11/24-12/01/06 | Weekly Bird Flu Thread: South Korean poultry imports halted to Japan

JPD

Inactive
South Korean poultry imports halted over bird flu outbreak

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20061125a1.html

The Associated Press

Japan has halted imports of South Korean poultry due to a suspected bird flu outbreak that has killed around 6,000 chickens and prompted authorities to cull thousands more, the top government spokesman said Friday.

"As a precaution, we decided (Thursday) to suspend imports of South Korean poultry and to ask that people entering Japan from South Korea sterilize their shoes," Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuhisa Shiozaki told reporters.

Japan imported 289 metric tons of chicken meat from South Korea in 2005, according to the Japan External Trade Organization.

Most bird flu viruses are not harmful to humans, but South Korea's agriculture ministry hoped to confirm this weekend whether the suspected outbreak was caused by the H5N1 strain, which can be deadly to people.

The discovery was made Wednesday in the province of Jeolla, according to a statement from the agriculture ministry. It said 6,000 chickens in the area had died, and 6,000 more will be killed to prevent the virus from spreading.

South Korea culled 5.3 million birds during the last known bird flu outbreak in 2003.

The H5N1 virus began ravaging Asian poultry stocks in late 2003 and has killed at least 153 people worldwide.
 

JPD

Inactive
New drug to boost defense against bird flu pandemic

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-2471200,00.html

Mark Henderson, Science Editor
A new flu drug that can kill deadly strains of bird flu is promising to transform global preparations for an influenza pandemic.

Peramivir, an antiviral agent, could provide the world with a critical new line of defence against flu viruses with the potential to cause millions of deaths, such as the H5N1 avian strain, research has suggested.

Studies in the United States show that it should be more powerful and easier to give to seriously ill patients than either Tamiflu or Relenza, the two existing drugs for H5N1 flu.

Flu experts said that the advent of a third effective option could save hundreds of thousands of lives if H5N1 acquires the ability to pass easily from person to person — the key trigger for a pandemic. H5N1 has already infected 258 people and killed 153, mainly in South-East Asia, and it has recently mutated in ways that make human infections more probable.

“We need as many good antiviral drugs for flu as we can develop,” said Frederick Hayden, a World Health Organisation medical officer who has studied peramivir. “Having multiple options with different antiviral spectra is very desirable.”

Peramivir has two important advantages over the other therapies. Tamiflu, which is taken orally, and Relenza, which is inhaled, are difficult to administer to unconscious patients. Peramivir does not have this problem because it is injected, and the first human studies have shown that it also reaches the bloodstream in higher concentrations and remains active for longer.

The new drug would also provide a valuable alternative if a pandemic strain were to evolve resistance to Tamiflu, the front-line treatment that has been stockpiled by many countries, including Britain. Some H5N1 viruses have already shown resistance to Tamiflu, and if such a strain became dominant the drug would become useless. This week, a report from the Royal Society urged the Government not to rely on it exclusively.

Laboratory tests show that peramivir is effective against every known variant of H5N1, and its greater potency means that the virus is less likely to acquire resistance.

It is also simple to manufacture from synthetic raw materials that are readily available in bulk. Tamiflu production has been delayed by a shortage of star anise, the plant from which the active ingredient comes.

Peramivir was developed by BioCryst Pharmaceuticals, based in Alabama. It said that facilities already exist that could make a billion doses a year; Roche can make only 400 million doses of Tamiflu a year. BioCryst recently completed successful safety trials on human volunteers, which also proved that both intramuscular (IM) and intravenous (IV) injections deliver high levels of the drug to the bloodstream.

Phase 2 trials of the IM formulation will start testing peramivir’s effectiveness in more than 100 patients with seasonal flu from next week, and a similar study of the IV injection is due to begin in January. If these are successful, larger phase 3 trials would take place during next winter’s flu season, and the drug could be marketed within two to three years.

If a flu pandemic were to start before then, peramivir could be made available as an emergency measure, as it already has a good safety record.

Protection for the masses

What is H5N1 flu? It is a strain of the influenza virus that has killed millions of birds, mainly in Asia and Africa. So far, 258 people have been infected and 153 have died, according to World Health Organisation figures

Why is it a concern? The virus has a mortality rate of 59 per cent. The “Spanish flu” of 1918-19 killed 20 million to 50 million people

How likely is a pandemic? We don’t know. The chances of H5N1 passing from person to person are small, but the virus has acquired two mutations that allow it to infect people more easily. Even if it does not trigger a pandemic, another flu virus that does is likely to emerge some time soon. Pandemics tend to be cyclical, roughly every 40 years. The last one occurred in 1968

What can be done about it? There are two main options: vaccines and antiviral drugs. Vaccines, which use a dead or weakened virus to stimulate immunity, can be designed only once the precise pandemic strain is known. A vaccine would take seven to nine months to develop

What are the drugs? Tamiflu, or oseltamivir, is the front-line treatment. It does not stop people becoming infected, but reduces symptoms and the probability of transmission. It is made by Roche. The other drug is Relenza, or zanamivir, made by GlaxoSmithKline. It is inhaled rather than taken orally. An injectable version is being developed

How do they work? Both drugs block a key protein called neuraminidase — the “N” of H5N1 — which allows the virus to replicate and spread. The class is known as the neuraminidase inhibitors.

What is peramivir? It is another neuraminidase inhibitor, working in similar fashion to the other two drugs. It is made by BioCryst Pharmaceuticals.

What are its advantages? First, it offers an alternative if resistance emerges to either of the other two. Secondly, it is injectable, making it simple to use in a hospital setting. Thirdly, it is more potent than the other agents, more of it reaches the bloodstream, and stays in the body for longer.

How far is it developed? The injectable versions have passed safety trials and the first effectiveness trials with humans will begin next month. A round of trials is scheduled next winter. The drug could be licensed in 2008 or 2009.

Could it be used if a pandemic started next year? It could be licensed in a public health emergency. BioCryst could make 1bn doses a year.
 

JPD

Inactive
Junk medicine: pandemic flu

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,8123-2468284,00.html

Mark Henderson
Take risks to save lives
The H5N1 bird flu virus is changing. It emerged last week that it has acquired two mutations that suit it better to infecting human cells. It has not triggered a pandemic yet, and may never do, but these are the sort of developments we would see if the worst- case scenario were unfolding.

Britain is among the countries that are best prepared for this. The Government’s contingency plans have won international praise, and the decision to stockpile 14.6 million doses of the antiviral agent Tamiflu means that a first line of defence is in place.

The lack of room for complacency, though, was highlighted by this week’s report from the Royal Society and the Academy of Medical Sciences. It found that while the Tamiflu order is a necessary measure, it is not sufficient. There is a good case for buying a lot more, so it can be used preventively. And supplies of a second antiviral, Relenza, are also needed, as there are signs that H5N1 could become resistant to Tamiflu. An alternative weapon is essential.

Another way of protecting against a pandemic, of course, is vaccination. But as the report cautioned, this is fraught with difficulty. Production capacity is limited by demand for seasonal flu jabs, currently about 350 million a year. It would be difficult to cover more than a small fraction of the world’s 6.5 billion people.

On top of that, an effective vaccine can be designed only once the precise pandemic strain is known. Safety testing, regulatory approval and manufacturing mean a delay of seven to nine months before anyone can be immunised. Millions would be dead before the first injection is given.

The first problem will probably be impossible to solve. It is impractical for industry or governments to build vaccine factories and mothball them. The priority should be research into adjuvants, additives that get more response from vaccines at lower doses.

The second issue also looks intractable. But as Professor Nick White, a flu specialist at the Wellcome Trust, pointed out in the Natural History Museum’s annual science lecture, that is true only up to a point. Some manufacturing delays are inevitable, but weeks or even months might be saved by cutting corners on research.

Under normal circumstances, it is right and proper that vaccines are assessed rigorously and produced to the highest standards to prevent side effects. A pandemic, though, is not a normal circumstance. Professor White argued persuasively that trading off a little more risk for speed might be a bargain worth making. “Have we become too risk-averse to move quickly?” he asked. “We need to think as a society about underwriting scientists to run risks.” A saving of a month would not allow a vaccine to be used in the first phase of a pandemic, but it might make all the difference against its second wave. The vaccine might itself cause deaths, but this must be set against lives saved by speed. The balance of risks and benefits is not yet clear, but this is certainly a debate worth having.

It is not one that has much engaged the Government so far. As Professor White said, it would get fuller consideration if ministers were to accept another of the Royal Society’s recommendations: the appointment of an expert scientist as “flu czar”.

The Chief Medical Officer and the Chief Scientific Adviser have done fine work on pandemic preparedness, but both have significant other responsibilities. They cannot be expected either to be influenza specialists or to give the issue the time it warrants. The UK is fortunate in that many of the world’s leading authorities on pandemic flu are based here: Professor Neil Ferguson of Imperial College London and Sir John Skehel of the National Institute for Medical Research are two of them.
 

JPD

Inactive
Rapid tests for bird flu are flawed, studies show

http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/11/24/news/flu.php

By Donald G. McNeil Jr. / The New York Times
Published: November 24, 2006

Avian flu is extremely hard to detect with standard tests, but waiting for laboratory confirmation of an outbreak would cause dangerous treatment delays, according to new studies of two flu outbreaks.

The studies, published Thursday in The New England Journal of Medicine, were of family clusters of flu cases in Turkey and Indonesia.

Rapid tests on nose and throat swabs failed every time, and in Turkey, so did all follow-up tests, known as Elisas. The only tests that consistently did work were polymerase chain reaction tests, or PCRs, which can only be done in advanced laboratories and take several hours.

"It'll be a disaster if we have to use PCRs for everybody," said Dr. Anne Moscona, a professor of pediatrics and immunology at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York. "It just isn't available at a whole lot of places."

If the H5N1 virus mutates into a pandemic strain, rapid tests "will be really key," she said.

The studies followed clusters in three separate families in Indonesia in 2005 and in what appears to have been one extended family near Dogubayazit, in eastern Turkey, in January. Case clusters particularly worry the public health authorities because they raise the possibility that the flu is mutating to spread faster between people.

In the Indonesian cases, the authors, a mix of experts from Indonesia, the World Health Organization and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, concluded that human-to-human transmission had probably taken place in two of the three family clusters.

In one case, a 38-year-old government auditor appeared to have caught the flu from his 8-year-old daughter or her 1-year-old sister. All three died; his wife and two sons did not become ill.

No one in the family had any known contact with poultry, wild birds, animals or sick people, so the source was a mystery. "But you can't always tell what a young child has done," said Dr. Tim Uyeki, a CDC flu specialist and an author of the study. "There's no magical test, and you don't always get a perfect explanation."

