12/16-12/22/06 | Weekly Bird Flu Thread: U.S. Unprepared for National Emergency

JPD

Inactive
U.S. Unprepared for National Emergency, Report Claims

http://www.ecanadanow.com/science/h...repared-for-national-emergency-report-claims/


Detroit (eCanadaNow) - The United States public health system, considered the first line of defense against pandemic flu, bioterror attack or other widespread health emergency, is woefully unprepared to protect the American public, according to a report on Tuesday.

The annual study by Trust for America’s Health revealed that emergency health preparedness remains inadequate five years after the 9/11 and anthrax attacks of 2001, which brought fears of bioterrorism to the forefront of American minds. The study also comes one year after Hurricane Katrina illustrated the need for the U.S. government to provide health care promptly when thousands of people are in need.

“The nation is nowhere near as prepared as we should be for bioterrorism, bird flu and other health disasters,” said Trust director Jeff Levi. “We continue to make progress each year, but it is limited. As a whole, Americans face unnecessary and unacceptable levels of risk.”

The report ranked the 50 states and Washington, D.C., on a 10-point scale that assessed key indicators, such as whether individual states are capable of distributing drugs and antidotes from a national stockpile; whether enough hospital beds and nurses exist to handle a patient surge; and whether states have an adequate number of labs and scientists to test for biological threats and other outbreaks.

Oklahoma was the only state to receive full marks for satisfying all 10 measures.

California, Iowa, Maryland and New Jersey shared the lowest scores, only four points out of 10.

The document also revealed the following:

• The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)has reported that only 15 states have been certified as capable of distributing drugs and antidotes from the nation’s supply.

• Half the states would run out of available hospital beds within two weeks of a moderate flu pandemic.

• Forty states face a serious shortage of nurses.

• Rates for vaccinating the elderly against the flu decreased in 13 states over last year.

• Four states don’t run year-round flu testing, something health officials regard as a key monitoring strategy for a pandemic.

• Eleven states and Washington, D.C., are inadequately equipped to test for biological threats.

And although Congress dedicated $5 billion this year for officials to prepare for a possible pandemic, progress has been far too slow, the report said.

“The public believes that more is being done and that we are better prepared than we are,” said trust board member Margaret Hamburg, a former New York City health officer and one-time top official at the federal Department of Health and Human Services. Allowing public health system weaknesses “to persist can lead to serious consequences,” she said. “Our systems need to be strengthened.”

CDC spokesman Von Roebuck agreed, saying that after decades of neglect, the public health system has improved tremendously since 9/11. However, “more needs to be done,” he added.
 
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<B><font size=+1 color=red><center>Texas prepares for possible pandemic flu outbreak</font>

December 15 2006
http://www.kltv.com/Global/story.asp?S=5821815 </center>
DALLAS Health officials continue to tweak the state's plan to respond to the threat of a pandemic flu outbreak.

A statewide drill is planned for next year.</b>

The Texas plan has been in place since 2004 and updated several times since.

Local health departments, hospitals, businesses and schools also have prepared their own plans in coordination with the state.

A pandemic flu outbreak occurs when a new, highly contagious form of the flu virus emerges.

There is heightened concern that the Asian bird flu could cause a pandemic if it starts easily spreading among humans.

The state's plan estimates that an international outbreak of a new variation of the flu could have a 25 to 50 percent attack rate -- meaning five to ten (M) million Texans could get sick.

Of those, from 200-thousand to 400-thousand Texans might have to be hospitalized and 75-thouand to 500-thousand could die.

The Texas Hospital Association says the state's 554 hospitals have about 77-thousand beds.

During a pandemic, health officials say staffing the hospitals would be the biggest challenge -- not a bed shortage.

___
 
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<B><font size=+1 color=brown><center>You, too, can help prevent flu pandemic</font>

By Karla Browne, Sentinel Reporter,
December 15, 2006
http://www.cumberlink.com/articles/2006/12/15/news/news191.txt </center>
The U.S. government plans to spend $434 million worldwide to prevent an avian flu pandemic.

