10/21-10/27/06 | Weekly Bird Flu Thread:Egypt detects new human H5N1 bird flu case

JPD

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Egypt detects new human H5N1 bird flu case

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20061010/wl_nm/birdflu_egypt_dc

By Aziz El-Kaissouni Tue Oct 10, 7:24 PM ET

CAIRO (Reuters) - Egypt has detected its first human case of the highly pathogenic H5N1 bird flu virus since May in an Egyptian woman who raised ducks from her home, a World Health Organization official said on Tuesday.

Hassan el-Bushra, regional adviser for communicable diseases surveillance at the World Health Organization, said the woman had tested positive for the avian influenza virus in tests carried out by Egyptian health authorities.

The new infection brings the number of human cases in Egypt to 15, of whom six have died. All the previous infections were detected between March and May after the virus first surfaced in Egyptian poultry in February.

The woman, 39-year-old Hanan Aboul Magd of the Nile Delta province of Gharbiya, has been in hospital since October 4 and has been treated with the drug Tamiflu, state news agency MENA said.

The woman was on a respirator but her condition was stable, MENA said. Her family was being tested for the virus.

Egypt has had the largest cluster of human bird flu cases outside of Asia, and the fresh case came a month after authorities found a cluster of new cases in birds following a two-month lull in detected poultry cases.

"BACKYARD" BIRDS

The initial bird flu outbreak caused panic in Egypt, where poultry is a major source of protein and where poor families frequently breed chicken domestically in cities and rural areas to supplement their diet and income.

MENA reported that the newly infected woman had raised a flock of 11 ducks from her home north of the Egyptian capital. Two became sick and died, and she then slaughtered the rest before she was hospitalized.

Most of the people infected with bird flu in Egypt became ill after coming into contact with so-called "backyard" birds, officials say. Egypt has culled 30 million birds since February to contain the virus.

Chickens on rooftops may be particularly susceptible to catching the virus from infected migrant birds, which fly along the densely populated Nile valley during migration, experts have suggested.

Bushra had earlier said that the fresh cases of bird flu in Egyptian poultry showed that there was still a risk for human cases, but a large outbreak was less likely to take hold or spread so long as Egypt continued to vaccinate poultry.

The vast majority of Egyptian commercial poultry flocks have been vaccinated, while about 20 percent of domestic birds had received vaccines, officials say.

Two separate officials said the onset of warm weather, combined with Egyptian government measures, may have helped keep the virus at bay during the summer months.

But an official from the Food and Agriculture Organization has said that the onset of cooler weather could still cause a flare-up of cases in poultry, and has urged increased surveillance accompanied by a fair compensation scheme.
 

JPD

Inactive
Illegal immigrants with bird flu symptoms in Greece

http://www.mrt.com.mk/en//index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1331&Itemid=26

Friday, 20 October 2006

Four illegal immigrants from India with bird flu symptoms have been hospitalised in Greek Island of Syros, internet-edition of Ethnos reported.

Two immigrants had bird flu symptoms, registered in Southeast Asia. The results from the examinations should be announced by the end of Friday.

Veterinary authorities in Greece took over preventive measures such as prohibition of wild birds hunt and formation of security zones, according to EU proposals.

Earlier this year the deadly virus X5H1 (subtype of bird flu) was detected in Greece.
 

JPD

Inactive
Fatal Suspect H5N1 Cluster in South Sulawesi

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/10200602/H5N1_S_Sulawesi.html

Recombinomics Commentary
October 20, 2006

the Official of the Maros Health of the Service took the sample of blood against five citizens in the Bontopaddingin Village, the Bontotallasa Village, the Subdistrict Toss Up, on Wednesday October 18 yesterday.The taking of the sample of this blood, related the death a baby, Fajrin, 2 months that was expected suspect avian influenza (AI) or bird flu.

They who were taken the sample of his blood respectively the two parents Fajrin, the Dervish, 22 years with his wife, dahlias, 29 years.Three other citizens were still being the grandfather and the close Fajrin family respectively Kurdin, 60 years, Hj Indeed, 55 years, and Harbiah, 35 years.A Service staff the Maros Health, Muhammad Said, SKM M. Cash that led the taking of the sample of this blood in the location, mentioned, from the five citizens, two including being expected suspect bird flu.

The above translation describes a suspect fatal H5N1 bird flu case in South Sulawesi. In addition, at least two family members are hospitalized and several contacts are being tested. The H5N1 situation in South Sulawesi remains unclear.

Last month a fatal confirmed case from Mekassar was announced. However, the patient had died in June. The WHO update indicated the delay in reporting the confirmation was because it was collected during routine testing. However, the WHO update failed to mention the deaths of two family members who also had bird flu symptoms. Thus, the failure to report, couple with the misleading characterization by WHO is cause for concern.

Between the earlier fatal cluster and the current suspected fatal cluster, a large number of suspect cases have been hospitalized in South Sulawesi. Although these cases have tested negative, patients have been treated with Tamiflu which may lower the level of circulating H5N1 to a level that is below detection. False negatives are common in H5N1 cases and frequently multiple tests are required to detect H5N1. A recent confirmed H5N1 fatality in Thailand was tested nine times over several weeks, yet H5N1 was only detected at autopsy.

The frequency of H5N1 infections in Indonesian remains unclear. The H5N1 in patients does not match the H5N1 in poultry. Since a link to dead or dying poultry is usually required fro H5N1 testing, the level of H5N1 infections in patients with bird flu symptoms, but without a bird link is largely unknown.

If these patients have been infected with H5N1, they will have antibodies that can be detected 3-4 weeks after disease onset. It remains unclear how many of any surviving patients with bird flu symptoms are tested for convalescent H5N1 antibodies.

Similarly, sequence data from H5N1 positive cats has not been released. The only cat H5N1 sequence released to date does match the human H5N1 sequences, which provides additional evidence for a mammalian reservoir. Similarly, analysis of recently released H5N1 sequences in China show that recombination is frequent, and regions of identity are found in Indonesian patients, providing evidence for the introduction of new polymorphisms in Indonesia via migratory birds. H5N1 sequences from wild birds in Indonesia are also lacking.

The latest suspect cluster in Indonesia again highlights the need for expanded surveillance and more timely reporting.

Recent media reports indicate that there will be testing of waterfowl in the Trisik area, Yogyakarta, and the Eretan Coast, Indramayu. Thus far the only reported bird H5N1 from Java with the novel cleave site was from Indramayu. Although it did not match the majority of human cases, it was close to a small subset of patients infected at the end of 2005. The only other bird isolates with the novel cleavage site were from central Sumatra.

Although the novel cleavage site has not been detected outside of Indonesia, many polymorphism from patients in Indonesia have been detected in H5N1 in China, strongly implicating these isolates in the evolution of H5N1 worldwide, including several polymorphism that were widely detected in Indonesian patients. Moreover, the origins of these H5N1 sequences in China could be found in low path isolates in Hong Kong in the late 1970’s indicating low path flu sequences are also closely involved in the evolution of H5N1, which is largely driven by recombination, which was readily detected in the H5N1 from poultry, waterfowl, and swine in China.
 

JPD

Inactive
New Suspect H5N1 Cases in Egypt

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/10200601/H5N1_Egypt_3.html

Recombinomics Commentary
October 20, 2006

There is a state of panic among citizens Governorate Western fear of the spread of the bird flu pandemic. The Directorate of Health called the detention of sick Ula Abdel Razek, 28 years housewives and evaluates Enberoh city of Dakahlia Governorate in hospital.

Pathogenesis of Mahala under suspicion بانفلونزا infected birds. Been sent a sample of blood for examination by central labs in Cairo. As has been sampling from all Almkhalten them. This is the third case that emerged in the province within days.

The above translation provides detail for a second suspect H5N1 bird flu victim in Egypt, and mentions a third case. The first case has been confirmed by WHO on October 11, and several outbreaks have been reported in Egypt, as well as neighboring Sudan.

These cases coincide with migratory birds head south for the fall and winter and raise questions about the lack of H5N1 reports in Turkey and other countries in the Middle East. H5N1 was confirmed in Turkey and Romania in October, 2005 and H5N1 in Siberia over the summer indicates a new wave of H5N1 infections would be expected at this time in the same regions as reported in 2005. The only country reporting H5N1 this season is the Ukraine. Last season, many countries failed to report H5N1 until after fatalities were reported in humans in Turkey in early January, 2006.

Reporting failures in these areas this season highlights major questions about surveillance and transparency in these countries again this season.
 

JPD

Inactive
Nigeria: Bird Flu - Poultry Farms Lose Over 222,000 Birds

http://allafrica.com/stories/200610200413.html

October 20, 2006
Posted to the web October 20, 2006

Yusha'u Adamu Ibrahim

Kano state government has so far distributed the sum of N37m to the first and second batch of the Avian Influenza affected poultry farmers in the state, the state commissioner of Agriculture, Alhaji Muhammad Adamu Bello has revealed.

The commissioner who was speaking at a one-day workshop on recognition, prevention and control of Avian Influenza in Kano, said that a total of 222,101 birds were killed in about 82 farms in the state during the outbreak.

Alhaji Muhammad Ada-mu Bello added that the state government is also processing the payments of the third batch of the affected poultry farmers, assuring that all the affected poultry farmers in the state will receive the N250 far bird assistance.

The commissioner therefore expressed government gratitude to the FG and various governmental and non-governmental agencies who during the pandemic put their heads together in putting it under control in the state.

Also speaking at the occasion, the field officer, federal department of livestock and pest control, Dr. D. Kwange disclosed that due to the Avian Influenza's high risk, immense economic loses and threat to public health, government on its side has put in place an emergency preparedness and differentiated action plan for surveillance and control of the disease.

Dr. Kwange said further that part of the measures adopted in controlling the disease is putting a ban on importation of poultry and poultry products, effective surveillance and functional National Veterinary and quarantine facilities.

She pointed out that Avian Influenza is not government problem alone, rather it requires the cooperation of the private practitioners, poultry farmers and dealers. She therefore, emphasized the need for all the concerned parties to be involved and pro-active in its control.

However, three papers were presented at the occasion and participants include all Heads of Agric Departments and Heads of Veterinary Departments of the 44 local governments of the state.
 

JPD

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Nations Face Tough Choices in Preparing for Flu Pandemic

http://www.voanews.com/english/AmericanLife/2006-10-20-voa87.cfm

By Rosanne Skirble
Washington DC
20 October 2006


Weighing the threat of a global avian flu pandemic, the World Health Organization has called on all nations to develop plans to prepare for the event. So far, it says, only 40 countries have done so.

A new study released this week in the Public Library of Science analyzes global preparedness for an avian flu outbreak and considers the challenge of delivering scarce life-saving drugs.

Lead author Lori Uscher-Pines, a graduate student at Johns Hopkins University's Bloomberg School of Public Health, says the first step in global preparedness is setting priorities: "These flu plans are very dynamic documents and they are constantly being edited. So, you see flu plans that are under 10 pages long and you see flu plans that are slightly under 500 [pages]. And, often they are not adhering to World Health Organization guidelines on certain issues."

For example, Uscher-Pines notes, while health care workers consistently ranked at the top of the priority lists to get antiviral drugs or vaccines, in almost half the plans, children were next in line to receive the medications. "And the World Health Organization actually does not think that this is an appropriate strategy based on the evidence that is available," she says. "So the World Health Organization is saying that they advise against this, but we are still seeing countries do this in a pretty large scale, and we can only guess why this is the case, perhaps socio-cultural values or different interpretation of evidence."