The Dogubayazit cluster was a cause célèbre for some Internet flu-watchers following Turkish media reports in January. They argued that widespread human-to-human transmission seemed to be taking place, and that it may have begun at a banquet in late December attended by members of two related families named Ozcan and Kocyigit. The Turkish government and the WHO did not link the cases or families, and tentatively said that birds had caused all transmission.

The study showed how wide a net was cast: 290 people were tested at one hospital because they had flu symptoms and/or contact with dying birds. All were given the antiviral drug oseltamivir, which is also sold as Tamiflu, and about half were hospitalized.

That accorded with WHO recommendations: widespread testing and prophylactic use of antivirals, both to save lives and to snuff out any suspected outbreak of a mutant strain.

Only 10 came up positive on PCR tests, and only 8 of those were confirmed by a WHO laboratory.
 

JPD

Inactive
S Korea confirms outbreak of bird flu caused by H5N1 strain

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2006-11/25/content_5374171.htm

SEOUL, Nov. 25 (Xinhua) -- The South Korean government confirmed Saturday that an outbreak of bird flu in Iksan, 230 km south of Seoul, was caused by the H5N1 strain virus.

Tests conducted by the National Veterinary Research and Quarantine Service showed that the outbreak has been caused by the H5N1 virus, said Lee Yang-ho, spokesman for the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry.

South Korean experts are working to determine whether the virus is the highly contagious type or a milder variety, Lee said.

Local media said the final result will be announced later in the day.

The Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry announced Thursday that suspected bird flu cases were found at a poultry farm in Iksan city, Jeollabukdo where 6,000 out of a total of 13,000 chickens have died suddenly since Sunday.

According to the ministry, all of the chickens and other animals on the farm have been culled and buried, while a tight quarantine has been established around the affected area. All eggs produced in the poultry farm were destroyed and the transportation of all chickens, birds and eggs within 10 km of the farm had been banned.

It was the first time for South Korea to report the outbreak of bird flu. The South Korean government destroyed 5.3 million birds from December 2003 to March 2004 to curb the spread of the fatal epidemic disease.
 

JPD

Inactive
Outbreaks Show Bird Flu Virus Is Changing

http://health.theledger.com/article/20061124/HEALTHNEWS/2722/-1/RSS2&source=RSS

E.J. MUNDELL
c. 2006 HealthDay News
Distributed by The New York Times Syndicate

Detailed data on clustered human cases of avian flu have experts agreeing that the H5N1 virus is evolving -- but in what direction?

"The virus is always changing, and the mutations that make it more compatible with human transmission may occur at any time," warn Drs. Robert Webster and Elena Govorkova, both virologists at St Jude's Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, Tenn. Their commentary accompanies reports from Indonesia and Turkey, both published in the Nov. 23 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine.

However, another expert believes that, so far, H5N1 has given no indication it is mutating toward human-to-human transmission.

"It's far from a certainty," says Dr. Marc Siegel, a clinical associate professor of medicine at New York University School of Medicine, and author of "Bird Flu: Everything You Need to Know About the Next Pandemic." "The virus could move closer to human-to-human transmission, and it could move farther away. I don't think that you can conclude from these articles in the NEJM that the thing is becoming easier to transmit."

The two studies' most basic data is not new. They focus on three clusters of H5N1 infection in Indonesia in mid-to-late 2005, involving four deaths, and an eight-patient cluster treated in the first weeks of 2006 at a hospital in far-eastern Turkey. Four of the Turkish patients died.

Details published in the journal do point to some intriguing trends, however. As noted in other cases, almost all infections were linked to close handling of domestic fowl. More troubling was the fact that the Turkish group, led by Dr. Ahmet Oner of Yuzuncu Yil University in Van, found it very difficult to diagnose H5N1 in humans at its earliest stages.

Two standard tests turned up negative for the virus, and only a high-tech "polymerase-chain-reaction assay" confirmed H5N1 as the culprit. Infection also "causes a wide spectrum of illnesses in humans," the study authors wrote, with symptoms varying widely among patients.

In the Indonesian report, led by epidemiologist Dr. Timothy Uyeki of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, researchers found that H5N1 affected some patients more severely than others, suggesting that there are genetic factors influencing patient vulnerability.

They also noted that certain drugs, such as oseltamivir (sold as Tamiflu), could help fight the predominant Indonesian strain, but that these drugs are only effective when given a day or two after infection. That's probably too early for most patients, however.

"In the countries that have reported human H5N1 cases, patients generally do not seek medical care early in their illness," Uyeki explains. "They usually present for medical care when their illness is advanced, e.g., they have pneumonia, and therefore they are not able to receive early oseltamivir treatment."

In their commentary, Webster and Govorkova noted that the number of documented human cases of H5N1 infection is rising worldwide. A total of 251 cases have been recorded globally since 1997, they said, and "by mid-August, 97 humans had been infected in 2006 -- the same number as in all of 2005."

No definite case of human-to-human transmission has yet been reported, suggesting that "the current H5N1 virus is apparently not well 'fitted' to replication in humans," the two experts wrote. However, "the intermittent spread to humans will continue, and the virus will continue to evolve," they added. "Clearly, we must prepare for the possibility of an influenza epidemic."

Siegel believes this kind of language can be misleading.

"We don't know enough about H5N1, and the science hasn't evolved to the point where we can predict when an epizoonotic problem -- a disease that has killed a lot of birds -- is going to start killing a lot of humans," he says.

And while reports do suggest a rise in human cases over time, Siegel notes that, prior to 1997, no one was keeping close tabs on the epidemiology of H5N1. "I think there may have been previous clusters that might have gone unreported because of a lack of attention -- they may have been misdiagnosed as other kinds of flu," he explains.

Underreporting of prior outbreaks means it is also impossible to say that the avian flu is mutating in any one direction, Siegel says. "There's just no way of telling from these clusters that this virus is evolving in the direction of easier transmission -- we can't tell if these clusters are anything new, or if there was a precedent for them," he says.

Finally, he adds, H5N1's genetic "leap" to human-to-human transmission -- if it ever happens -- will be much tougher than media reports have let on.

"I've talked to a top expert at the U.S. National Institutes of Health," Siegel says. "He has tried (in the lab) to manipulate H5N1 to make it transmit more easily human-to-human, and he hasn't been able to do it. He's tried different mutations, including using proteins from the 1918 Spanish flu."

This suggests that a bird flu pandemic is a possibility -- but not a certainty. "There's no sense of 'imminence' here," Siegel says.

All the experts agree, however, that more needs to be done to curb the spread of the virus among birds. "H5N1 viruses are a 'moving target' and are evolving globally," Uyeki says. "Therefore, what is needed is ongoing, expanded surveillance of highly pathogenic avian influenza A (H5N1) viruses in animals (including poultry and wild birds) and humans in many countries."

Webster and Govorkova note that countries that have implemented tough, bird-focused interventions did reduce the threat. But with winter approaching, they worry H5N1 will finally make its way from Eurasia to the Americas through migrating flocks.

However, Siegel says, vaccinating every bird in the United States does not make sense right now. That's because the virus would simply go "underground," infecting fowl but not producing outward symptoms. "You want to vaccinate susceptible populations, and then control outbreaks by killing affected birds," he says.

But Siegel also stresses that, "here, in the United States, we as yet have no birds that have this virus. We don't even have a problem yet, except for fear."
Published November 24, 2006
 

JPD

Inactive
Dogs Culled In Likely H5N1 Infections On South Korean Farm

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/11250601/H5N1_Korea_Dogs.html

Recombinomics Commentary
November 25 2006

Government workers at the farm located about 230 kilometers south of Seoul said 6,000 chickens and two dogs have been destroyed to prevent the possible spread of the avian virus. It is the first time that dogs have been culled as a result of a bird flu outbreak.

The above description of the culling of dogs in Korea, virtually confirms the H5N1 serotype in the large outbreak described above. It is not clear if the dogs tested positive for H5N1, or were culled as a precaution.

H5N1 was isolated from a dog in Thailand in 2004, but there have been isolates of Qinghai H5N1 from several mammals in Europe, and it is likely that the bird flu in South Korea is the H5N1 Qinghai strain.
 

JPD

Inactive
H5N1 Confirmed On South Korean Farm

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/11250602/H5N1_Korea_Confirmed.html

Recombinomics Commentary
November 25 2006

South Korea said on Saturday a poultry farm was hit by bird flu, saying it found the H5N1 strain of avian influenza in the country's first outbreak in three years of the virus that is potentially fatal for humans.

The agriculture ministry said earlier this week it suspected that a highly virulent strain of bird flu killed 6,000 chickens at a farm in the southwest part of the country that lies on a path for migratory birds.

"It is the H5N1 strain," the agriculture ministry official said by telephone of test results. It was too early to say whether the strain found at the farm was highly pathogenic, he added.

The virus' virulence could be known later on Saturday, he said.

The above confirmation of H5N1 in the southwest part of Korea leaves little doubt that it is highly pathogenic H5N1, which can easily be deduced by the rapid death of about 1/2 of the chicken population at the index farm. This diagnosis can be confirmed by either sequencing HA cleavage site, or running a 10 day pathogenicity test, involving the infection of 10 experimental chickens with the virus. However, since H5N1 generally kills all 10 choices in 1-2 days, the 10 day test can be ended as soon as all 10 chickens are dead.

The HA cleavage site sequences is more important, because it not only determines pathogenicity, but it also correlates well with the strain of H5N1, which is rapidly evolving in Asia. The original HPAI H5N1 cleavage site in Asia was QRERRRKKR, which was first reported for a 1996 goose in Guangdong. That is the sequence of the Clade 1 human H5N1 described in 2004 in Vietnam and Thailand. However, H5N1 has evolved into multiple versions of H5N1, and these versions can be approximated by simply looking at the cleavage site.

In humans, the three Clade 2 sub-clades are easily distinguished by the HA cleavage site and each defines a strain that has been selected as a vaccine target by The WHO. Sub-clade 1 is the human Indonesian strain, which has a cleavages site of QRESRRKKR. Sub-clade 2 is Qinghai strain, which has the cleavage site of QGERRRKKR. Sub-clade 3 is the Fujian strain in China, which has the cleavage site of LRERRRK_R.

The sub-clades represent the human cases reported to date from Indonesia, China, and all human cases west of China. The have many H5N1 variations on these themes, but the reported human cases targeted by pandemic vaccines targeting isolates with the four major HA cleavage sites described above.