Now local organizations are asking you to do your part.</b>

Covering your nose when you sneeze and washing your hands frequently and correctly are just the beginning.

Cumberland County residents should stockpile two to four weeks’ worth of nonperishable food, water, prescription drugs, medical supplies and sanitizers.

Don’t panic, though, says the county’s chief of public safety, Eric Hoerner.


“The avian flu piece, the pandemic piece, is just a part and parcel to all emergency planning,” Hoerner says.

“If we had a winter storm coming through that closes the roadways or causes a long-term power outage, you would need the same supplies as for avian flu planning.”

Getting people’s attention

Hoerner is gratified that the possibility of a major worldwide flu outbreak is turning people on to the need for personal emergency planning.



“If this is what it takes to get people’s attention” then it’s a good thing, he says.

People “need to learn to fend for themselves in the event public safety entities may not be able to help them for whatever reason,” Hoerner says.

Hoerner’s Department of Public Safety Emergency Management is part of a Pandemic Action Community Task Force (PACT) that began meeting in November.

Representatives of Cumberland County American Red Cross, Carlisle Health & Wellness Foundation, United Way of Carlisle and Cumberland County, Carlisle Area School District, Carlisle Barracks, Carlisle Regional Medical Center and some concerned citizens are on the task force, says Stacy McIntosh of the Red Cross.

One of the first orders of business for the task force was to prepare a brochure for distribution beginning in mid-January.

The 12-page guide, “Pandemic Flu,” covers symptoms, the nature of the disease, what a pandemic would be like, preparedness, prevention, treatment and caregiving tips.

“We’re going to get 20,000 of those made up and were going to place them in places like the post office, places where people would be picking it up and taking it home,” McIntosh says.

The pamphlet is intended for circulation by any means feasible, Hoerner says, and may be photocopied.
 

JPD

Inactive
Qinghai H5N1 Confirmed On South Korean Farms

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/12150601/H5N1_Korea_Qinghai.html

Recombinomics Commentary
December 15, 2006

South Korea confirmed a highly pathogenic bird flu outbreak on Nov. 25 at a poultry farm in Iksan, about 230 kilometers south of Seoul, the country's first case in three years. Two additional cases of highly virulent avian influenza were discovered Nov. 27 and earlier this week, respectively, in nearby poultry farms.

Genetic analysis of the N5H1 virus sample specimens from the first two cases showed traits similar to ones found in China's midwestern province of Qinghai.

The above comments confirm that the recent H5N1 infections in South Korea are from the Qinghai strain of H5N1 and are due to migratory birds. This result was expected based on genetic analysis of H5N1 from South Korea / Japan in 2003 / 2004. The earlier isolates were closely related to each other and pieces of genetic information were found in the Qinghai strain, first reported in May 2005 at Qinghai lake. The Qinghai strain was a recombinant composed of genetic information from high and low path H5 from eastern Asia, as well as additional genetic information found in bird and swine isolates in Europe. The presence of then genetic information from Korea helped define a northern H5N1 migration route.

The Qinghai strain spread to Russia, Mongolia, and Kazakhstan in the summer of 2005, and then to Europe, the Middle East, and Africa in late 2005 / early 2006. In this time frame, Russia, Mongolia, Kazakhstan, India, Afghanistan, and multiple countries in the Middle East, Europe, and Africa reported H5N1 infections for the first time, and all infections were the Qinghai strain.

In the same time frame, H5N1 was detected ion live markets throughout southern China. The recent PNAS paper had 404 HA isolates, and most were the Fujian strain. There was only one Qinghai isolate (in Shantou). The paper concluded that the Fujian strain was a new wave of H5N1 infections that would displace the Qinghai strain. However, the report failed to consider the migratory bird distribution route, which followed well defined pathways which did not include live markets in eastern China, the source of most of the H5N1 in the study.. There were no Fujian isolates in the over than 700 H5N1 positives in Europe in 2006. The samples were exclusively the Qinghai strain. A recent H5N1 isolate form a patient in Egypt had a number of additional changes when compare to Egyptian isolates from early 2006, but all isolates were clearly the Qinghai strain. Similarly, spring and summer isolates of H5N1 in Afghanistan and southern Siberia were also the Qinghai strain, indicating the Fujian strain was limited to eastern and southeastern Asia, and was not a new wave that would displace the Qinghai strain.

