9/30-10/6/06 | Weekly Bird Flu Thread:Further Bird Flu Death in Indonesia

JPD

Inactive
Further Bird Flu Death in Indonesia

Spread of the disease may be assisted by the approaching rainy season

http://english.ohmynews.com/articleview/article_view.asp?at_code=363469&no=320376&rel_no=1

Aloysius Wisnuhardana (wisnuhard)
Published 2006-09-29 18:35 (KST)

One more person has died of the bird flu virus in Indonesia. Taufik Zakariah, a 20-year-old man from Bandung, died on Thursday four days after his brother. Both were suspected of catching bird flu after feeding their dogs with dead chickens they bought in the market near their house.

After the two brothers died their cousin was also suspected of having bird flu. She was brought to Hasan Sadikin Hospital in Bandung after attending the burial of the brothers. Soon afterwards the 18-year-old female developed a high fever, coughing, and found it hard to breathe. Her body temperature reached 39 degree Celsius. This girl was suspected for bird flu because she lived in the same house as Taufik, the first person to die in the family. However, laboratory tests have yet to be conducted on her blood sample.

Meanwhile, the young sister of this family, a 15-year-old female, is also being treated in Hasan Sadikin Hospital due to a high fever and breathing difficulties. The laboratory test revealed that she was negative for the bird flu virus, but the medical staff still gave her medical treatment. She initially required an oxygen tube but she is now breathing unaided.

The doctors will keep her in hospital for the next seven days to make sure that her condition becomes normal. They are also waiting for a third laboratory test. To prevent the situation worsening, health officers have now taken blood samples for examination from about 20 people who live near the dead patients.

Meanwhile Mike Perdue, a doctor from the W.H.O., was reported by AFP as explaining that H5N1, otherwise known as the bird flu virus, never sleeps and is still a danger. As the rainy season approaches and the weather becomes colder, the risk of virus mutation is more possible and at the same the human body's resistance drops. That is the best time for viruses to hit humans. Perdue warns that although a virus mutation incident has not happened, it remains a possibility.

Health Minister Siti Fadilah Supari said yesterday on television that the government was not too slow-going to fight against the bird flu spreading across Indonesia. She explained what her side had done and would do, including distribute more bird flu antibiotics, especially into the regions where there are bird flu outbreaks.

Another factor behind how the bird flu virus continues to spread and is becoming difficult to stop is economic.

In the latest cluster the victims became infected after buying dead chickens from the market. It is possible that other people actually were infected by the same virus. The problem is understanding what caused the traders to sell the dead chickens. There were undoubtedly economic motivations.

Beside this factor, another factor is awareness about how to prevent the bird flu virus among people who live with poultry or chickens near their houses. Again and again we find that economic considerations prevent people from living their lives without chickens, even for just a little while.
 

JPD

Inactive
High doses of new bird flu drug safe in US study

http://today.reuters.com/news/artic...HEALTH-BIOCRYST-UPDATE-1.XML&rpc=66&type=qcna

WASHINGTON, Sept 29 (Reuters) - A new drug being developed to fight both bird flu and seasonal flu can be given safely to people in very high doses, BioCryst Pharmaceuticals Inc. (BCRX.O: Quote, Profile, Research) said on Friday.

The drug, called peramivir, is still in experimental trials but is considered the next-line drug to fight influenza of all sorts, after Tamiflu and Relenza.

Experts want to have several antivirals to choose from in fighting flu because the virus mutates quickly, and because no drug has been completely effective.

"We demonstrated that you can go to very high levels of peramivir in humans," Dr. Charles Bugg, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of BioCryst, said in a telephone interview.

"We did escalating doses -- starting at a low dose and showing it's safe and going until we have a dose way, way above what we think it takes to inhibit the virus. We can go to very high levels," Bugg added.

They gave more than 60 healthy volunteers intravenous peramivir each day for up to 10 days in doses ranging from about 30 mg to 600 mg.

All doses were well tolerated with no serious adverse effects, researchers independent of the company told a meeting in San Francisco of the American Society for Microbiology.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration gave peramivir "fast-track status" in January to allow speedy review for approval. The company has said peramivir has shown broad spectrum activity against various strains of flu, including the H5N1 virus that causes bird flu, in animal trials.
 

JPD

Inactive
Low-risk bird flu found in Ill. wild ducks-USDA

http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/CrisesArticle.aspx?storyId=N29251736&WTmodLoc=World-R5-Alertnet-3

Fri 29 Sep 2006 22:42:40 BST

WASHINGTON, Sept 29 (Reuters) - Wild Green-winged Teal ducks in central Illinois have tested positive for a low-pathogenic strain of avian influenza, the government said on Friday.

"Initial tests confirm that these wild duck samples do not contain the highly pathogenic H5N1 strain that has spread through birds in Asia, Europe and Africa," the Agriculture and Interior departments said in a statement.

Five of 11 samples taken from the ducks tested positive for the H5 virus subtype and one contained the H5 and N1 subtypes, they said. The samples were sent to a federal laboratory in Ames, Iowa, for further testing of virus strains.

The samples were collected on Sunday at the Rice Lake Conservation area in Fulton County, central Illinois. The ducks showed no signs of illness, which also indicates a low-risk strain of avian influenza.

As a precaution against the highly pathogenic H5N1 virus that has killed millions of fowl, the government has stepped up testing of wild birds. The Agriculture and Interior departments say they expect to find additional cases of common strains of avian influenza that pose no risk to humans.
 

JPD

Inactive
Indonesia woman contracts bird flu in new family cluster: health official

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2006/09/29/asia/AS_GEN_Indonesia_Bird_Flu.php

The Associated Press

Published: September 29, 2006
JAKARTA, Indonesia Indonesia confirmed a new cluster of bird flu infections on Friday after a woman whose brother recently died of the virus also tested positive, a senior Health Ministry official said.

The 21-year-old woman is being treated in a hospital in Surabaya city in east Java province, said Nyoman Kandun. Her 11-year-old brother died from bird flu on Sept. 18. He was suspected of contracting the virus from infected chickens close to his house.

"This is a family cluster," said Kandun, adding that the source of the woman's infection was not yet known.

Most of Indonesia's 52 fatal cases have been linked to contact with infected chickens or their droppings. But the World Health Organization said the virus passed between humans in one large cluster of cases in a single family on Sumatra Island earlier this year.

Cases of suspected human-to-human transmission are watched very closely because they increase the chances of the virus mutating into a form that is easily passed between humans, and that could possibly trigger a global pandemic.

The H5N1 strain of bird flu has killed at least 148 people worldwide since it started ravaging poultry stocks in Asia three years ago, according to WHO.

Indonesia has been criticized for failing to aggressively attack the virus in poultry, either by mass slaughters or vaccination. It has said it lacks the resources to compensate farmers for slaughtered birds.


JAKARTA, Indonesia Indonesia confirmed a new cluster of bird flu infections on Friday after a woman whose brother recently died of the virus also tested positive, a senior Health Ministry official said.

The 21-year-old woman is being treated in a hospital in Surabaya city in east Java province, said Nyoman Kandun. Her 11-year-old brother died from bird flu on Sept. 18. He was suspected of contracting the virus from infected chickens close to his house.

"This is a family cluster," said Kandun, adding that the source of the woman's infection was not yet known.

Most of Indonesia's 52 fatal cases have been linked to contact with infected chickens or their droppings. But the World Health Organization said the virus passed between humans in one large cluster of cases in a single family on Sumatra Island earlier this year.

Cases of suspected human-to-human transmission are watched very closely because they increase the chances of the virus mutating into a form that is easily passed between humans, and that could possibly trigger a global pandemic.

The H5N1 strain of bird flu has killed at least 148 people worldwide since it started ravaging poultry stocks in Asia three years ago, according to WHO.

Indonesia has been criticized for failing to aggressively attack the virus in poultry, either by mass slaughters or vaccination. It has said it lacks the resources to compensate farmers for slaughtered birds.
 

JPD

Inactive
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

http://www2.cdc.gov/PHTN/webcast/phgr-92906/media.asp

Public Health Grand Rounds:

Pandemic Flu Preparedness: What Every Community Should Know

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Public Health Training Network Satellite Broadcast & Webcast
September 29, 2006

View Webcast : Download Program

http://www2.cdc.gov/PHTN/webcast/phgr-92906/media.asp#

Instructions to Download Webcast
*Internet Explorer 5.0 or higher is required to download this program.

* right click on the file of your choice
* select "Copy to Folder"
* after the file downloads, [150K (254 MB) 56K (44.7 MB)] browse to the file on your computer
* double click the file
* view the webcast.
 

JPD

Inactive
China reports new outbreak of H5N1 bird flu in poultry in country's north

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2006/09/30/asia/AS_GEN_China_Bird_Flu.php

The Associated Press

Published: September 30, 2006

BEIJING A new outbreak of the H5N1 strain of bird flu has been found in dead poultry in China's northern region of Inner Mongolia, a state news agency reported Saturday.

The birds were found in a village near the city of Baotou and a laboratory confirmed Friday that they were carrying the H5N1 flu strain, the Xinhua News Agency said.

It didn't identify the birds or say how many were involved.

China has reported dozens of H5N1 outbreaks in its vast poultry flocks and has destroyed millions of in an attempt to stop the spread of the virus.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNe...0930/avianflu_China_060930/20060930?hub=World

China reports new outbreak of H5N1 bird flu

Updated Sat. Sep. 30 2006 3:32 PM ET

Associated Press

BEIJING -- A new outbreak of the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu killed 985 chickens in China's northern region of Inner Mongolia, a state news agency reported Saturday.

The discovery in a village near the city of Baotou prompted authorities to destroy 8,990 other chickens to prevent the virus from spreading, the Xinhua News Agency said.

A laboratory confirmed Friday that the dead birds had the H5N1 strain of the virus, Xinhua said.

The strain has killed at least 148 people worldwide since it started ravaging poultry stocks in Asia three years ago, according to World Health Organization figures.

China has reported dozens of H5N1 outbreaks in its vast poultry flocks and has destroyed millions of birds in an attempt to stop the spread of the virus.

Veterinary experts believe the virus is spread by wild fowl that migrate across China.

Health experts have warned that China is bound to suffer more human cases if it can't stop further outbreaks in poultry.

China has suffered 13 human deaths from bird flu, including a soldier who died in 2003 but whose infection was only confirmed in August this year through genetic testing.

Eight earlier poultry outbreaks were recorded this year in central China and areas of the north, east and southwest, according to Xinhua.

