in China since February 2004, affecting 24 provinces, it added. — AFP
 

JPD

Inactive
Ghana: Journalists Have No Power to Announce Bird Flu
Outbreak, Agric Ministry Cautions

http://allafrica.com/stories/200606121310.html

June 12, 2006
Posted to the web June 12, 2006

Emmanuel Akli
Takoradi

The Western Regional Director of the Ministry of Food and Agriculture, Mr. David Okine, has cautioned journalists not to rush into printing or broadcasting any suspected cases of bird flu in any part of the country.

He said journalist with the information of suspected bird flu should first report to either the district or regional director of veterinary services for investigation.

According to him, even if the district or regional veterinary officer's investigations proved that the reported case was indeed bird flu, he had no power to go public with his finding.

He would have to report it to his national secretariat in Accra, who would take samples to a designated laboratory in Accra for further investigation, and if it is confirmed the Director of Food and Agriculture would call a press conference to announce the occurrence of the avian influenza.

Quick actions would then be taken to stop the disease from spreading into other parts of the country.

Speaking at a workshop organized in Takoradi last Friday to educate the public on the disease, Mr. Okine said not even the minister of agriculture had the power to go public with the occurrence of the disease.

He noted that such stringent measures had been put in place because they did not want the media to cause unnecessary panic about the bird flu in the country.

The regional director of agriculture further told the gathering that it was the determination of the agric ministry to ensure that any information put in the public domain about the disease was nothing but the truth.

Okine noted that the poultry industry in Ghana nearly collapsed because of the way the media over-blew the bird flu issue, resulting in public boycott of poultry products though the disease had not even been reported in any part of the country.

He said the situation seemed to have changed due mainly to the massive public education campaign they embarked on.

He therefore called on the media to obey the laid down procedure and refrain from rushing into print or broadcast of the disease without first informing the relevant authorities.

He said a number of measures had been put in place to prevent the disease from spreading into the country.

According to him, tyres of all vehicles and cars entering Ghana from the neighbouring countries are sprayed with special chemicals in addition to special checks on the vehicles.

He revealed also that since migrating birds sometimes spread the disease, Nzema areas in the Western region had been put under special surveillance.

He explained that the migrating birds usually settled on wetlands that are common in the Nzema districts, and that the people had been well-educated about the disease and its symptoms.

Okine appealed to Ghanaians to always obtain movement permits from veterinary officers before moving animals from one geographical location in the country to the other.

He noted that this law had been in our statute books for a long time, but was not enforced.

The Western regional chairman of the Ghana Poultry Association, Mr. Tony Osei Mensah, on his part said the bird flu scare entered the country at the time poultry farmers had sold out their stocks because of the Christmas festivities.

He noted that most of the farmers were not prepared to invest in new stock because they were unsure if they would recoup their investment due to the boycott of poultry products.

He was therefore happy that the situation had now changed, with people now consuming poultry products.

According to him even if the disease should enter the country, it was the farmers who usually have contact with the birds, and who would be at risk; not the general public.

Mr. Mensah therefore appealed to journalists not to think they have gotten a scoop and rush to publicize any suspected case that might even prove wrong after laboratory investigations.

The workshop was attended by journalists, players in the poultry industry and the general public.

It was sponsored by the veterinary service directorate of the Ministry of Food and Agriculture, the Ghana Health Service, United State Agency for International Development (USAID) and Ghana Sustainable Change Project (GSCP).
 

Dinghy

Veteran Member
Thanks for all your hard work!! It has been pretty quiet lately, and that is scary! I really appreciate all your articles! I heard a new one the other day. The Pope has bird flu....he caught it from a Cardinal!!:lol:
 

JPD

Inactive
WHO To Set Up Disease Center In China

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/06/12/health/main1702113.shtml

Move Aims To Increase Cooperation In Fighting Infectious Disease

BEIJING, June 12, 2006

(AP) The World Health Organization and the Chinese government said Monday they were setting up a center to boost cooperation in fighting emerging infectious diseases such as severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, and influenza.

The WHO collaborating center will be opened Tuesday at the Center for Disease Control and Prevention in Guangzhou, the capital of south China's Guangdong province, a joint statement from the WHO and China's Ministry of Health said.

The center will serve as a liaison between the WHO and the Guangdong disease control facility, with the aim of increasing information-sharing between China and the rest of the world, the statement said.

SARS first emerged in Guangdong and killed nearly 800 people worldwide before subsiding in 2003. China's south has been the breeding ground for diseases that jump between animals and humans because they often live in close proximity.

The statement said the collaborating center will help carry out epidemiological research, including studies into the animal origins of SARS and the transmission of influenza between humans and animals.

Avian influenza, or bird flu, has killed 124 people worldwide, including 12 in China.

No new human cases of bird flu have been reported in a more than a month, the official Xinhua News Agency said Monday, quoting Health Ministry spokesman Mao Qun'an, who also said the government was stepping up prevention measures.

"We are still keeping a close eye on bird flu and have strengthened scientific research and nationwide surveillance," Mao said.

The Agriculture Ministry on Monday said local government officials should step up efforts to monitor migratory birds, Xinhua reported.

The move follows the discovery of an outbreak of the H5N1 strain of bird flu in migratory birds in an isolated area of Tibet and neighboring Qinghai province, in western China, late last month.

Scientists fear the H5N1 bird flu virus will mutate into a highly contagious form that can be spread between humans, possibly sparking a global pandemic. So far, most human cases have been linked to infected birds.

The WHO collaborating center in China aims to become a training base for other southern Chinese provinces as well as countries in the region, the statement said.

"We know from SARS and avian influenza that what happens in one country affects another," Shigeru Omi, WHO regional director for the western pacific, was quoted as saying in the statement. "China is helping WHO and the world implement lessons learnt from recent emerging infectious diseases."
 

New Freedom

Veteran Member
Dinghy said:
Thanks for all your hard work!! It has been pretty quiet lately, and that is scary! I really appreciate all your articles! I heard a new one the other day. The Pope has bird flu....he caught it from a Cardinal!!:lol:



Thanks, Dinghy ! I needed a good laugh !!! :lkick:
 

Fuzzychick

Membership Revoked
PCViking said:
Dutch, IMO, TPTB are sitting on news... and they're going to sit on news (and pray nothing happens) until they no longer can...

It became obvious after H5N1 was discovered in Scotland... BF was effecting business... people were buying less chicken, changing travel plans, etc. then miraculously BF was out of the news... We've seen it also in Turkey and Indonesia... BF breaks out... WHO shows up, and like a miracle, no new news...

Whatever TPTB say, the world economy(s) is fragile... SARS threw the Pacific Rim into a bad spin... and they are more concerned about BF making that happen again, than being on the level with us...

The fact that the only news out there is about governments prepping, is a dot! and indicates something is happening (or has happened) that we're not hearing about.

I will be continuing th keep my ear to the rail, and I encourage others who are following BF to do so... when the stories pop again, it'll be with a vengance.

:vik:



Yep, I'm bowing out now...
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Bird flu surveillance underfunded, under prioritized in Indonesia: World Bank

The Associated Press (apwire)

Published 2006-06-13 09:58 (KST)
JAKARTA, Indonesia

Indonesia's fight against bird flu is underfunded and poorly coordinated, the World Bank said Tuesday, urging the government to more aggressively cull fowl in infected areas.

The bank, in a report to Indonesia's biggest aid donors, also said the government needed to improve surveillance of poultry stocks to better detect outbreaks, and to modify its current vaccination program.

Indonesia has said it will need US$900 million (euro710 million) over the next three years to fight the H5N1 virus, which has killed at least 37 people in the nation. However, it has only budgeted US$59 million (euro46 million) for 2006.