The recent PNAS paper on the spread of the Fujian strain in southern China included comments indicating that the Fujian strain may represent a 3rd wave of H5N1. However, the only data supporting such a conclusion was the failure to report more than one Qinghai isolate in the 2005 and 2006 isolates collected primarily from feces of birds in live markets in southeastern China.

However, the Qinghai strain is widespread in wild birds and has been detected in over 700 samples of H5N1 in Europe. It is the only HPAI strain reported for Europe, the Middle East, or Africa. To date there has been only one Qinghai isolate reported for eastern Asia, so the failure to detect the Qinghai strain in southern China says more about the surveillance and ability of the Qinghai strain to displace endemic strains in China and southeast Asian, than the persistence of the Qinghai strain in other countries, including wild birds which can migrate to South Korea.

The H5N1 isolated at Qinghai Lake in China in 2005 had regions of identity with H5N1 from Shantou in Guangdong Province, as well as South Korea/Japan isolates from 2003/2004. Therefore, it is likely that a new H5N1 outbreak in South Korea, particularly at this time of the year, will be the Qinghai strain, although the cleavage site of the only public sequence from South Korea, A/duck/Korea/EAS1/03, is QREKR_KKR may have generated a recombinant cleavage site, such as the reported bird HA cleavage site in the Sudan, which is a recombinant between Qinghai QGERRRKKR, and tree sparrow QREGRRKKR cleavage site sequences, to give QGEGRRKKR.

Thus, the key question for the South Korea isolate is the HA cleavage site, which will not only confirm that it is HPAI, but will also provide the first clue on its relations ton the various H5N1 strains in the area, which can be used to trace origins.

The tracing of the origin is clearer when full sequences on all eight gene segments is released, which should be completed in a matter of days after the H5N1 is isolated.
 

JPD

Inactive
Banks to 'withstand' flu pandemic

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/6180250.stm

UK banks could maintain core services during a flu pandemic despite extensive disruption to business, a major contingency exercise has revealed.

About 70 businesses took part in a six-week test, designed to see how the financial system would cope in the event of a severe flu outbreak.

It raised concerns about how consumers would get access to cash and how firms could restore operations afterwards.

The Financial Services Authority (FSA) said it had learnt "valuable lessons".

There have been warnings that a global flu pandemic could have a devastating impact on the world economy, far in excess of the $30bn financial damage wreaked by the 2003 Sars outbreak.

In a worst-case scenario, experts believe a pandemic could force stock markets and banks to close, bringing global trade to a halt.

Preparedness

The FSA's exercise, which took place in October and November, simulated the first five months of a pandemic in the UK.

It assumed that companies - including banks, stock exchanges, payment and settlement firms - would lose up to 48% of their staff through absenteeism.


The work we are doing now will help the financial services sector prepare for a pandemic
Callum McCarthy, FSA chairman

Despite this, the exercise suggested that the financial system would not be paralysed and that core services would continue to operate.

"All who took part have learnt valuable lessons, which both individual participants and the sector as a whole will build on," said Callum McCarthy, FSA chairman.

"The work we are doing now, in a benign period, will help the financial services sector prepare for a pandemic or other threats to its stability which we will face in more difficult times."

The exercise identified three major issues, which the FSA said needed "further consideration":

* How far would consumers be able to access the banking system to withdraw cash and make mortgage payments?

* Would key workers be able to work from home using mobile technology and still carry out vital functions?

* How quickly and efficiently would firms be able to resume business as normal after the end of a pandemic?

Barclays said the exercise was "a very useful opportunity to look into how we could implement our contingency plans" in such a scenario.

The FSA, in conjunction with the Bank of England and the Treasury, has carried out a series of exercises in the past 18 months to see how the banking system would face up to emergencies such as a terror attack.
 

JPD

Inactive
CASH COULD RUN OUT IN FLU PANDEMIC
AS ATMS GO UNSTOCKED, FSA WARNS.

http://today.reuters.com/news/artic...T-FINANCIAL-TIMES-NOV-25.XML&rpc=66&type=qcna

The Financial Services Authority has warned cash supplies could dry up at the peak of a bird flu pandemic in parts of the country because bank branches are likely to close and leave automated teller machines unstocked. The watchdog made the comments as it revealed the preliminary conclusions of a six-week exercise designed to simulate the impact of a flu pandemic on the financial services sector. The FSA exercise, which involved 70 of the City's biggest institutions plus the Treasury and the Bank of England, assumed that at its peak almost 50 percent of staff would be off work. The events of a five-month pandemic were squeezed into the six-week simulation.
 

JPD

Inactive
South Korea to Slaughter 236,000 Poultry After Bird Flu Outbreak

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,231926,00.html

SEOUL, South Korea — South Korean quarantine officials will slaughter 236,000 poultry after an outbreak of the virulent H5N1 form of bird flu at a chicken farm, the agriculture ministry said Saturday.

The outbreak occurred at a farm in Iksan, about 155 miles south of Seoul, earlier this week, resulting in the deaths of 13,000 chickens — 6,700 a direct result of infection and the rest culled.

Test results confirmed the outbreak was caused by a "highly pathogenic" type of H5N1 virus, the ministry said in a statement.

It said 236,000 poultry within a 1,650-foot radius of the outbreak site would be slaughtered to keep the virus from spreading.

The ministry also said it would limit the movement of about 5 million chickens and ducks from 221 farms within a 1.6 mile radius of the outbreak.

Park Yong-jong, a city official in Iksan, said the culls would begin Sunday morning.

The "highly pathogenic" type of H5N1 can be lethal to poultry but poses little risk to people, said Kwon Jun-wook, an official at the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

"People can be infected with the virus if they come into direct contact with dead chickens," said Kwon, the KCDC's director of the communicable disease control team.

Lee Sang-gil, head of the ministry's livestock bureau, said no one has been infected.

"There is no problem so far," Lee said in an interview with AP Television News.

South Korea killed 5.3 million birds during the last known outbreak of bird flu in 2003.

The H5N1 virus began ravaging Asian poultry stocks in late 2003 and has killed at least 153 people worldwide.

Most human cases have resulted from contact with infected birds. Scientists fear the virus could mutate into a form that is more easily transmitted between people, possibly creating a pandemic that could kill millions.

On Friday, the ministry said a low-grade strain of bird flu killed 200 chickens in a separate outbreak south of Seoul. The ministry said the strain was neither H5N1 nor the less dangerous H5N2.

It also said officials would take preventive measures, including disinfecting the remaining 19,000 chickens.

The exact cause of the outbreak, which occurred at a chicken farm in Pyeongtaek, about 40 miles south of Seoul, was undetermined, but a ministry official said it was unrelated to the one in Iksan
 

JPD

Inactive
Farmers Take Fright Over Bird Flu

http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/nation/200611/kt2006112618121511990.htm

By Kim Tong-hyung
Staff Reporter

Farmers in North Cholla Province are scrambling to put up defenses after the health authorities found bird flu in dead chickens at a farm in Iksan, the country’s first outbreak since 2003.

Although the government urges calm over the discovery of bird flu, identified as the H5N1 strain that could be fatal to humans, there is mounting concern over public health safety and economic losses, since the area is the country’s largest poultry supplier.

Health officials and farm workers yesterday have begun culling about 236,000 chickens and chickens at six Iksan poultry farms in a bid to stave off the spread of the H5N1.

Authorities have banned the sale or transport of chickens from the area, and checkpoints have been setup to inspect trucks.

``We are planning to establish more checkpoints at traffic points and mountain roads connecting the villages with the help of the police and the military. We are also deploying more quarantine workers to the area,’’ said an official from the North Cholla Provincial Government, adding that authorities plan to double the current eight checkpoints surrounding the affected area soon.

``We hope that the bird flu outbreak in Iksan is an isolated case, but we are preparing for the worst case scenario,’’ said the official.

An initial three kilometer quarantine zone was setup around the outbreak site in Iksan late Saturday, surrounded by a 10 kilometer surveillance zone, which covers more than 200 poultry farms in Iksan, Sochon and Kumgang.

Farmers in the affected areas are restricted from moving poultry, eggs and other products.

The farms within the surveillance zone raise more than 50 million chickens and ducks, and the economic costs could be around 150 billion won ($160 million) to 200 billion won should the farmers be forced to kill the birds.

On Saturday, the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry confirmed that the H5N1 bird flu virus was found in some 6,500 dead chickens at a farm in Iksan.

The potentially lethal H5N1 virus, the same type that hit the country in December of 2003, is an epidemic among birds that could mutate and spread to humans in direct contact with them.

The disease has claimed 151 lives around the world, mostly in Asia, since first emerging in Hong Kong in 2003, the Ministry of Health and Welfare said. The death toll accounts for more than half the people who were treated for H5N1 infections.

Symptoms range from fever, sore throat, cough, respiratory illnesses and possible organ failure.

This February, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported that four quarantine workers, involved in culling operations on poultry farms after the bird flu outbreak in 2003, tested positive for the H5N1 virus.

However, none of the four suffered flu-liked symptoms or any other illnesses believed to be linked to bird flu, the state-run agency said.

During the last outbreak in 2003, health officials were forced to kill 5.3 million chickens at 19 poultry farms in South Chungchong Province, resulting in 1.5 billion won ($1.6 million) in economic losses.

Between December 2003 and March of the following year, domestic poultry consumption was down some 60 percent from normal levels.

The government is trying to downplay concerns over health, saying that it is safe to eat poultry meat that is cooked for more than five minutes at 75 degrees Centigrade and above.
 

JPD

Inactive
Transmission of Avian Influenza H5N1:
Animals to Animals & Animals to Animals &
Animals to People Animals to People

http://vetsci.sdstate.edu/Avian Inf...N1-Animals to Animals & Animals to People.pdf

Presentation PDF dated Nov 21, 2006 by Tanya D. Graham, DVM Tanya D. Graham, DVM

Diplomate: American College of Veterinary Pathology Diplomate: American College of Veterinary Pathology

Associate Director: Animal Disease Research & Diagnostic Associate Director: Animal Disease Research & Diagnostic Laboratory Laboratory
 

JPD

Inactive
Transparency plea over bird flu

http://www.thestandard.com.hk/news_detail.asp?pp_cat=11&art_id=32739&sid=11064842&con_type=1

Chester Yung

Monday, November 27, 2006

World Health Organization director-general-elect Margaret Chan Fung Fu-chun has called on all member countries, including China, to exercise a high level of transparency in efforts to fight bird flu, saying she is fully aware of many countries' concerns about public health administration in the mainland.

"China is a big country whose public health administration is of great concern to other states. China is adopting a positive attitude towards cooperation in the area of public health," Chan said in an exclusive interview with Xinhua News Agency - the first since her election to the top WHO post earlier this month.