The most recent was in Changsha in the central province of Hunan, when 1,805 ducks were killed, the agency said. It said a quarantine on the area was lifted Sept. 6 after no new cases were found after three weeks.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Another bird flu family cluster confirmed

29/09/2006 - 7:08:37 AM

An Indonesian woman whose brother died of bird flu this month is also sick with the virus, a senior Health Ministry official said today, confirming the country’s latest family cluster of infections.

The 21-year-old woman is being treated in a hospital in Surabaya city in east Java province, said Nyoman Kandun. Her 11-year-old brother died from bird flu on September 18. He was suspected of contracting the virus from infected chickens close to his house.

“This is a family cluster,”
said Kandun, adding that the source of the woman’s infection was not yet known.

Most of Indonesia’s 52 fatal cases have been linked to contact with infected chickens or their droppings. But the World Health Organisation said the virus passed between humans in one large cluster of cases in a single family on Sumatra Island earlier this year.

Cases of suspected human-to-human transmission are watched very closely because they increase the chances of the virus mutating into a form that is easily passed between humans, and that could possibly trigger a global pandemic.

The H5N1 strain of bird flu has killed at least 148 people worldwide since it started ravaging poultry stocks in Asia three years ago, according to WHO.

Indonesia has been criticised for failing to aggressively attack the virus in poultry, either by mass slaughters or vaccination. It has said it lacks the resources to compensate farmers for slaughtered birds.

http://www.eecho.ie/news/bstory.asp?j=83910974&p=839yyz75&n=83911370

:vik:
 

JPD

Inactive
Threat of 'superflu' rampage as mutant viruses resist drugs

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/10/01/nflu01.xml

By Richard Gray, Science Correspondent

(Filed: 01/10/2006)

The drive to fight deadly flu pandemics with special antiviral drugs risks creating an untreatable "superflu", the head of -Britain's public health watchdog has warned.

Sir William Stewart, the chairman of the Health Protection Agency, warned that the widespread use of antiviral drugs to treat illnesses, including bird flu and seasonal influenza, is causing- viruses to mutate into drug-resistant- forms.

He claimed that drug-resistant viruses now represented as big a threat to public health as antibiotic-resistant superbug bacteria, such as MRSA. His comments come as bird experts were once again placed on alert for cases of avian flu returning to Britain with migrating birds.
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The autumn migration of waterfowl triggered the spread of the deadly H5N1 virus into western Europe and Britain for the first time last year, as the disease spread rapidly in wild birds trying to escape the cold weather. A dead swan discovered in Fife, Scotland, in April this year, was the only bird flu case to be found in a wild bird in Britain.

Officials at the Department of Health confirmed that, last week, it received the last of its stockpile of 14.6 million doses of the antiviral drug Tamiflu, which will be used if bird flu mutates into a human flu pandemic.

But Sir William, a former chief scientific adviser to the Government, fears that the drug will be useless if the flu virus develops resistance to it during the mass medication that would be necessary in a pandemic.

"With pandemic flu, once it develops antiviral resistance in one area, it is likely to spread quickly," he told The Sunday Telegraph. "One of our concerns is that we get Tamiflu-resistant strains emerging.

"Unfortunately, it is unknown if Tamiflu will be effective when pandemic flu emerges and how long it will be effective for. Anti-viral resistance is becoming as big a problem as antibiotic resistance." Sir William stressed, however, that it was better to have stocks of antiviral drugs that helped patients fight non-resistant flu strains than no drugs at all to protect the population.

Meanwhile, last night, bird experts warned that the spectre of bird flu infecting flocks in Britain would return this winter, as ducks and swans migrated south over the coming months.

The H5N1 virus spread rapidly through bird flocks in 15 European countries, including Turkey, France, Germany, Italy, Austria and Denmark, after last year's winter migration. Cold weather from the east forced the birds to move west as they sought food.

"The risk from bird flu is likely to be as great this year as it was, at its height, last year," said Dr Bob McCracken, of the British Veterinary Association. "We have to ensure that wild birds arriving in the UK are being monitored."

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs has also launched a revised strategy to screen migrating wild birds for bird flu, including stepping up sampling for the disease in areas that have high numbers of migrating waterfowl. It has also placed orders for 10 million doses of avian influenza vaccine for poultry.

Health officials fear that if the H5N1 virus combines with human flu it could create a new strain that would cause a pandemic. Government predictions suggested that up to 700,000 people could die in such an outbreak.

Concerns that a pandemic flu virus might develop resistance to Tamiflu emerged last year, after reports from Vietnam that H5N1 virus was showing signs of decreased sensitivity to the drug.

Figures from the World Health Organisation also show that approximately 0.4 per cent of adult seasonal flu cases and 5 per cent of child cases treated with Tamiflu have already developed immunity to the drug.

Prof Jeremy Farrar, an expert on flu virus drug resistance at Oxford University, said it was essential that more flu drugs were developed if doctors were to fight a pandemic.

"We need more than one or two drugs available so we can combine them to prevent resistance, or to have alternatives if resistance develops to the first-line therapy," he said.

A spokesman for Roche, Tamiflu's maker said resistance to the drug was "extremely rare".
 

Cascadians

Leska Emerald Adams
Y'all notice the bird flu problem is heating up? Clusters here, clusters there, more dead here and there, still no effective vaccine or antiviral, still no sharing of data necessary, last 2 days H5 found in Illinois & California, tick tock tick tock.
 

JPD

Inactive
Health Experts Urge EU to Prepare for More Bird Flu Cases

http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,2144,2188460,00.html

Health experts met to review how well the EU is prepared for an outbreak of avian influenza and what can be done to limit the damage if this happens.

Health professionals meeting at the 2006 European Congress on Disaster Management in Bonn all agreed that it is not a question if an outbreak of bird flu will happen, but when.

They recommended establishing a common EU position and making sure there are clear communication channels between member countries. They also addressed stockpiling of Tamiflu, one of the only known drugs that can cure bird flu symptoms.

Avian influenza, or the H5N1 virus, began in Southeast Asia in mid-2003, with the disease initially transmitted between birds. However, the virus "crossed the species barrier" to humans. Of 244 people infected with the virus, 143 have died, according to the World Health Organization.

Vaccination priorities

Kurth hopes a pandemic could be avoided if birds are vaccinated

Fatalities are inevitable, and that the key to limiting the number of deaths is planning for an outbreak and having enough vaccinations for the whole population, said Reinhard Kurth, the president of Germany's Robert Koch Institute. Kurth added that priority for vaccinations should be given to health workers and infants "who are more susceptible to death.'

"Four million dosages can be produced in a week, so it would take 20 weeks to inoculate the entire German population," he said. "The (German) federal government has said it is willing to invest a lot on money in vaccinations on a mass scale."

Of the $1.9 billion (1.49 billion euros) the international community has pledged to management of avian influenza, the EU has contributed 211 million euros. The European Commission has collaborated with member states and the World Health Organization to develop EU preparedness planning. Kurth said he is hopeful that one of the solutions to minimizing the outbreak will be getting farmers to vaccinate all of their birds.

Boosting Tamilflu orders?

Tamiflu is regarded as the most effective drug to couteract the H5N1 virus

Hoffmann-La Roche, the sole supplier of Tamiflu has quadrupled its production capacity over the past two years. However, current supply is thought to cover just two percent of the world population.

Jane Lahl and Isabel Burckhardt from Hoffmann-La Roche Pharmaceuticals said orders for the drug need to increase because currently there is not enough for the EU population. Lahl said drugs are the only option to containing a full-blown pandemic, but notably she is a spokeswoman for a pharmaceutical company.

Lahl and Burckhardt both stressed that working out the logistics of distributing the drug "in an uncomplicated way" was imperative. Burckhardt also encouraged a continuation of production levels.

"We cannot simply open the valve when the demand increases," she said.

World-wide warning systems

Communication is key --experts at a conference in early 2006

Massimo Ciotti of the EU center for disease and prevention control response unit said EU countries should not be spending all the money on just one drug, like Tamiflu, but there should be a range of measures implemented. He promoted warning and information systems worldwide and global communication, to prevent a pandemic if there is an outbreak.

Ciotti also urged that it was imperative the EU establish a unified position and added that EU preparations are on track. But there are many aspects that need to be solved, such as who would be prioritized for vaccinations if there was not enough for everyone, he said.

"Would it be the policeman or the child?" he asked. "There are issues of closing borders if Tamiflu is distributed in some countries and not others. But one thing is clear: We need to distribute vaccination quickly after an outbreak.

"There are over 480 million people across the EU and there are substantial differences across different countries with demographics, geography and available services and health systems," he said. "Now there is free movement across borders. This means there will be free movement of diseases."

Rachel Ryan
 

JPD

Inactive
H5 in Dead Duck in Lakeport California

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/09300601/H5_Lakeport_CA.html

Recombinomics Commentary
September 30, 2006

The City Council will soon discuss banning any feeding of ducks or waterfowl at Library Park. This comes after another dead duck was found last weekend at Library Park and one of the ducks tested previously by the California Department of Fish and Game has tested positive for H5 avian influenza.

"In this particular case, we had a positive hit for avian influenza and the subtype is H5 category," said Retallack.

The above comments indicate H5 has been detected in a dead duck at Library Park in Lakeport, CA. Last month dead ducks were tested and were said to have died from avian botulism. However, the presence of H5 raises additional concerns.

Test results have not been announced by the National Veterinary Services Laboratories (NVSL) in Ames, IA. In the past they have announced the detection of H5N1 in mute swans in Michigan, mallards in Maryland and Pennsylvania, Northern pintail in Montana, and Green-winged Teals in Illinois. These isolates have been characterized as low path and the North American strain based on sequence data and in some instances, followed up with a pathologenicity index.

However, the numerical result of the pathogenicity test has not been disclosed. Moreover, no sequence data has been released.

H5N1 is problematic because wild birds are frequently infected wsith multiple strains, and the strain that grows out in chicken eggs in the testing lab frequently does not match the serotype of the initial test on the uncloned samples. In addition, the various serotypes detected have not been released. Many sampes have been positive for H5, but negative for N1.

The distribution of H5 serotypes remains unclear. This year Quebec has reported H5N2 and H5N6. Last year Canada reported H5N1, H5N2, H5N3, and H5N9. However, all of these earlier reports were from healthy birds tested under a surveillance program. In additiona H5 was detcted on a live market in New Jersey, but the serotype was withheld, and the manadtory OIE report was not filed.

The only dead birds reported to be positive were from four dead geese on a farm on Prince Edward Island (PEI). Those geese suddenly died after neurological symptoms. One was tested and was H5 positive, but virus was not isolated and sequence data was not generated from the insert from the PCR test. The size of the insert was withheld and an OIE report was not filed.