Uscher-Pines says this finding suggests that public health plans must consider both scientific and ethical issues. "Then when an event happens they will ask fewer questions. They will be less surprised. Maybe less panic will ensue as a result, that this is something everyone has thought about in advance."

Lori Uscher-Pines says attention to these details may help reduce deaths and also minimize political turmoil and the possibility of inequitable treatment during an epidemic.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu infected provinces in Indonesia drop to 14: official

http://english.people.com.cn/200610/21/eng20061021_314056.html

The number of bird-flu infected provinces in Indonesia dropped by 14 from 30, a official said Saturday.

These 14 provinces have declared free from avian influenza (AI) virus in the past six months, Antara news agency quoted Bayu Krisnamurthi, executive officer of the National Commission of the Bird Flu Control and AI Pandemic Alertness, as saying.

The AI-free provinces included South Kalimantan, West Kalimantan, Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam, West Sumatera, West Nusa Tenggara, and West Sulawesi.

Bird flu cases were also not found in South Sumatera, Bangka Belitung, Riau, Jambi, East Kalimantan, Riau Islands and West Irian Jaya.

Health Minister Siti Fadilah Supari said that such development was encouraging in an effort to prevent the AI virus from affecting people.

"The problem is poultry. If we can control AI infection on poultry, the virus will not infect human beings," the minister said.

Between July 2005 and October 17, 2006, there were 72 cases of bird flu infections in Indonesia, and the virus has so far killed 55 affected people.

The case fatality rate (CFR) of the avian influenza virus reached 76.39 percent, she added.

To deal with the fatal disease, the Indonesian government has provided Oseltamivir or Tamiflu to a number of hospitals across the country.

Source: Xinhua
 

JPD

Inactive
Studying the virulence of bird flu in humans

http://www.worldpoultry.net/ts_wo/w...rldpoultry/_pageLabel/tswo_page_news_content/

19 Oct 2006

New research has shown that the H5N1 avian influenza virus replicates much more aggressively in humans than other types of human influenza viruses, which means that quick diagnosis and treatment is vital to preventing fatalities from the disease.

The H5N1 avian influenza virus creates high viral levels that set off an overwhelming inflammatory response.This helps explain the infection's virulence, according to researchers M de Jong and others, who published their findings in the Journal of the American Medical Association .

Researchers at the Oxford University Clinical Research Unit at the Hospital for Tropical Disease in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, studied 18 patients infected with H5N1 influenza and eight patients with two types of human influenza.

H5N1 patients had much higher levels of virus in their throats than other patients. Also, levels of some inflammatory cytokines and chemokines were correlated with viral load and were highest in the patients who died. One cytokine, interleukin 8, is produced by bronchial epithelial cells and may play a role in acute respiratory distress syndrome.

"Our observations indicate that high viral load, and the resulting intense inflammatory responses, are central to influenza H5N1 pathogenesis," the researchers said, noting that clinicians should focus on preventing this intense cytokine response by early diagnosis and antiviral treatment.
 

JPD

Inactive
Researchers' work from Japan, Germany and
the United States adds to bird flu body of knowledge

http://www.bioportfolio.co.uk/cgi-b..._work_from_Japan_Ge_c1020548.6wh.xml&THEHOST=

Virus Weekly via NewsEdge Corporation :.

2006 OCT 24 - (NewsRx.com) -- Bird flu data are the focus of recent research from Japan, Germany and the United States.

Study 1: The avian influenza virus A/chicken/Yamaguchi/7/04 (H5N1) strain is highly pathogenic to other birds.

According to recently published research from Japan, "Outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) have been occurring in domestic poultry in Asia since 1996. In the beginning of 2004, HPAI outbreaks were caused by H5N1 virus in two farms and a group of pet chickens in different areas of Japan.".

"In the present study," wrote scientists, "the pathogenicity of A/chicken/Yamaguchi/7/04 (H5N1), which had been isolated from a dead chicken during the first outbreak in Japan, was assessed in chickens, quails, budgerigars, ducklings, mice, and miniature pigs by experimental infection.".

"The virus was highly pathogenic to all the birds tested," reported N. Isoda and colleagues at Hokkaido University.

The authors concluded, "Mice were susceptible to infection with a low mortality rate and miniature pigs were resistant to infection with the virus.".

Isoda and colleagues published their study in Archives of Virology (Pathogenicity of a highly pathogenic avian influenza virus, A/chicken/Yamaguchi/7/04 (H5N1) in different species of birds and mammals. Arch Virol, 2006;151(7):1267-1279).

For more information, contact H. Kida, Hokkaido University, Graduate School Vet. Medical, Dept. of Diseases Control, Microbiology Laboratory, Sapporo, Hokkaido 0600818, Japan.

Study 2: Measures for control and eradication of highly pathogenic avian influenza in Germany and in the European Community are examined in a recent issue of Berliner und Munchener Tierarztliche Wochenschrift.

According to the report from Germany, "The huge potential economic impact of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) substantiates specific and rigorous legal regulations worldwide. According to the O.I.E. Terrestrial Animal Health Code, fowl plague is a notifiable disease. International trading activities concerning poultry and poultry products originating from countries with active HPAI are rigorously restricted.

"In EU member states directive 92/40/EEC subsumes measures against fowl plague and has been transferred into German legislation by the 'Geflugelpest-Verordnung.' These acts specify that vaccination against HPAI is principally prohibited.".

"The aim of all sanctions is the extinction of disease and the eradication of the causative agent," said O. Werner and T. Harder at the Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut. "However, HPAI viruses, exclusively belonging to subtypes H5 and H7, can re-emerge de novo from progenitor viruses of low pathogenicity which are perpetuated in the wild bird population. An outbreak of HPAI requires prompt action by a stamping out strategy. Fast and accurate diagnosis, a strict stand-still and the culling of affected flocks are at the basis of success.".

Werner and Harder stated, "In areas with a high density of poultry holdings pre-emptive culling and creation of buffer zones, devoid of susceptible poultry, may be necessary. In these cases emergency vaccinations can be considered as a supportive measure in order to limit mass culling. Vaccinations on merely prophylactic grounds, not being connected to acute outbreaks, should be avoided because of selective pressures on the virus leading to antigenic drift and escape of vaccine-induced immunity. Instead, high standard biosecurity measures, particularly limiting direct and indirect contacts with wild birds, should be maintained.".

Werner and Harder published their report in Berliner und Munchener Tierarztliche Wochenschrift (Measures for control and eradication of highly pathogenic avian influenza in Germany and in the European Community. Berl Munch Tierarztl Wochenschr, 2006;119(3-4):151-159).

For additional information, contact O. Werner, Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut, Bundesforschungsinstitut fur Tiergesundheit, Insel Riems, D-17493 Greifswald, Germany. ortrud.werner@fli.bund.de.

Study 3: Adenovirus-based immunization protected mice and poultry from lethal H5N1 avian influenza virus.

According to recent research published in the Journal of Virology , "The recent emergence of highly pathogenic avian influenza virus (HPAI) strains in poultry and their subsequent transmission to humans in Southeast Asia have raised concerns about the potential pandemic spread of lethal disease. In this paper we describe the development and testing of an adenovirus-based influenza A virus vaccine directed against the hemagglutinin (RA) protein of the A/Vietnam/1203/2004 (H5N1) (VN/1203/04) strain isolated during the lethal human outbreak in Vietnam from 2003 to 2005.".

"We expressed different portions of RA from a recombinant replication-incompetent adenoviral vector, achieving vaccine production within 36 days of acquiring the virus sequence," said Wentao Gao at the University of Pittsburgh and collaborators in the U.S. "BALB/c mice were immunized with a prime-boost vaccine and exposed to a lethal intranasal dose of VN/1203/04 H5N1 virus 70 days later. Vaccination induced both HA-specific antibodies and cellular immunity likely to provide heterotypic immunity. Mice vaccinated with full-length RA were fully protected from challenge with VN/1203/04.".

"We next evaluated the efficacy of adenovirus-based vaccination in domestic chickens, given the critical role of fowl species in the spread of HPAI worldwide," reported Gao and associates. "A single subcutaneous immunization completely protected chickens from an intranasal challenge 21 days later with VN/1203/04, which proved lethal to all control-vaccinated chickens within two days.".

The researchers concluded, "These data indicate that the rapid production and subsequent administration of recombinant adenovirus-based vaccines to both birds and high-risk individuals in the face of an outbreak may serve to control the pandemic spread of lethal avian influenza.".

Gao and coauthors published their study in the Journal of Virology (Protection of mice and poultry from lethal H5N1 avian influenza virus through adenovirus-based immunization. J Virol, 2006;80(4):1959-1964).

For additional information, contact Andrea Gambotto, Department of Surgery and Medicine, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Molecular Medicine Institute, Suite 412, 300 Technology Drive, Pittsburgh, PA 15219, USA. agamb@pitt.edu.

Keywords: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States, Avian Influenza Vaccine, Vaccine Development, Vaccine Efficacy, Adenoviral Vector, Adenovirus, Immunology, Immunotherapy, Vectors and Zoonoses, Outbreaks, Pandemics, Emerging Pathogens, Virology, Proteomics.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird Flu Suspected in Nine More People in Indonesia

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aqJazwa8naHI

(Update1)

By Karima Anjani

Oct. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Tests for bird flu are being run on nine people from Indonesia's eastern island of Sulawesi, where one of the patients, a 1-year-old boy, may have died of the virus this week.

The infant from the South Sulawesi district of Maros died Oct. 17, hours after he was admitted to the Wahidin Sudirohusodo Hospital in Makassar with flu-like symptoms, said Halif Saleh, a doctor who treated the infant. Specimens are being tested for the H5N1 avian influenza strain, Runizar Ruesin, head of the health ministry's avian flu center, said today.

If confirmed, the child would be the 152nd person to die from the virus since 2003. World health experts say millions could die if H5N1 mutates to become easily transmissible between humans. Almost half the 109 cases reported this year have occurred in Indonesia, the world's fourth-most populous country.

``I have recently been to Indonesia and I see signs of much increased effort in the animal health sector in that country, but there is a long, long way to go,'' David Nabarro, the senior United Nations system coordinator for avian and pandemic influenza, said over the telephone from Bangkok today.

Additional Cases?

Tests for the H5N1 virus are being run on eight others being treated in the Wahidin Sudirohusodo Hospital. They are all from South Sulawesi province, where the disease is known to have infected poultry, said Ruesin at the health ministry. It wasn't immediately known whether the patients are related, he said.

A 14-year-old girl died on June 24 of the H5N1 strain in the provincial capital, Makassar, the World Health Organization said last month.

The virus is reported to have killed a person every four days worldwide this year, more than double the 2005 rate, creating more chances for it to become more contagious to people. At least 256 people in 10 countries have caught H5N1 since late 2003, the WHO said on Oct. 16.

Almost all human H5N1 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 WHO. While the virus doesn't spread easily between people, some human-to-human transmission may have occurred.

Indonesia attracted international attention in May when seven members of a family from the island of Sumatra contracted H5N1, six of them fatally. The cases represented the largest reported cluster of human cases and the first laboratory-proven instance of human-to-human transmission.

Clusters of cases may signal the virus is becoming more adept at infecting humans, not just birds.
 

New Freedom

Veteran Member
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationw...2oct22,0,4438376.story?coll=la-home-headlines


Alaska villagers living in bird flu's flight path


What has brought the Eskimos sustenance for generations now may carry the deadly virus into North America


By JIA-RUI CHONG, Times Staff Writer
October 22, 2006

THE 800 YUP'IK ESKIMOS in this wet and lonely village knew the situation was serious when government scientists began swooping in on bush planes.