Chan's election had earlier prompted calls for independence and transparency at the top of the global health agency amid concern about the mainland's secrecy in tackling infectious diseases.

"Cooperation between China and the WHO is good. The exchange of timely information facilitates the work of the organization," Chan was quoted as saying.

Observers said Chan's position may help consolidate China's relationship with the WHO, and could encourage Beijing to share medical samples and exchange information with member countries.

Chan, who won the WHO job November 9, will start her 5-year term January 4.

The former Hong Kong director of health said her "most crucial and the first task" after assuming office is "to listen to the opinions of member states, regional offices, various research and development organizations, non-governmental organizations, the private sector and my colleagues."

Asked about the threat from bird flu and other infectious diseases confronting the world, Chan said the current situation on bird flu has eased off somewhat, and morbidity is lower than in the past two years partly because countries have become more alert about prevention and control of bird flu, and will adopt various timely measures to contain any outbreak.

But she stressed the world should stay vigilant because many public-health experts are still unable to have a full picture of the deadly disease.

International cooperation and strengthening of research work is the key. "This is more effective than any control measures enforced," she said.

Chan urged all member states to report any outbreak to the WHO and the United Nations' World Organization for Animal Health.

In her election manifesto, Chan pledged to establish a global health observatory to collect and collate data on priority health problems.

Notably, she said she would assist Taiwan to participate in the WHO's work. "Being a WHO director-general with the authorization of the World Health Assembly, I'll continue to help Taiwan experts in participating in WHO events." However, the interview did not touch on the more sensitive issue of whether Taiwan should become a WHO member.

The island was ejected from the organization in 1972 - a year after losing the China seat in the UN to Beijing.

Responding to a question on whether there would be any change in WHO policies after Chan takes up the post, a foreign ministry spokeswoman in Beijing said last month: "Our position is clear. The WHO constitutes sovereign states and Taiwan, as part of China, has no right to participate in this organization."

Chan is the third Asian to head the WHO, which was founded in 1948.

Before Chan's predecessor, South Korea's Lee Jong Wook who died in office in May this year, the post of director-general had been held by citizens of Canada, Brazil, Denmark, Japan and Norway.
 

Bill P

Inactive
South Korea to kill cats and dogs over bird flu fears​

http://breakingnews.iol.ie/news/story.asp?j=202453266&p=zxz45397z

27/11/2006 - 09:58:03

South Korea plans to kill cats and dogs to try to prevent the spread of bird flu after an outbreak of the deadly H5N1 virus at a chicken farm last week, officials said today.

Animal health experts, however, suggested it was “a bit of an extreme measure” when there was no definitive scientific evidence to suggest that cats or dogs could pass the virus to humans.

Quarantine officials have already killed 125,000 chickens within a 1,650-foot radius of the outbreak site in Iksan, about 155 miles south of Seoul, the Agriculture Ministry said.

Officials began slaughtering poultry yesterday, a day after they confirmed that the outbreak was caused by the H5N1 strain.

They plan to slaughter a total of 236,000 poultry, as well as an unspecified number of other animals, including pigs, and all dogs and cats in the area by Thursday, the ministry said. About six million eggs also will be destroyed, it said.

Slaughtering cats and dogs near an area infected with bird flu would be highly unusual in Asia.

Indonesia has killed pigs in the past, but most countries concentrate solely on destroying poultry.

However, it would not be the first time for South Korea to kill cats and dogs due bird flu concerns. An official at the Agriculture Ministry said South Korea had slaughtered cats and dogs along with 5.3 million birds during the last known outbreak of bird flu in 2003.

Another ministry official, Kim Chang-sup, insisted killing cats and dogs to curtail the spread of bird flu was not an unusual practice.

“Other countries do it. They just don’t talk about it,” Kim said, adding that all mammals are potentially subject to the virus and that South Korea is just trying to take all possible precautionary measures.

He declined to comment further.

However, animal experts disputed the validity in culling cats and dogs.

“It’s highly unusual, and it’s not a science-based decision,” said Peter Roeder, a Rome-based animal health expert with the UN’s Food and Agricultural Organisation or FAO, who published research about cats and bird flu earlier this year in the journal Nature. “We’ve got absolutely no reason to believe they’re important,” he said.

Dr Jeff Gilbert, an animal health expert at the FAO in Vietnam, described South Korea’s plan as “a bit of an extreme measure”.

He said dogs and cats have been known to occasionally become infected, but they pose little risk to humans and that in most cases, the animal has contracted the virus through eating infected poultry.

Tigers and snow leopards in a Thailand zoo died in 2003 and 2004 after being fed infected chicken carcasses. Earlier this year, a few domestic cats tested positive for the virus in Europe.

The H5N1 virus began ravaging Asian poultry stocks in late 2003 and has killed at least 153 people worldwide.

So far, the disease remains hard for people to catch, and most human cases have been traced to contact with infected birds. But experts fear it will mutate into a form that is easily spread among people, possibly creating a pandemic that could kill millions.

South Korea has also been hit by a low-grade strain of bird flu that is not harmful to humans.

North Korea, meanwhile, has stepped up prevention measures, by inoculating poultry and closely monitoring migratory birds, the country’s official Korean Central News Agency reported Monday.

Bird flu hit North Korea early last year, prompting the slaughter of about 210,000 chickens and other poultry. No new cases of bird flu have since been reported.
 

Bill P

Inactive
Bird flu danger looms greater than before next spring

New human infections emerge especially in Indonesia

http://www.hs.fi/english/article/Bird+flu+danger+looms+greater+than+before+next+spring/1135223268053

Avian influenza or bird flu appears to be more widespread now than it was in the spring. The disease has been diagnosed Egypt and in several other African countries, as well as in Asia and parts of South Russia. There are fears that it could be carried to Finland by migratory birds in the spring.

To prevent the virus from taking hold in the spring of 2007, the precautions that were implemented earlier this year to prevent its spread are to be repeated in the coming months.

Bird flu does not spread among humans yet, but the risk that the virus might mutate into a strain that does so remains a big concern. New branches of the H5N1 virus are spreading in Southeast Asia, and Finland might have to change the vaccine that it has ordered.

(So far in 2006,) as many as 111 people have caught the H5N1 virus, and 75 have died. A total of 258 human infections and 153 deaths have been recorded since 2003.

No end is currently in sight for the trend; eleven new cases and 13 deaths were confirmed in Indonesia in four weeks in the autumn, according to the World Health Organisation.

The New England Journal of Medicine wrote on Thursday that it is likely that the H5N1 virus will again spread this winter, and that human infections will increase.

The bird disease seems to be coming closer to Finland. In Ivory Coast, Nigeria, Sudan, Egypt, and Belarus, sick birds have been found since July. The danger that the virus might be brought to Finland by migratory birds is perhaps even greater next spring than previously.

"The same measures will be in use that we had last spring, because they proved to be effective", says Matti Aho of the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry. Therefore, poultry will be kept indoors during the spring migration, and when they are let out of doors, they are not be allowed to come in contact with wild water fowl.

The fight against the virus is being made more difficult by the rapid changes in the bird flu virus. A month ago it was reported in the scientific journal Pnas that a branch of H5N1 virus which is immune to the current vaccine is spreading rapidly in China. China has not confirmed the report, but Matti Aho sees no reason to doubt it.

"We are hectically following events in Southeast Asia", says Reijo Pyhälä, head of the Influenza Laboratory of the National Public Health Institute. "If the branch that is becoming more common in China gets the upper hand, the composition of the model vaccine for humans will have to be changed."

The World Health Organisation is developing a virus from the new branch which would be appropriate for the production of a human vaccine. Pyhälä feels that it is most likely that a variation that can spread from one person to another, and thus cause a global pandemic, will emerge in Indonesia, where half of the new human infections have been recorded.

Finland is continuing to prepare for a pandemic. Such measures are considered necessary even if bird flu does not spread here, notes Merja Saarinen of the Ministry of Social Affairs and Health.

A proposal for a national readiness plan is getting its final touches, and municipalities and health care districts are drawing up their own plans.

"The work will not go to waste, because it will help in coping with other new and sudden diseases", Saarinen points out. One such disease was SARS, from three years back.

Flu medications, which stay fresh for several years, have been stockpiled for the needs of all Finns. Finland has also ordered a model vaccine which will be ready next year or the year after. Its composition was altered last spring, and it will have to be modified later as well
 

JPD

Inactive
S Korea

Second confirmed bird flu outbreak

http://www.koreaherald.co.kr/SITE/data/html_dir/2006/11/27/200611270060.asp

A second outbreak of bird flu has been detected in Seosan, about 140 kilometers north of Iksan where the fatal H5N1 led to a massive culling of poultry and other animals.

Provincial officials said the sick chickens were hatched from eggs distributed in mid-November from a breeding farm in Iksan, North Jeolla Province. But the authorities have not yet confirmed whether the Seosan chickens were infected with the highly virulent strain.

"Preliminary tests indicate the virus of being a harmless strain," the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry said in a statement.

The prevent the spread of the virus, quarantine officials have so far destroyed about 100,000 chickens and ducks within a 500-meter radius of Iksan, which is about 250 kilometer south of Seoul. Officials confirmed the H5N1 virus in the Iksan poultry on Saturday.

The ministry said the government plans to cull a total of 236,000 birds, in addition to other animals such as pigs, dogs and cats in the area by Thursday. About six million eggs will also be destroyed.

Seosan officials said they are waiting for the preliminary test results of chickens from eight farms in the area. They said measures have been put in place to contain the transfer of livestock. Five of the farms have bought livestock from breeding farms in Iksan, the authorities said.

The latest bird flu case in Seosan is expected to unnerve poultry-related industries. Since news of the first outbreak on Nov. 22 major retailers have been seeing chicken sales decline.

Lotte Mart said sales dropped 15 percent between Friday and Sunday compared to a year ago. Samsung Tesco's Homeplus says sales have dropped 20 percent during the same period.

Demand for poultry at E-Mart, the nation's largest discount store chain, has also been declining compared to a year ago, however, at a slower pace.

"Sales have climbed 55 percent from Thursday to Saturday compared to a year ago, but the growth rate is slowing down," said Park Soo-beom, a spokesman for Shinsegae Co.'s E-Mart. "We expect sales to slow further if there continues to be reports of the bird flu spreading because consumers would feel more uneasy," he added.

Hallim Co., the nation's No. 1 supplier of chicken and poultry products, suffered a 30 percent drop in sales from Thursday to Monday. Hallim commands about 25 percent of the nation's chicken manufacturing market.