The Qinghai strain of H5N1 produces sudden death in waterfowl following neurological symptoms. Neurological problems are also associated with botulism poisoning, so the diagnosis of botulism poisoning in H5 positive dead waterfowl is cause for concern.

More information on the number of dead ducks, as well as the serotype and sequence of the H5 detected, would be useful.
 

JPD

Inactive
Airborne flu viruses threaten health workers, expert says

http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidrap/content/influenza/panflu/news/sep2906airborne.html

Robert Roos News Editor

Sep 29, 2006 (CIDRAP News) – A microbiologist who reviewed the evidence about how influenza viruses spread says that some official guidelines, including the US pandemic influenza plan, may not go far enough in protecting healthcare workers who take care of flu patients.

Writing in Emerging Infectious Diseases, Dr. Raymond Tellier of the University of Toronto says there is good evidence that flu viruses often spread via tiny airborne particles, despite a common belief that they travel mainly in large droplets that quickly fall to the ground after a flu patient coughs or sneezes.

Good protection from airborne particles requires the use of an N95 respirator. Yet the US, Canadian, and British pandemic flu plans advise healthcare workers to use simple surgical masks, which are much less effective, Tellier contends.

"Compelling evidence in the literature indicates that aerosol transmission of influenza is an important mode of transmission, which has obvious implications for pandemic influenza planning, and in particular for recommendations about the use of N95 respirators as part of personal protective equipment," he writes.

"Airborne particles" are usually defined as particles about 5 microns or less in diameter, Tellier says. Particles larger than about 10 to 20 microns fall quickly to the ground, while those smaller than 3 microns essentially do not settle. Coughing and sneezing generate particles in a range of sizes, many of them small enough to stay airborne for a long time. Airborne particles can penetrate into the lungs, whereas the larger particles and droplets are more likely to be trapped in the upper respiratory tract.

Experiments have shown that mice, monkeys, and human volunteers can be infected by exposure to aeorosol flu viruses, according to Tellier. In addition, various epidemiologic observations indicate that aerosol transmission is important. One example was a 1979 outbreak on an airliner with a defective ventilation system.

Tellier says many guidelines and review articles state that large droplets appear to be the main vehicle for flu virus transmission, but they offer little supporting evidence. "Despite extensive searches, I have not found a study that proves the notion that large-droplets transmission is predominant and that aerosol transmission is negligible (or nonexistent)," he writes.

Further, he says, infection control experts often argue that large-droplet precautions have proved adequate to stop flu outbreaks. But he contends that several factors cast doubt on the evidence for this view. For example, without laboratory diagnosis, what is believed to be a flu outbreak can be some other virus; serologic studies often are omitted, and asymptomatic flu infections in healthcare workers are probably missed; many people have partial immunity to seasonal flu viruses; and surgical masks provide some limited protection against aerosols.

Tellier goes on to say that evidence suggests that current strains of H5N1 avian influenza predominantly infect the lower respiratory tract, which in turn suggests that airborne particles are involved, since large droplets don't reach into the lungs.

"Given the strong evidence for aerosol transmission of influenza viruses in general, and the high lethality of the current strains of avian influenza A (H5N1), recommending the use of N95 respirators, not surgical masks, as part of the protective equipment seems rational," he states.

The current US pandemic influenza plan, according to Tellier, "acknowledges the contribution of aerosols in influenza but curiously recommends surgical masks for routine care; the use of N95 respirators is reserved for 'aerosolizing procedures.'"

In contrast, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC's) current infection control guidelines for healthcare facilities treating avian flu patients say that workers should use a fit-tested respirator at least as good as the N95 type when in a patient's room.

Bill Hall, a Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) spokesman in Washington, said today that the infection control guidance in the US pandemic flu plan is being updated. "We are conducting a rather in-depth process by which we'll be reviewing the science that is available on masks and the various positions out there," he told CIDDRAP News. "This journal article certainly adds one more data source to inform the decision-making."

"There's still a lot of debate on how flu is transmitted, whether it's aerosol or large droplets," Hall said. "The [pandemic] plan issued in November last year was based on current science and information at that point in time," but it is subject to change, he added.

Hall said HHS plans to cooperate with the Institute of Medicine to hold some workshops to discuss "community mitigation" in a pandemic, meaning measures such as closing schools, canceling public events, and recommending the use of masks. But no dates or other details have been decided.

Tellier R. Review of aerosol transmission of influenza A virus. Emerg Infect Dis 2006 Nov;12(11) (early online publication) [Full text]

See also:

CDC interim guidance on use of masks to control influenza
http://www.cdc.gov/flu/professionals/infectioncontrol/maskguidance.htm

CDC interim infection control guidelines for healthcare facilities treating people with avian flu
http://www.cdc.gov/flu/avian/professional/infect-control.htm
 

BREWER

Veteran Member
H5 in Dead Duck in Lakeport California

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/09300601/H5_Lakeport_CA.html

Recombinomics Commentary
September 30, 2006

The City Council will soon discuss banning any feeding of ducks or waterfowl at Library Park. This comes after another dead duck was found last weekend at Library Park and one of the ducks tested previously by the California Department of Fish and Game has tested positive for H5 avian influenza.

"In this particular case, we had a positive hit for avian influenza and the subtype is H5 category," said Retallack.

The above comments indicate H5 has been detected in a dead duck at Library Park in Lakeport, CA. Last month dead ducks were tested and were said to have died from avian botulism. However, the presence of H5 raises additional concerns.

Test results have not been announced by the National Veterinary Services Laboratories (NVSL) in Ames, IA. In the past they have announced the detection of H5N1 in mute swans in Michigan, mallards in Maryland and Pennsylvania, Northern pintail in Montana, and Green-winged Teals in Illinois. These isolates have been characterized as low path and the North American strain based on sequence data and in some instances, followed up with a pathologenicity index.

However, the numerical result of the pathogenicity test has not been disclosed. Moreover, no sequence data has been released.

H5N1 is problematic because wild birds are frequently infected wsith multiple strains, and the strain that grows out in chicken eggs in the testing lab frequently does not match the serotype of the initial test on the uncloned samples. In addition, the various serotypes detected have not been released. Many sampes have been positive for H5, but negative for N1.

The distribution of H5 serotypes remains unclear. This year Quebec has reported H5N2 and H5N6. Last year Canada reported H5N1, H5N2, H5N3, and H5N9. However, all of these earlier reports were from healthy birds tested under a surveillance program. In additiona H5 was detcted on a live market in New Jersey, but the serotype was withheld, and the manadtory OIE report was not filed.

The only dead birds reported to be positive were from four dead geese on a farm on Prince Edward Island (PEI). Those geese suddenly died after neurological symptoms. One was tested and was H5 positive, but virus was not isolated and sequence data was not generated from the insert from the PCR test. The size of the insert was withheld and an OIE report was not filed.

The Qinghai strain of H5N1 produces sudden death in waterfowl following neurological symptoms. Neurological problems are also associated with botulism poisoning, so the diagnosis of botulism poisoning in H5 positive dead waterfowl is cause for concern.

More information on the number of dead ducks, as well as the serotype and sequence of the H5 detected, would be useful.


The article is a cause for deep concern. I've highlighted the OBVIOUS. We, and to a larger extent, the medical community are having critical information withheld or supressed. This will inevitably lead to an outbreak with no timely warning. Is this gross incompetence or deliberate? Any quesses, folks? Thanks again JPD for finding this article and keeping the board up to date. Great job, my friend.
 

JPD

Inactive
Avian-flu samples on the way to CDC​


http://www.washtimes.com/world/20061001-114438-1983r.htm

By John Zarocostas
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
October 2, 2006

GENEVA -- After 18 months of stalling and repeated calls for cooperation by international health officials, China is expected to deliver a batch of animal virus samples of the lethal avian influenza virus H5N1, senior global health officials say.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) laboratory in Atlanta expects the samples to arrive "in the coming days," said Mike Purdue, head of a team that is studying how influenza moves from animals to humans on behalf of the World Health Organization (WHO).

Dr. Purdue told The Washington Times that the necessary paperwork was completed by Chinese authorities last week, but one carrier did not want to haul the samples, so they will be shipped by another company for WHO.

WHO first asked China to share the samples in the spring of 2005, after thousands of migratory birds died in the province of Qinghai. The 10 samples expected by the CDC are from Qinghai and other regions, Dr. Purdue said.

International health officials and diplomats have long been frustrated by Beijing's failure to send the samples promptly, despite its public pledges of full cooperation after its reluctance to share information aggravated a crisis over severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in 2003.

The sharing of specimens is essential if researchers are to find a vaccine and more effective anti-viral drugs against bird flu. Since 2003, there have been 251 human cases of the avian influenza virus in 10 countries, of which 148 resulted in deaths.

Some Asian and Western health diplomats attribute the delay to a bureaucratic turf war between China's Ministry of Agriculture, which has been reluctant to share the samples, and the Ministry of Health, which has been more willing to co-operate. The same sources said Chinese authorities were now fully sharing human samples from victims of bird flu and HIV/AIDS.

Despite its dynamic economy and huge foreign reserves, China offered only $10 million at a pledging conference in Beijing in January aimed at strengthening global preparedness against a human avian influenza pandemic.

Senior Western diplomatic sources said China initially offered no contribution at all and only came forward with the $10 million pledge when pressure was put on its political leaders. However, diplomats are cautiously optimistic that China is moving in the right direction on global health issues.

In a significant move, China has put forward Margaret Chan, a senior WHO official, for the top post of the global health agency, which is vacant after the sudden death in May of the incumbent, Lee Jong-wook. This is the first time that China has nominated a candidate for a major global agency.

Dr. Chan, formerly Hong Kong's top health official, played a pivotal role in stamping out an avian-flu outbreak in the city in 1997. In July 2005, she publicly scolded China for stalling on vital cooperation over the outbreak of bird flu.

Another leading candidate in a crowded field is Shigeru Omi, a Japanese national and WHO regional director for the Western Pacific. Asian diplomats described fierce behind-the-scenes lobbying by Tokyo and Beijing for their respective nominees. The outcome is to be decided on Nov. 9.
 

JPD

Inactive
Similarities in H5N1 Sequences from Germany and Denmark

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/10020601/H5N1_Germany_Denmark.html

Recombinomics Commentary
October 2, 2006

Full sequences of a cat, A/cat/Germany/606/06(H5N1), and a swan, A/swan/Germany/65R/06(H5N1) were released at Los Alamos. The bird flu isolates were collected in February from northern Germany. The isolates have the characteristic HA cleavage site of the Qinghai strain, GERRRKK, and the mammalian PB2 polymorphism, E627K.