''The current allocation of donor funds, about US$55 million (euro43 million), does not correct this imbalance,'' the bank said, adding that it was ''unclear how the government of Indonesia intends to finance the shortfall.'' Bird flu has killed at least 128 people worldwide since it started ravaging Asian poultry farms in late 2003.

So far, most human cases have been linked to contact with infected birds, but experts fear the virus could mutate into a form more easily transmissible between humans, potentially sparking a pandemic that could kill millions worldwide.

Indonesia trails only Vietnam, where 42 people have died, in human bird flu deaths. The H5N1 virus is considered endemic in poultry in most provinces across the sprawling archipelago.

''But surveillance coverage is limited and generally unreliable to detect outbreaks,'' the bank said, adding that ''control measures, including vaccination and culling of infected stocks are seriously under-financed and fraught with implementation problems.'' Mass poultry culling in infected areas is one of the U.N.Foodand Agriculture Organization's most basic containment guidelines, but Indonesia has dragged its feet, saying it cannot afford to compensate farmers.

While the disease has killed more than 10.5 million chickens and ducks among a total poultry stock of 1.3 billion, so far Indonesia has taken part in ''a relatively minor culling of less than 100,000 exposed birds,'' the bank said.

It also expressed concern about recent cases on Sumatra island, which have raised suspicions of limited human-to-human transmission.

Six members of a family died of bird flu and a seventh fell ill in the Kubu Simbelang village last month. An eighth family member was buried before samples were collected, but the World Health Organization considers her part of the cluster of cases -- the largest ever reported.

''While tests indicate that so far there has been no significant change to the virus, the probability of moving from the current phase of primarily poultry-centered outbreaks with isolated humaninfections to a more efficient human-to-human transmission is considered to be significant in Indonesia,'' the World Bank noted.

http://english.ohmynews.com/article...?menu=c10400&no=298308&rel_no=1&isPrint=print

:vik:
 
=




<B><font size=+1 color=red><center>Cats could hold key to spread of avian flu virus</font>

By Roger Highfield, Science Editor
(Filed: 13/06/2006)
<A href="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/06/13/nflu13.xml&sSheet=/news/2006/06/13/ixuknews.html">www.telegraph.co.uk</a></center>
Cats should become a new focus of efforts to understand and prevent the spread of avian flu, according to government advisers.

In a review of the science underpinning the contingency plans drawn up by the Department for Food, Environment and Rural Affairs (Defra), Prof Jeffrey Waage, a member of Defra's Science Advisory Group's Epidemic Diseases sub-group, said: "The ability of mammals to contract and transmit the avian influenza virus has important human health implications.</b>

"We know about cats as a potential host for avian influenza because of the extensive infection of cats in Asia in outbreaks there."

The report calls for more research to better understand the results of exposure on feral cats, farm cats and household pets and the risks of transmission to poultry.

Prof Andrew Easton, of the University of Warwick, said culling cats was not an option and a vaccine was not currently available, so it was important to prevent the animals from coming into contact with infection. "There are problems in doing that with cats in countryside areas which we recognise," he said.

Two years ago, there was the first report of a domestic cat vomiting, coughing up blood and dying from the avian influenza H5N1 virus in Thailand. Then came the death of 147 captive tigers fed virus-infected chicken carcasses and cases in Indonesia, where farmers already link the disease in cats to that in poultry.

Cats can become infected with the virus through contact with domestic and wild birds, and then excrete the virus from the respiratory and digestive tract, sometimes transmitting infection to other cats. Cats fed virus-infected chickens can be infected directly through the gut - a novel route for influenza transmission in mammals.

In the review Prof Waage, who is also the head of the Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College, asks Defra to increase the speed of reporting of avian influenza cases and taking samples, as well as considering the wider economic implications of a poultry boycott and a walk-out by poultry workers if avian influenza takes hold.
 
=



<B><font size=+1 color=brown><center>Scientists warn on 'hobby farm' bird flu monitoring</font>

James Meikle
Tuesday June 13, 2006
The Guardian
<A href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/birdflu/story/0,,1796373,00.html">www.guardian.co.uk</a></center>
Scientists advising the government on bird flu yesterday called for more systematic monitoring of wild birds for disease. They warned that the present testing regime relied too heavily on sampling live birds using busy feeding grounds such as wetlands and sanctuaries or birds shot for sport or food.</b>

The scientists feared the government was not paying sufficient attention to hobby farmers keeping pet birds or preserving rare breeds. Their stock might be more vulnerable to infection from wild birds and have fewer veterinary checks, and therefore present a greater threat to humans.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 

JPD

Inactive
Indonesia's Bird Flu Reports Underestimate Disease

(Update2)

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000087&sid=a7s8c5JZKu3A&refer=top_world_news



June 13 (Bloomberg) -- Indonesia's bird flu reports underestimate the extent of the outbreaks in poultry and are hampering efforts to fight the disease in a country with 1.3 billion chickens, an international veterinary agency said.

The World Organization for Animal Health last learned of an outbreak in Indonesia of the H5N1 avian influenza strain seven weeks ago when the agriculture department reported 789 poultry died or were culled this year to control its spread. Since then, H5N1 infected at least 17 Indonesians, killing 13 of them, and spread in birds as far east as Papua province.

``It's very important in terms of planning intervention programs'' to have regular, detailed reports, Antonio Petrini, deputy head of information at the Paris-based animal health organization, said yesterday by telephone. ``But it's very difficult to obtain'' in many developing countries.

Delayed or inadequate data on outbreaks make it difficult for international agencies to anticipate where the virus may emerge next or to know where to send animal health officials. Diseased fowl increase the risk for humans and create more opportunity for the virus to mutate into a pandemic form.

The H5N1 flu virus has infected at least 225 people in 10 countries, killing 128 of them since late 2003, the World Health Organization said June 6. Indonesia has reported one new human case a week on average this year and accounts for 29 percent of the fatalities worldwide and the most this year.

Poor Response

``Indonesia has among the highest highly pathogenic avian influenza risks and lowest capacity to respond,'' the World Bank said in a report released in the capital, Jakarta, yesterday. ``The H5N1 virus is now considered endemic in poultry in most provinces in the country, but surveillance coverage is limited and generally unreliable to detect outbreaks.''

In February and March, 45 chickens and a duck died of H5N1, Mathur Riady, Indonesia's director general of livestock services, said in a report to the World Organization for Animal Health, also known as the OIE. In addition, 743 chickens were destroyed as part of control measures, Riady said.

The report was received by the OIE on April 24 and posted on its Web site. The outbreaks in the provinces of Kepulauan Riau and Irian Jawa Barat are the only ones in 2006 reported by Indonesia to the OIE.

``It's underestimated of course,'' Petrini said. ``I don't know the true number.''

Riady and his predecessor, H.R. Wasito, reported more than 360,000 domestic fowl died or were culled in the country last year.

Romania, Nigeria

In comparison, other countries' reports to the OIE estimate Romania's avian flu toll this year at about 652,000 poultry, Myanmar's at 507,000, India's at 415,000, Nigeria's at 374,000 and Azerbaijan's at 296,000. The worldwide toll this year is about 3.9 million fowl, compared with 1.6 million in 2005, according to reports submitted to the OIE and published on its Web site.

Figures for dead and culled birds in Indonesia this year and in 2005 aren't reliable, said Peter Roeder, an animal health officer with the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Roeder spent about five of the past eight months in Indonesia setting up FAO's field program for avian flu.

``The virus is widespread and circulating,'' he said yesterday in an interview.

Initial Outbreak

Indonesia's pattern of communicating outbreaks to the OIE is typical of developing countries, where limited veterinary resources often mean reports are submitted weekly only in the first months after an initial outbreak and become progressively less frequent as financial resources dwindle, Petrini said.

``For sure, it's endemic in Indonesia, everybody knows that, but we don't have data week-by-week,'' he said.