Except for a few doctors that fly in each year to give villagers checkups, outsiders rarely visited this outpost of scattered gray plywood homes and prefab structures plopped in the middle of the tundra.


Soon, latex gloves appeared on store shelves and Wild West-style posters started popping up around town: "Wanted: Birds of the Delta." Researchers camped out in the town's tribal council offices, preparing for trips to nearby Kwigluk Island with vials, swabs, nets and needles.

They came bearing a warning: The wild birds that the Yup'ik have hunted for millenniums may be carrying the first traces of the deadly bird flu virus from Asia into North America.

"It's kind of scary, you know," said resident Ronnie Peter, 39. "That's like, our food, you know."

The H5N1 avian influenza emerged in China 10 years ago and has since spread into Europe, Africa and the Middle East. Though the virus mainly infects fowl, since 2003 it has sickened 256 people and killed 151 around the world.

Kipnuk lies at the crossroads of an invisible freeway system linking migratory birds that journey along the East Asia-Australia flyway with those from the Pacific Americas flyway.

Tens of millions of birds flock every year to this seemingly endless expanse of soggy land in the Yukon Delta National Wildlife Refuge to feast on insects, grasses, worms and mussels before heading back south in the winter to Asia, Australia and other parts of the Americas.

"If it's going to show up in wild birds, Alaska is the most likely place where it's going to happen," said Brian McCaffery, a federal wildlife biologist who was camped a few miles down the coast from Kipnuk collecting bar-tailed godwit droppings for testing.

Federal officials have identified 29 bird species that are most likely to carry the deadly virus from Asia, and they have enlisted local hunters to help provide birds for testing.

In the old days, the Yup'ik Eskimos felled the uqsuqaq, metraq and kanguq with bows and throw sticks tipped with sharpened walrus ivory.

Now, the men use 12-gauge shotguns and reach remote hunting spots in motorboats.

Little else has changed — until now.

"Oh Lord, what are we going to eat? Store-bought food?" thought Steven Mann, who oversees tribal operations in town, when he first started receiving faxes on bird flu safety in the spring.

The nervousness has waned through the summer, said the 58-year-old ex-Army sergeant, but still, "We don't joke about what we eat here."

Mann's son, Danny, a lanky 27-year-old who used to work as a bilingual parent liaison for the school, took on the job of bird flu testing manager in Kipnuk for the tribal health agency, the Yukon-Kuskokwim Health Corp. He gets $15 for every bird he samples.

At the tribal council offices, he was on the phone, checking in with hunters. "Got any birds?" he asked Peter, who goes hunting just about every day except Sunday.

"How many?" Danny Mann asked. "Can I come over and check them?"

Mann threw on a jacket, grabbed a blue Nike duffel bag and headed out. As a light drizzle enveloped the village, he strode across the boardwalks that lie across the marshiest parts of town. The hollow sound of his steps echoed in the still afternoon.

The residents of Kipnuk, which means "bend in the river" in Yup'ik, are a little bewildered that their speck of a village has been drawn into the battle against the bird flu virus.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu: China inoculates over 46 mn fowls

http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/003200610230313.htm

Beijing, Oct 23. (PTI): A total of 42.6 million domestic fowls in north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region have received mandatory inoculations following an outbreak of bird flu in the region last month, a report said on Sunday.

The inoculation rate has reached 100 per cent in the autonomous region, said the Inner Mongolian Autonomous Regional Bird Flu Control Headquarters Office.

Nearly a thousand chickens and ducks were reportedly died suddenly on a poultry farm in the Xincheng Village of Jiuyuan District in Baotou City last month. The national avian influenza laboratory later confirmed that the H5N1 virus was found in samples of the dead poultry.

About 30,000 fowls within three kilometres of the farm were subsequently slaughtered. No human infections were found, Xinhua news agency reported.

Nearly three million domestic fowls in Baotou had been inoculated by October 11. Poultry and egg products from the bird flu-stricken areas have been barred from sale.

Two outbreaks of bird flu have been reported since last month, which killed around 2,000 domestic poultry in the autonomous regions of Inner Mongolia and Ningxia Hui.

The H5N1 virus has also killed 14 people in China since 2003.
 

JPD

Inactive
Mongolian veterinary has symptoms of bird flu

http://www.regnum.ru/english/726039.html

A scientist, who conducted researched at Ulaanbaatar agricultural university veterinary clinic, has become infected with bird flu. On October 23, the Onoodor periodical informs that Mongolian emergency ministry refuses to release any additional information; however, as it became known to the press, the scientist became infected a week ago.

The researcher was hospitalized with high temperature. As National Infectious Disease Center director Mendbayar Altanhuu stressed, preliminary analysis confirmed that the man had the avian flu virus. Outcomes of the second analysis are unknown yet.
 

JPD

Inactive
H5N1 Infection of Veterinarian in Mongolia

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/10220601/H5N1_Mongolia_Vet.html

Recombinomics Commentary
October 22, 2006

A scientist, who conducted researched at Ulaanbaatar agricultural university veterinary clinic, has become infected with bird flu. On October 23, the Onoodor periodical informs that Mongolian emergency ministry refuses to release any additional information; however, as it became known to the press, the scientist became infected a week ago.

The researcher was hospitalized with high temperature. As National Infectious Disease Center director Mendbayar Altanhuu stressed, preliminary analysis confirmed that the man had the avian flu virus.

The above translation suggests that the first human H5N1 case in Mongolia has been detected. It is not clear if the infection was linked to a lab procedure by the veterinarian/scientist, or was acquired through proximity to infected birds. Earlier media reports described a massive outbreak of H5N1 in Tuva and adjacent areas in Mongolia. Several Qinghai sequences from isolates in Tuva and Mongolia have been released.

However, reported human cases of the Qinghai H5N1 infections have been limited to Turkey, Iraq, Azerbaijan, Egypt, and Djibouti.

If confirmed, this would be the first human H5N1 case in Mongolia.
 

JPD

Inactive
A poultry affair

http://www.dailystaregypt.com/article.aspx?ArticleID=3583

By IRIN
First Published: October 22, 2006

Another human case of bird flu puts Egyptians on high alert

CAIRO: Local health officials blamed the most recent case of human bird-flu infection in Egypt on poor observance of government regulations aimed at stamping out the virus last week.

This came after it was confirmed on Wednesday that a 39-year-old woman in the Nile Delta province of Al-Gharbiya had contracted avian influenza, also known as the H5N1 virus.

“People are sticking to their habits and they are forgetting our message," said Sayyid Abbasi, Ministry of Health spokesperson.

Earlier this year, the Egyptian government and international agencies embarked on a nationwide campaign to persuade the population not to keep poultry inside their homes.

Hanan Aboul Magd is the latest victim to be infected with avian flu in Egypt. She was admitted to hospital on Oct. 4 after she reportedly contracted the virus after buying and slaughtering infected ducks at her home.

Magd is the 15th human case of bird flu in Egypt since the first signs of the outbreak were seen in the country in February. Six of those patients have since died.

Hanan is reported to be in a stable condition, and her family is being tested for the virus.

The country's densely populated Nile Valley saw the worst concentration of bird flu infection this year outside Asia. The Valley lies on major routes for migratory birds, and has a large rural population that has traditionally reared poultry for food and income.

The government has overseen the culling of some 30 million birds over the past eight months, and has put into place tough restrictions on poultry keeping. So-called ‘backyard birds’, which are chickens or ducks kept in small numbers in low-income homes for extra food or cash, have been outlawed.

“It is a matter of changing behavior. People are sometimes not honest [about keeping birds]. They know they are in danger but for other reasons they still have them,” said Dr. John Jabbour of the Communicable Diseases Surveillance Department at the World Health Organization’s regional office in Cairo.

Dr. Jabbour added that the government has succeeded in removing poultry from the homes of people in Cairo “but in more rural areas people are not accepting that they have to get rid of backyard birds".

Minister for Health and Population Hatem El-Gabali said on Tuesday that hospitals across Egypt had been put on a high state of alert.

Abbassi, the Ministry’s spokesman, said the government was “working to ‘recharge’ the media message, through all the available channels."

An incidence of the virus among poultry was also recorded last month in the Upper Egypt town of Edfu, although no human infection was reported.
 

JPD

Inactive
More bird flu vaccine capacity urgently needed: WHO

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20061023/hl_nm/birdflu_who_vaccines_dc



By Richard Waddington 45 minutes ago

GENEVA (Reuters) - The
World Health Organization (WHO) on Monday called for a multi-billion-dollar drive to make more pandemic flu vaccines, saying bird flu still threatened a global pandemic.
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Outlining a plan to protect the world's 6.7 billion people against bird flu, or other flu viruses with pandemic potential, the U.N. health agency said manufacturing capacity would shield only a percentage of the population.

"We are presently several billion doses short of the amount of pandemic influenza vaccine we would need," said Marie-Paule Kieny, director of the WHO's initiative for vaccine research.

Since it re-emerged in 2003, H5N1 bird flu has infected 256 people, killing 151, mainly in southeast Asia. Although it has been difficult for humans to catch, health authorities fear it could evolve into a form more easily passed between people and trigger a pandemic.

"Our assessment continues to be the same. The risk of a pandemic has not gone down," David Heymann, the WHO's acting assistant director-general for communicable diseases, told a news conference to launch the plan.

Pharmaceutical companies have announced promising animal trials for a possible H5N1 vaccine, but the WHO says an effective serum is probably still a year away.

Global output of seasonal flu vaccination -- which could be switched to anti-pandemic production if needed -- stands at 350 million doses, with existing spare capacity for around a further 150 million if needed, the WHO said.

Current expansion plans could see this figure rise to some 780 million doses by 2009, but this was still far short of what might be required in the event of a global epidemic of a killer flu strain.

The plan, drawn up in consultation with 120 experts, urged governments to increase vaccination campaigns against normal seasonal flu in order to give industry an economic incentive to boost their production capacity.

But this would not be enough. States must also encourage the development of capacity specifically for producing pandemic vaccines, even if this meant companies would have to be paid for keeping some capacity idle when such vaccines were not needed.

The third strand of the strategy would see stepped up research into more potent vaccines. These could cut the number of preventive doses needed to one from the two currently forecast, the WHO said.

The agency estimated the cost of the development plan at $3 billion to $10 billion over the next decade.

But besides bringing global protection against pandemic flu viruses, the campaign would help cut the toll from seasonal flu which kills up to 500,000 people worldwide every year.

"Immunization is a critical control strategy for limiting the impact of an influenza pandemic. Immediate, collaborative action to increase vaccine supply could have a massive payoff," Heymann said.
 

JPD

Inactive
UGA study identifies North American wild bird species that could transmit bird flu

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2006-10/uog-usi102306.php

Finding comes on heels of a $2.6 million dollar CDC grant to study the probability of human contact and transmission of bird flu

University of Georgia researchers have found that the common wood duck and laughing gull are very susceptible to highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza viruses and have the potential to transmit them.

Their finding, published in the November issue of the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases, demonstrates that different species of North American birds would respond very differently if infected with these viruses. David Stallknecht, associate professor in the department of population health at the UGA College of Veterinary Medicine and co-author of the study, said knowing which species are likely to be affected by highly pathogenic H5N1 viruses is a vital component of efforts to quickly detect the disease should it arrive in North America.