The two sets of sequences are virtually identical to each other and a buzzard isolated from Denmark, A/Buzzard/Denmark/6370/05(H5N1), which was available at the sequencer’s website in March, 2006.

Polymorphisms are present in all eight gene segments which have only been reported for the three Qinghai isolates above. Although there are minor differences which are unique for each sequence, the three isolates clearly are closely related to each other, even though they were isolated from three different species, which were found in early 2006 in geographically close regions in Germany and Denmark.

These three sequences were most closely related to a recent chicken sequence from Nigeria, A/chicken/Nigeria/641/2006(H5N1). This location is linked to the above region via the East Atlantic Flyway.

H5N1 in Nigeria is linked to several independent introductions. Full sequences from another Nigerian isolate, A/chicken/Nigeria/641/2006(H5N1) are most closely related to the eight gene segments from two recent isolates from Sudan, A/chicken/Sudan/1784-7/2006(H5N1) and A/chicken/Sudan/1784-10/2006(H5N1).

These data demonstrate the utility of full sequences to link isolates and identify transport paths, as well as the track the evolution of H5N1, which is driven by the acquisition of these sequences via recombination. The vast majority of the polymorphisms in the Qinghai isolates can be readily found in Clade 1 or Clade 2 isolates from southeast Asia or China.

The above matches also highlight the match failures in Indonesia. Although human and poultry isolates in Indonesia share a number of Indonesian polymorphisms, the human isolates on Java are easily distinguished from the poultry isolates in Indonesia. The novel cleavage site, RESRRKKR, is only one many polymorphisms that distinguishes the isolates. This cleavage site has been reported for one duck isolate on Java in Indramyu and two chicken isolates on Sumatra.

In contrast, all but one human isolate from Java have the novel cleavage site, signaling an independent reservoir for the human infections.
 

JPD

Inactive
Outbreak: Preparing for a flu pandemic

http://www.cleburnetimesreview.com/siteSearch/apstorysection/local_story_268173348.html

By Michael Mager/Features Editor

Editor’s note: This is part two of a three-part series.

By the time Hurricane Katrina stormed ashore, Gulf Coast residents, scientists and government officials had known for years that the landfall of a major hurricane would likely wreak havoc. This was especially true in New Orleans, which is largely built in a bowl that lies below sea level and depends on a complicated system of aging levees to keep water from flooding the city. Yet, when Katrina’s powerful sea surge inundated large parts of the region, causing the frail levees to fail, there was major loss of life, a significant blow to the economy and a long period of civil anarchy in the streets of the Big Easy. There had been years to prepare a plan against such a catastrophe.

A great deal of the blame for a lack of preparedness and a seemingly uncoordinated response to the catastrophe was placed first at the feet of the federal government and later at the feet of state and local officials. Large parts of the Gulf Coast still are unrepaired and the ability of the levees to hold back the waters of Lake Ponchartrain are still suspect. Many believe that the government is not looking down the dark barrel of yet another, possibly more perilous, disaster and the question remains, “Are we ready?”

Unlike the tragedies of Hurricane Katrina and the devastation of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, which were largely local and regional, if the nation is forced to deal with a pandemic as vicious as one avian flu might bring about, the crisis will not be a local, a statewide or national one: It will likely be a worldwide crisis.

“A pandemic of avian flu could result in 350 million deaths globally,” a State Department report says.

How prepared will we be? How well coordinated will the response be? How well have we learned from past disasters and pandemics?



The Spanish flu

In the pandemic of the so-called Spanish flu of 1918, an estimated 50 million people died. And the world population was considerably smaller then. The world was not as urbanized as it is today. There also was no such thing as fast intercontinental transportation to carry those people who had the virus across vast distances in hours. According to the World Bank, a pandemic of the same scope of the Spanish flu would cost the world economy somewhere in the trillions of dollars.

Jim Higgins, a doctoral candidate at Lehigh University in Pennsylvania, has been researching that pandemic. In an article on the Science Daily Web site, he claims that there are lessons that we can learn from that tragic outbreak of the early 20th century.

“Most communities were woefully unprepared for the health crisis they faced,” said Higgins. “Those cities that passed muster, relatively speaking, had been building a strong medical infrastructure for decades, and had sound public health policies based more upon science than politics. I’m not sure that’s the case today.”

He said he is increasingly concerned by what he sees as a divided “health care system where the best, state-of-the-art care is available to some, but not to others at the lower end of the socio-economic spectrum.” He finds himself wondering what will happen when those hospitals that do have a limited number of beds for lower-class and uninsured patients run out of those beds, while those that cater to the insured and financially fortunate accept new patients. According to the National Center for Political Analysis, one forth of all Texans do not have health insurance. How will those uninsured individuals receive the care they need?

Scenario

Experts at the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta have worked out a possible scenario for an avian flu pandemic. At a certain point, most likely during the 2006-07 southward bird migration, the H5N1 virus will be discovered to have reached the wild bird population in North America. Birds that had been living and breeding in the northern parts of North America will make their yearly trek south to warmer climates. Some of them will have come from Asia, where the virus has already been found and millions of birds have already died.

Along with the migrating birds will likely come the viruses the birds host. The viruses living in these birds will likely be passed on to other birds that are native to North America, domestic flocks and animals that prey on those birds in the wild. Not all birds who harbor the virus become ill or die because of it. Some are carriers and simply pass it along to other birds. It is possible that, as in Asia, there will be some infection of humans who come into contact with infected birds or bird droppings, resulting in some illness and possibly death. However, if the virus’ nature changes so that it becomes communicable from human to human, the disease might begin to spread as quickly as the human flu does.

According to the World Health Organization, “Prompt and accurate reporting of H5N1 influenza cases to [the World Health Organization] is the cornerstone for monitoring both the global evolution of this disease and the corresponding risk that a pandemic virus might emerge.”

Doctors in the United States are required by law to report incidents of the flu to the CDC so that, if a pattern of infection from the H5N1 virus begins, the CDC will be able to notify the White House and the president will then institute the government’s action plan.



The plan

The federal plan calls for doses of flu vaccine, broad spectrum antibiotics and the anti-viral drugs oseltamivir and zanamivir (better known under the brand names Tamiflu and Relenza) and other medical supplies to be sent beforehand to each state under armed guard. Stored at a number of undisclosed, secure locations, those medicines and supplies will be stockpiled and kept safe to use. Each state will have sufficient materials to set up a number of pre-determined local centers, each of which will be given the go ahead to open with a command from a local judge. In the case of Johnson County, that person would be County Judge Roger Harmon. The vaccine doses will then be distributed to these centers, again by armed guard. The human flu inoculations will first be given to first responders and their families. First responders include police, fire, emergency and medical personnel.

“We have more than enough (flu vaccine) to go around,” said Gerald Mohr, Johnson County emergency management coordinator. “We shouldn’t run short. Johnson County is pretty well prepared.”

Judge Harmon agreed.

“Johnson County was the first in the state to determine that these centers would be situated at schools,” Harmon said. “Schools are ideal places for mass inoculations. They all have gymnasiums, people know how to find them and they all have kitchens to feed the workers who will be there over a long period of time. There are a lot of counties that are following our lead and making their schools their centers. We don’t want anyone to know which schools we’ve designated, though, for obvious reasons.”

“Gerald Mohr,” Harmon said of his colleague, “is the perfect person for this job. He’s sharp as a tack and he’s got his heart in it. He knows what he’s doing.” Both Mohr and Harmon have modeled a county-wide response to a pandemic on federal guidelines issued to help deal with a biowarfare scenario in which a biological agent such as smallpox is let loose on the country by terrorists. In fact, much of the money supporting the county’s preparations for a pandemic come from the Department of Homeland Security.

There are, however, a few flies in the ointment. First of all, even though Tamiflu and Relenza have been shown to be effective against this form of H5N1 in mice with two human-sized doses a day, much more may be needed for an infected adult human. Also, there is not enough of these drugs to go around. An article in Scientific American said that treating 25 percent of Americans would require more than the number of doses stockpiled. It would take 130 million doses to protect all health care workers and first responders in the country. According to the Department of Homeland Security’s paper on avian flu, as of September 2005, the total number of doses available was about 22 million. Additionally, there are those who should not take the medicine for medical reasons; there will also undoubtedly be some people who will refuse the drug for one reason or another.

According to the Centers for Disease control, if the patient comes for treatment beyond a 48-hour window of opportunity, it’s not likely the drugs will work. Next, because flu viruses are ever-changing, it is not known if the vaccines presently under development will work against new strains of flu. The same is true of broad-spectrum antibiotics which, while they do not have any effect on viruses, do control secondary bacterial infections that set in once the body’s immune system is compromised. Finally, there is the question of maintaining law and order during a time of widespread fear and illness.

“That,” said Harmon, “is the thing that scares me the most. I worry about what will happen if our first responders go down with the flu and I worry about whether or not we have the resources to maintain law and order if they do. That’s the part that keeps me up at night.”

According to World Health Organization statistics, avian flu thus far appears to be a very lethal killer. Of those who have been infected, approximately 50 percent did not survive. In other words, once it is spread, it will likely kill more than half those it infects. Fortunately, it does not yet seem to be transmissible from one person to another, only from an infected animal to a human who comes into contact with that animal. As a comparison in mortality, the much-dreaded smallpox, for the most part, has a mortality rate of about 30 percent. If a pandemic of a human-transmissable form of avian flu does occur, the potential losses from the disease alone could be very high. What Harmon and others are worried about is how to keep associated, non-disease-related deaths and injuries at a minimum. If the social chaos and civil disorder that followed the devastation of Hurricane Katrina is an example of what could happen, then keeping numbers of non-disease-related deaths low might be challenging, considering that there may be only a possible skeleton crew on duty. According to both Harmon and Mohr, the challenge becomes greater still in a vast and essentially rural place like Johnson County.



Quarantine and

communication

A quarantine is a prescribed period of time in isolation to keep a disease from spreading. The word dates back to the time of the plague in Italy when people were kept restricted to their home for 40 days to halt the transmission of the disease. It is widely assumed that a brief quarantine might be the only effective way to limit the march of a human-transmissable avian flu once it gets started.