"The sales decline is slower compared to the first scare the nation experienced in 2003," said Kim Dae-sik, the spokesman for Hallim. "But we attribute this slower pace to consumers' wider awareness of the avian influenza and how consuming chicken, if well cooked, is not harmful to humans."

Experts assure the public that poultry is safe to consume when it is cooked at temperatures above 75 degrees Celsius for more than five minutes.

Korea reported its first outbreak of H5N1 in December 2003. About 5.3 million chickens and ducks valued at 150 billion won ($161 million) were slaughtered within four months.

The H5N1 virus is known to have infected 258 people in 10 countries over the past three years, killing 153 of them, according to the Geneva-based World Health Organization. Seventy-five deaths have been recorded by the WHO this year. This is more than the United Nations agency counted in the previous two years combined.

So far, Korea has reported no human H5N1 cases, according to the WHO.

By Soh-jung
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird Flu Spread To Three South Korean West Coast Locations

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/11270602/H5_Korea_Spread_3.html

Recombinomics Commentary
November 27, 2006

The agriculture ministry said the death of some 200 chickens at a farm in Pyeongtaek, 70 kilometers (44 miles) south of Seoul, was due to a mild strain of bird flu not lethal to humans.

The ministry said the government would ban the movement of birds from the Pyeongtaek farm, but that sick chickens would not be slaughtered because they usually recover from the mild strain.

On Thursday the ministry announced an apparently more virulent suspected outbreak in the southern city of Iksan, the first suspected bird flu case since the nation declared itself free of the disease last December.

The above comments describe two of the three bird flu outbreaks clustering on the western coast of the South Korean peninsula, 70-210 kilometers south of Seoul. This clustering in time and space increase the likelihood that these outbreaks are linked to wild birds.

The first outbreak has led to a massive cull and quarantine due to the detection of HPAI H5N1. The outbreak described above has been reported as a serotype other than H5N1 or H5N2, but additional details have not been published. Similarly, the limited number of detected infections has suggested that the third outbreak is also low path avian influenza.

In 2003, H3N2, H6N1, and H9N2 were detected in South Korean live markets. while farm outbreaks of H5N1 and H5N2 were also reported in 2003 and 2004 respectively.

The timing and location of the latest series of outbreaks points toward a migratory bird source. More information on the serotypes of the most recent outbreaks, as well as the strain of H5N1 and sequence data would be useful.
 

JPD

Inactive
(LEAD) N. Korea steps up preventive measures against bird flu: KCNA

http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/Engnews/20061127/630000000020061127092432E6.html

SEOUL, Nov. 27 (Yonhap) -- Following an outbreak of bird flu in South Korea, North Koreas is toughening its own preventive measures against the deadly animal epidemic, the North's media reported on Monday.

Bird flu, also known as avian influenza, broke out last week in South Korea's southern city of Iksan, killing thousands of chickens, the first outbreak in the country in four years.

The South Korean government confirmed later the deaths had been caused by a highly virulent strain of the virus which can affect human beings.

The North's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) said quarantine posts along the inter-Korean border are working closely with veterinary pathologists to prevent the disease from crossing into the North.

Hundreds of South Koreans cross the land border by bus daily to visit North Koera for sightseeing or business.

"The borderline quarantine posts, in connection with veterinary pathologists, are meticulously conducting preventive projects to block bird flu from entering our country," the KCNA report said.

The North's disease control officials have also conducted inoculation of poultry with H5N1 vaccines to prevent the disease, the report said.

"The veterinary authorities have higher roles than at any other time, and quarantine projects against avian influenza are being conducted more actively than ever," the report said.

The latest outbreak of bird flu in North Korea was reported in March last year, forcing officials to cull more than 210,000 chickens, an important source of meat in the poverty-stricken state.

North Korea's veterinarian officials have also set up field posts to monitor migratory birds and detect any signs of abnormality, according to the KCNA report, adding that farmers have been ordere to keep domesticated animals locked inside.

South Korea remains on a high alert after the outbreak of the fatal virus, which is believed to have killed some 250 people worldwide since its outbreak in 2003.

The Geneva-based World Health Organization believes the virus may mutate into a highly virulent strain that can easily be transmitted among humans if left unchecked.
 

JPD

Inactive
Additional Chicken Deaths in Seosan Support H5N1 Spread

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/11270604/H5N1_Korea_Seosan.html

Recombinomics Commentary
November 27, 2006

Chicken farm operators at Seosan, just north of the site of a bird flu outbreak in Iksan, 230 kilometers south of Seoul, have formally requested an investigation by the state veterinary service after more than 1,000 chickens died since Nov. 20 without a clear reason.

The above reports on chicken deaths in Seosan raise significant credibility issues surrounding the outbreak there. Recent reports have indicated two birds have tested positive for avian influenza. Moreover, the birds hatched from eggs from the H5N1 confirmed breeding farm in Iksan.

Thus, in addition to the more than 6000 deaths in Iksan, there have been over 1000 chicken deaths in Seosan, 200 chicken deaths in Pyeongtaek, and 510 chicken deaths in Yangpyeong. Although media reports have indicated that these deaths are not due to H5N1, the linkage in time and location to the confirmed farm suggests the deaths may all be linked to H5N1 infections.

There are are also reports of additional infection(s) near the index farm, supporting significant spread beyond the large farm in Iksan.

More information on the serotype and sequences of these bird flu positive chickens would be useful.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird Flu Spread To Five South Korean West Coast Locations

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/11270605/H5_Korea_Spread_5.html

Recombinomics Commentary
November 27, 2006

In Yangpyeong, a chicken farm owner reported that 800 of his 1,700 chickens have died since November 21. The local government of Gyeonggi Province commissioned the National Veterinary Research and Quarantine Service for an inspection of this farm and found out that low pathogen AI was also the cause for this case. Technically, this low pathogenic bird flu is not classified as avian influenza, as it is non-virulent and not harmful to humans

The above characterization of the deaths of almost 50% of a flock in a matter of days as being "low path" avian influenza that wasn't avian influenza, captures the absurdities being printed in media reports coming out of Korea in the past few days.

The above outbreak appears to be the fifth in a matter of days. Thus far, four of the five outbreaks have been characterized as low path, but no serotypes have been given and the number of dead chickens has been 200, 510, 800, and 1000 at the four "low path" locations.

Now wire service reports are reporting another suspected high path outbreak near the index farm, strongly suggesting that most or all of the low path outbreaks will be high path H5N1 and cover a significant portion of the western coast of South Korea.

More specifics on the serotypes and sequences of the bird flu in these multiple locations in South Korea would be useful.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu kills woman, raising death toll to 57

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaillgen.asp?fileid=20061128153807&irec=1

JAKARTA (AP): An Indonesian woman died of bird flu early Tuesday,raising the country's death toll to 57, a hospital official said.

The 35-year-old woman died after being treated for almostthree weeks in a hospital in the capital, Jakarta, said spokesmanSardikin Giriputro. Health officials were still investigating thesource of infection.

Health Ministry tests confirmed on Nov. 13 that the woman fromthe city of Tangerang, on the western outskirts of Jakarta, wasH5N1 positive.

The H5N1 virus has killed at least 153 people worldwide sinceit began ravaging Asian poultry stocks in late 2003, according tothe World Health Organization.

Most people have been infected after coming into contact withsick birds, but experts fear the virus will mutate into a formthat passes more easily between humans, sparking a pandemic thatcould kill millions
 

JPD

Inactive
S. Korea confirms second highly pathogenic case of bird flu

http://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_national/174842.html

South Korean officials said Tuesday they had discovered a second case of the highly pathogenic strain of avian influenza (AI) on a poultry farm in the southern part of the country.

The confirmation came after the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry said Saturday it had confirmed the country's first outbreak of the highly pathogenic H5N1 strain in three years on a poultry farm in Iksan, about 230 kilometers south of Seoul.

The latest case was found on a farm about 3 kilometers from the first outbreak site, the ministry said.

"Officials reported a suspected case of AI late Monday on the farm," said the ministry. "Test results showed the strain was highly pathogenic."


Quarantine officials were working to confirm if the latest outbreak was the H5N1 strain, which can be fatal to humans, it added.

The ministry said it will begin culling livestock within a 500-meter radius of the latest outbreak in an effort to prevent the spread of the potentially deadly disease. The measure of culling livestock may be extended to within a 3-km radius of both the first and second outbreak, a ministry official said.

For the source of the virus in the second case, officials suspected the farmhouse where the first outbreak occurred on Nov.

19, as the two farmhouses were supplied with chaff from the same mill. They said the virus seemed to have spread through chaff vehicles before last Wednesday, when the quarantine measure took effect.

In 2003 and 2004, South Korea destroyed 5.3 million poultry to prevent the spread of the disease. No human case of bird flu has been reported in the country.

A highly pathogenic strain of the H5N1 bird flu virus has been cited by the World Health Organization for killing at least 148 people in 10 countries since late 2003. Of the 43 countries to have reported bird flu outbreaks, 28 have not yet fully contained it.

Seoul, Nov. 28 (Yonhap News)
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird Flu Outbreak Plagues Korea

http://theseoultimes.com/ST/?url=/ST/db/read.php?idx=4435

The bird flu has spread to the Korean Peninsula, infecting and killing about 10,000 fowl (chickens and ducks) in November, 2006. As of Sunday Nov. 26, 2006, South Korean officials culled 236,000 fowl in Iksan, North Jeolla Province, the southwestern region of Korea.

The Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported that authorities culled over 100,000 fowl in Hadang farm in Pyongyang, North Korea's capital city. Yet, neither countries reported cases of human infections.

The South and North Korean governments have taken dramatic steps to stem the spread of the bird flu, called the avian influenza by scientists. Nonetheless, the South Korean Agriculture Ministry announced on Saturday November, 25th that the chicken killed by the Avian Flu were infected by the H5N1 virus.

This illness is highly virulent and pathogenic with a mortality rate of 90-100% for fowl. H5N1 virus spreads mostly through chickens but humans can be infected with the possibility of being contagious.

Alarm bells have been ringing throughout the world. But some high-level South Korean government authorities expressed more concern for the financial welfare of poultry farmers than for the public at large.

On Sunday November 26th South Korean Prime Minister Han Myeong-sook and Agriculture Minister Park Hong-soo gathered in front of the local media to eat chicken soup. Even though if poultry is properly cooked nobody can be infected by it, they are sending the wrong message to their citizens.

What they are saying is that people should take the risk and continue eating chicken. They demanded all government cafeterias encourage people to eat chicken the day afterward. They launched a campaign to convince consumers that they must buy chicken to prevent sales from plummeting.

They've had some success. The large supermarket chains reported a slight drop in poultry purchases. Nevertheless, the same can't be said for their culling program.