The Southeast Asian nation of 238 million people has about 70,000 villages spread across 17,000 islands. Poultry are raised in the backyards of about 80 percent of the country's 55 million households, said John Budd, head of communications with the United Nations Children's Fund in Jakarta.

There is a ``significant financing gap'' as well as a mismatch between the government's national avian flu plan and the allocation of funding, the World Bank said in its report. The 2006 national budget includes 555 billion rupiah ($59 million) for avian flu, of which a third is for animal health and two- thirds for human health, it said.

``Surveillance and control in animals, which should be top priorities, are underfunded,'' the World Bank said.

The FAO wants to add three more people to its five-person team in Indonesia to bolster surveillance and infection control, and to liaise with communities and government officials, Roeder said. The Rome-based agency also wants to build community acceptance of the program and to station animal health professionals at nine disease investigation centers being set up across the country.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu has been confirmed in Sumy region (updated)

http://en.for-ua.com/news/2006/06/13/104136.html

Ukraine State Veterinary Service confirmed theictus of the high pathogen H5N1 bird flu in Peski village of Sumy region, Ukraine'sEmergency Ministry Spokesperson Ihor Krol told.

The operation HQ and the interdepartmental group of the Coordination Council Counteracting Bird Flu attached to the President of Ukraine have taken contorl of the situation. The delegation is headed by Anatoly Berezhnov.

Romenskiy breakdown crew consisting of 77 rescuers and 20 units of equipment is working on the spot.

Over 7,000 birds are scheduled to be killed.

Ukraine’s Emergency Ministry plans to allot $60,000 for compensation payment to Peski dwellers-owners of infected birds. It was revealed by Ivan Bisyuk, the Chief Veterinary Inspector of Ukraine.
“The State Emergency Ministry of Ukraine is working out a draft resolution of the Cabinet of Ukraine which will regulate the allocation of funds for compensation to owners of poultry. According to preliminary calculations, it will cost about $60,000,” specified Bisyuk.
 

JPD

Inactive
Hungary battles bird flu in domestic flock

http://www.foodproductiondaily.com/news/ng.asp?id=68382

By staff reporter

13/06/2006 - Hungary has confirmed it has found the avian influenza virus in a flock of domestic geese, a week after a European Commission report claimed incidents of bird flu are declining in the EU.

Outbreaks of avian influenza or bird flu have served to alarm consumers. Food processors have seen sales of poultry products plummet in some countries as avian influenza slowly crept into the block, brought by wild birds and in some cases infecting domesticated poultry stocks.

Supplies from other countries have also been restricted. Last week the Commission banned the import of all poultry and poultry products from Romania, for example.

The confirmed outbreak in Hungary occurred in Bács-Kiskun, in the south of the country. The tests carried out so far have shown that is a H5 highlypathogenic strain. Testing is being done to determine whether or not this is the H5N1 strain, the Commission announced in a press statement.

The flock was situated in a region where cases of highly pathogenic avian influenza occurred in wild birds earlier this year. Although the restrictions applied to farmers in the area had been lifted, a high level of surveillance wasmaintained in the area, the Commission stated.

All 2,300 geese in the flock were immediately culled when the virus was found, including farmed ducksand geese, in a one kilometer radius around the outbreak.

If the outbreak is confirmed, it would become the fifth outbreak of high pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza indomestic poultry in an EU member state.

Previous outbreaks have occurred in domestic poultry in France,Sweden, Germany and Denmark. Cases of avian influenza H5N1 have occurred in wild birds in thirteen member states of theEU to date.

A survey of wild birds; published from data collected by the EU's designated reference laboratory in Weybridge,the UK was carried out in the European Union during the past 10 months.

The survey found that between February 2006 and 21 May 2006, 741 cases of highly pathogenic avian influenza , most of them confirmed as the deadly H5N1 strain, have been detected in wild birds in 13 member states – Greece, Italy, Slovenia, Hungary, Austria, Germany, France, Slovakia, Sweden, Poland, Denmark, Czech Republic and UK.

There have been four outbreaks of H5N1 avian influenza in poultry in the EU, and all of these were swiftly eradicated following detection. No human case of the H5N1 virus has occurred in the EU.

There is considerable variation in the number of cases of highly pathogenic avian influenza in wild birds, ranging from 326 in Germany to one found in the UK.

The peak in terms of the number of cases in wild birds was reached in March with 362 cases, compared to 200 in February, with cases declining to 162 in April and 17 in May.

The most commonly affected wild birds have been swans, representing 62.8 per cent of the total, followed by ducks (16.3 per cent), geese (4.5 per cent), birds of prey (3.9 per cent) and others (13 per cent).

Following the major geographical spread of the H5N1 avian influenza virus from South-East Asia in 2005, the EU has intensified its programmes for the surveillance and early detection of avian influenza, both in wild birds and poultry.

The bloc has released €2.9m to co-finance member states' surveillance programmes until December 2006. Guidelines on beefed up surveillance for avian influenza in wild birds were also issued by the Standing Committee on the Food Chain and Animal Health.

The spread of the virus in domestic poultry in Europe has heightened public fears about eating chicken. Consumption of poultry meat has dropped by more than half in some EU states, with 300,000 tonnes and more in storage across the bloc, according to previous EU estimates.

Since the beginning of the recent avian flu crisis, consumption of poultry and eggs has fallen dramatically in some member states, leading to a sharp reduction in prices. In some countries, such as Italy, demand has fallen by up to 70 per cent, drastically lowering poultry farmers' incomes.

The continuing fight against the spread of avian influenza throughout Europe has focused on preventing the spread of the disease to domestic flocks from wild birds.

A total of 57 countries around the world have so far reported detecting the avian influenza strain, either in wild birds or domestic poultry.

Bird flu has killed 64 percent of those people known to be infected with the virus this year, according to World Health Organization statistics. There were 217 cases of infection and 123 deaths worldwide. Most of the deaths occurred in Asia. Earlier this year four died in Turkey.

Scientists worldwide are worried that the H5N1 form of the virus, which can be transmitted from poultry to humans, may mutate so that it can be transmitted from human to human and start a influenza pandemic.

The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) reported that recent avian influenza outbreaks in Europe, the Middle East and Africa have caused dramatic swings in poultry consumption, increased trade bans and sharp price declines. The UN agency expects poultry consumption shocks this year in many countries.

“A steady erosion of previously expected gains in per caput poultry consumption will likely push down global poultry consumption in 2006, currently estimated at 81.8 million tonnes, nearly three million tonnes lower than the previous 2006 estimate of 84.6 million tonnes,” stated FAO commodity specialist Nancy Morgan.

According to the FAO report consumption shocks are ranging from a dramatic 70 per cent decline in Italy in mid-February to 20 per cent in France and 10 per cent in northern Europe.

The crisis has also affected the $42 billion dollar feed sector in Europe, with demand losses estimated at up to 40 per cent in some countries, the FAO stated.
 

JPD

Inactive
H5N1 avian flu viruses trigger worse disease in adult cells than in children

http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/12062006...iruses-trigger-worse-disease-adult-cells.html

Mon Jun 12, 05:44 PM EST

By Helen Branswell

TORONTO (CP) - Some avian influenza viruses, and particularly the dangerous H5N1 subtype, appear to prompt the human immune system to over-produce important pathogen-fighting chemicals called chemokines, triggering an exaggerated response that creates more damage than it fixes, a new study suggests.

The study shows that at least with older versions of the H5N1 virus, this response - referred to as a cytokine storm - was significantly more acute in adults than children.

The findings could help to explain why the 1997 outbreak of H5N1 was far more deadly for adults than children and why the infamous 1918 Spanish flu - caused by the H1N1 subtype - wreaked its greatest havoc on young adults.

They could also offer clues to help in the design of therapies to treat infections caused by these viruses, by pinpointing the response that needs to be moderated to avoid this immune response tidal wave and the damage it inflicts.