There has never been a national quarantine, so no one really knows what the public response might be to such an order, which would, necessarily, come from the White House. In the past, individuals have been quarantined, but never whole cities, states or countries. If children could be kept home from school, workers home from their jobs, ships from docking and planes from landing and so on for two to three days, it might be possible to staunch the spread of the disease. The question is, though, will people willingly stay home and stay away from work to stop the spread of the flu? In large cities, this might be easier to do than in small, rural areas with limited police presence. How would such an order be enforced and by whom?

Because of Johnson County’s close proximity to a major metropolitan area, Harmon worries that there could a mass exodus of people seeking to flee the cities to our north for the more sparsely populated areas like Johnson County.

“How will we keep them out?” Harmon asked. “There is no model for anything like that. I can see a scenario where we could have infected individuals looking to protect their families by heading off into the country by turning onto I-35 heading south. In the best of circumstances, we simply don’t have the manpower to stop them all from coming here.”

Although such a quarantine would likely be effective in slowing the progress of a pandemic and although the quarantine would only need to last 48 to 72 hours, both Mohr and Harmon express doubts that there would be 100 percent cooperation on the part of the public.

They also agree that cooperation and communication are crucial in coordinating the effort to keep the spread of the flu in check.

Mohr indicates that the area is working hard to complete a communications system that will keep all first responders on the same frequency, thus addressing a major problem that cropped up as the result of Sept. 11 and again in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.

County Medical Examiner Arthur Raines has been pushing for the purchase of technology to do just that. For his part, Harmon is making sure that all of the communities in the county are aware of and familiar with the national, state and local protocols if a state of emergency is declared.

It is anticipated that there will be a high demand for medical services with the onset of a pandemic such as avian flu.

“We have only a limited capacity to help here,” said Michael McEachern, safety manager at Harris Methodist Walls Regional Hospital in Cleburne. “We don’t have a huge emergency room, so we’ll probably handle only the sickest people. We keep refreshing our stockpile of things that have a limited shelf life, like surgical masks. Because they’re able to filter out particles as small as viruses, those will probably be in very high demand.”

Another thing that McEachern wonders about is the inevitable buildup of bodies.

“We don’t have much of a morgue here,” he said. “I guess we’d be forced to use things like refrigerator trucks or the refrigeration at retail stores and distributors.”
 

JPD

Inactive
Alertness matters

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaileditorial.asp?fileid=20061003.F05&irec=4

Bayu Krishnamurti's interview (The Jakarta Post, Sept. 26) confirms that Indonesia is the world's weakest link in the battle against bird flu.

The government faces an insurmountable dilemma, which can be summed up as follows: How can we ensure that 220 million people who live on hundreds and hundreds of islands have adequate information about prevention and then implement it? And how can we implement centralistic policies in a country with a heavily decentralized environment and a health-care system that is in tatters?

The government has realized almost too late that there is a desperate need to raise public awareness, rather than just undertake a poultry vaccination campaign or compensate farmers who cull sick birds. There is no doubt that the campaign launched recently on radio and television will bear fruit, but only if we adopt an adequate tone in warning against the real danger, especially in rural areas, because the situation is alarmingly serious.

Indonesian people are not ready to toss aside thousands of years of tradition and change their way of life (with chickens) if they don't feel the real danger, or to put it frankly, if they are not waspada (alarmed).

That is on the prevention level. On the disease management level, the situation is worse and is an omen of the disaster it would be, should a pandemic strike. What alarms most is the regrettable absence of the medical community from the battle field as a whole. Cases of infected patients who have seen a doctor a week or a few days before being admitted with the wrong diagnosis to the wrong hospital are rising in number. The majority of the victims reached specialized medical centers too late. How can general practitioners, in the most affected country in the world, continue to overlook the diagnosis despite suspicious pneumonia-like symptoms?

Greater public awareness is of no use if all ( yes, at all ) if doctors at the provincial and district levels are not trained well enough to recognize the disease and provide a rapid response. The H5N1 strain of the bird flu virus is much more lethal than the normal human variety, and antiviral treatment is ineffective when administered too late.

A 75 percent mortality rate in Indonesia should blow the whistle on medical lethargy. Medical doctors and departments must gear up for the situation. Look at the Vietnamese scientists; they are producing groundbreaking research in avian flu again and again. Why can't our scientists do the same when they have more patients and data? The answer to this question cannot be the lack of funds.

AIT-ALLAH MEJRI
Jakarta
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu campaign in West Java to involve school children

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailnational.asp?fileid=20061003.G05&irec=4

Yuli Tri Suwarni, The Jakarta Post, Bandung

The West Java provincial administration is mulling the possibility of involving school children in its campaign about the spread of the deadly bird flu virus, an official said Monday.

Fatimah Resmiati, head of the West Java Health Office's environmental sanitation unit, said that the plan to involve school children had been adopted as the current campaign had been ineffective, as shown by the increasing number of people falling sick from bird flu.

The campaign would concentrate on the dissemination of information about bird flu with the help of school children, including those attending Muslim boarding schools, Fatimah explained.

She said that West Java had the highest number of bird flu cases, with 23 patients having tested positive for the virus, and 19 having died.

By comparison, the total number of people who had been infected with the virus stood at 69, of whom 52 had died, she said, explaining that cases of bird flu-infected fowl livestock had been detected in 23 out of the 26 regencies and municipalities in West Java.

"As we've already become the 'top scorer', we badly need a better prepared campaign to help prevent more fatalities," Fatimah said in Bandung after attending a coordinating meeting with representatives of the Ministries of Health and Agriculture.

Over the next two days, Fatimah said officials from the relevant offices would discuss the possibility of establishing a regional bird flu prevention commission.

"We have to admit that we all walk by ourselves so that whenever there is news about a new case that requires quick handling, we haven't been able to respond to it as soon as possible," she said.

A similar concern was expressed by Fatum Basalamah, head of standardization at the zoonosis subdirectorate of the Ministry of Health, who underlined the importance of involving school children as a means of conveying information on the bird flu danger to their parents and the public at large.

Fatum said that the existing anti bird-flu campaign through the mass media had not been able to heighten public awareness.

"Despite the huge coverage, the public have not been persuaded to act better. In Bandung, there were patients who were found to have fed their dogs with dead chickens. We have to open our eyes about the problem," she said.

Fatum explained that the exact details of the children's campaign remained to be worked out.

A similar campaign involving children was waged by the West Java Health Office during an outbreak of dengue hemorrhagic fever two years ago, when school children were involved in eradicating the mosquito larvae.
 

JPD

Inactive
U.S. governors prepare for flu pandemic

http://www.upi.com/SecurityTerrorism/view.php?StoryID=20061002-033331-1840r

WASHINGTON, Oct. 2 (UPI) -- The National Association of Governors is launching a project to help U.S. states prepare for the arrival of bird flu or some other deadly pandemic.

The Pandemic Preparedness Project will focus on best practices in areas such as the development of response strategies and maintaining vital public services in the midst of a health crisis.

"By their nature, pandemics happen across the globe, but their effects are excruciatingly local," U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Mike Leavitt said in the association's announcement Monday. "Planning needs to go beyond public health. Discussion at the state and local level needs to address how schools, businesses, public agencies and others participate in pandemic preparedness."

The centerpiece of the project will be a year-long series of regional exercises involving state teams representing areas such as public health, homeland security, agriculture, education and the private sector. The tabletop exercises will test preparedness and cooperation among state, local and federal agencies, and will more importantly bolster the working relationships that already exist.

The project is being launched against the backdrop of the H5N1 avian flu, which poses a threat not only to the U.S. poultry industry, but is also considered a potentially major human health threat that would most likely show up first in hospitals and schools that are under state and local control rather than federal, and could quickly cross state lines as infected people travel by air and vehicle.
 

JPD

Inactive
GPS Deployed in War Against Bird Flu

http://dsc.discovery.com/news/2006/10/03/gpsflu_hea.html?category=animals&guid=20061003143030

Oct. 3, 2006 — As wild birds ready to take to the skies for their winter migration, birds from space will be monitoring their movements in order to help scientists fight the spread of H5N1 — the deadly strain of avian flu virus.

By using GPS navigation technology, international teams of scientists plan to follow the movements of migrating birds to better understand the extent of their role in transmitting the virus. The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) launched the plan following a conference in Rome in May, where experts convened to address the problem.

"We believe that at some levels, wild birds may be contributing to the spread of avian influenza across borders and even across continents in some cases," said Scott Newman, spokesperson for the Wildlife Conservation Society.
 

JPD

Inactive
Indonesia confirms 69th human case of bird flu

http://www.news-medical.net/?id=20370

The Ministry of Health in Indonesia has confirmed the country's 69th case of human infection with the H5N1 avian influenza virus.

The case is a 21-year-old female from East Java Province. She developed symptoms on 19 September and was hospitalized on 25 September. She remains hospitalized.

She is the sister of a confirmed H5N1 case, an 11-year-old male who died on 18 September. Following that fatal case, health authorities initiated contact tracing, and on 24 September they received reports of symptoms in the sister. In line with the national protocol, she was immediately given the antiviral drug, oseltamivir, and isolated in hospital.

The source of her infection is presently under investigation. Poultry deaths in the family's household were noted both before and during the illness of the brother. The woman was likely exposed to these poultry as well as to her brother.

Of the 69 cases confirmed to date in Indonesia, 52 have been fatal.
 

Seabird

Veteran Member
JPD

I know the audience for BF is thin these days, but your diligence and constant vigil is most appreciated. I know everything is fine on this front when I see the ongoing threads...because someone is keeping the candle burning, and when we really need to know things are heating up with BF, you all will shout it from the TB rooftops.

Thank you very, very much.

Seabird
 

JPD

Inactive
West Java to up fight against bird flu

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailnational.asp?fileid=20061004.G01&irec=0

Yuli Tri Suwarni and Suherdjoko, The Jakarta Post, Bandung, Semarang

West Java province has dropped out of a special commission to educate the public about bird flu and will improve its existing working team instead, an official says.

Provincial health office head Yudi Prayudha said the decision was taken after the province was declared the country's worst affected by the H5N1 virus.

Health Ministry data shows that out of the country's 52 deaths from bird flu, 19 came from West Java.

Yudi said making "paper" policies was less important than increasing operations in at-risk areas.

"What is the use of a decree on the establishment of a special commission? What we need is to intensify our work in the field," Yudi said.

The establishment of the national commission is currently being worked out in a meeting by agriculture, health and education ministry officials and provincial representatives.

Yudi said he did not care what the outcome of the meetings was.

What is most important is an aggressive public campaign, possibly involving school children, on the dangers of the virus, he said.

Yudi said he had done his best to disseminate information about the dangers of bird flu but the results had not been positive.

Even doctors and nurses were not taking the problem seriously and were not immediately treating patients showing bird flu symptoms, he said.