"If you're looking for highly pathogenic H5N1 in wild birds, it would really pay to investigate any wood duck deaths because they seem to be highly susceptible, as are laughing gulls," said Stallknecht, a member of the UGA Biomedical and Health Sciences Institute. "It was also very interesting that in some species that you normally think of as influenza reservoirs – the mallard, for instance – the duration and extent of viral shedding is relatively low. This may be good news since it suggests that highly pathogenic H5N1 may have a difficult time surviving in North American wild birds even if it did arrive here."

Working under controlled conditions in an airtight biosecurity lab at the USDA Agricultural Research Service's Southeast Poultry Research Laboratory, the researchers determined how much of the virus was shed in the feces and through the respiratory system of several species of wild birds. The work was jointly funded by the United States Poultry and Egg Association, the Morris Animal Foundation and the USDA.

"We chose birds that, because of their behavior or habitat utilization, are most likely to transmit the virus or bring the virus here to North America," said lead author and doctoral student Dr. Justin Brown.

The species studied were: Mallards, which are often infected with commonly circulating, low-pathogenic avian influenza viruses in North America and Eurasia; Northern pintails and blue-winged teal, which migrate long distances between continents; redheads, a diving species; and wood ducks, which breed in Northern and Southern areas of the United States. The laughing gull is a common coastal species ranging from the Southern Atlantic to the Gulf Coast.

Stallknecht explained that in low-pathogenic avian influenza, most of the virus is shed in the feces of birds. The virus then spreads as other birds drink from contaminated water. The study found that in highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza, however, the birds shed most of the virus through their respiratory tract.

Stallknecht said that with this knowledge, scientists can more effectively detect the virus in live birds by swabbing the birds' mouths and throats.

"Doing avian influenza surveillance is pretty tricky because there are a lot of species differences and there are also seasonal differences," he said. "So you've got to pick the right species at the right time and you've got to collect the right samples."

In a related study scheduled to be published in December issue of the journal Avian Diseases, the researchers have quantified how long the virus persists in water samples. They found that highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza viruses don't persist as long as common low-pathogenicity strains. In some cases, persistence times were reduced by more than 70%. This could affect transmission and supports the idea that these viruses may not have much of chance of becoming established in North America.

Stallknecht said the finding is encouraging, but cautions that it's difficult to put it into context without results from a study his team is currently working on that will assess the minimum amount of virus it takes to infect a bird.

This month the researchers also received the first $875,000 of a planned three-year grant totaling $2.6 million from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The grant will be used for an ambitious project that will take a broad look at the possibility of human contact with avian influenza viruses.

In the first phase of the project, the researchers will examine the prevalence, persistence and distribution of the viruses in various environments. In the next phase, they'll work with state public health departments to determine the groups of people who – by virtue of their occupation or recreational activities – are likely to come into contact with the viruses. The researchers will then assess the ability of low-pathogenic avian influenza viruses to infect mammals so that the risk of human contact can be put into perspective.

"With this information, public health officials will be able to better understand the human health risks associated with both low-pathogenic and highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses in both domestic and wild bird populations," Stallknecht said. "Many of these potential risks are not very well understood or even defined, and it is possible that they could be very effectively controlled with simple preventive measures."
 

Bill P

Inactive
Avian flu spreading steadily worldwide
http://www.topix.net/content/kri/0939874325021503668440982756602584611105


Myrtle Beach Online

October 23, 2006

We're as worried now as we ever have been Less than a year ago, Americans could barely turn on the television, surf the Internet or pick up a newspaper without finding a doomsday story about deadly avian flu.

By last November, President Bush had asked Congress for $7.1 billion to help develop a vaccine, stockpile antiviral medications and fund state preparations for a possible pandemic.

Now, with the disease still centered in Asia and the failure of migratory birds to spread the illness to Europe and North America, the H5N1 virus has dropped out of the media spotlight. The dearth of coverage has prompted some to think that the threat of a pandemic has passed.

Nothing could be further from the truth, however.

So far this year, a person dies from the disease roughly every four days, compared with about once every nine days last year, according to World Health Organization data.

Of the 108 confirmed human cases of bird flu thus far this year, 73 have been fatal. That's up from 97 cases and 42 deaths in all of last year.

'We're as worried now as we ever have been,' said Michael Osterholm, the director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research & Policy at the University of Minnesota.

Avian flu currently is transmitted mainly from animal to animal, mostly among birds. People can contract the disease after contact with infected animals and - in isolated cases - infected humans.

The fact that the virus hasn't made its way to U.S. soil is of little comfort to Americans, because it could mutate into a form that spreads easily from person to person, making geographic borders meaningless.

Most bird flu deaths are clustered in Asia, where billions of wild birds, domestic birds and humans live in close contact, increasing the chances of infection.

Indonesia, which is fighting an epidemic of avian flu in poultry, is the world's hotspot. Three deaths last week upped the nation's number of confirmed human cases so far this year to 53, with 43 deaths.

Earlier this month, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations announced that tests on infected Indonesian poultry found that the virus wasn't mutating toward a more lethal strain. However, there have been isolated instances of person-to-person transmission in Indonesia. 'But not in an explosive way,' said Bruce Gellin, the director of the national vaccine program at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Many experts now think that wild migratory birds are only bit players in the spread of the disease. More likely culprits are humans who clean, feed and house infected domestic birds and those who prepare infected birds and transport them to commercial markets, said Rick Kearney, wildlife program coordinator with the U.S. Geological Survey.

Six companies are researching a cell-based flu vaccine that could be made available to everyone in the U.S. within six months of a flu outbreak. Each company is planning a U.S. production facility, but construction is years away.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, is optimistic that the pace of vaccine science has picked up in the last year. He's particularly heartened by recent data from several studies indicating that vaccinations against one subtype of H5N1 might provide protection against other subtypes.

Health officials also hope to have 26 million courses of the antivirals Tamiflu and Relenza by year's end, and 81 million courses - enough to treat more than 25 percent of the U.S. population - by the end of 2008. Antivirals lessen the effects of the flu. Viruses eventually can develop resistance to widely used antivirals, and that's already occurred in isolated instances with Tamiflu.

Gellin said it was unclear whether the development was clinically significant, but added, 'it does raise the issue of the need to look at other antiviral candidates.' HHS will issue $200 million in contracts to develop more antivirals. The agency is evaluating proposals, Gellin said.
 

JPD

Inactive
World can't yet let down its guard on bird flu: U.N.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20061023/wl_nm/birdflu_un_dc



By Irwin Arieff 30 minutes ago

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - The threat of a bird flu pandemic is transforming poultry industry practices around the world, but health officials must remain on high alert for five to 10 more years, a top U.N. official said on Monday.
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The bird flu virus can reside in flocks for long periods of time, showing no symptoms, before spreading to new areas via trade or migration, said Dr. David Nabarro, who heads the U.N. drive to contain the disease in birds and prepare for its possible transformation into a fast-spreading human disease.

It will also take more than a decade for those raising poultry to make needed changes in the way they operate to keep the disease under control, Nabarro added.

For now, the disease continues to menace both birds and humans. A total of 256 people have been infected and 151 have died from the disease in nine countries since 2003, according to the Geneva-based
World Health Organization.

In Indonesia alone, a densely populated developing country of 220 million people with a heavy concentration of poultry, the virus has killed 55 people, causing U.N. health officials "very great concern," Nabarro said.

While Indonesia has taken significant steps to change the way it raises poultry to lower the risk of a pandemic, "still there is such a lot to be done" to ensure both animal and human safety, he said.

A little over a year ago, new to the job, Nabarro told reporters at U.N. headquarters he feared bird flu could end up killing as many as 150 million people if the world failed to adequately prepare for an expected mutation of the virus, enabling it to easily spread among people.

Nabarro did not think the crisis had been overblown.

"When we are saying there is a risk of something bad happening," he said, "if that bad thing doesn't happen in the immediate future after we have said that there is a risk, people are prone to say, 'Well perhaps you've exaggerated."'

"I can understand that. However, there will be an influenza pandemic one day. I don't know -- you don't know -- when it is going to be. When it does come along, it will have really major economic and social consequences," he said.

The H5N1 bird flu virus is "extremely vicious" and now affecting poultry around the world except for the Western Hemisphere, he said. It kills birds "incredibly rapidly," can infect humans and could mutate to a form that could cause a human pandemic, he said.

"There are probables in there. There are certainties in there. But the one absolute requirement on the basis of this is, we have to get prepared for the pandemic."
 

JPD

Inactive
WHO action plan for pandemic flu vaccine aims to build surge capacity

http://www.mytelus.com/news/article.do?pageID=cp_health_home&articleID=2426673

CP) - Building surge capacity for influenza vaccine production in developing countries could be a key component of helping the world meet the need for vaccine when the next flu pandemic strikes, the World Health Organization suggested Monday.

The Geneva-based agency released a pandemic flu vaccine action plan designed to start to close the wide gap between how much vaccine the world will need and what it can actually produce.

Helping vaccine manufacturers in developing countries acquire the ability to switch over to make influenza vaccine in an emergency is part of the answer, WHO officials suggested as they made public the plan.

The U.S. government revealed Monday it will provide US$10 million in seed money to start helping vaccine companies in the developing world make necessary adaptations to their operations.

"They need to establish the capacity and to have the capacity maintained. This being said, it doesn't mean they would have to produce all year round influenza vaccine," Dr. Marie-Paule Kieny, director of the WHO's initiative for vaccine research, said from Geneva.

She said by year end WHO expects to use the U.S. funding to issue four awards to vaccine companies in developing countries. The money would be used to help them purchase equipment and make pilot lots of vaccine for testing and licensing.

Kieny said the companies would have to commit to make a pre-set number of flu vaccine doses on an annual basis to sustain the capacity to do that work. That vaccine could be used in-country or sold within the region.

"And for the rest of the time they would be allowed to produce other vaccines for their own internal consumption."

Canada also announced it will give the WHO C$1 million to help it administer the action plan, which aims not just at increasing capacity but at spurring research into better flu vaccines and finding ways to minimize the size of the dose needed to provide protection.

"We are greatly supportive of this initiative," said Dr. Arlene King, director general of pandemic preparedness with the Public Health Agency of Canada.

And Japan has promised UNICEF US$20 million for the vaccine initiative; how the money will be spent is still being worked out.

These sums, though, are drops in the bucket of what the WHO estimates it would take to get global influenza vaccine production capacity to the point where it could conceivably protect the bulk of the world's people when a pandemic next emerges.

The action plan sets that figure at US$3 billion to US$10 billion. The idea of setting up surge capacity in developing countries is part of a three-pronged approach outlined in the plan.

Increasing the market for seasonal flu shots - thereby enticing manufacturers to increase their output - is another. The last is research to develop better vaccines.

Dr. Keiji Fukuda, co-ordinator of the WHO's global influenza program, said most or all of the world would want access to flu vaccine in the event of a pandemic.

"So we see the shortfall staring us in the face. A shortfall that will take several years to address."

Going full tilt, the world's flu vaccine manufacturers combined could make enough vaccine in a year to vaccinate 750 million people - if all went well and if a dose requires a modest amount of vaccine.

In the face of a severe pandemic, health authorities would want to vaccinate as many of the world's 6.7 billion people as possible. Two shots per person - a primer and a booster - would be needed, or 13.4 billion doses of vaccine.
 

JPD

Inactive
M230I Alteration Near H5N1 Receptor Binding Doman in Egypt

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/10220603/H5N1_M230I.html

Recombinomics Commentary
October 22, 2006

On October 11 the WHO update confirmed an H5N1 infection in a patient (39F) in the Gharbiya governorate in the Nile Delta. Today the sequence of the HA gene from that patient was released, A/Egypt/12374-NAMRU3/2006(H5N1). The rapid release of this sequence by the US Naval Medical Research Unit in Cairo is to be commended. It was deposited at GenBank on October 13, 2006 and released shortly thereafter.