The transmission routes are now reinforced by the discover of the Qinghai strain in South Korea. H5N1 has been found in whooper swans in Mongolia, and tracking data shows movement of whooper swans from Mongolia to the precise location on the western South Korean coast, where the recent H5N1 infections were reported. These swans have since migrated to the eastern coast of Korea, and infections in Japan in the upcoming weeks would not be a surprise. This time line and location match the 2003 outbreak in December 2003 in South Korea and predict early 2007 outbreaks in Japan.

The movement of H5N1 by wild birds is firmly established. The wild birds facilitate the transport and transmission of H5N1, which leads to genetic evolution via recombination. This process is not new, but the increasing genetic diversity of H5N1 has led to an acceleration in the rate of H5N1 change. This rapid change has led to 4 distinct vaccine targets because of limit cross reactivity between Clade 1 in southeast Asia, Clade 2 Sub-clade I in Indonesia, Clade 2 Sub-clade II (Qinghai strain in multiple countries west of China, and now spreading into South Korea), Clade 2 Sub-clade III (Fujian strain in China and spreading into southeast Asia).
 

JPD

Inactive
States' flu plans vary widely

http://www.seacoastonline.com/news/12142006/worldnation-ph-wn-pandemic.html

By Lauran Neergaard
Associated Press

Trailers packed with cots and medical supplies are parked in secret locations around Colorado, ready for doctors to open makeshift hospitals in school gyms if a flu pandemic strikes.

Parts of southeastern Washington are considering drive-through flu shots during a pandemic -- although a practice run this fall showed they'd better hire traffic cops. If Alabama closes schools amid a super-flu, students may take classes via public television. In Dallas, city librarians may replace sick 911 operators.

States and communities are getting creative as they struggle to answer the Bush administration's call to prepare for the next influenza pandemic, whether the culprit is the much-feared Asian bird flu or some other super-strain.

The Associated Press took a closer look at those preparations and found wide differences in how far along states are -- and little consensus on the best policies, even among neighboring states, on such basic issues as who decides whether to close schools.

Almost half the states haven't spent any of their own money yet to gird against a super-flu, relying instead on grants from the federal government.

Ethical queries abound about how to ration scarce drugs and vaccine. As Oklahoma epidemiologist Dr. Brett Cauthen puts it, that's "the toughest question out there." Some states are debating whether to purchase the recommended anti-flu medications to store for their citizens, or to gamble that they'll receive enough from a federal stockpile.

And while some states proudly list other pandemic supplies they've stockpiled in guarded warehouses -- 4.5 million protective face masks, touts New York -- others, like West Virginia, still are putting final drafts of their plans to paper.

"How are states doing, and how do we know how states are doing?" asked Dr. Pascale Wortley of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "There's a lot of important things that are very hard to measure. It's a real challenge."

Indeed, when the government's first official assessment of state readiness begins in a few weeks, officials expect few states will have tackled some of the toughest issues: How will you keep grocery stores stocked? Will you reserve enough anti-flu drugs for utility workers so the water and electricity stay on? If you close schools, will local businesses let parents stay home with their children, or fire them?

When the feds fly in your state's share of vaccine and medicine, can you store it properly and get it to patients without being mobbed?

"Nothing, we think, is better than having 5,000 communities right now wrestle with this," said Dr. William Raub, emergency planning chief at the Department of Health and Human Services. "What will seem to work happily in one community is probably not going to work in some others."

Super-strains of the easy-to-mutate influenza virus cause worldwide outbreaks every few decades or so, three in the last century. Worst was the 1918 pandemic that killed about 50 million people worldwide, 500,000 in the U.S. alone. If a 1918-style pandemic struck today, up to a third of the population could fall ill and 1.9 million Americans could die.

With another pandemic overdue, the CDC began telling states to prepare years ago, plans that have taken on greater urgency with the simmering H5N1 bird flu. In 2004, just 29 states had pandemic plans of some sort. Today, all have at least a draft on paper.