"Just look at IJ (a bird flu victim), who died at a private hospital without getting the necessary medication after being treated for four hours there," he said.

IJ's younger brother died five days later at the Hasan Sadikin Hospital in Bandung.

Yudi said the local administration had not yet allocated any special fund for handling bird flu infections in the province.

Meanwhile, three new suspected bird flu patients were admitted to the Hasan Sadikin Hospital during the weekend. Twenty three patients have so far been declared positive with the virus in the province.

Meanwhile in Semarang, Central Java, the virus is believed to be rife in poultry in Lebdosari hamlet

Totok Sutanto, the head of the Semarang Agriculture Office's animal unit, said the birds infected with the virus would be culled to prevent it from spreading.

"We will soon cull the infected chickens while waiting for laboratory tests from the chicken blood we took," Totok said. The likely infection was discovered following the deaths of dozens of chickens belonging to a villager, he said.

Officials arrived at the site a day after the disease was reported, Totok said.

Despite the find, work went on as normal at Rejomulyo, Semarang's biggest chicken market.

"Every day, up to 500 chickens are slaughtered here," a worker, Gito, said.

A major bird flu outbreak took place in Central Java in 2004 when nearly 8.7 million chickens died from the disease or were culled, local data said.
 

JPD

Inactive
China reports bird flu outbreak, second for the week

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/PEK4201.htm

BEIJING, Oct 4 (Reuters) - An outbreak of bird flu has killed 1,000 domestic poultry in a village in China's northwest, state television said on Wednesday, a day after the report of another outbreak in a nearby region.

The Agriculture Ministry said scientists had confirmed that the poultry near Yinchuan, capital of the Ningxia region, were killed by the H5N1 avian flu virus, China Central Television reported.

Another 72,930 fowl were culled to stop the virus spreading, it said.

"Now the outbreak has been effectively controlled," it added.

On Tuesday, Beijing authorities banned poultry from an area in Inner Mongolia, a region neighbouring Ningxia, after a thousand birds there died from bird flu.

The H5N1 virus has spread through much of Asia's poultry flocks and infected large numbers of wild birds, particularly water fowl, which can act as carriers of the virus.

Bird flu has since spread to Europe, Africa and South Asia, killing at least 148 people worldwide since late 2003, when the virus resurfaced in Southeast Asia.

Scientists fear the virus could mutate into a form that could pass easily from person to person, sparking a global pandemic.

With the world's biggest poultry population and millions of backyard birds roaming free, China is at the centre of the fight against bird flu. There have been 21 human cases, including 14 deaths, from virus and dozens of outbreaks in birds that have led to the culling of millions of fowl.

The latest report did not mention any human infections, nor explain the source of the outbreak.
 

JPD

Inactive
New Jersey preparing for a flu pandemic

http://www.dailyrecord.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061004/NEWS02/610040323/1123

Health commissioner: State getting medicines, asking residents to plan

BY TOM BALDWIN
GANNETT STATE BUREAU

TRENTON -- New Jersey is struggling to stockpile enough medicines, and to determine who gets first dibs, against a flu pandemic that health officials warned on Tuesday is sure to strike --though they can't say when.

"Experts say we are overdue," said Dr. Fred Jacobs, commissioner of the state Department of Health and Senior Services.

"It is going to be mushrooming around the country. ... Every facet of society would be affected," Jacobs said. He added that state officials still haven't decided who would get medicine first in such a situation.

State health officials on Tuesday launched an awareness campaign that they hope will motivate people to take some basic steps that may help avert getting sick.

"Get flu ready" is the watchword of the campaign, which urges people to stockpile food and water in case officials order people to stay at home; identify emergency phone numbers; wash hands and stay home if sickened; and keep abreast of alerts in the media.

Jacobs is appearing in 30-second public service announcements airing at video screens in 176 Acme, Pathmark and ShopRite supermarkets throughout New Jersey. Posters and fliers developed by the state and local health departments, in English and Spanish, will be displayed at places such as municipal buildings, doctors'offices and schools.
 

JPD

Inactive
Philippinos asked to ready for bird flu

http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D8KHTT1O1.htm

The Associated Press/MANILA, Philippines
By JIM GOMEZ
Associated Press Writer

OCT. 4 12:16 P.M. ET The Philippine health secretary asked town mayors Wednesday to prepare bird flu containment plans to control any local outbreak and safeguard the country -- among the few in Asia that have stayed free of the disease.

A bird flu outbreak could have a devastating impact on people and businesses in affected communities and eventually on the national economy, Francisco Duque told mayors at a one-day meeting organized by his department and the Asian Development Bank.

"Every local government, every community should be able to draft a local preparedness and action plan," Duque told the mayors. "Only when action starts in communities can we control and contain a budding epidemic from turning into a deadly national disaster."

Once in place, a containment plan should be tested and refined "like an earthquake drill," Duque said, adding bird flu is one problem that's best dealt with at the grassroots level.

The Philippines is one of the few countries in Asia free of bird flu. The H5N1 strain has killed at least 148 people worldwide since it started ravaging poultry stocks in Asia three years ago, according to the World Health Organization.

Human deaths have almost all been traced to direct exposure to sick birds or their droppings. However, health officials fear the virus could mutate into a form easily passed between humans, possibly triggering a global pandemic.

About 25 town mayors from across the country attended the Manila meeting, which aimed to encourage local governments to commit budgets and personnel to efforts to prevent bird flu and other emerging infectious diseases, the Manila-based ADB said in a statement.

The mayors realized the gravity of bird flu and proposed that teams in every village or barangay, the smallest political unit in the country, be trained to prevent any outbreak and spot any sign of infection that could be investigated by experts, the ADB said.

The ADB has helped finance a fund, which has been used by the Philippines and other Asian countries, to deal with the bird flu threat.

A low-risk bird flu outbreak was found at a duck farm north of Manila last year but authorities said the country remains free of the deadly H5N1 strain that has ravaged other Southeast Asian poultry industries. About 230 ducks were culled following the discovery of that low-risk infection.

The Philippines, which has a significant poultry industry, has taken a number of precautionary measures, including strict bans on poultry imports from affected countries, in an effort to keep the H5N1 strain out.
 

JPD

Inactive
'Fit chickens can carry bird flu'

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailnational.asp?fileid=20061005.G05&irec=4

Yuli Tri Suwarni, The Jakarta Post, Bandung

A healthy chicken could be a carrier of the bird flu virus although it shows no symptoms of the illness, a health official warned Wednesday.

Head of the West Java Animal Husbandry Office, Rachmat Setiadi, said the warning was made following the discovery of healthy chickens that tested positive with H5N1 virus from a serology test conducted on 20 chickens around the house of two dead flu victims -- 23-year-old IJ and his 20-year-old brother -- in Kebonwaru area, Batunggal.

He said earlier, only chickens and ducks are believed to carry the virus.

"The test has shown that four healthy chickens were infected with H5N1. We should be more cautious," he said Wednesday in Bandung.

Currently, people are only made aware of the danger of bird flu when chickens die suddenly in their neighborhood, but Rachmat said healthy chickens could also be carriers.

Out of Bandung's 26 cities and regencies, only two -- Tasikmalaya city and Ciamis regency -- are free of H5N1 virus in poultry.

He said cases where healthy chickens were infected with bird flu had occurred not only in Bandung, but also in other cities and regencies. However, he did not name the cities or regencies.

He recommended that residents stop keeping chickens in their backyards or near their houses.

Meanwhile, serology tests on 11 dogs kept by the family of the bird flu cluster in Kebonwaru have came back negative, according to head of Bandung City Agriculture Office, Yogi Supardjo.

He said the result showed that dogs could not spread the virus.

He said his office was currently working on a public campaign in 26 districts to make people aware of the threat of bird flu following the deaths of IJ and TJ.
 

JPD

Inactive
Asymptomatic H5N1 Infected Chickens in Indonesia

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/10050601/H5N1_Asymptomatic_Chickens_Java.html

Recombinomics Commentary
October 5, 2006

Head of the West Java Animal Husbandry Office, Rachmat Setiadi, said the warning was made following the discovery of healthy chickens that tested positive with H5N1 virus from a serology test conducted on 20 chickens around the house of two dead flu victims -- 23-year-old IJ and his 20-year-old brother -- in Kebonwaru area, Batunggal

The above comments indicate asymptomatic chickens can carry H5N1 bird flu. Although many H5N1 sequences from birds and people in Indonesia have been published, the link between H5N1 in dead poultry, and H5N1 in dead patients has not been established.

All reported sequences from human cases in 2006 on the island of Java have has a novel HA cleavage site. The novel cleavage site has only been detected in one duck on Java in Indramayu, and that sequence was similar to a few human sequences from late 2005 / early 2006 (in upper twig of lower branch of HA tree). The vast majority of human cases are on a separate twig of the lower branch, and these do not match any reported poultry isolates on Java. Matching sequences have been found in two chickens in central Sumatra, isolated in 2005.

The H5N1 asymptomatic chickens on Java are positive for antibodies. It is not clear if H5N1 sequences have been detected in the asymptomatic birds. These infections could represent a separate reservoir. There have also been repots on the recovery of suspect bird flu victims. However, these patients have been H5N1 negative, so it remains unclear if they are infected with H5N1, or if the H5N1 sequence from these recovered is different than the H5N1 fatal cases. Almost all H5N1 human sequences in Indonesia are from fatal cases.

Asymptomatic chickens in Vietnam have also been reported previously.

Clearly more surveillance and sequences from H5N1 infected people, birds, and other mammals are indicated.
 

narnia4

Inactive
There is some hope.

University of Wisconsin-Madison My UW Search People UW Home > News > Story
News
New drug blocks influenza, including bird flu virus
October 4, 2006

by Terry Devitt

Opening a new front in the war against flu, researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have reported the discovery of a novel compound that confers broad protection against influenza viruses, including deadly avian influenza.

The new work, reported online this week (Oct. 4, 2006) in the Journal of Virology, describes the discovery of a peptide - a small protein molecule - that effectively blocks the influenza virus from attaching to and entering the cells of its host, thwarting its ability to replicate and infect more cells.

The new finding is important because it could make available a class of new antiviral drugs to prevent and treat influenza at a time when fear of a global pandemic is heightened and available antiviral drugs are losing their potency.

"This gives us another tool," says Stacey Schultz-Cherry, a UW-Madison professor of medical microbiology and immunology and the senior author of the new report. "We're quickly losing our antivirals."