"I think this is starting to provide us with a framework to better understand why H5N1 does what it does," said Dr. Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota.

"And I think also it's reason to be more concerned about similarities between 1918 H1N1 and 2006 H5N1."

The work, by scientists at the University of Hong Kong, is reported in the July issue of the Journal of Infectious Diseases and was financed by Hong Kong's Research Grants Council.

The research is part of a series of studies done by this group of scientists that is looking at the way human cells respond to H5N1 and related avian influenza viruses.

Group leader Dr. Malik Peiris, a leading influenza expert, said the study was inspired by the mortality pattern observed during the first recorded outbreak of human disease with the H5N1 virus - in Hong Kong in 1997. Of the 18 recorded cases, five of nine who were over 12 years of age died. Only one patient under that age succumbed to the virus.

"It made us wonder if there was some host factor associated with age," Peiris said in an interview from Hong Kong.

But the current wave of human infections with H5N1, which began in late 2003, includes many cases under 12, many of whom have died.

Peiris acknowledged that host response - in other words, the immune system reaction - obviously isn't the only factor involved in determining the severity of disease caused by H5N1 viruses. He suggested the route of infection, or the dose of virus to which an individual is exposed may also play a role.

Peiris's team tested their age hypothesis using blood from healthy adult blood donors and donated umbilical cord blood from healthy, full-term babies.

The scientists tested the response to three influenza viruses - a human H1N1 virus from 1998, an H5N1 virus from 1997 and a 1997 H9N2 virus. The last is considered an ancestor of the H5N1 virus, because while the two wear different hemagglutinins (the H in a flu virus's name) and neuraminidases (the N) on their outer shell, their six internal genes are very closely related.

The blood samples were used to isolate macrophages - immune system warriors which are drawn to the site of infection by signalling chemicals such as chemokines. Once at the site of infection, macrophages engulf and destroy invading pathogens.

In this experiment, the flu viruses were added to cultures of macrophages to see what responses were provoked.

Interestingly, the flu viruses all replicated at about the same rate, in both the adult and infant cells.

"So these differences weren't due to differences in the extent of virus growth that they could discern, but rather something intrinsic to the viruses themselves which were causing the different (chemokine) expression levels that they reported," said Dr. Frederick Hayden, a scientist with the World Health Organization's global influenza program.

But while the viruses generated the same amount of infection, the immune response to the infection varied greatly, both between the human and avian viruses and between the adult and infant cells.

In particular the avian viruses triggered the production of significantly higher levels of a chemokine called CCL3 in the adult cells. The authors noted elevated levels of CCL3 have also been found in the blood of patients who have died from H5N1 infection as compared to those who were infected but survived.

"The higher CCL3 response in adult (macrophages) may be one of the important factors responsible for the age-related severity of avian influenza virus infection in 1997," they wrote.

Peiris also noted that in fatal human cases of H5N1 infection it has been observed that macrophages have virtually swarmed the lungs. Chemokines like CCL3 draw macrophages, he noted, saying the pattern of actual disease and the experiments done by his team "do fit."

Chemicals like these play a crucial role in the body's response to invading pathogens. But overproduction can create a cascading hyper-response that actually exacerbates the damage already done by the virus.

The authors noted that mice infected with the newly reconstituted 1918 H1N1 Spanish flu virus produced high levels of the same immune system signalling chemicals as were seen to be over-produced by the H5N1 and H9N2 viruses.

Since these more contemporary avian flu viruses carry a number of the same mutations on their internal genes as the 1918 virus did, they argued, further analysis of the role of these mutations is needed to determine what role they play in the disease process.

For Osterholm, the work provides further supporting evidence that the cytokine-storm phenomenon was at work during the deadly second wave of the Spanish flu. It also supports the concern he and others share about the similarities between the type of human disease H5N1 causes and reports of what patients suffered during the 1918 pandemic, which claimed an estimated 50 million lives worldwide.

"We'll never be able to go back to 1918 and demonstrate that the cytokine storm was the key feature of those early and dramatic deaths in patients," Osterholm said.

"But clinically those patients were so similar and patho-physiologic standpoint it makes so much sense that that's what was happening that I've got to believe that there are important parallels here."
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
June 13, 2006
Health

Human bird flu case reported in Shenzhen
The Centre for Health Protection has been notified of a suspected human case of avian influenza in Shenzhen.​

The 31-year-old man developed fever and pneumonia on June 3. He is in critical condition.

It was reported that he visited a wet market where live chickens were on sale. The centre is seeking more information on the case.

The Department of Health's Port Health Office has maintained temperature screening for inbound travellers at all immigration control points. The Centre for Food Safety will also step up inspection on the health and hygiene conditions of chickens imported from the Mainland.

http://www.news.gov.hk/en/category/healthandcommunity/060613/html/060613en05013.htm

:vik:
 

New Freedom

Veteran Member
http://www.cantonrep.com/index.php?ID=290810


Alaska tests for flu before cooking birds
Saturday, June 10, 2006
By ANNE SUTTON ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER


BARROW, Alaska - Nearly 350 miles above the Arctic Circle, a traditional Eskimo feast to celebrate a successful whale hunt is in the making. On the table, chopped-up chunks of wild fowl are ready for the pot — all except for a lovely king eider duck.

Before this duck is plucked and cooked, a government scientist will swab it to take a sample for bird flu testing.

Scientists have been posted in Barrow — the nation’s northernmost city, set in a treeless expanse of tundra on the edge of the ice-bound Arctic Ocean — to look for early warning signs that migratory birds are bringing the deadly virus to North America.

No one knows when or if H5N1 avian influenza will arrive on U.S. shores, but if it does come by wild bird, experts want to know early on, before it can devastate the poultry supply, or worse.

The virus has led to the death or slaughter of millions of birds in Asia, Europe and Africa and killed more than 128 people who had close contract with sick birds. The bigger fear is that the virus could mutate into a form that could pass easily from human to human, sparking a pandemic.

crossroads for migrant birds

But as Corey Rossi, district supervisor for the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s wildlife services in Alaska, prepares to take a fecal sample from the duck with a swab, he relays the same message he has been giving since he arrived in Barrow a week earlier.

“I don’t think we’re going to find anything but we’re looking just to make sure,” he says. He tucks the cotton swab in a sterile vial to be sealed, labeled and sent on to a government lab while Laura Paktotak and her cousin pluck, chop and deliver the duck to the pot.

The testing is part of an effort to sample between 75,000 and 100,000 live and hunter-killed birds across the nation, of which 19,000 are to come from various points around Alaska.

Barrow, population 4,800, is a place where a sharp wind whips the grit from the dirt roads, and snow flurries fly even in June. Because it is a crossroads for birds migrating back and forth from Asia and traveling to and from the Lower 48 states, Barrow is on the front lines of the early-detection plan — a fact that caused some consternation at first among people who live here and depend on wild fowl for food.

A public information campaign worked to ease those fears by telling hunters to cook game birds thoroughly and to use rubber gloves and exercise care when handling and cleaning their catch.

Frances Leavitt, a 41-year-old Barrow housewife, says she would never give up the foods she grew up eating. Hunting is a vital source of food in a community where a nice steak at the grocery store can go for $35 and milk is $7.50 a gallon.

Leavitt says that after the initial concerns about bird flu wore off, the subject became a joke among the hunters in her family. “They would say to each other, ‘Are you going to go bird flu hunting now?’ ” she says.

ALASKAN BIRD FLU OPERATION

Sampling hunter-killed birds is only a small part of the Alaska effort being waged by federal, state and local governments. Live birds also are being sampled, though that effort did not start out as smoothly as biologists hoped.

Rossi and crew spent two days trying to capture glaucous gulls at the local landfill. The idea was to fire a 50-by-60-foot net over them. The whale blubber bait failed to lure the skittish birds, which waited until later in the night to venture close.