They issued quarantine for five farms in the Iksan village with a 500m radius. Those chickens have all been slaughtered, as well as, six million eggs within a 3Km radius and restricted the movement of poultry in a 10Km radius.221 farms with 5 million head of fowl have been affected. This includes 300 pigs and 677 cats and dogs.

Yet a week after the government revealed the outbreak of the avian flu in Iksan it has spread northward to another village named Seoson. A pair of chicken and were infected by eggs from Iksan. They died and spread the virus more.

The process of culling chicken can be quick and effective but this doesn't guarantee a complete cure. 30 quarantine officials, national and local officials and staff from Halim, chicken meat processing firm adding up to 116 people herded chickens in a corner, covered them with a tarpaulin mat and suffocated them with carbon dioxide before burying them with lime in a 3m deep hole.

Seoul government plans to declare the region a special disaster zone and provide farmers millions of dollars in compensation. These actions are more adequate for dealing with the crisis.

The world fears a pandemic where avian influenza spreads from human to human, killing millions. They want to see governments establish preventative measures even if it adversely affects the economy. The world would dread seeing a government promote chicken consumption when the H5N1 virus spreads throughout their nation.

Certainly, people should not panic over the bird flu unless it's a crisis, but all should learn some basic information. A good website to click on is www.cdc.gov/flu/avian/. It is sponsored by the US Department of Health and Human Services Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Not all types of bird flu are deadly but the H5N1 virus is. The symptoms are subtle in the beginning but progresses into an illness requiring hospitalization. The patient gets fever, cough, sore throat and muscle aches so few people report it. But the patient will then get an eye infection, pneumonia and face severe respiratory diseases. By that time many can't be cured.

Infected poultry spread the virus through their saliva and nasal secretions and feces. Farmers who care for them are at high risk so culling is necessary. Since 2003, 153 people were killed worldwide but most originate from the Asia-Pacific region with Vietnam suffering the most.

Fortunately, scientists proved that nobody could be infected by the bird flu if they eat poultry that's properly cooked. The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) and Food and Drug Administration give advice on how to avoid the H5N1 virus.

Wash your hands with soap and water for at least 20 seconds before and after handling raw poultry and eggs.

Clean cutting boards and other utensils with soap and hot water to keep poultry from contaminating other foods.

Use a food thermometer to make sure the cooking is at 75 degrees Celsius or 165 degrees Fahrenheit or more.

The scenes of men in white lab suits going to slaughter chickens are heart-rending for those farmers who dedicated their lives to raising them. They're forced to watch anonymous individuals hidden behind masks take away their means of financial support. It's as if one is watching a nightmare plot from a science-fiction film. But if the poultry were not culled then the results would be the same and worse.

H5N1 virus is highly virulent and would kill all of their chickens then spread throughout the land. So, culling is a difficult decision by the government but the right one.

Nonetheless, the South Korean government shouldn't promote chicken consumption until after the bird flu crisis ends. Not to do so is foolish and dangerous. It's quite possible that a pandemic might start just because the South Korean prime minister ate a bowl of chicken soup.
 

JPD

Inactive
Burundi: Gov't Adopts Plan Against Avian Flu

http://allafrica.com/stories/200611280461.html

UN Integrated Regional Information Networks

November 28, 2006
Posted to the web November 28, 2006

Bujumbura

A senior Burundian health official said on Tuesday the government was implementing measures aimed at preventing the possible introduction of avian flu to the country, since it was a destination for migratory birds from Europe and Asia where cases of the disease have been reported.

"From the months of November to April every year, we receive thousands of birds of various species from central Europe, the Middle East and eastern Asia," Charles Batungwanayo, director-general of the Ministry of Public Health, said. "Some of the areas are or were reported to have been infected by the bird flu virus."

On 21 November, the government adopted a US$6 million national plan for 2006-2007 aimed at keeping the country free of the avian flu virus. Batungwanayo said the money would come from an international fund set up for this purpose.

Burundi has an estimated 853,000 poultry requiring anti-H5N1 virus vaccines worth $7,000.

"We are now setting up a national network of epidemiologic surveillance to counter or control epidemics such as bird flu," Batungwanayo said.

The network, however, existed in name only as it lacked trained personnel and money.

"We [the Burundian government] have already sent two researchers to Cameroon in a bid to be trained in the diagnosis of the avian flu virus," Batungwanayo said.

He added that the national plan was intended to strengthen the country's surveillance and alarm-raising systems, as well as improve national health and veterinary structures.

One of the most modern hospitals in the capital, Bujumbura, will be equipped to treat possible human cases of bird flu, he said. Bujumbura was chosen because it had the best hospitals in the country and a high population density.

Anti-viral medicines will also be made available. These will include 100 treatments for emergency cases and a stockpile of 1,000 treatments.

Batungwanayo added that 100 kits for individual protection and 20 of spraying equipment would be available if there was a viral outbreak in Burundi.

He said electronic and print media would be used in public awareness campaigns.

The Burundian government is regulating the import of birds and poultry products, especially from countries where cases of avian flu have been reported.

He said migrating birds sought places of high humidity in Burundi, such as the shores of Lake Tanganyika, the Rusizi Nature Reserve in the west, the lowlands along River Ruvubu in the north, and the region around the small lakes of the northern province of Kirundo. Consequently, he said, these areas were most vulnerable to the disease.

Batungwanayo said most rural dwellers had adopted what is known as "traditional familial stockbreeding system", which involved accommodating their chickens in one of the rooms within their homes.

"The majority of those people are illiterate. Not only do they shelter their chickens in their houses, they also keep all kinds of domestic animals [cows, goats, sheep] there," Batungwanayo added.

People living in close proximity with H5N1 virus-infected birds or chickens are most at risk of infection. The risk of transmission, Batungwanayo said, is also high when the houses sheltering the infected birds are near dwelling places because the virus spreads through the air.

[ This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations ]

Copyright © 2006 UN Integrated Regional Information Networks. All rights reserved. Distributed by AllAfrica Global Media (allAfrica.com). Click here to contact the copyright holder directly for corrections -- or for permission to republish or make other authorized use of this material.
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JPD

Inactive
Flu viruses survive frozen in lakes, study finds

http://today.reuters.com/news/artic...U-LAKES.xml&WTmodLoc=NewsHome-C3-healthNews-2

By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Influenza virus can live for decades and perhaps even longer in frozen lakes and might be picked up and carried by birds to reinfect animals and people, researchers reported on Tuesday.

Such frozen viruses could potentially become the source of new epidemics that sicken and kill generations after they were last seen, the researchers report in the Journal of Virology.

"We've found viral RNA in the ice in Siberia, and it's along the major flight paths of migrating waterfowl," said Dr. Scott Rogers of Bowling Green State University in Ohio.

"The lakes are along the migratory flight paths of birds flying into Asia, North America, Europe, and Africa," the researchers wrote.

Migrating birds are blamed, in part, for the spread of H5N1 avian influenza, which has killed or forced the culling of more than 200 million birds globally.

Since January, H5N1 has spread out of Asia, across Europe and into Africa. Now more than 50 countries have battled the virus, which has infected 258 people and killed 153 since 2003.

Experts fear it could mutate into a form that easily infects people and causes a pandemic. There were three such pandemics in the last century and one, the 1918-1919 pandemic, killed anywhere from 40 million to 100 million people.

It was caused by a virus called H1N1, a descendant of which still circulates and causes illness today.

But the original form was only recently studied and was recovered from the still-frozen body of a victim from Alaska.

Were that strain of H1N1 to circulate today, it could cause another serious pandemic because no one alive now has immunity to it, Rogers said. The original H1N1 appears to have passed fairly directly from birds to people.

Rogers noted that World Health Organization and other experts try to predict every year which strains of flu virus will be circulating, and they advise companies to formulate the next year's flu vaccine accordingly.

"Sometimes they're wrong," he said. "We thought that by looking at what's melting and what birds are picking up," better guesses for the next year might be possible.

Rogers and colleagues at the Russian Academy of Sciences sampled three lakes in northeast Siberia in 2001 and 2002. They found an H1 strain that circulated from 1933 to 1938 and again in the 1960s in the lake that had attracted the most geese.

"These certain strains come back from time to time," Rogers said.

"The data suggest that influenza A virus deposited as the birds begin their autumn migration can be preserved in lake ice. As birds return in the spring, the ice melts, releasing the viruses," the researchers wrote.

"Above the Arctic Circle, the cycles of entrapment in the ice and release by melting can be variable in length, because some ice persists for several years, decades, or longer."

Rogers said his team now wants to study lakes in Greenland and Canada.
 

JPD

Inactive
Korea

Size of mass poultry cull feared to sharply increase

http://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_national/175093.html

The South Korean government is sure to expand the radius of areas for culling bird flu-infected poultry from the current 500 meters to 3 kilometers, affecting some 770,000 livestock, officials said Wednesday.

On Saturday, a farm in Iksan, 280 km south of Seoul, was confirmed to have been contaminated by the deadly H5N1 virus that can also be fatal to humans. Four days later, a nearby farm was also found to have been exposed to the deadly virus.

According to a government tally, some 140,000 poultry within a 500-meter radius of the breeding farms have so far been destroyed.

But an emergency meeting of experts in livestock epidemics and officials from the agriculture ministry on Wednesday shared the opinion that the radius should be expanded, the officials said.


The country's agriculture minister will make a final decision on the issue Thursday, the officials said.

A 3-km radius incorporates 40 farms breeding 770,000 livestock, the majority of which are chickens, they said.

The government will provide full compensation for the culling.

Between 2003-2004, the government had to spend 45 billion won (US$48.38 million) in culling 5.3 million poultry in the wake of bird flu attacks.

Meanwhile, the local city is suffering a severe personnel shortage for the cull as officials there are reluctant to participate out of fear of possible contamination.

The city is under criticism for only mobilizing scores of street sweepers and daily workers.

Culling within a 3-km radius is estimated to require some 1,500-2,000 workers. "In the worst case scenario, we will forcibly mobilize public servants to complete the culling," a city official said.
 

JPD

Inactive
There is an ongoing thread about this at FluTrackers



Suspect H5N1 Patient in Rimouski Quebec Canada?

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/11290601/H5N1_Rimouski.html

Recombinomics Commentary
November 29 2006

Recombinomics has received several independent reports of a nine year old boy hospitalized in Rimouski, Quebec. The patient has pneumonia and is in isolation. More information on H5N1 testing on this patient would be useful.