The new drug, which was tested on cells in culture and in mice, conferred complete protection against infection and was highly effective in treating animals in the early stages of infection. Untreated infected animals typically died within a week. All of the infected animals treated with small doses of the drug at the onset of symptoms survived.

"Pretreatment with (the peptide) provided 100 percent protection against numerous subtypes (of flu), including the highly pathogenic H5N1 viruses�," according to the Journal of Virology report.

The new drug, known as "entry blocker," is a fragment of a larger human protein whose role in biology is to help things pass through membranes such as those that encapsulate cells.

Although the peptide's precise mechanism for thwarting flu remains to be deciphered, it seems to work by blocking the virus' ability to latch onto a key cell surface molecule that the virus uses to get inside cells. To survive and reproduce, viruses must gain access to cells where they make new infectious particles to infect yet more cells in a cascade of infection.

The scientific team emphasized that while the new drug shows great promise, much work remains to determine optimal dosage, efficacy and safety before the drug can be tested in a human patient. One possibility is that the new agent could be used as part of an anti-influenza cocktail of drugs, much like those used to treat HIV infection. The team hopes to move the research into preclinical phase as quickly as possible.

Currently, there are a few effective antiviral medications on the market for influenza, but they are beginning to show signs that they are losing their effectiveness, and scientists and health professionals worry that the flu virus, and especially the H5N1 bird flu virus, will evolve to the point where existing drugs are no longer effective. Drugs now on the market work by either preventing virus replication within the cell or preventing the release of viruses from the cell.

The peptide found by the Wisconsin group seems to work in an entirely different way.

"It attacks a completely different part of the virus life cycle," explains Curtis R. Brandt, a co-author of the study and a UW-Madison professor of medical microbiology and immunology and of ophthalmology and visual sciences. "The virus can't even get into the cell. The peptide is blocking the very earliest step in infection."

Antiviral drugs are considered to be a critical line of defense in the event of an influenza epidemic or pandemic. Vaccines are the most important defense, but new vaccines must be customized in response to an outbreak of disease and it can take as long as a year to formulate and manufacture vaccine in quantity. Antiviral drugs, it is anticipated, would be used to buy time to produce a vaccine in the event of a flu pandemic.

And one intriguing possibility, the Wisconsin scientists add, is that the drug might be able to help stimulate an immune response to flu as the peptide failed to block all of the virus particles in their experiments. A few persistent virus particles, while not enough to make a patient sick, could give the immune system the viral template it needs to mount an effective response, just like a vaccine.

The flu-thwarting qualities of the peptide were observed after similar peptides were found by Brandt and his colleagues to stop herpes simplex virus infection.

The Wisconsin work was supported by grants from the UW-Madison School of Medicine and Public Health Education and Research Committee, the National Institutes of Health and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.
 

RAT

Inactive
I've found two dead crows within three days! One in the middle of the sidewalk and one in the street. Western Washington. The last time this happened it was West Nile virus...whatever, it's gross trying to walk the dog and trying to keep her from sniffing the dead birds. :rolleyes:
 

JPD

Inactive
Carefully read the following and the next article....

Indonesia's Bird Flu Variant Shows No Major Changes (Update1)

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601080&sid=ahDuD4y1bQxU&refer=asia

By Karima Anjani

Oct. 5 (Bloomberg) -- The bird flu virus that's killed one person a week in Indonesia this year hasn't mutated to become more contagious to people, the country's agriculture ministry said, citing an analysis of virus samples.

Tests on 49 samples taken from birds on the islands of Sumatra, Java and Bali showed the H5N1 avian influenza virus has undergone no major changes, the ministry said in a statement today. The analysis was undertaken by a World Organization for Animal Health reference laboratory in Geelong, Australia.

Flu viruses make minor genetic changes when they reproduce, though most of the time they don't become more infectious in the process. Disease trackers are monitoring H5N1 to check whether it has mutated to become easily transmissible between people. Millions could die if the virus sparks a global outbreak.

The past three years, H5N1 is known to have infected 252 people in 10 countries, killing 148 of them, the World Health Organization said on Oct. 3. Almost all human cases have been linked to close contact with sick or dead birds, such as children playing with them or adults butchering them or plucking feathers, according to the United Nations agency.

Indonesia has reported 69 human H5N1 cases, including 52 deaths, since July 2005. This year, at least 40 people have died from the virus, mostly through contact with infected fowl. About 300 million poultry are raised in backyards in the world's fourth-most-populous country.

Further Analysis

Samples of the H5N1 virus taken from birds were collected between September in 2005 and March, Elly Sawitri, an official at the agriculture ministry's avian flu center, said in a telephone interview today. Animal health authorities will dispatch samples collected in the past six months for analysis, Sawitri said.

Indonesia agreed to deposit avian flu genetic information in public databases, such as GenBank, four months ago to help scientists better track dominant variants of the virus and to speed preparations for vaccines to fight a human outbreak.

The virus may have infected as much as 27 percent of fowl and caged birds in the Southeast Asian nation, Musny Suatmodjo, Indonesia's director of animal health, said last week.

The health ministry and Singapore's Temasek Life Sciences Laboratory Ltd. are developing a diagnostic kit to speed the diagnosis of human H5N1 cases. The kit may be available within a year, Tan Kok Keng, Temasek Life's chief operating officer, told reporters in Jakarta today.

``We cannot wait any longer, we're fighting with time,'' Tan said. The kit will be developed in Indonesia using H5N1 strains collected in the country, and assisted by Temasek Life's scientists and technology.

``The kit should help make diagnosing cases faster because many patients are receiving proper treatment too late,'' Health Minister Siti Fadilah Supari said.
 

JPD

Inactive
H5N1 Match Failure in Indonesia Raises Pandemic Concerns

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/10050602/H5N1_Indo_Match_Failures.html

Recombinomics Commentary
October 5, 2006

Tests on 49 samples taken from birds on the islands of Sumatra, Java and Bali showed the H5N1 avian influenza virus has undergone no major changes, the ministry said in a statement today. The analysis was undertaken by a World Organization for Animal Health reference laboratory in Geelong, Australia.

Samples of the H5N1 virus taken from birds were collected between September in 2005 and March.

The above comments provide additional detail on the H5N1 bird samples sent to Australia for sequencing in an attempt to match the human H5N1 sequences from Indonesia. Prior to the sequencing of the above isolates, the bird H5N1 sequences failed to match the human sequences.

However, most of the initial bird sequences were from 2003 through the first half of 2005, while the first human sequence was from July 2005. Therefore, the match failure may have been due to recent H5N1 that were not reflected in the earlier sequences.

91 samples were sent to Australia for sequencing. Since the human isolates had already been sequenced, the question of major changes was not at issue. The human sequences had no evidence of reassortment, but virtually all samples from Java had a novel cleavage site that was associated with a number of additional changes in all 8 gene segments that were in the human isolates, but absent in the poultry isolates.

The HA sequences from over 50 samples from Australia were deposited at Los Alamos over the past few months, and those sequences failed to match the human sequences. Only three of the bird isolates had the novel cleavage site. Two were from chickens in central Sumatra, but all of the human sequences with the novel cleavage site were from a duck in Indramayo on Java. The third bird isolate with the novel cleavage site was from Java, but it only matched a few of the human sequences. The vast majority of the human sequences matched each other, but did not match any bird sequence from Java.

The above comments confirm that the recent bird sequences overlap the human sequences in time and location, but still fail to match, indicating the vast majority of human H5N1 sequences are from a source other than most of the H5N1 infected poultry in Indonesia.

The failure of the above comments to address the match failure is cause for concern.
 

JPD

Inactive
BRIEFING: Flu pandemic requires distinct preparations

ABA Banking Journal

http://www.ababj.com/Feature6.html

By Karen Kahler Holliday, contributing editor

With the five-year and one-year anniversaries of 9/11 and Hurricane Katrina now past, banks’ disaster recovery manuals have become thick and well-thumbed. But the depth and scope of the preparedness challenge continues to take on new dimensions.

Following an interagency advisory to financial institutions and their technology service providers earlier this year, banks are expanding their emergency/business continuity strategies to include another potential threat: avian flu and other pandemics.

With a stated intent to “raise awareness regarding the threat of a pandemic influenza outbreak and its potential impact on the delivery of critical financial services,” the advisory referenced the National Strategy for Pandemic Influenza, which stresses that the “private sector should play an integral role in preparedness before a pandemic begins and should be part of the national response.”

While no one knows whether the virus that has infected birds will mutate into another strain that could pass from human to human or how quickly it could spread, experts stress that advance planning is the key to preparedness. Given the uncertainties of such a scenario, financial institutions are navigating their way through relatively uncharted territory as they aim to enhance and revise emergency strategies.

Statistics vary, but some sources suggest that over the course of such an outbreak, staff absences due to avian-flu-related factors—whether individual illness, family demands, or fear of contagion—might be in a range of 20% to 30%, although absenteeism on any given day could be less. Subsequently, as an industry and as individual institutions, banks are assessing the human resources, operational, customer and community considerations for such a situation.

“There are a number of key considerations to evaluate, ranging from infection control to internal and external communication to staffing, cross-training and telecommuting, says Doug Johnson, American Bankers Association senior policy advisor, who adds that banks should also be assessing the impact of such an event on consumer behaviors.

Recognizing the prudence of advance dialogue and examination of the issue, several state banking associations are sharing information via seminars and informational resources, and the ABA included an avian flu/pandemic section in its Toolbox on Emergency Preparedness (available to members at www.aba.com). While individual plans will vary, some of the responsibilities of the U.S. private sector include:

• Establishing an ethic of infection control in the workplace that is reinforced during the annual influenza season to include, if possible, options for working offsite while ill, systems to reduce infection transmission and worker education;

• Establishing contingency systems to maintain delivery of essential goods and services during times of significant and sustained worker absenteeism;

• Establishing mechanisms, where possible, to allow workers to provide services from home if public health officials advise against non-essential travel outside the home;

• Establishing partnerships with other members of the sector to provide mutual support and maintenance of essential services during a pandemic.

Operating with fewer people
While banks have continued to expand preparedness strategies post-Katrina and 9-11, ABA President and CEO Edward Yingling has stressed that a potential pandemic would present distinct circumstances. In testimony before the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations earlier this summer, Yingling outlined some of these considerations, which include absenteeism, disruptions to other economic sectors which may cause supply/service shortages; the need for backup coverage, cross-training; and the need for expanded communications and telecommunications programs.