This Qinghai sequence has the common HA cleavage site, GERRRKKR, and has many polymorphisms found in isolates from birds and human cases from Egypt and Djibouti reported earlier this year. However, the sequence also has an alteration, M230I, near the receptor binding domain.

Changes in the receptor binding domain are cause for concern because they can alter the ease of transmission. Last year another change in the receptor binding domain, S227N, was predicted based on donor sequences in H9N2 in birds in the Middle East. That change was found in the index case in Turkey, which was linked to a very large cluster. Two of the four human sequences made public contained this change.

Changes in the receptor binding domain in the Qinghai strain are of additional concern because the Qinghai strain has already acquired a mammalian polymorphism, PB2 E627K. This change increases polymerase activity at lower temperatures. It offers strong selective advantage, and therefore is all in human H1, H2, and H3 isolates. The acquisition by H5N1 was first reported in isolates from Qinghai Lake in China. Subsequent isolates in Russia, Mongolia, Afghanistan, Turkey, Azerbaijan, Germany, Sudan, Italy, Croatia Slovenia, Niger, Nigeria, and the Ivory Coast in 2005 and 2006 has shown that this change has become fixed in the Qinghai strain.

Thus, additional changes in or near the receptor binding domain of Qinghai isolates are cause for concern. Results of testing of additional suspect H5N1 patients in Egypt have not been announced. However, H5N1 in Egypt may be further spread by migratory birds.

The change in the cleavage site has been reported in H5N2 birds from Mexico, as well as H5N1 from Vietnam. Recombination between Clade 1 H5N1 in Vietnam and Clade 2 Qinghai H5N1 provides a mechanism for further genetic diversity in the Qinghai strain. The Egypt isolates also have polymorphisms found in human H5N1 isolates in in Indonesia. These acquisitions via recombination demonstrate additional genetic diversity.

The geographic expansion of H5N1 by wild birds in China as well as the Qinghai strain in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa, creates additional opportunities for recombination and added genetic diversity.

This added geographical reach, coupled with increased genetic diversity, are cause for concern.
 

Tink

Veteran Member
Anybody have a good guess at when we can expect it here?
Weren't we suppose to see it already this summer or fall because of the migration patterns?
 

JPD

Inactive
U.N.: Avian flu death toll still up

http://www.upi.com/InternationalIntelligence/view.php?StoryID=20061024-032506-7219r

UNITED NATIONS, Oct. 24 (UPI) -- The United Nations says the number of people around the world dying from avian influenza continues to rise monthly.

David Nabarro, senior U.N. system influenza coordinator, Monday told reporters at U.N. World Headquarters in New York more than 30 countries this year -- the highest in the organization's history -- had reported outbreaks of the disease, which has caused more than 200 deaths since it emerged in 2003.

Nabarro said it was a critical period, requiring vigilance on the part of the United States and the Americas, as the poultry density is high in both North and South America.

While the H5N1 subtype of the avian influenza virus is not yet prevalent in the United States it could become so, Nabarro said, because if one bird becomes infected, others will.

Indonesia continues to pose the greatest threat to the world regarding H5N1 outbreaks, the U.N. influenza coordinator said.

However, some challenges which could hinder attempts to curb the disease in Indonesia, such as cooperation with the government and a speedy response to outbreaks as they happen, have been surmounted. Other countries already affected by the virus range from China and Vietnam to Nigeria and Cameroon, Nabarro said.

He commended efforts made by countries to decrease the spread of the virus and expressed satisfaction at their responses to past outbreaks.

Despite Indonesia's position as the country worst-hit by bird flu, Nabarro said, Africa poses a significant challenge to curbing the disease as recurring political and economic instability on the continent, and a lack of funds to facilitate speedy responses to outbreaks, remain obstacles to success.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu falls off media radar as cases mount

http://www.contracostatimes.com/mld/cctimes/news/15834808.htm

Disease more deadly this year than in 2005; vaccine advancements promising but uncertain
By Tony Pugh
MCCLATCHY WASHINGTON BUREAU

WASHINGTON - Less than a year ago, Americans could barely turn on the television, surf the Internet or pick up a newspaper without finding a doomsday story about deadly avian flu.

By last November, President Bush had asked Congress for $7.1 billion to help develop a vaccine, stockpile antiviral medications and fund state preparations for a possible pandemic.

Now, with the disease still centered in Asia and the failure of migratory birds to spread the illness to Europe and North America, the H5N1 virus has dropped out of the media spotlight.

The dearth of coverage has prompted some to think that the threat of a pandemic has passed.

Nothing could be further from the truth, however.

So far this year, a person has died from the disease roughly every four days, compared with about once every nine days last year, according to data from the World Health Organization.

Of the 108 confirmed human cases of bird flu so far this year, 73 have been fatal. That number is up from 97 cases and 42 deaths in all of last year.

"We're as worried now as we ever have been," said Michael Osterholm, the director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research & Policy at the University of Minnesota.

Avian flu currently is transmitted mainly from animal to animal, mostly among birds. People can contract the disease after contact with infected animals and -- in isolated cases -- infected humans.

The fact that the virus hasn't made its way to U.S. soil is of little comfort to Americans, because it could mutate into a form that spreads easily from person to person, making geographic borders meaningless.

Most bird flu deaths are clustered in Asia, where billions of wild birds, domestic birds and humans live in close contact, increasing the chances of infection.

Indonesia, which is fighting an epidemic of avian flu in poultry, is the world's hot spot for the illness. Three deaths as of Thursday upped the nation's number of confirmed human cases so far this year to 53, with 43 deaths.

Earlier this month, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations announced that tests on infected Indonesian poultry found that the virus wasn't mutating toward a more lethal strain.

However, there have been isolated instances of person-to-person transmission in Indonesia. "But not in an explosive way," said Bruce Gellin, the director of the national vaccine program at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

"Still, every one of these cases have to be investigated because you're never sure if this is the one where the virus has changed enough to become readily transmissible among humans," Gellin said.

Health officials were surprised when flocks of migratory birds that had flown south to Africa and then back to Europe last spring didn't carry the H5N1 virus as expected.

Birds that wintered in Asia and flew to Alaska last summer to breed didn't carry the virus either. International bird monitors also found no widespread deaths from the virus among migratory birds.

Many experts now think wild migratory birds are only bit players in the spread of the disease.

More likely culprits are humans who clean, feed and house infected domestic birds and those who prepare infected birds and transport them to commercial markets, said Rick Kearney, wildlife program coordinator with the U.S. Geological Survey.

"Migratory birds may contract the disease and continue in their migration, but they clearly don't play a major or single role in spreading the disease," Kearney said.

When birds or other animals in the U.S. are suspected of carrying the deadly virus, trace samples are sent for final confirmation to the National Veterinary Services Laboratories in Ames, Iowa. The facility has found no traces of the deadly H5N1 virus so far.

Six companies are researching a cell-based flu vaccine that could be made available to everyone in the U.S. within six months of a flu outbreak. Each company is planning a U.S. production facility, but construction is years away.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, is optimistic that the pace of vaccine science has picked up in the last year.

He's particularly heartened by recent data from several studies indicating that vaccinations against one subtype of H5N1 might provide protection against other subtypes.

"That has caught my attention," Fauci said. "Just looking at the baseline lab data, you wouldn't have guessed that."

He cited new research by the University of Rochester's John Treanor, who presented his findings Oct. 13 in Toronto at a meeting of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

Treanor and his colleagues studied people who had received two vaccinations against the Hong Kong strain of the H5N1 virus in 1998. Each was vaccinated again this year with a booster shot to fight the strain found in Vietnam. A second test group only received shots for the Vietnam strain in 2005.

Researchers found that more people who'd gotten shots in 1998 and 2006 developed antibodies to fight the Vietnam strain than those in the second test group.

"We need more data, but the concept is rather encouraging because if you give pre-vaccinations with one subtype you actually prepare much better for a vaccination or an exposure to a different subtype," Fauci said.

Health officials also hope to have 26 million courses of the antivirals Tamiflu and Relenza by year's end, and 81 million courses -- enough to treat more than 25 percent of the U.S. population -- by the end of 2008.

Antivirals lessen the effects of the flu. Viruses eventually can develop resistance to widely used antivirals, and that's already occurred in isolated instances with Tamiflu.

Gellin said it was unclear whether the development was clinically significant, but he added, "It does raise the issue of the need to look at other antiviral candidates."

HHS will issue $200 million in contracts to develop more antivirals. The agency is evaluating proposals, Gellin said.
 

JPD

Inactive
Pandemic Flu Patients Should Stay Home, U.S. Officials May Say

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601202&sid=aM6f0p4ovJCI&refer=healthcare

By John Lauerman

Oct. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Health officials may propose a plan to prevent the spread of pandemic flu in the U.S. that includes treating sick patients at home, rather than in hospitals.

The home therapy option is based on computer models showing that limiting personal contact may slow growth of a pandemic. Advisers to the U.S. Institute of Medicine are meeting tomorrow in Washington to determine if scientific estimates are strong enough to make health policy decisions affecting the lives millions of Americans in a deadly flu outbreak.

Some advisers say the so-called ``social distancing'' measures might buy critical time for officials to develop, produce and distribute drugs and vaccines. That may be enough to slow or even halt an outbreak of flu that health officials say might kill millions of people worldwide and cause as much as $2 trillion in economic losses.

``There's strong historical evidence that where it appears that aggressive social-distancing measures were used, they had an impact,'' said Ira Longini, a University of Washington epidemiologist who advises the government on flu, in an Oct. 19 telephone interview. ``It can be highly effective.''

Other government advisers say many Americans, accustomed to getting the latest treatments at well-equipped hospitals, won't be content to wait at home for doses of Roche Holding AG's Tamiflu or other therapies.

``I think we have to understand that what we recommend and what people do are two different things,'' said Michael Osterholm, director of the University of Minnesota's Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy in Minneapolis, in a telephone interview Oct. 20. ``I don't think that because we tell people stay home that they're going to do it.''

Institute

The Institute of Medicine, a branch of the Washington-based National Academy of Sciences, forms volunteer committees to study important medical questions in the U.S. The agency's panels have highlighted the dangers of medical errors and the need for Food and Drug Administration reform.

As the lethal H5N1 bird flu spreads in Asia and parts of Africa, the Middle East and Europe, U.S. health officials are grappling with how best to slow its spread. Even a mild pandemic, such as those in 1957 and 1968 that each killed less than 2 million people, is likely to overwhelm hospitals with patients, Osterholm said.

``Hospitals won't be able to care for the majority of pandemic related illness,'' he said. ``We've already gnawed hospitals down to the bone.''

`Unrealistic'

It may be unrealistic to expect that government advice will be sought or closely followed during a pandemic, said Stephen Brozak, an analyst with WBB Securities Inc. in New Jersey.

``That might have worked 100 years ago, when we were an agrarian economy,'' said Brozak, who previously worked as a military liaison to the United Nations.` `You're talking about social disruption the likes of which has never been seen.''

Many Americans, though, may see an incentive to follow social-distancing guidelines, said Richard Hatchett, a National Institutes of Health researcher who's advising the Department of Health and Human Services on pandemic response.