Patients with H5N1 symptoms in this area are cause for concern. In June, four goslings died on a farm on Prince Edward Island. The birds had H5N1 symptoms and died suddenly. One duck was PCR tested and was confirmed to be H5 positive. The size of the insert was withheld and the Canadian National Labs in Winnipeg failed to confirm the confirmed PCR test on Prince Edward Island and failed to isolate the virus, so no mandatory OIE report was filed.

The refusal to disclose the size of the insert is cause for concern. The Qinghai strain of H5N1 has four additional amino acids in its HA cleavage site, so the insert would be 12 BP larger than low path H5N1. This difference should be apparent in the insert generated by the PCR test, but was not disclosed.

The symptoms associated with the fatal infections in the geese strongly suggested that the H5 was from high path H5N1, since waterfowl are generally resistant top low path H5,

Low path H5 has been isolated throughout Canada and the United States. However, these isolates have been from healthy or hunter killed waterfowl. The testing of dead or dying wild birds in the United States has been minimal. Although 35,000 live or hunter killed birds have been tested, less than 1000 dead or dying wild birds in the continental United States, Alaska, and Hawaii have been tested.

In Canada, over 50% of the live birds tested on Prince Edward Island are positive for avian influenza, but only 106 live birds have been tested (54 positive). This rate is twice as high as 2005 when 61/212 were positive. Prince Edward Island also has the highest percentage of avian influenza in dead birds (39/176).

These high levels of avian influenza raise questions about the sensitivity of the serotype and isolation tests. Details on testing in the United States show that the detection and isolation in live birds is low, and there have been no reports of H5N1 in the summary table of the US program.

The low numbers of tested birds in regions that are linked to H5 positive dead farm geese are cause for concern, as is the hospitalized pneumonia patient.

More data on the testing of this patient would be useful.
 

JPD

Inactive
Health Canada warns of adverse reactions from Roche's Tamiflu

http://www.hemscott.com/news/latest-news/item.do?newsId=37754910183152

OTTAWA (AFX) - The Canadian health authority Health Canada has warned of adverse effects of Roche Holding AG's antiviral drug Tamiflu and asked the Swiss pharma group to include new warnings on the package insert.

Health Canada points to 'international reports of hallucinations and abnormal behaviour, including self harm, in patients taking the antiviral drug Tamiflu'.

While the connection with the drug in these cases has not yet been proven, high fever or other complications of influenza can affect mental state, which in turn can lead to abnormal behaviour, Health Canada said.

Health Canada said it will continue to monitor the safety of the drug.

Two weeks ago, the EU's Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) said it did not believe that Tamiflu poses a health risk and that there was no evidence to suggest a causal relation between the drug and mental or emotional disorders.

Concern over the drug's safety first surfaced in the US last October amid claims linking Tamiflu to such symptoms, particularly in children.

Only yesterday, Roche rejected recent claims of increased resistance to anti-flu treatment Tamiflu in patients infected with the H5N1 'bird flu' virus.
 

JPD

Inactive
unfounded and discredited. See Below:


There is an ongoing thread about this at FluTrackers



Suspect H5N1 Patient in Rimouski Quebec Canada?

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/11290601/H5N1_Rimouski.html

Recombinomics Commentary
November 29 2006

Recombinomics has received several independent reports of a nine year old boy hospitalized in Rimouski, Quebec. The patient has pneumonia and is in isolation. More information on H5N1 testing on this patient would be useful.

Patients with H5N1 symptoms in this area are cause for concern. In June, four goslings died on a farm on Prince Edward Island. The birds had H5N1 symptoms and died suddenly. One duck was PCR tested and was confirmed to be H5 positive. The size of the insert was withheld and the Canadian National Labs in Winnipeg failed to confirm the confirmed PCR test on Prince Edward Island and failed to isolate the virus, so no mandatory OIE report was filed.

The refusal to disclose the size of the insert is cause for concern. The Qinghai strain of H5N1 has four additional amino acids in its HA cleavage site, so the insert would be 12 BP larger than low path H5N1. This difference should be apparent in the insert generated by the PCR test, but was not disclosed.

The symptoms associated with the fatal infections in the geese strongly suggested that the H5 was from high path H5N1, since waterfowl are generally resistant top low path H5,

Low path H5 has been isolated throughout Canada and the United States. However, these isolates have been from healthy or hunter killed waterfowl. The testing of dead or dying wild birds in the United States has been minimal. Although 35,000 live or hunter killed birds have been tested, less than 1000 dead or dying wild birds in the continental United States, Alaska, and Hawaii have been tested.

In Canada, over 50% of the live birds tested on Prince Edward Island are positive for avian influenza, but only 106 live birds have been tested (54 positive). This rate is twice as high as 2005 when 61/212 were positive. Prince Edward Island also has the highest percentage of avian influenza in dead birds (39/176).

These high levels of avian influenza raise questions about the sensitivity of the serotype and isolation tests. Details on testing in the United States show that the detection and isolation in live birds is low, and there have been no reports of H5N1 in the summary table of the US program.

The low numbers of tested birds in regions that are linked to H5 positive dead farm geese are cause for concern, as is the hospitalized pneumonia patient.

More data on the testing of this patient would be useful.


Internet rumours of a human bird flu case
in Rimouski exasperate hospital

http://www.570news.com/news/national/article.jsp?content=n11299A

November 29, 2006 - 14:03

(CP) - The power of the Internet rumour mill slammed up against a hospital in Rimouski, Que., on Wednesday, leaving infection control specialists and pediatricians bewildered by claims they were treating a child gravely ill with H5N1 avian flu.

Dr. Patrick Dolce, the hospital's head of microbiology, confirms there is no case of H5N1 flu in the hospital.

Dolce says the hospital doesn't even have a pediatric patient suffering from any respiratory illness.

"This is totally untrue. There is no case of respiratory illness in any children right now in the hospital. No cases at all," Dolce said.

He added that when he raised the rumours with a colleague, the infectious disease specialist on duty Wednesday, "she laughed at me."

Several Internet websites on pandemic influenza reported rumours that North America had its first human "bird flu" case in an unlikely spot - Rimouski, a city of about 42,000 people on the St. Lawrence River north of Quebec City.

Hospital administrators, who were initially unaware of the rumours, took some perplexing calls. A concerned man identifying himself as a physician called from Italy to check out the reports.

Dolce says the rumours are entirely untrue.
 

JPD

Inactive
National Committee Launchs Bird Flu Site

http://www.indonesia-relief.org/mod.php?mod=publisher&op=viewarticle&cid=39&artid=1714

Thursday, 30-Nopember-2006, 10:16:57

Jakarta, Indonesia-Relief -- Bayu Krisnamurthi, the chief executive officer of the National Committee for Avian Influenza Control and Pandemic Preparedness (Komnas FBPI), announced the launch of Komnas FBPI’s new website, www.komnasfbpi.org .

The site offers the public the latest information on human avian influenza cases, links to organizations involved in the fight against bird flu, press releases, stories and downloadable material from the Tanggap Flu Burung public awareness campaign, including TV public service announcements and fliers.

''The great thing about the website is people can freely download the public campaign materials so that they could reproduce and distribute them to their respective communities,'' he said. ''We are going to be putting more material on web, so please keep visiting the site.''

On behalf of Komnas FBPI, the government and all partners that are working together to combat bird flu In Indonesia, Mr. Bayu would also like to wish those celebrating the end of the fasting month a Happy Idul Fitri.

Avian Influenza is a highly pathogenic disease. However, there are steps that everyone can take to lower the risk of contracting the H5N1 virus.

There are steps that every Indonesian can take to lower the risk of contracting the H5N1 virus.

1. Do not touch sick or dying birds; if you do, immediately wash your hands and report to local authorities.

2. Wash your hands and utensils with soap and water before you eat or cook. Cook all poultry and eggs well.

3. Separate your birds and separate all new flocks for two weeks.

4. Go immediately to a health clinic if you have a fever with flu-like symptoms and have had contact with birds.
 

JPD

Inactive
South Korea triples chicken cull

http://edition.cnn.com/2006/HEALTH/conditions/11/30/skorea.birdflu.ap/

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- South Korea's Agriculture Ministry said Thursday that authorities would cull another 609,000 chickens to try and stem the spread of bird flu, more than triple the previous amount designated for slaughter.

Originally, some 155,000 birds had been slated for death, but the ministry said it was expanding the slaughter in the wake of a second outbreak of the deadly H5N1 strain of the disease in the area of Iksan, about 250 kilometers (155 miles) south of Seoul.

With the latest decision -- affecting birds within a 3-kilometer (1.9-mile) radius of the outbreak sites, both in Iksan -- a total of 764,000 poultry at 40 farms will be culled, the ministry said in a statement. It was not immediately clear the expansion of slaughter would also affect non-poultry animals in the area.

Quarantine officials have already killed more than 150,000 chickens, along with 426 pigs and four dogs, since the initial outbreak was confirmed last week, according to city officials. More than 6.7 million eggs have also been destroyed, they added.

South Korea culled about 5.3 million birds during the last known outbreak of bird flu in 2003.

Animal health experts have questioned the necessity of killing non-poultry species to stem bird flu's spread, but South Korea insists the step was taken to prevent the deadly virus from potentially being transmitted to humans.

Tigers and snow leopards in a Thailand zoo died in 2003 and 2004 after being fed infected chicken carcasses. Earlier this year, a few domestic cats tested positive for the virus in Europe.

Since ravaging Asia's poultry in late 2003, the H5N1 virus has killed at least 154 people worldwide, according to the World Health Organization. Infections among people have been traced to contact with infected birds, but experts fear the virus could mutate into a form that could create a human pandemic.

South Korea has also reported a few outbreaks of a low-grade strain of bird flu that is not harmful to humans
 

JPD

Inactive
Virulent AI Strain Discovered in Iksan Again

http://english.donga.com/srv/service.php3?biid=2006112996928

Another case of highly pathogenic avian influenza (AI) has been discovered eight days after the first case in Iksan, North Jeolla Province, at a farm close to the initial outbreak.

The government expected that the AI would not spread further due to meticulous quarantine measures, but experts worry that this incident may foretell further outbreaks.

After reports were received by the Ministry of Agriculture on November 27 that mass deaths may have resulted from AI at a poultry farm in Hwangdeung-myeon, Iksan, the National Veterinary Research & Quarantine Service launched investigations and reported on November 28 that the chickens were contaminated with the highly pathogenic AI strain.

The farm is approximately 3km away from the farm where the initial outbreak of November 19 occurred, and contains 12,000 chickens. Six chickens were found dead on November 26, with an additional 200 on November 27 and 400 on November 28.

Kim Chang-sup, head of the livestock quarantine section of the Ministry of Agriculture, said, “It is highly likely that this AI virus is similar to the previous incident, ‘H5N1’”, and added, “We are investigating how the two farms with virulent AI incidents are related.”