And in a coastal marsh, biologists tried and failed to capture several species of small, quick shorebirds by stringing long nets. The birds flew up and over the mesh after a wind kicked up and set it rippling.

While the scientists persist, the Inupiat Eskimos continue to rely on nature’s bounty.

More than 300 Barrow residents show up at the outdoor community festival, called an apugauti, for a bowl of duck soup and some mikigaq, a tangy black viscous mixture of fermented whale blood, blubber and meat that the children gobble up like candy. The elderly in fur-trimmed parkas and youngsters in hooded sweatshirts sit at long tables at a windy community playground.

“We are keeping our tradition and culture alive,” says Susan Hope. “It brings out the best in everybody.”
 

New Freedom

Veteran Member
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000101&sid=aXiq1lbyXdQM


Indonesia's Bird Flu Reports Underestimate Disease
(Update1)

June 13 (Bloomberg) -- Indonesia's bird flu reports underestimate the extent of the outbreaks in poultry and are hampering efforts to fight the disease in the country that has 1.3 billion chickens, an international veterinary agency said.

The World Organization for Animal Health last learned of an outbreak in Indonesia of the H5N1 avian influenza strain seven weeks ago when the agriculture department reported 789 poultry died or were culled to control its spread. Since then, H5N1 infected at least 17 Indonesians, killing 13 of them, and spread in birds as far east as Papua province.

``It's very important in terms of planning intervention programs'' to have regular, detailed reports, Antonio Petrini, deputy head of information at the Paris-based animal health organization, said yesterday by telephone. ``But it's very difficult to obtain'' in many developing countries.

Delayed or inadequate data on outbreaks makes it difficult for international agencies to anticipate where the virus may emerge next or to know where to send animal health officials. Diseased fowl increase the risk for humans and create more opportunity for the virus to mutate into a pandemic form.

The H5N1 flu virus has infected at least 225 people in 10 countries, killing 128 of them since late 2003, the World Health Organization said June 6. Indonesia has reported one new human case a week on average this year and accounts for 29 percent of the fatalities worldwide and the most this year.

Poor Response

``Indonesia has among the highest highly pathogenic avian influenza risks and lowest capacity to respond,'' the World Bank said in a report released in the capital, Jakarta, yesterday. ``The H5N1 virus is now considered endemic in poultry in most provinces in the country, but surveillance coverage is limited and generally unreliable to detect outbreaks.''

In February and March, 45 chickens and a duck died of H5N1, Mathur Riady, Indonesia's director general of livestock services, said in a report to the World Organization for Animal Health, also known as the OIE. In addition, 743 chickens were destroyed as part of control measures, Riady said.

The report was received by the OIE on April 24 and posted on its Web site. The outbreaks in the provinces of Kepulauan Riau and Irian Jawa Barat are the only ones in 2006 reported by Indonesia to the OIE.

``It's underestimated of course,'' Petrini said. ``I don't know the true number.''

Riady and his predecessor, H.R. Wasito, reported more than 360,000 domestic fowl died or were culled in the country last year.

Romania, Nigeria

In comparison, other countries' reports to the OIE estimate Romania's avian flu toll this year at about 652,000 poultry, Myanmar's at 507,000, India's at 415,000, Nigeria's at 374,000 and Azerbaijan's at 296,000.

Figures for dead and culled birds in Indonesia this year and in 2005 aren't reliable and don't reflect the ability to find the virus, said Peter Roeder, an animal health officer with the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.

Roeder spent about five of the past eight months in Indonesia setting up FAO's field program for avian flu.

``The virus is widespread and circulating,'' he said yesterday in an interview.

Initial Outbreak

Indonesia's pattern of communicating outbreaks to the OIE is typical of developing countries, where limited veterinary resources often mean reports are submitted weekly only in the first months after an initial outbreak and become progressively less frequent as financial resources dwindle, Petrini said.

``For sure, it's endemic in Indonesia, everybody knows that, but we don't have data week-by-week,'' he said.

The Southeast Asian nation of 238 million people has about 70,000 villages spread across 17,000 islands. Poultry are raised in the backyards of about 80 percent of the country's 55 million households, said John Budd, head of communications with the United Nations Children's Fund in Jakarta.

There is a ``significant financing gap'' as well as a mismatch between the government's national avian flu plan and the allocation of funding, the World Bank said in its report. The 2006 national budget includes 555 billion rupiah ($59 million) for avian flu, of which a third is for animal health and two- thirds for human health, it said.

``Surveillance and control in animals, which should be top priorities, are under-funded,'' the World Bank said.

The FAO wants to add three more people to its five-person team in Indonesia to bolster surveillance and infection control, and to liaise with communities and government officials, Roeder said. The Rome-based agency also wants to build community acceptance of the program and to station animal health professionals at nine disease investigation centers being set up across the country.
 

New Freedom

Veteran Member
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/mai...u13.xml&sSheet=/news/2006/06/13/ixuknews.html


Cats could hold key to spread of avian flu virus

By Roger Highfield, Science Editor
(Filed: 13/06/2006)

Cats should become a new focus of efforts to understand and prevent the spread of avian flu, according to government advisers.

In a review of the science underpinning the contingency plans drawn up by the Department for Food, Environment and Rural Affairs (Defra), Prof Jeffrey Waage, a member of Defra's Science Advisory Group's Epidemic Diseases sub-group, said: "The ability of mammals to contract and transmit the avian influenza virus has important human health implications.

"We know about cats as a potential host for avian influenza because of the extensive infection of cats in Asia in outbreaks there."

The report calls for more research to better understand the results of exposure on feral cats, farm cats and household pets and the risks of transmission to poultry.

Prof Andrew Easton, of the University of Warwick, said culling cats was not an option and a vaccine was not currently available, so it was important to prevent the animals from coming into contact with infection. "There are problems in doing that with cats in countryside areas which we recognise," he said.

Two years ago, there was the first report of a domestic cat vomiting, coughing up blood and dying from the avian influenza H5N1 virus in Thailand. Then came the death of 147 captive tigers fed virus-infected chicken carcasses and cases in Indonesia, where farmers already link the disease in cats to that in poultry.

Cats can become infected with the virus through contact with domestic and wild birds, and then excrete the virus from the respiratory and digestive tract, sometimes transmitting infection to other cats. Cats fed virus-infected chickens can be infected directly through the gut - a novel route for influenza transmission in mammals.

In the review Prof Waage, who is also the head of the Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College, asks Defra to increase the speed of reporting of avian influenza cases and taking samples, as well as considering the wider economic implications of a poultry boycott and a walk-out by poultry workers if avian influenza takes hold.
 

New Freedom

Veteran Member
http://www.birdflubreakingnews.com/...//www.camrosecanadian.com/story.php?id=235790


East Central Health, the province and the federal government are doing everything possible to ensure they are prepared for the worst possible case of a pandemic flu outbreak.
Camrose physician Dr. Diane Wong told Camrose Chamber of Commerce members that whether we like it or not, a pandemic outbreak of influenza is just around the corner.