In a severe pandemic, similar to the 1918 Spanish flu that killed as many as 50 million people worldwide, fears of infection alone may be enough to keep the and sick and their families away from hospitals and clinics, Hatchett said in an Oct. 19 telephone interview.

One proposal that might help keep sick people at home would be to tie it with the quick delivery of Roche Holding AG's Tamiflu, GlaxoSmithKline Plc's Relenza, or other proven antiviral drugs, he said.

``I suspect that people will be very interested in getting their hands on drugs if they're available,'' Hatchett said.

Other Controversies

Other pandemic measures being considered may also be controversial. For instance, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, based in Atlanta, has discussed a proposal to close schools for long periods of time, a measure that is sure to draw fire from some parents, said David Bell, director of the agency's Office of Strategy and Innovation.

Parents may have to skip work or telecommute for days or weeks if pandemic concerns keep children at home, and many children get lunch regularly through school programs, he said.

``If that's planned in advance it can be dealt with,'' Bell said at a September conference on infectious disease in San Francisco.

A study by researchers at Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque predicted that closing schools and keeping children at home during even a mild pandemic would cut the proportion of the population infected by more than 90 percent.

``The public is intelligent and will behave in a way that it perceives to be in its own best interests,'' he said. ``You can shape that perception with information.''
 

JPD

Inactive
Study: North American wild bird species transmit bird flu

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2006-10/25/content_5245020.htm

www.chinaview.cn 2006-10-25 07:18:38

WASHINGTON, Oct. 24 (Xinhua) -- The U.S. researchers from the University of Georgia reported Tuesday they have found that the common wood duck and laughing gull are very susceptible to highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza viruses and have the potential to transmit them.

Their finding, published in the November issue of the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases, demonstrates that different species of North American birds would respond very differently if infected with these viruses. David Stallknecht, associate professor of the UGA College of Veterinary Medicine and co-author of the study, said knowing which species are likely to be affected by H5N1 viruses is a vital component of efforts to quickly detect the disease should it arrive in North America.

"If you're looking for highly pathogenic H5N1 in wild birds, it would really pay to investigate any wood duck deaths because they seem to be highly susceptible, as are laughing gulls," said Stallknecht. "It was also very interesting that in some species that you normally think of as influenza reservoirs -- the mallard, for instance -- the duration and extent of viral shedding is relatively low. This may be good news since it suggests that highly pathogenic H5N1 may have a difficult time surviving in North American wild birds even if it did arrive here."

Working under controlled conditions in an airtight bio-security lab of Department of Agriculture, the researchers determined how much of the virus was shed in the feces and through the respiratory system of several species of wild birds.

"We chose birds that, because of their behavior or habitat utilization, are most likely to transmit the virus or bring the virus here to North America," said lead author and doctoral student Dr. Justin Brown.

The species studied were: mallards, which are often infected with commonly circulating, low-pathogenic avian influenza viruses in North America and Eurasia; northern pintails and blue-winged teal, which migrate long distances between continents; redheads, adiving species; and wood ducks, which breed in northern and southern areas of the United States. The laughing gull is a common coastal species ranging from the Southern Atlantic to the Gulf Coast. Stallknecht explained that in low-pathogenic avian influenza, most of the virus is shed in the feces of birds. The virus then spreads as other birds drink from contaminated water. The study found that in highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza, however, the birds shed most of the virus through their respiratory tract.

Stallknecht said with this knowledge, scientists can more effectively detect the virus in live birds by swabbing the birds' mouths and throats.

"Doing avian influenza surveillance is pretty tricky because there are a lot of species differences and there are also seasonal differences," he said. "So you've got to pick the right species at the right time and you've got to collect the right samples."
 

JPD

Inactive
Face Facts

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/25/opinion/25wein.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1

By LAWRENCE M. WEIN
Published: October 25, 2006

Lawrence M. Wein is a professor at Stanford’s graduate school of business.

Stanford, Calif.

DESPITE all the attention given to anthrax and smallpox and potential weapons of mass destruction, pandemic influenza is probably the world’s most serious near-term public health threat. If a strain similar in effect to the 1918 Spanish flu (which killed tens of millions of people worldwide) emerges in the next several years, it is highly likely that an effective vaccine will not be available during the pandemic’s first wave, that we won’t have enough antiviral drugs for large-scale prophylactic use, and that hospitals will be too overwhelmed to treat most cases.

Consequently, as in 1918, we will need to combine medical efforts with voluntary and forced social changes — closing schools and churches, canceling public gatherings, keeping workers at home — to hinder the flu’s spread. Our government must draw up a plan for educating the public about effective nonpharmaceutical interventions like hand washing and face protection like masks.

A prerequisite for doing so is determining the biggest culprit in spreading influenza: droplet transmission, in which an infected person sneezes or coughs directly into the mouth, nose or eyes of someone who is susceptible); contact transmission, in which virus is transferred via hands either directly, say, through a handshake, or indirectly through an object like a doorknob; and aerosol transmission, in which evaporated virus-containing particles are inhaled.

Remarkably, this issue has not been resolved: the Department of Health and Human Services’ Pandemic Influenza Plan states that “the relative clinical importance of each of these modes of transmission is not known.” As a result, the government enthusiastically endorses frequent hand washing — which would reduce contact transmission, and costs nothing — but remains noncommittal about face protection. While the government says that it might be beneficial, it doesn’t make respirators or masks available. Yet face protection would guard against aerosol and droplet transmission, and even reduce contact transmission by making it difficult to place fingers into one’s mouth or nose.

A Stanford graduate student, Michael Atkinson, and I recently performed a detailed study of the routes of transmission, using data on influenza and on rhinovirus, which causes the common cold. Our findings suggest that the dominant mode of transmission for influenza is aerosol — implying that hand washing will make little difference. This is consistent with the views of leading researchers several decades ago, views that have somehow been forgotten by the public health community.

We found that ventilation, like placing a fan in an open window, and humidifiers (most influenza strains survive in the air for much less time when the humidity is raised to about 65 percent) can reduce transmission slightly. Sleeping in separate bedrooms (and working in separate offices) can help even more.

But the single most effective intervention is face protection. And because roughly one-third of influenza transmissions occur before an infected person exhibits symptoms, these precautions should be taken whenever people are in the same room throughout the pandemic period.

There are two kinds of face protection: N95 respirators, as worn by construction workers, for instance, and surgical masks of the sort worn by dental hygienists. (The respirators cost roughly a dollar apiece, the surgical masks 10 cents.) Their efficacy in preventing aerosol transmission depends on three factors: the extent to which the face filter prevents virus particles from passing through, how tightly the device fits and — most important — how long people can be coerced into wearing them.

To our surprise, we found that the filters in surgical masks, although not as good as the filters in N95 respirators, are still quite effective. And although a surgical mask fits much more loosely and allows more leakage, it’s also more comfortable — and therefore likely to be effective because it’s used more. Wearing nylon hosiery over a surgical mask essentially eliminates the face leakage, making this combination a practical, albeit macabre, alternative. The less comfortable N95 respirators would probably result in lower compliance.

The government doesn’t stockpile masks and respirators, and the manufacturers aren’t able to produce a huge number of them quickly. But the way forward seems clear: the government needs to build up a supply of respirators and masks just as it does with vaccines and antivirals. It should first hire a whiz-bang design company to create, within one month, a surgical mask that comfortably adheres to the face, and then decide on the appropriate mix of respirators and masks. Next, it needs to sign contracts with manufacturers to stockpile masks and respirators, relieving the manufacturers of liability issues.

Although there is very little technological risk involved (masks and respirators are easier to make and safer to use than vaccines), several issues need to be ironed out. First, the effectiveness of N95 respirators and masks varies widely. The government needs to educate the public (the brands are anonymous in the published studies) and should stockpile only the most effective brands.

Also, if respirators and masks are discarded daily, as they are in many hospitals, the national demand during a three-month pandemic could be 10 to 20 billion, and the cost for respirators for a family of four several hundred dollars. Such waste isn’t necessary. The virus does not survive longer than a few hours on the material used for masks and respirators, so they should be re-used until they disintegrate.

The government and the public health community must switch mindsets, from the current perspective of protecting workers paid to do a dangerous job everyday, to that of providing citizens with the tools to best protect themselves during a pandemic.

It may take 18 months to build a stockpile of respirators and masks, so there is no time to lose. The American people’s faith in their government will be seriously undermined if, along with larger measures like school closings, it cannot provide effective face protection for its citizens during a deadly pandemic. Masks and respirators may be our main lines of defense during a pandemic.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird Flu Virus May Return to Europe in Coming Weeks (Update1)

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601085&sid=a8ep8cbHnFQY&refer=europe

By Jason Gale

Oct. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Bird flu may return to Europe in the coming weeks, spread by wild ducks, swans and geese carrying the lethal virus south from their Arctic mating grounds.

Twenty-six European nations reported initial infections of the H5N1 avian influenza strain in poultry or wild birds in late 2005 and early 2006 after a severe winter in Russia and the Caucasus area pushed migratory birds south and westward. The Food and Agriculture Organization said a resurgence of H5N1 in China and Russia indicates the pattern may be repeated.

``A similar situation could occur in the approaching weeks with the migratory movement of wild birds from their northern breeding grounds,'' the United Nations agency said in the October edition of a newsletter published on its Web site. ``Eastern Europe and Caucasus region is at particularly high risk'' because of the higher density of backyard poultry there.

Diseased birds increase the opportunities for human infection and provide chances for H5N1 to change into a form more dangerous to people. The virus is reported to have killed a person every four days this year, more than double the 2005 rate. Millions could die if H5N1 becomes easily transmissible between people, sparking a lethal pandemic.

The H5N1 virus is known to have infected 256 people in 10 countries in the past three years, killing 151 of them, the World Health Organization said on Oct. 16. Half the countries that have reported cases -- Turkey, Azerbaijan, Iraq, Egypt and Djibouti -- are outside East Asia.

China, Russia

Outbreaks in the Middle East and Europe have been linked with a variant of the H5N1 virus found at China's Qinghai Lake, where more than 6,000 wild birds died in April 2005. Infected fowl were found at the nature reserve again this year, as well as in the Novosibirsk-Omsk area of Russia.

Wild migratory birds tend to flock to Siberia and other places near the Arctic Circle for breeding during the Northern Hemisphere's summer before flying south during the fall.

South Korea, which reported an H5N1 outbreak in birds in December 2003, plans to step up quarantine and surveillance to detect imported infected birds and poultry and prevent a recurrence of the disease during winter, Yonhap News said today, citing a statement by the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry.

Colder weather may also contribute to the virus's spread.

Lingering Longer

Tests show H5N1 can survive in bird feces for at least 35 days at about 4 degrees Celsius (39 degrees Fahrenheit), the WHO said in January. At 37 degrees Celsius, it may only survive as long as a week, Robert Webster, a virologist at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee, said in May.

Central and Eastern Europe are crisscrossed by overlapping migration flyways, and their wetlands, rivers and shorelines provide sanctuary for wild fowl which can come into direct contact with backyard poultry, the Rome-based agency said.

Improved control measures on poultry farms in Russia and early warning systems there have helped stem the spread of H5N1, the FAO said. These measures could reduce the risk that avian flu will be reintroduced to Central and Western Europe, it said.

``Should there be outbreaks in Central and Eastern Europe, these are likely to occur later in the year than they did in 2005,'' the agency said.

A severe pandemic similar to the one that killed 50 million people in 1918 may cause global economic losses of as much as $2 trillion, the World Bank said last month. Poultry farmers in infected countries have already suffered because of outbreaks. The Washington-based bank in January estimated the cost at $10 billion in Asia alone.