“Pandemic planning presents an unusual challenge for business continuity planners at all levels,” says Brian Tishuk, executive director of ChicagoFIRST, a nonprofit association dedicated to addressing homeland security and emergency management issues affecting financial institutions. Tishuk observes that where continuity planning generally focuses on the loss of facilities or equipment, the potential for a public health emergency requires organizations to plan for what could be a longer-term loss of personnel.

William Connors, president and CEO of Risk Management Advisors Inc. in Boston, says that while certain facets of emergency planning are relevant across the board, pandemic planning must be approached in a way that goes beyond functional areas to take into account the overall mission of the organization. Experts state that a serious avian flu outbreak could erupt in waves over several weeks or even months, with fluctuations in severity, which could significantly impact available human resources.

“You have to be able to assess not only the functions that are critical to your mission, but those that are not,” Connors states. “You also need to determine which tasks may be accomplished remotely and how to best utilize the staff that you have given the potential for change in the ways that your customers interface with your organization. Crisis communication planning before, during and after both internally and externally are key planning elements, as are individual elements of a plan, such as security, infection control, continuity of service, relationships with vendors/suppliers and emergency management and health-related agencies.” Connors adds that testing a plan is also a key consideration, with various simulation scenarios that could impact a plan’s effectiveness.

Required: communications expertise
A starting point in the ABA Toolbox is the establishment of a coordination team with defined roles and responsibilities for preparedness and response planning. The team should contain: medical expertise, in an effort to provide independent and objective information on the background, status and potential course of a pandemic; communications expertise to develop and disseminate information to customers and staff; information experts who are knowledgeable in creating and operating public/private websites and firm-wide communications capabilities, such as e-mail and web logs; telecommunications experts who could develop and promote the effective use of tools such as voice and videoconferencing; and security experts who would also communicate with civil authorities to ensure compliance with changing ordinances.

Tishuk says that since a pandemic could potentially result in extended periods of sporadic attendance, “it is critical to appropriately track those who are working at home versus those who are ill, and to ensure that a policy is in place regarding the use of medical time, vacation time and potentially, short- and long-term disability.”

Are vendors prepared?
Since pandemic planning must incorporate a significant dependence on the public sector—both public health and emergency management officials—Connors and Tishuk state that it is essential to understand the government’s planning assumptions, as well as response triggers and potential quarantine activities. Both recommend the establishment of communication contacts and dialogue with such agencies. Ditto for vendors and suppliers.

“Certainly in an industry where certain services are performed by outside vendors and suppliers, financial sector planers must coordinate with them as well to ensure that each has a plan in place to ensure delivery of services or supplies with a potentially smaller workforce,” Tishuk states.

Experts also recommend that companies establish a disinfection program, which supplements routine office cleaning efforts with special disinfection procedures, particularly for common areas at facilities, as well as procedures for temporary isolation of areas that may have been contaminated. Policies regarding the availability and distribution of hygiene supplies should also be in place.

Mark Lies, a partner in the Chicago office of Seyfarth Shaw LLP and co-author with Connors on an avian flu preparation guide, says that companies should carefully review business continuity and employee safety arrangements as well as policies to ensure that they are in compliance with personnel and privacy laws and regulations.

Not surprisingly, experts state that communication planning should be thorough and should be addressed well in advance of an emergency. Sonya Smith, Regions’ vice-president of media relations, states that corporate communications has a designated member attending all planning sessions related to its emergency preparedness efforts. Additionally, she states, the company’s intranet site and corporate newsletter have regular articles on the subject.

“It’s critical for people to know that there’s a roadmap,” Connors concludes. BJ
 

JPD

Inactive
Indonesia

Possible bird flu cases in Makassar

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailheadlines.asp?fileid=20061006.A06&irec=5

Andi Hajramurni and Suherdjoko, The Jakarta Post, Makassar, Semarang

Seven people showing symptoms of bird flu have been admitted to a hospital in Makassar, South Sulawesi.

The patients, most less than 10 years old, were being treated in the Pakis isolation room at Wahidin Sudirohusodo Hospital on Thursday for high fever and vomiting.

"Our preliminary clinical diagnosis was that they were infected with the bird flu virus, so we moved them to the isolation room," said M. Halik, who is responsible for bird flu treatment at the hospital.

Halik said the seven patients' blood had tested negative for the H5N1 bird flu virus. To be certain of the diagnosis, however, he said doctors needed the results of tests on the patients' nasal mucus from a laboratory in Jakarta.

"We've sent the specimens to Jakarta and are waiting for the test results," he said.

Family members said chickens near the patients' homes had been falling ill and dying rapidly without any clear reason, Halik added.

The Wahidin Sudirohusodo Hospital is somewhat overwhelmed by the increasing number of suspected bird flu patients it is treating. Two isolation rooms designed to hold two patients each have had to accommodate twice the number.

According to the Ministry of Health, a total of 69 people have contracted bird flu in Indonesia. Of those, 52 have died.

Meanwhile, in Central Java, many chickens have fallen ill and died in recent days in a possible outbreak of the disease.

The H5N1 virus is believed to be killing poultry in 17 kampongs in the Central Java regencies of Semarang, Temanggung, Purbalingga, Pekalongan and Pemalang, according to Kurmaningsih, the head of the Central Java Livestock Husbandry Office.

Rapid tests on dead chickens in Lebdosari kampong, Gisikdrono, in Semarang, indicated they had the virus. Local authorities later culled 35 other chickens in the kampong to prevent the disease from spreading.

Kurmaningsih said her office had asked for 10 million more doses of H5N1 vaccine from the central government.

"We currently have 12 million doses of the vaccine, but we want more in order to be ready for a much bigger outbreak," she said in Semarang on Thursday.

Kurmaningsih explained that despite the massive poultry vaccination drive launched earlier this year through a program called the National Movement against Avian Influenza, the infections which started hitting the province in 2003 have continued to spread.

Kurmaningsih said under the program, her office distributed 50 million doses of vaccine to poultry owners in the province in 2004, 14 million doses in 2005 and another 22 million doses this year.

"We culled chickens in Boyolali in 2004. But now we have no plans to do so because the social impacts (of culling) are so widespread. Besides that we still don't know whether there will be compensation for the culled chickens," she explained.

In a related development, the Ministry of Health plans to build modern laboratories in North Sumatra to diagnose bird flu infections, Aswin Soefi Lubi, dean of the School of Medicine at the Islamic University of North Sumatra, said Thursday.

Aswin said one of the laboratories will be built at his medical school. They will be used to test blood from suspected bird flu victims without having to send the samples to Jakarta.
 

JPD

Inactive
New H5N1 Sequences Confirm Recombination in China

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/10050603/H5N1_Recombination_Confirmation.html

Recombinomics Commentary
October 5, 2006

New H5N1 bird flu sequences have been deposited at Genbank and Los Alamos (see list here and here). These sequences were deposited by the Beijing Genome Institute and represent complete sequences of all eight gene segments of H5N1 isolates from poultry and wild birds in China from 1997 to 2004. Some of these sequences are updated versions of a series of sequences released earlier this year under the title “A cohort of AIV H5N1 subtypes isolated from wild aquatic birds and domestic poultry revealed rapid transmission, frequent reassortment, and identifiable recombination events.” The sequence contained a number of examples of clear-cut recombination.

Recently additional sequences from the 1970’s were released and these sequences from Hong Kong are well conserved in the above 2004 sequences, which again raise questions about the central dogma of influenza genetics which maintains that season variation is due to random mutations. In addition to the sequences from the 1970’s, the new sequences from 1997 also show a high level of sequence conservation. In the PB2 gene the 2004 tree sparrow sequence, A/tree sparrow/Henan/2/2004(H5N1) between positions 685 and 2146 has only three differences with the 1997 chicken sequence, A/chicken/Hubei/wi/1997(H5N1). This sequence conservation is inconsistent with an error prone polymerase lacking a proof reader function as the source of seasonal variation in human flu, or rapid evolution in pandemic flu.

Instead, the data clearly shows that both season flu and pandemic flu evolve via homologous recombination. The confirmation of the earlier data demonstrates that the clear examples of recombination are not due to lab error, but reflects the primary mechanism of influenza evolution.
 

JPD

Inactive
H5N1 H7N1 PB1 Recombination in Hubei Northern China

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/10060601/H5N1_H7N1_PB1_Recombination.html

Recombinomics Commentary
October 6, 2006

New H5N1 sequences have been released from northern China. In several instances these are sequences from earlier isolates which were originally submitted to GenBank by the Beijing Genome Institute on February 28, 2005 under the title, “A cohort of AIV H5N1 subtypes isolated from wild aquatic birds and domestic poultry revealed rapid transmission, frequent reassortment, and identifiable recombination events.” One of the sequences with clear cut homologous recombination was A/chicken/Henan/210/2004(H5N1). The re-sequenced sample, A/chicken/Henan/wu/2004(H5N1) is identical in 7 of the 8 gene segments. The sole difference was in PB2 and the new sequences which removed the premature termination codon. The new sequence confirms the previously identified recombination.

However, the recombination in northern China was not limited to sequences generated by the Beijing Genome Institute. A recent paper by Harbin Veterinary Research Institute and St Jude described the relationship between an H7N2 isolate from a chicken in Hubei in 2002, A/chicken/Hubei/1/2002(H7N2), and a 1979 H7N1 isolate from an African starling, from a quarantined bird in England, A/African starling/England-Q/983/1979(H7N1). Those sequences however had a region of identity with a 2001 H5N1 chicken sequence, A/chicken/Hubei/718/2001(H5N1) generated by the China Agricultural University in Beijing. The sequence between positions 1729 and 2182 of the 1979 and 2001 isolates were identical, even though the two PB1 sequences were only 93% homologous.

The region of identity between the two PB1 sequences strongly supports acquisition via homologous recombination, and the identity between the sequences that were 22 years apart shows that the sequence could be faithfully copied over an extended time period. These data were similar to Canadian swine data which also had examples of clear cut recombination as well as long stretches of identity in sequences that were isolated over 25 years apart (see identities in PB2 and PA).

The examples of frequent and clear cut homologous recombination involving sequences faithfully copied for several decades seriously challenges the dogma of influenza genetic which maintains that seasonal variations are due to genetic drift cause by random mutations generated by a polymerase lacking a proof reading function and pandemic shifts are due to reassortment.

The latest examples of recombination show that the random muations can easily be generated by homologous recombination between closely related sequences, and genetic shifts can be generated by recombination between distantly related genes. The acquisition of single nucleotide changes (SNPs) by homologous recombination is also supported by polymorphism tracing through an expanding sequence database. The “new: polymorphisms are easily found in earlier sequences which are frequently found in closely related sequences which are transported and transmitted by wild birds.
 
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