Disaster

“In a nutshell it will be the biggest disaster of our time,” Wong said, comparing the pandemic to a hurricane hitting every major city, small city, town and village in the country. “It will last for months and maybe even years.”
While some people have been suspicious that fears of a pandemic are simply a hoax or have been overblown, “every health expert thinks that it’s not if, but when it’s going to happen. Don’t just take my word for it, read the newspapers, try to get your information from the real top sources.”
As waves of fear swept through the assembled business and political leaders, Wong compared the human flu that strikes every year, but that rarely leads to death, to a pandemic outbreak which is created by a mutation of bird flu and the human flu virus.
“A pandemic is a vicious kind of flu that happens every 30 to 40 years,” Wong said, noting we are now on the outer limit of that cycle. She added that in the case of pandemic flu it will strike the young and elderly, but also “healthy young people.”
Normally the death rate from influenza is less than .1 per cent, however in a pandemic that rises to 2.5 per cent of those who fall sick. She said with the pandemic flu, symptoms include bleeding from the eyes, nose, mouth, lungs drowning in fluid, brain swelling and skin turning purple and then black before the victim dies.
The Spanish Flu outbreak in 1918-19 “was the worst natural disaster in human history. There was one town in Alaska where 75 per cent of the community died.”
The world’s population at the time was 1.8 billion and of those, one billion got sick with Spanish Flu. “That’s four times the number of deaths of World War I, in one quarter of the time... 824 people died in Winnipeg and it was twice the size of Camrose (now) at that time.”
A pandemic appears three or four times every century as influenza develops the ability to jump from the animal kingdom to humans. While precautions have been taken and people are encouraged to wash their hands regularly, cover their mouth when they cough, the avian flu is moving steadily westward from China, Russia and Hong Kong and is now into Europe. To date is has not been identified in North America, but it is just a matter of time. It is inevitable, Wong admitted.
The recent earthquake in Indonesia has created a hot bed for an outbreak. The country had several human deaths after people had contact with infected birds and as a result of the earthquake many survivors are now sleeping in their chicken coops on H5N1 infested feces.
East Central Health suggests businesses start putting in place a plan to ensure they are ready in case a pandemic breaks out. First, plan for the impact of a pandemic on the business. Check that existing contingency plans are applicable to a pandemic. In particular, check to see that core business activities can be sustained over several weeks.
Identify other critical inputs (i.e. raw materials, suppliers, sub-contractors), services/products and logistics required to maintain business operations by location and function during a pandemic.
Determine which outside activities are critical to maintaining operations and develop alternatives in case they cannot function normally.

Interruptions

Plan accordingly for possible short interruptions of essential services like sanitation, water, power, and disruptions to the food supply.
Identify your company’s essential functions and the individuals who perform them. The absence of these individuals could seriously impair business continuity. Build in the training redundancy necessary to ensure that their work can be done in the event of an absentee rate of 25 to 35 per cent.

Massive

In the Camrose trading area of 104,000 people Wong said, businesses and governments can expect to see “31,200 ill.”
The key to reducing the risk is maintaining a healthy work environment by encouraging healthy behaviours at all times and posting tips on how to stop the spread of germs at work.
“Use waterless soaps - handwashing it is so basic, but it’s true,” Wong said.

Develop a policy

Establish or expand policies and tools that enable employees to work from home with appropriate security and network access to applications, if possible.
Expand online and self-service options for customers and business partners, if possible.

Educate

Communicate with and educate your employees. Tell the workforce about the threat of pandemic influenza and the steps the company is taking to prepare for it. In emergencies, employees demonstrate an increased tendency to listen to their employer so clear and frequent communication is essential. Encourage personal preparedness.
Update sick leave and family and medical leave policies and communicate with employees about the importance of staying away from the workplace if they become ill.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Hungary battles bird flu in domestic flock

By staff reporter

13/06/2006 - Hungary has confirmed it has found the avian influenza virus in a flock of domestic geese, a week after a European Commission report claimed incidents of bird flu are declining in the EU.

Outbreaks of avian influenza or bird flu have served to alarm consumers. Food processors have seen sales of poultry products plummet in some countries as avian influenza slowly crept into the block, brought by wild birds and in some cases infecting domesticated poultry stocks.

Supplies from other countries have also been restricted. Last week the Commission banned the import of all poultry and poultry products from Romania, for example.

The confirmed outbreak in Hungary occurred in Bács-Kiskun, in the south of the country. The tests carried out so far have shown that is a H5 highlypathogenic strain. Testing is being done to determine whether or not this is the H5N1 strain, the Commission announced in a press statement.

The flock was situated in a region where cases of highly pathogenic avian influenza occurred in wild birds earlier this year. Although the restrictions applied to farmers in the area had been lifted, a high level of surveillance wasmaintained in the area, the Commission stated.

All 2,300 geese in the flock were immediately culled when the virus was found, including farmed ducksand geese, in a one kilometer radius around the outbreak.

If the outbreak is confirmed, it would become the fifth outbreak of high pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza indomestic poultry in an EU member state.

Previous outbreaks have occurred in domestic poultry in France,Sweden, Germany and Denmark. Cases of avian influenza H5N1 have occurred in wild birds in thirteen member states of theEU to date.

A survey of wild birds; published from data collected by the EU's designated reference laboratory in Weybridge,the UK was carried out in the European Union during the past 10 months.

The survey found that between February 2006 and 21 May 2006, 741 cases of highly pathogenic avian influenza , most of them confirmed as the deadly H5N1 strain, have been detected in wild birds in 13 member states – Greece, Italy, Slovenia, Hungary, Austria, Germany, France, Slovakia, Sweden, Poland, Denmark, Czech Republic and UK.

There have been four outbreaks of H5N1 avian influenza in poultry in the EU, and all of these were swiftly eradicated following detection. No human case of the H5N1 virus has occurred in the EU.

There is considerable variation in the number of cases of highly pathogenic avian influenza in wild birds, ranging from 326 in Germany to one found in the UK.

The peak in terms of the number of cases in wild birds was reached in March with 362 cases, compared to 200 in February, with cases declining to 162 in April and 17 in May.

The most commonly affected wild birds have been swans, representing 62.8 per cent of the total, followed by ducks (16.3 per cent), geese (4.5 per cent), birds of prey (3.9 per cent) and others (13 per cent).

Following the major geographical spread of the H5N1 avian influenza virus from South-East Asia in 2005, the EU has intensified its programmes for the surveillance and early detection of avian influenza, both in wild birds and poultry.

The bloc has released €2.9m to co-finance member states' surveillance programmes until December 2006. Guidelines on beefed up surveillance for avian influenza in wild birds were also issued by the Standing Committee on the Food Chain and Animal Health.

The spread of the virus in domestic poultry in Europe has heightened public fears about eating chicken. Consumption of poultry meat has dropped by more than half in some EU states, with 300,000 tonnes and more in storage across the bloc, according to previous EU estimates.

Since the beginning of the recent avian flu crisis, consumption of poultry and eggs has fallen dramatically in some member states, leading to a sharp reduction in prices. In some countries, such as Italy, demand has fallen by up to 70 per cent, drastically lowering poultry farmers' incomes.

The continuing fight against the spread of avian influenza throughout Europe has focused on preventing the spread of the disease to domestic flocks from wild birds.

A total of 57 countries around the world have so far reported detecting the avian influenza strain, either in wild birds or domestic poultry.

Bird flu has killed 64 percent of those people known to be infected with the virus this year, according to World Health Organization statistics. There were 217 cases of infection and 123 deaths worldwide. Most of the deaths occurred in Asia. Earlier this year four died in Turkey.

Scientists worldwide are worried that the H5N1 form of the virus, which can be transmitted from poultry to humans, may mutate so that it can be transmitted from human to human and start a influenza pandemic.

The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) reported that recent avian influenza outbreaks in Europe, the Middle East and Africa have caused dramatic swings in poultry consumption, increased trade bans and sharp price declines. The UN agency expects poultry consumption shocks this year in many countries.

“A steady erosion of previously expected gains in per caput poultry consumption will likely push down global poultry consumption in 2006, currently estimated at 81.8 million tonnes, nearly three million tonnes lower than the previous 2006 estimate of 84.6 million tonnes,” stated FAO commodity specialist Nancy Morgan.

According to the FAO report consumption shocks are ranging from a dramatic 70 per cent decline in Italy in mid-February to 20 per cent in France and 10 per cent in northern Europe.