`Serious Jeopardy'

Unless the virus is controlled and eradicated, the livelihoods of people raising free-range poultry flocks as a source of income and food ``will be in serious jeopardy,'' the FAO said in its Emergency Preparation Systems newsletter. ``The virus will pose a constant threat to human beings and cause serious economic losses to the poultry sector and to avian wildlife-generated tourism.''

Studies of migratory waterfowl in Asia and Europe suggest these birds may play a role in introducing avian flu, although legal or illegal trade of birds and poultry may contribute more to the disease's spread within and across regions, the FAO said.

Ducks, swans and geese harbor the highest diversity and prevalence of avian influenza viruses, and past outbreaks of highly pathogenic strains in poultry have been traced to strains originating in ducks.
 

JPD

Inactive
Quarantine lifted in bird flu-hit area of Inner Mongolia

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2006-10/25/content_5247484.htm

www.chinaview.cn 2006-10-25 14:06:45

BAOTOU, Inner Mongolia, Oct. 25 (Xinhua) -- The quarantine imposed on an area in north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, which was hit by an outbreak of bird flu last month, has been lifted, local authorities announced on Wednesday.

A ceremony was held to mark the lifting of the quarantine in Jiuyuan District of Baotou city on Wednesday morning.

Experts with the regional headquarters for the prevention of major animal-related epidemics said that no new outbreak of bird flu had been reported since the last poultry was culled 21 days ago.

Nearly 1,000 chickens and ducks were reported to have died suddenly on a poultry farm in Xincheng Village of Jiuyuan Districtin Baotou City on September 27. The national avian influenza laboratory later confirmed that the H5N1 virus was found in samples of the dead poultry. About 30,000 fowls within three kilometers of the farm were subsequently slaughtered. No human infections were found.

A total of 42.6 million domestic fowls in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region have received compulsory inoculations.

"The inoculation rate has reached 100 percent in the autonomous region," said the Inner Mongolian Autonomous Region Bird Flu Control Headquarters Office.

Three million domestic fowls in Baotou had been inoculated by October 11. Poultry and egg products from the bird flu-stricken areas were not put on sale.

Two outbreaks of bird flu have been reported last month, which killed around 2,000 domestic poultry in the Inner Mongolia and Ningxia Hui autonomous regions.
 

JPD

Inactive
TANZANIA: Zanzibar destroys more eggs to keep bird flu at bay

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/IRIN/a69e7a65b61b37e94308f128caa07a0a.htm

STONE TOWN, 24 October (IRIN) - Authorities in Zanzibar have incinerated another consignment of chicken eggs smuggled from mainland Tanzania, in the hope of keeping their islands free of avian flu.

"We seized the egg consignment of about 11 boxes imported from the Tanzanian mainland commercial capital of Dar es Salaam," said Kassim Gharib, the head of a task force formed by the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock, Natural Resources and Environment.

The task force was establised to ensure that bird flu does not spread to Zanzibar, two semi-autonomous islands that form part of the Republic of Tanzania.

The consignment was seized after the importers disappeared, apparently fearing arrest, Gharib said on Tuesday. Gharib said the Zanzibari business community had continued to import poultry products despite a ban on them introduced in 2005.

According to the United Nations World Health Organization (WHO), the H5N1 avian influenza virus can be found inside eggs, and on the surface of eggs laid by infected birds.

There is, however, no epidemiological evidence to suggest that people have been infected with avian influenza through eating eggs or egg products. Thorough cooking of eggs can inactivate the virus, according to WHO.

In August, Zanzibar's authorities incinerated 61,000 chicken eggs in a bid to check the threat of bird flu, but because of high demand during the Muslim Eid al-Fitr holidays this week, and the current high season for tourism in the islands, the price of eggs in Zanzibar has doubled.

The deadly H5N1 strain of avian flu has been found in several African countries. The poultry industry in Asia and in a few European countries has been affected by the disease, which has claimed dozens of human lives, mostly in Asia.
 

JPD

Inactive
Zimbabwe ostriches hit by suspected Avian bird flu

http://www.gozimbabwe.com/birdflu_061026.html

October 26, 2006, 00.05 HRS BST

BULAWAYO – Two ostriches at a farm in Hwange, Matabeleland North, have reportedly contracted a suspected strain of the dangerous bird flu virus in the country’s second such case in recent weeks.

Contacted by our sources for comment yesterday, Department of Veterinary Services director, Stuart Hargreaves, could not immediately confirm the outbreak. But he also could not rule it out completely as the province was on alert following a similar outbreak in nearby Victoria Falls and Livingstone in Zambia.

“There was an outbreak in that province recently, the new suspected cases have not been reported to us, but we had a some cases in Victoria Falls and Livingstone, Zambia where some birds were quarantined,” he said.

Hargreaves said he was yet to find out from officials on the ground in Hwange on the exact situation.

Farmers in Hwange and Victoria Falls confirmed the suspected outbreak and are already on high alert.

“We have reported the case to the veterinary department who promised to carry out tests to establish what it is,” said Samuel Dube who spoke by phone from Deka Mouth in Hwange.

“I suspect one of my birds (Ostriches) has avian flu, I have called the veterinary department before I could put it down,” he said.

Dube said the strain suffered by one of his birds could be avian flu, as he had seen such symptoms before on quarantined ostriches in Zambia during the recent outbreak.

However Hargreaves downplayed the fears saying the department has intensified efforts to prevent a deadly outbreak.

He said: “At the moment, the situation is calm and we have since resumed ostrich meat, chicken and eggs exports regionally, but we are monitoring any suspected cases of outbreaks.”

Hargreaves also chairs the national taskforce on avian flu mandated to put in place all necessary measures to detect the influenza virus early. One way of containing the highly contagious outbreak would be tightening restrictions on the movement of poultry and poultry products across the country. Experts have discovered that the strain of virus killing poultry and wild birds on a wholesome scale is being carried around the world by migratory birds. The virus has so far only been transmitted to humans in isolated cases.

But World Health Organisation (WHO) experts fear the virus may mutate to a form transmittable from human to human, resulting in a global epidemic threatening the lives of millions, comparable to the SARS outbreaks that hit mainly China in early 2003. The spread of the flu from Asia to eastern Europe and then Africa has increased chances of the virus mutating and causing a possible pandemic among humans, said UN bird flu chief David Nabarro.

The highly pathogenic H5N1 bird flu virus moved rapidly outside of Southeast Asia and spread into Europe, Eurasia, and Africa. The disease has been detected in 53 countries worldwide and threatens to derail significant progress made in international development. Globally, the disease has caused tremendous damage, slaughtering at least 220 million birds, hurting agri-business, trade, and opportunities for economic growth.

According the WHO, avian flu has infected 247 humans in 10 countries; almost 60 per cent of these cases have been fatal.

The national taskforce on bird flu has ruled out human infection by the virus.

The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO)’s animal products and health office based in the Italian capital, Rome, warned the disease might continue to spread despite medical research aimed at halting its progress.

- Daily Mirror
 

JPD

Inactive
Chinese scientists report bird flu in sparrows

http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/CrisesArticle.aspx?storyId=PEK216435&WTmodLoc=World-R5-Alertnet-5

Thu 26 Oct 2006 12:26:57 BST

BEIJING, Oct 26 (Reuters) - Chinese scientists said they had found the H5N1 bird flu virus in sparrows two years ago, the first time it has been detected in non-migratory birds in China, Xinhua news agency reported on Thursday.

Researchers at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, in the central province of Hubei, found the virus in sparrows' excrement following an outbreak of bird flu in a county in neighbouring Henan province.

"There's no need for the public to panic. The findings are two years old and there is no indication that sparrows pose a risk," Xinhua quoted Li Tianxian, a researcher at the institute, as saying.

Chinese officials have in the past blamed outbreaks of bird flu in the country on migratory birds, but the findings indicate that the virus could also be among local birds common in urban areas.

With the world's largest poultry population, China is seen as a centre in the fight against bird flu, which scientists fear could mutate into a form that can pass easily between people, potentially causing a pandemic.

The country has already seen dozens of outbreaks of the virus in birds and at least 21 human cases, of whom 14 have died.
 

JPD

Inactive
BIRD FLU: INDONESIA STILL A WORRY, UN COORDINATOR SAYS

http://www.adnki.com/index_2Level_English.php?cat=Security&loid=8.0.353494046&par=

New York, 26 Oct. (AKI) - While the deadly bird flu virus has not spread as widely as feared in Africa, global vigilance is still needed, the United Nations coordinator for the disease said, indicating Asia and in particular Indonesia as high risk areas. "Unfortunately the virus continues to affect humans: there are 256 people known to be affected, 151 dying and the rate of human death is still distressingly high, with Indonesia increasingly becoming the country which causes all of us… very great concern" David Nabarro, the UN's coordinator for bird flu told reporters in New York.


There have been 43 deaths out of 53 human cases so far in Indonesia this year, a significant proportion of the 73 human deaths recorded worldwide since the start of 2006.
The Asian region has been hardest hit by the virus, which spreads through contact with infected birds.

Dr. Nabarro, who has just returned from a fact-finding trip to Australia, Cambodia, Indonesia and Myanmar, said in order to deal with such a long-term problem, which has already forced the culling of hundreds of millions of poultry to curb the disease’s spread, it will mean changes to commercial bird rearing and also better preparedness to deal with outbreaks.

Already such changes are taking place, he said, praising countries responses to the disease, including better preparation and improved veterinarian services; however more needed to be done, especially in Indonesia.

“Indonesia has the virus probably in 30 out of 33 provinces… now Indonesia has had to move fast to completely redesign its animal health services… the Government certainly is committed together with the UN to making this happen but… still there’s such a lot to be done.”

"The disease didn’t spread quite so profoundly in Africa as we had expected it might… but still the amount of viral outbreaks in 2006 were many greater than any previous year," Nabarro added.

However, experts fear that the H5N1 virus could mutate, gaining the ability to pass from person to person and in a worst case scenario unleashing a deadly human pandemic. Dr. Nabarro warned that it will remain a “major animal health issue” for years.

“We think it’s going to stay that way for five years perhaps 10 years to come because the virus is highly pathogenic yet at the same time can seem to survive in certain communities of birds without symptoms… and secondly it does seem to be spread by a combination of wild birds and trade.”
 

JPD

Inactive
Obstacles to halting pandemic studied

http://www.heraldnet.com/stories/06/10/26/100wir_a9flu001.cfm

Published: Thursday, October 26, 2006

Associated Press


WASHINGTON - Ask Americans if they would hole up at home to keep from spreading a superstrain of flu, and at first they pledge to cooperate.

But probe deeper, and doubts appear. One in four adults says there is no one to care for them at home if they got sick, raising the specter of Grandma gasping alone in bed or a single mom passed out while her children wail.

Another one in four could not afford to miss work for even a week. Would they heed doctors' calls to stay home or go sneeze on co-workers?

And one in five fears the boss would insist they come to work even if they were sick and contagious.

So concludes a survey by Harvard researchers that will bring the concerns of average people into government deliberations on how to fight the next worldwide outbreak of a superflu.

"If you want to contain the flu, you have to make it livable for people" to comply with infection-control steps, said Robert Blendon, a health policy specialist at the Harvard School of Public Health. He planned to present the survey today at a meeting of public health officials.

"This is really a Catch-22 here. If you can't help the people make it at home, then the epidemic's going to get much more severe," he said.

Pandemics can strike when the easy-to-mutate flu virus shifts to a strain that people have never experienced. This has happened three times in the past century. Concern is rising that the Asian bird flu might trigger a pandemic if it starts spreading easily from person to person.
 