The government will dispose of all poultry including chickens and ducks within a 3km radius of the two farms to prevent the spread of the AI virus.

Within a 3km radius of the first farm are 170,000 chickens and ducks, and an additional 700,000 chickens are near the second farm.

The Iksan Office of Education ordered the 57 students of the five schools located within 1.5km of the farm where the highly pathogenic AI strain was first discovered, including Hamyeol Middle School and Hamyeol High School, to return home to be quarantined.
 

JPD

Inactive
A Closer Look at Bird Flu's Victims

http://online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/retro06-avfludeaths-date_desc.html

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL ONLINE
Nov. 29, 2006

Researchers will never know precisely how all the more than 150 people who have died of H5N1 avian influenza acquired the disease. But the details of their investigations offer glimpses into the lives of the victims -- who have been largely young, in close contact with poultry, and mostly from Southeast Asia. While the fatality count has slowly ticked higher, the victims' stories -- or what little we know of them -- have sometimes been overshadowed by broader concerns about food safety, bird migratory patterns and feared mutations that could make the virus easily transmissible between people, potentially sparking a global pandemic.

Here is a look at the victims, based on updates on avian flu from the WHO. Click on the highlighted column headers to re-sort by country or age.

This list is a regularly updated work in progress.

The List
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu vaccine leaves 10 Canadians dead

http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/story.html?id=51dcd7d9-6cb5-4a0c-a9b6-7199673ae0dc&k=76592


Carly Weeks, CanWest News Service
Published: Thursday, November 30, 2006

OTTAWA -- Ten Canadians have died and at least 74 had adverse reactions after taking Tamiflu, but Health Canada didn't issue a public update about the flu drug until Wednesday.

The update came more than two weeks after international warnings were posted of adverse reactions to the medication among children and youth.

Wednesday's Health Canada information update said people in other countries -- particularly children and teens in Japan -- exhibited strange behaviour, including hallucinations and self-injury, after taking the drug.

Among those exhibiting this behaviour, there have been 25 reported deaths around the world in the most recent one-year period.

Health Canada said it has "not received any such reports" of abnormal behaviour among young people in Canada.

But it has asked Hoffmann-La Roche to include updated information about possible adverse reactions on its Canadian labels.

The information about young people on Tamiflu behaving strangely was widely publicized in Canadian media more than two weeks ago after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and drug-maker Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd. issued a warning about the drug on Nov. 13.

Auditor-General Sheila Fraser's report released Tuesday included criticism that Health Canada doesn't issue timely and accurate health warnings to the public on a variety of issues.

The criticisms were voiced by Health Canada managers who said mismanagement and insufficient funds in a variety of areas, including drug programs, could jeopardize public health and safety.

Health Canada's bulletin said that since February 2000, 84 Canadians have had adverse reactions after taking the drug, including 10 who died and seven adults who reported "psychiatric adverse events."

Numerous victims were under age 60, according to the department's adverse drug reaction database, but only two were under 20.

There have been 13 reported adverse reactions this year, including the deaths of three women aged 95, 88 and 81.

The link between the drug and the adverse reactions and deaths has not been confirmed, according to Health Canada.

Tamiflu, an antiviral drug launched in 1999, is prescribed to treat flu and is promoted as a way to help people combat the H5N1 avian flu virus, which has killed just over 150 people worldwide, according to the World Health Organization. Numerous countries, including Canada, have stockpiles of the drug in the event of an avian flu pandemic.

In one instance, a 28-year-old Canadian woman died in December 2003 after taking Tamiflu for eight days. Her reaction included respiratory failure, jaundice, nausea, vomiting, inflammation of the pericardium, which causes chest pain and an abnormally rapid heart beat.

Although Canadians should be aware of the possibility Tamiflu may be linked to adverse reactions, there is no reason for people to be worried, said Health Canada spokesman Alastair Sinclair.

"No, Canadians shouldn't be unduly concerned," he said.

Roche Canada says Tamiflu, which has been used by 42 million people worldwide, has a good "safety profile" and emphasized that no causal relationship between any abnormal behaviour or adverse reactions has been linked to the drug.

"It's always important for any patient to talk to their doctor about the medicine they're taking, but you know other than that, I would say there's no reason to be concerned," said Leigh Funston, communications manager at Roche Canada.

It's important for doctors and other health officials to monitor potential issues with Tamiflu, but until a problem is identified and confirmed, there is no need to make any changes to Canada's policy toward the drug, said Dr. Joanne Langley, spokeswoman for the Canadian Paediatric Society.

"We should pay attention to these signs, but we have to follow it systematically and not make rapid changes in what we're doing before we get the full story and that remains to be seen," Langley said.

The Tamiflu drug is widely available and is sold on scores of websites to those willing to pay the price. One online pharmacy offers 100 capsules for about $476, while another sells 10 capsules for about $73.

Canadians began amassing personal stockpiles of Tamiflu a few years ago when fears of an avian flu pandemic began to grow. Many worried the federal government wouldn't have any, or enough, antiviral drugs and that they and their families would die as a result.

The price of Tamiflu spiked as a result and there were concerns the company wouldn't be able to provide enough of the drug to meet demands.

Others took advantage of the mass fear by selling counterfeit Tamiflu drugs, particularly on the Internet.

Meanwhile, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has been reviewing 103 cases in which patients taking Tamiflu exhibited strange behaviour, including hallucinations, self-injury and other psychiatric problems.

A majority of the cases involved people under age 17 in Japan and involved three people who fell to their death after taking the drug.

One 14-year-old boy fell to his death after climbing on the railing of his family's condominium.
 

JPD

Inactive
Be on the lookout for dead birds

http://www.insidetoronto.ca/to/etobicoke/briefs/story/3796250p-4391014c.html?loc=etobicoke

Nov. 30, 2006

Torontonians are being asked to keep an eye out for dead birds.

The province is taking part in a national project involving dead birds. This project will help Ontario address the risk of avian influenza.

Torontonians who notice dead birds, particularly waterfowl such as ducks and geese or significant numbers of dead birds in one location, are asked to contact the Canadian Cooperative Wildlife Health Centre at 1-866-673-4781.

People are asked not to touch dead birds with their bare hands.

Canada is monitoring the many strains of avian influenza that naturally occur in wild bird populations. One way this is tracked is through the collection and testing of dead birds. This method is only successful if there is a significant level of public participation and awareness.

To date, no influenza viruses of concern have been detected in Ontario in wild or domestic birds. However, it is important to continue testing wild birds to help better understand avian influenza viruses, officials say.

Information gained through the national wild bird survey is helping Canadian animal health experts better understand the influenza viruses present in resident and migratory bird populations. In certain situations, testing of wild birds can provide an early warning system for viruses of concern to domestic poultry health.

Visit www.ontario.ca/birdflu for details.
 

JPD

Inactive
Toronto Requests Dead Wild Birds For H5N1 Tests

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/11300601/H5N1_Toronto_Dead.html

Recombinomics Commentary
November 30, 2006

Torontonians are being asked to keep an eye out for dead birds.

The province is taking part in a national project involving dead birds. This project will help Ontario address the risk of avian influenza.

Canada is monitoring the many strains of avian influenza that naturally occur in wild bird populations. One way this is tracked is through the collection and testing of dead birds. This method is only successful if there is a significant level of public participation and awareness.

The above request, made today, is better late than never. To date, most surveillance for H5N1 in wild birds in Canada has focused on live birds. However, H5N1 is almost always initially detected in dead birds, wild or poultry. Detection of H5N1 in live birds is generally limited to locations where H5N1 had been previously found in dead birds.

In the United States, over 35,000 live or hunter killer birds have been tested. H5N1 has been detected, and on rare occasions has been isolated. However, there are no listings of H5N1 found in dead or dying birds. Reported low path H5N1 has been reported in the absence of high path. However, the failure to find any H5N1 in dead birds signals an experimental design flaw.

Unfortunately, this fatally flawed approach is not unexpected. In Africa, 15,000 live wild birds were tested by conservation groups and no H5N1 positives were reported. However, H5N1 is widespread in Africa. It has been detected in dead poultry in Egypt, Sudan, Nigeria, Niger, Ivory Coast, Burkino Faso. In all cases the Qinghai strain was detected, and the sequence data showed that the isolates were from independent introductions, indicating they were from wild birds.

Thus, channeling surveillance resources into live bird testing is a formula for failure, which is clear from the data presented in the United States and Canada.

Canada however did find H5 in a dead farm goose. Four geese died suddenly after displaying H5N1 symptoms. Only one was tested and H5 was confirmed with a PCR test, but the size of the insert was withheld.. After a week on Prince Edward Island, the sample was shipped to Winnipeg for confirmation of the confirmation, but by then the sample had degraded and the confirmed results in PEI was not re-confirmed in Winnipeg. As a result, Canada did file file the mandatory OIE report. H5 in farm birds generally leads to import bans, which were avoided by simply failing to confirm the data.

That confirmation failure was followed by an unusually high level of detection of influenza in live and dead birds on PEI this year. However, the number of dead birds tested has been low.

Similarly, H5N1 has been detected at several locations in the Great Lakes region. Although there have been massive die-offs of wild birds in the same areas, there are now dead birds that were positive form low or high path H5N1, which is clearly due to a lack of testing.

The increased effort announced above may yield a sufficient number of birds to more accurately represent the level of low and high path H5N1 in the area.

Similar requests should be made throughout North America.
 

JPD

Inactive
Three more Egyptians suspected of having bird flu

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20061130/wl_mideast_afp/healthfluegypt_061130200606

CAIRO (AFP) - A woman and her two children are suspected of contracting the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu in Upper Egypt, a veterinary official reportedly said.
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The 25-year-old mother, her 12-year-old son and daughter, 10, from a village in Sohag governorate, were hospitalized after showing the first symptoms of the sickness, the province's veterinary services chief Mohammed al-Masri told the official MENA news agency.

They are currently undergoing tests to determine whether they are suffering from H5N1 which has killed seven people in Egypt this year, he added.

"Preventive measures have been taken and samples were taken from poultry raised at their home before the animals were killed. The house and chicken coops were disinfected," Masri added.

Egypt -- the Arab world's most populous state -- is on a major route for migratory birds and has seen the third highest number of H5N1 cases after Indonesia and China according to Dr David Nabarro, the UN official charged with battling bird flu.

The H5N1 strain of bird flu was first diagnosed in birds in Egypt in February, and the first case in humans was announced on March 18.

In its most aggressive form, the H5N1 strain has killed more than 150 people worldwide, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).
 
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