The crisis has also affected the $42 billion dollar feed sector in Europe, with demand losses estimated at up to 40 per cent in some countries, the FAO stated.

http://www.foodproductiondaily.com/news/ng.asp?id=68382

:vik:
 
=


<B><center>Reader's Digest Magazine

<font size=+1 color=red>Which Big U.S. Cities Are Prepared for a Disaster?</font>

Releases Special Report Ranking 10 High-Risk Cities
Miami, New York, and Washington D.C. Top the List
<A href="http://orange.advfn.com/news_Which-Big-U-S--Cities-Are-Prepared-for-a-Disaster--Reader-s-Digest-Magazine-Rele_15769994.html">orange.advfn.com</a></center>
PLEASANTVILLE, N.Y., June 13 /PRNewswire/ -- As the first storm of the 2006 hurricane season approaches the U.S. mainland, Reader's Digest releases a special report that evaluates which major urban areas are best prepared to respond to a crisis, whether hurricane, bird flu pandemic or terrorist attack. The full report can be found on http://www.rd.com/ and in the July issue, on newsstands June 27.</b>

"Everyone realizes that being prepared for disasters is one sure way to save lives and property," says Bill Beaman, Washington Bureau Chief for Reader's Digest. "Yet some cities have done a lot more than others to protect their residents."

There are no set criteria for measuring preparedness, so Reader's Digest conducted an independent assessment focusing on key indicators in three main categories -- emergency readiness, crisis communications and medical response. Among the security measures reviewed were: ratio of first responders (police, fire and medical) to residents; proximity of federal search-and-rescue teams; clear instructions on city websites regarding evacuation plans including residents with special needs; communication capabilities between first responders; the existence of 24-hour emergency alert systems; number of hospital beds per residents.

Ten high-risk urban areas were graded with Miami, New York and Washington, D.C. achieving the highest score and Las Vegas and Detroit the lowest.

* Miami meets the standard in 10 of 11 measures and exceeds the standard in having at least one federal search-and-rescue task force within 50 miles supported by the Department of Homeland Security.

* New York meets the standard in six of 11 measures and exceeds the standard in all three categories by meeting CDC guidelines to distribute drugs and medical equipment from the National Stockpile, offering 24- hour emergency alerts through street sirens, email alerts or automated phone calls, and integrating labs nearby for the quick identification of biological and chemical threats.

* Washington, D.C. meets the standard in six of 11 measures and exceeds the standard in all three categories by having at least one federal search-and-rescue task force within 50 miles supported by the Department of Homeland Security, offering 24-hour emergency alerts through street sirens, email alerts or automated phone calls, and integrating labs nearby for the quick identification of biological and chemical threats.


To compile this report, Reader's Digest: consulted with more than two dozen preparedness authorities including federal and local emergency workers; analyzed public data including several dozen government documents at the Homeland Security Department, Health and Human Services Department as well as the White House, Office of Management and Budget, Justice, Labor and Transportation Departments; and contacted the mayors' offices to gauge the readiness of these cities to meet both natural and man-made disasters. Cities earned points on a scale from 0 to 3 in each category, reflecting how well they met our standards. The totals were then converted into a final grade for each city on a scale of 0% to 100%.

Reader's Digest reaches 40 million readers in the U.S. each month. The magazine celebrates the best of humanity, and delivers a compelling mix of special reporting, humor, personal service and human-interest stories. Reader's Digest is published in 21 languages and 50 editions worldwide.

DATASOURCE: Reader's Digest Association, Inc.
 

JPD

Inactive
Suspected human bird flu case in south China

http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?NewsID=1035416

BEIJING: A 31-year-old man is suspected to have contracted bird flu in southern China, state media quoted health authorities as saying on late Tuesday.

The man, identified only by his surname Jiang, was in critical condition in hospital in the economic boomtown of Shenzhen in Guangdong province, which borders Hong Kong, the Xinhua news agency said, citing city health officials.

The man, who developed a fever, back pains and a cough on June 3, was admitted to hospital on Friday. Preliminary tests carried out by local health officials showed he was positive for H5N1, Xinhua reported. He has since been transferred to another hospital in Shenzhen for "advanced treatment", the agency said, adding that provincial authorities had reported the case to the health ministry for verification.

The man would become China's 19th reported human case if he is confirmed as having the deadly H5N1 strain. Twelve of those cases have been fatal.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
State To Test Wild Birds For Avian Flu

June 13, 2006

By Associated Press

OLYMPIA - Washington state biologists will begin testing at least 2,500 wild birds next month as part of the national effort to detect any cases of bird flu entering the United States.

The Department of Fish and Wildlife says it will focus on several species of migratory shorebirds and waterfowl that are most likely to interact with Asian migratory birds in the Arctic.

The first priority will be testing wild birds that are found dead, but live birds and fecal samples also will be tested.

The testing is designed to provide early detection of birds carrying the H5N1 strain of bird flu. The virus has led to the deaths or slaughter of millions of birds in Asia, Europe and Africa and killed more than 128 people who had close contract with sick birds. The bigger fear is that the virus could mutate into a form that could pass easily from human to human.

So far, no wild birds in North America have tested positive for the H5N1 strain.

The federal and state departments of Agriculture also are involved in parallel testing programs in the state.

http://www.komotv.com/stories/43905.htm

:vik:
 

JPD

Inactive
Hungary confirms H5N1 in poultry

http://www.portfolio.hu/en/cikkek.tdp?cCheck=1&k=2&i=8537

2006.06.09 12:13
Hungary finds H5 bird flu virus in poultry

Last week an outbreak of bird flu was reported from some southeast Hungarian farms, prompting the veterinary authorities to order the culling of around 300,000 domestic poultry, mostly ducks and geese. Officials said then that they suspected the H5N1 strain had infected the birds. Earlier this week the ministry said they might be forced to cull up to half a million poultry.

"It can be taken as certain that the H5N1 type of bird flu infected the poultry stock in Bács-Kiskun county," Gráf said, adding that the laboratory results from the UK would arrive in Budapest later on Wednesday or Thursday.

In an interview on public television the minister said on Wednesday that Hungary's farmers would be unable to keep their ducks and geese indoors to isolate them from wild birds due to outdated technology.

"The technology they are using is totally obsolete, it is basically a foil tent, and just a few planks stop the birds from going out into the open," Reuters quoted Gráf as saying. "We must change the technology."

There is a 30-day ban on transporting or slaughtering fowl for consumption in a three-kilometre zone of the infected area.

Japan announced on Tuesday it temporarily halted imports of Hungarian poultry, including fois gras (livers of geese and ducks), because of bird flu concerns.
Hungary's Agricultural Ministry said imports were halted Monday and that Tokyo asked the government for details on its anti-bird flu measures.
Tokyo imported some 330 tonnes of fois gras products from Hungary in 2005.
 

JPD

Inactive
HK bird flu experts head for Shenzhen

http://english.people.com.cn/200606/14/eng20060614_274004.html

Hong Kong medical and veterinary experts will go to Shenzhen City in south China's Guangdong Province to gather more information on the human case of avian influenza there, a Hong Kong official said Wednesday.

Hong Kong Secretary for Health, Welfare and Food York Chow said the case is worrying and could see the suspension of live Mainland chicken imports for three weeks if confirmed.

He added that what concerns health authorities most is that the patient has no specific history of close contact with poultry, similar to two previous cases in Shanghai and Guangdong. Repeated cases on the Mainland may mean there might be some "silent infections" among poultry, which might carry the virus while not showing symptoms.

Chow assured that Hong Kong has all the tools and mechanisms to detect human avian flu and contain it.

"We should not panic, but at the same time we should be cautious," said Chow.

The Hong Kong delegation will discuss the case with Mainland authorities later Wednesday, and share information on epidemiological, laboratory and animal investigation findings, as well as clinical treatment of the case.

Hong Kong Department of Health will continue temperature checks at boundary checkpoints, and accidents and emergency wards have been reminded to step up monitoring of unknown sources of pneumonia.

The Health Bureau of Shenzhen City on Tuesday reported a suspected case of human infection of bird flu. the 31-year-old man is still in critical condition.