JPD

Inactive
Doubt over govt plan to contain bird flu

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailnational.asp?fileid=20061026.H06&irec=5

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta

The effectiveness of the government's plan to cage fowls in residential areas as a move to curb the spread of the deadly avian influenza virus has been met with skepticism.

The Indonesia Consumers Foundation chief Husna Zahier said Sunday that the plan would be ineffective without a careful study of poultry and the relationship with their owners.

"If people don't keep their habitat and poultry cages clean, then the policy would be pretty much useless," she told The Jakarta Post.

Further details, such as the type of poultry, quantity, purpose for keeping fowls and place where people keep them make a difference in how effective the regulation will be, she asserted.

"Keeping birds or poultry as a hobby or for eggs or meat is not the same," she said.

The National Committee for Avian Influenza Control and Pandemic Preparedness (FBPI), the body responsible for controlling the H5N1 virus spread, should pay special attention to the culture of the affected areas, she said.

"People handle poultry differently according to their customs and habits. This should be studied well in order to ensure effective monitoring," she said.

The central government announced last week that fowls would be separated from people in urban residential areas. The UN's Food and Agricultural Organization will assist the government in setting the time frame for the program.

Indonesia has the highest number of bird flu deaths in the world, with 55 fatalities out of 75 cases.

Jakarta, West Java and Central Java have seen the most people infected with the H5N1 virus.

Sociologist Ida Ruwaidi told the Post on Sunday that the quantity of birds, chickens and ducks that people kept in residential areas also matters tremendously.

"The large quantity of the poultry stock means that the whole community in the area, not just the local administration or fowl owners, should also take responsibility," she said.

Ida added that people's mind-set, both individual and collectively, needed to be changed to allow effective implementation.

"Without victims, many people will see the policy as just another regulation. Once someone in their area is infected by the H5N1 virus, then they would readily follow the procedure," the sociologist said.

Ida said that this regulation should be supported by a massive bio-security awareness campaign to change people's mind-set.

"The mass media, especially the broadcast media, is the most effective for raising awareness. Educational institutions and places of worship should also encourage the community to take charge in monitoring," Ida said.

She said that this would need painstaking and concerted efforts before it became second nature. Everybody in affected subdistricts, she said, should be authorized to enforce social control.

"Individuals in affected areas could be given the authority to monitor whether their neighbors have caged their fowls or let them run around in their yard," she said.

She added that besides culling, the government needed to add more facilities and monitor the caging implementation on a regular basis.

"Funding used to be the problem. Now it's up to people how much they want the eradication of avian influenza to be successful," Ida said.

Coordinating Minister for the People's Welfare Aburizal Bakrie says the government has pledged to allocate Rp 100 billion in order to assist public health facilities in monitoring and treating patients with symptoms of avian influenza. (03)
 

JPD

Inactive
Most workers unaware of employer flu plans: Study

http://www.businessinsurance.com/cgi-bin/news.pl?newsId=8667#

by Mark A. Hofmann
Posted on Oct. 26, 2006 10:20 AM CST

Fewer than one out of five workers are aware of any plan in their workplace to respond to an influenza pandemic, according to a survey released Thursday by the Harvard School of Public Health.

In fact, 63% of the 1,101 full- and part-time workers surveyed by the Boston-based school between Sept. 28 and Oct. 5 said their workplace had no plan, while 19% said there was a plan. The remaining 18% did not know whether their workplace had a plan or not.

Employees in workplaces with plans cited provisions such as encouraging sick employees to stay home, expanding options for working from home and general information about the flu.

In addition, 25% of the respondents said staying out of work for seven to 10 days would be a "serious financial problem."

The survey, which also discussed people’s willingness to cooperate with public health recommendations and how people would cope with a pandemic and home and school, was released at the Institute of Medicine in Washington.
 

Bill P

Inactive
This repeats much of above, but includes quotes from Osterholm:



Survey Examines How Americans Handle Flu
The Associated Press

By LAURAN NEERGAARD

October 25, 2006

Somebody's got to move the food, take away the garbage, provide health care, law enforcement, to assure that communications continues. ... We will very much put at risk things like electricity, food. Ask Americans if they would hole up at home to keep from spreading a super-strain of flu, and at first they pledge to cooperate.

But probe deeper, and here come the doubts. One in four adults says there is no one to care for them at home if they got sick, raising the specter of Grandma gasping alone in bed or a single mom passed out while her children wail.

Another one in four could not afford to miss work for even a week. Would they heed doctors' calls to stay home or go sneeze on co-workers?

And one in five fears the boss would insist they come to work even if they were sick and contagious.

So concludes a survey by Harvard researchers that will bring the concerns of average people into government deliberations on how to fight the next worldwide outbreak of a super-flu.

'If you want to contain the flu, you have to make it livable for people' to comply with infection-control steps, said Robert Blendon, a health policy specialist at the Harvard School of Public Health. He planned to present the survey Thursday at a meeting of public health officials.

'This is really a Catch-22 here. If you can't help the people make it at home, then the epidemic's going to get much more severe.'

Pandemics can strike when the easy-to-mutate flu virus shifts to a strain that people have never experienced. This has happened three times in the past century. Concern is rising that the Asian bird flu might trigger a pandemic if it starts spreading easily from person to person.

Old-fashioned infection control is one strategy to try slow a pandemic's spread until vaccines become available: staying home if you are sick or may have been exposed; closing schools; avoiding crowded gatherings such as church services, sports events and shopping malls.

It is far from clear how well such measures would work, or if some could cause more harm than good. So the government asked the Institute of Medicine to bring together health specialists, state and local officials and industry this week to debate that issue.

Harvard's Blendon was pleasantly surprised that his survey of 1,697 adults suggests people are paying attention to pandemic discussions and are open to public health advice.

Some 94 percent said they would stay home, away from other people, for seven days to 10 days if they had pandemic flu and 85 percent would do so if a household member were sick. Equally high numbers said they would heed calls not to leave their community while pandemic flu circulated.

People were mostly confident they could care for sick family members at home, and find a relative or friend to help out with child care if schools closed for months at a time.

But as the survey probed more consequences of containment measures, people began to realize what hardships could await them.

Millions of people live with no other adult who could care for them if they fall ill, Blendon noted. Communities need to plan how to provide emergency in-home help, perhaps through properly trained charity groups.

Then there were practical survival issues. More than 40 percent of those surveyed said they would run out of diapers, baby formula or medications if they had to stay home for even a week.

Blendon said workplace worries were a major problem, too. Many people live paycheck-to-paycheck, and more than one-quarter of respondents said they would lose a job or business if they had to stay home for seven days to 10 days. Only one-third thought they still would get paid if they missed work.

This real-world feedback is important as long as policymakers understand people will act less rationally in a crisis, said Michael Osterholm, a University of Minnesota infectious disease specialist who has advised the government on flu preparations.

His bigger concern is that the stay-at-home plans are far too simplistic.

'If you want to guarantee that society will collapse in terms of the economy, tell everybody to stay home,' Osterholm said. 'Somebody's got to move the food, take away the garbage, provide health care, law enforcement, to assure that communications continues. ... We will very much put at risk things like electricity, food.'

The Harvard poll was conducted by telephone between Sept. 28 and Oct. 5 by ICR of Media, Pa. It has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 2.5 percentage points.

The Institute of Medicine is part of the National Academy of Sciences, a private organization chartered by Congress to advise the government of scientific matters.

http://www.topix.net/content/ap/1670996308342178038412628649422231509951
 

Bill P

Inactive
Advance Warning Of H5N1 Influenza Outbreaks May Be Found In Shrimp Virus Reservoirs​
26 Oct 2006

http://www.pharma-lexicon.com/medicalnews.php?newsid=55095

Researchers at Replikins, Ltd.[1] have discovered that the shrimp viruses White Spot Syndrome virus (WSSV) and Taura Syndrome virus (TSV) - global lethal pathogens for shrimp - may be reservoirs for the peptide building blocks of H5N1, or bird flu virus.

The H5N1 virus recently has been responsible for huge poultry losses in many countries and for several hundred human cases, with approximately 50% mortality. While migratory waterfowl are known to transport the H5N1 influenza virus globally, no reservoirs for this virus have been identified[2].

Using FluForecast(R) proprietary technology, Replikins, Ltd. researchers have identified a new group of virus peptides of specific structure, called "replikins." The concentration of replikins in a virus (quantitative Replikin Count) has been shown to be related to rapid replication, and to be increased in epidemics and in the last three influenza pandemics[1]. Quantitative determination of the concentration of virus replikins by FluForecast(R), the company's proprietary software, has made it possible to predict in advance the recent H5N1 outbreaks[1].

Replikins, Ltd. researchers found that shrimp viruses also contained replikins, and asked if there might be a relation between shrimp viruses and H5N1 influenza virus in waterfowl.

Using FluForecast(R), the following findings were obtained which suggest that shrimp viruses may serve as one reservoir of replikin peptide building blocks for H5N1 and other influenza strains:

1) Shrimp viruses WSSV and TSV were found to contain replikin peptide sequences.

2) These shrimp virus sequences were found to be related in structure to the replikin peptide sequences in H5N1 virus.

3) Shrimp WSSV replikins increased markedly in concentration in the year 2000, just before the increase in H5N1 virus Replikin Counts which preceded the H5N1 outbreaks in chickens and humans of 2001-20061. The increase in shrimp virus Replikin Count was not trivial: In shrimp WSSV, which in dormant states was found to be less than 10 in the year 2000, reached 103.8. This is comparable only to the highest Count so far observed in any organism in nature. (The highest Replikin Count to date of 111 has been observed in the malaria species, pl. falciparum, which replicates 11,000 times in 48 hours passing from liver to blood in the host.)

4) Of the new shrimp replikins which appeared in 2000, the percent which were short peptides was increased compared to dormant years. Short replikins previously have been found to be related to high virulence and high mortality in the host, whether animal or man.

5) These short shrimp virus replikins share structures with short replikins in both H5N1 and other influenza strains going back 88 years to the great pandemic of 1918.

A related example of virus reservoir activity in which the replikin concentration was increased preceding an outbreak was found in the corona viruses as a group. The Replikin Count of the corona virus group increased markedly in 2002 before the outbreak of one of its members, SARS, in 2003[1]. In another study, further confirming the relationship of Replikin Count to rapid replication, studies on replikins in two strains of human HIV-1 virus have shown that the Replikin Count of a rapidly replicating strain is sixfold greater than that of a slowly replicating strain. No instances of rapid replication have been observed in all the organisms examined in which the Replikin Count was not significantly increased compared to the Count in the dormant state.

Advance forecasts of virus outbreaks, now possible with FluForecast(R), have not previously been possible. The relation of Replikin Count to rapid replication will be further used to examine virus reservoirs in both poultry and aquatic organisms for coming influenza outbreaks in animals and humans. Such forecasts now may permit time for preventive public health measures to be mobilized and safer strain-specific vaccines to be synthesized, tested, and mass produced.

Replikins, Ltd. is providing FluForecast(R) services to others. The "Replikins Group" has been formed with a number of university, government, and pharmaceutical institutes to test new synthetic Replikin vaccines developed by Replikins, Ltd. which target rapid replication in emerging viruses and a range of other infectious diseases.

References

1. Website: http://www.Replikins.com.

2. Check, E. On Border Patrol. Nature 442,348-350, 27 July, 2006.

Replikins, Ltd.
http://www.Replikins.com
 
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