Secretary of the Shenzhen Municipal Committee of the Communist Party of China Li Hongzhong on Tuesday announced a second-degree emergency precaution scheme against bird flu in the city.

Source: Xinhua
 

JPD

Inactive
Indonesia...

People protest govt plan to cull poultry in Karo

(ANTARA News) - People grouped in an "Anti Bird Flu Rumours Coalition" in the North Sumatra district of Karo staged a demonstration at the office of the North Sumatra governor on Tuesday to protest the government`s plan to conduct a cull of poultry following the recent death of birdflu patients in the district.

"We do not agree with the government`s plan because no poultry in Karo has been proven to be infected with the avian flu virus as rumoured so far," one of the demonstrators said.

Coordinating Minister for People`s Welfare Aburizal Bakrie has issued a decision calling for selective culling of people`s poultry in the district in an effort to contain the disease.

During the rally, some of demonstrators slaughtered five chickens, cooked and then ate them together with some officials of the office to demonstrate that their chickens were not infected with the birdflu virus.

One of the demonstrators even ate a raw chicken`s gall to emphasize that their poultry was healthy.

The demonstrators also raised banners reading among others "No Birdflu in Karo" and "We will not allow destruction of our poultry."

They said the people of Karo had been hurt by all the statements the government had made so far attributing the death of seven people in the district recently to birdflu.

They said they had been made restless because as a result of the statements they had suffered big losses. They said all poultry farmers in the district had gone bankcrupt as nobody wanted to buy poultry anymore.

In view of that they called on the government to immediately settle the problem so that poultry farmers would not suffer too long.

The head of the social affairs division of the provincial administration, Hasbi Nasution, said before the demonstrators that the government had no idea of destroying the life of poultry farmers.

He said that the decision was aimed at protecting the people, adding that it would not be effective permanently.(*)









]
 

New Freedom

Veteran Member
This isn't about BF, but the volcano is in Indonesia......makes for a great combination.......earthquake, volcano and bird flu.....what a mess !!!

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/SP167245.htm


Indonesia volcano back on highest alert level
14 Jun 2006 10:35:41 GMT
Source: Reuters


JAKARTA, June 14 (Reuters) - Indonesia raised the alert status of Mount Merapi volcano to its highest level again after it spewed hot clouds on Wednesday, a day after it lowered the warning.

Merapi in central Java, near the ancient royal city of Yogyakarta, had been on the highest alert level since mid-May until Tuesday when a volcano monitoring centre said decreasing activity had made it less dangerous.

"The status was upgraded at 2 p.m. (0700 GMT) because of the increasing hot clouds," said Triyani, an official at the state-run monitoring centre in Yogyakarta.

Many people who had moved back to their homes in nearby villages headed for evacuation shelters after the government raised the alert level.

On Tuesday, the volcano centre had recommended the government let people return home because villages located 6-7 km (3.75-4.3 miles) from the peak were considered safe.

"Those who have returned home now are going back to the evacuation barracks," said Sulistiyo, who manages evacuees in Sleman regency on Merapi's southern foothill.

After spewing huge gas clouds and lava last week, Merapi had calmed down for a few days, but on Wednesday began spitting out hot smoke again.

"The hot clouds have gone beyond 6 km. The emissions are continuous and that's our reason behind the upgrade," Subandrio, a senior volcanologist at the centre, told Jakarta-based Radio Elshinta.

A siren went off when the hot gas stretched beyond 4 km (2.5 miles) around noon, sparking panic among some residents.

Experts fear a lava dome, building since April due to increased activity, could collapse, generating clouds of gas and lava flows that could cause fatalities.

The volcano has become more active since an earthquake last month that struck Yogyakarta and nearby areas killing more than 5,700 people.

More than 60 people were killed when Merapi last erupted in 1994, while 1,300 died in a 1930 eruption.
 

New Freedom

Veteran Member
http://www.peoplemanagement.co.uk/p...ssible.htm?name=latest+headlines&type=section


Avian flu outbreak possible in autumn


'Toughest thing employers are facing at the moment is a lack of clarity'

Anna Scott
Issue date: 15 June 2006

An outbreak of avian flu is a "significant possibility" in the autumn, but a lack of clarity and information about the disease is causing employers unnecessary anxiety.


Occupational physician Richard Preece told PM that birds had been migrating away from the UK since spring but would return in the autumn, so there was "reason to assume there will be an H5N1 outbreak [the strain of the disease that can be deadly to humans] at some point".



"But avian flu is a disease of birds, and there have been no cases of the disease affecting humans in Europe," he stressed. "If you are in the poultry or catering industry there may be an issue for your business, but the media coverage of avian flu is not driven by rational concern. The threat is an emotional one.



"The toughest thing employers are facing at the moment is a lack of clarity," he added.



Ben Willmott, CIPD adviser, employee relations, agreed that the current climate of uncertainty was creating fear in itself. "At the moment the risk is very low," he said. "But the potential is there. So if things change, employers need to be prepared."



Preece, who is also business development director at IT services company Atos Origin, said HR professionals should start communicating with employees now. "They need to explain that there is a difference between seasonal flu, avian flu and a pandemic, and make sure they have plans in the event of a crisis," he said. "It's about building confidence that they are doing whatever they reasonably can."



He added: "Once there is a case of avian flu in humans in the UK, it is going to hit the news in the morning, will go around the office and people will want information immediately. They will need to know if they are in danger, or if they should travel to the office."





Plan now for threat

Firms can prepare for the worst by:

• communicating clearly about the threat of avian flu;

• putting contingency plans in place in the event of a pandemic;

• formulating plans that would enable the organisation to operate on a skeleton staff;

• considering ways to maximise homeworking;

• investigating ways of increasing the use of video-links and teleconferencing to help limit the amount of face-to-face contact;

• identifying key roles that must be carried out and those people who can fulfil more than one function;

• for service/customer-facing organisations, exploring the possibility of increasing the amount of online transactions and self-service options for customers.
 

New Freedom

Veteran Member
http://www.peta.org/mc/NewsItem.asp?id=8474


Humans’ Closest Relatives Are Among the Most Dangerous Carriers of Avian Flu, Other Deadly Diseases

For Immediate Release:
June 13, 2006

Atlanta — In an attempt to stanch the spread of bird flu, which has already traveled from Asia to the Middle East and Europe, PETA has fired off a letter to Dr. Julie Louise Gerberding, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, urging her to ban the importation of nonhuman primates from countries with confirmed bird flu outbreaks.

PETA cites laboratory tests that show that nonhuman primates contract bird flu similarly to humans and points out that primates bought and sold in unregulated Asian animal markets are likely to be kept in close contact with infected birds. Last year, more than 20,000 of these primates entered the U.S. from China, Vietnam, Cambodia, and Indonesia—countries that have suffered 97 human deaths from bird flu.

PETA’s request has precedent, as the CDC banned primate imports after contract-testing giant Covance Inc. was discovered to be importing hundreds of Ebola-infected primates from Asia. Given the severe threat posed by bird flu, PETA thinks that similar action by the CDC is appropriate.

PETA also points out that the intense stress caused by capture, confinement, and transport—which can be compounded by prolonged exposure to heat, cold, hunger, and thirst—suppresses primates’ immune systems, making them highly susceptible to infectious diseases. Because the animals are usually crowded together in large shipments, the virus can easily spread and mutate.

"Every day that nonhuman primates enter the United States brings the bird flu epidemic one step closer to our shores," says PETA Senior Vice President Mary Beth Sweetland. "The CDC recognizes the disease threat posed by nonhuman primates and has already banned their importation as pets. The CDC can close this potentially deadly loophole by banning the importation of all nonhuman primates from bird flu-ravaged countries."

PETA’s letter to the CDC is available upon request. For more information, please visit CovanceCruelty.com.
 
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