Next spring, federal health officials will have their first report card on the quality of those preparations, based on a questionnaire that Raub hopes to ship to the states by month's end -- questions that will go beyond health care to ask how communities would keep the economy and society in general running.

Raub said he's not playing "gotcha," but that the responses are key to helping less prepared states catch up, and identifying best practices that neighbors can copy.

"I feel pretty confident we will have covered far and away all the important things," he said.

It's an assessment that public health advocates, worried at varying state investments, call long due.

"Where you live shouldn't determine your level of preparedness," said Jeff Levi, executive director of the Trust for America's Health. "This is not a question of letting 51 flowers bloom. The federal government, as the primary payer and the entity that can see the biggest picture, needs to define a minimum standard of protection that every American can expect."

For now, hospital overflow, purchases of the anti-flu drug Tamiflu, plans for school closures, and how states are practicing for an outbreak are emerging as initial indicators of readiness.

A new study by Levi's group suggests half the states would run out of hospital beds within two weeks of a moderately severe pandemic outbreak, not even as bad as a 1918 outbreak.

In interviews conducted by the AP in every state, health chiefs repeatedly said they know their hospitals will be overrun -- but that having enough beds isn't the most critical issue.

"We don't have the health care workers to take care of all the patients," explained Alabama State Health Officer Don Williamson.

Indeed, nursing shortages and other issues mean that today, hospitals around the country may have staff available for just 60 percent or so of their beds. In a pandemic, some of those workers are going to be sick or caring for ill relatives, not at work.

That's where some states are getting creative.

Those trailers parked in strategic spots around Colorado hold a total of 6,500 beds that could be set up in school gyms or event halls, anywhere with power, water and bathrooms.

"Where we're best prepared is a place to put people," said Dr. Ned Calonge, chief medical officer of the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment.

Now, the state is recruiting volunteers to take care of the people who will lie in those beds, creating a master list of health workers not usually involved in flu care, from pharmacists to physical therapists, who could be credentialed now and put on standby.

El Paso County, in addition, wants to set up a phone bank of retired doctors to advise people on when to go to crowded doctors' offices and when to just sneeze at home.

Louisiana has discussed expanding visiting hours so relatives can help with some patient care, or even giving recovering patients some light duty.

"There's no easy answer. You have to be thinking creatively with what you have, rather than thinking you'll be able to find accessory staff," said Dr. Frank Welch, the state's immunization director.

California budgeted $18 million this year to buy three 200-bed mobile hospitals, and $78 million more to buy equipment -- including 20,000 beds -- for what officials call "alternate care sites."

The idea: The very sickest get hospitalized; the moderately ill stay home; those in between get care on cots at schools or fairgrounds.

Adds Dr. Bob England, health director for Maricopa County, Ariz., "We have to set up some kind of system for checking on folks (at home) and weeding out the people who really need to come in."

Inside hospitals, shortfalls will go beyond beds. For example, Georgia predicts 20,000 of its citizens would need ventilators over the months of a severe pandemic. In the entire state, there are 1,500. Officials just bought 2,000 portable versions to truck to different hospitals as needed, but worry they won't be durable enough.

Because it will take months to custom-brew a vaccine once a pandemic begins, flu-treating medicines, mostly Tamiflu, form the backbone of the nation's preparations. World flu authorities recommend stockpiling enough for a quarter of the population, or 75 million Americans.

The Bush administration is in the process of buying enough to treat 44 million people, and will hold each state's share in a national stockpile.

States are supposed to buy enough to treat the remaining 31 million people, doses they would store. The federal government negotiated a cheap price and offered to chip in 25 percent of the cost, but told states "we need you to come the rest of the way," Raub said.

Most states say they do plan to buy at least some of those outstanding doses, although at least nine still are awaiting money for the purchases from their state legislatures.

And at least four states don't know if they'll spend their own scarce dollars for the extra purchases, saying the drugs might not work against a super-flu -- or expire before they're needed.

"There's a chance that it might be useful, but there's also a chance that it might not be useful at all," frets Arizona assist health director Will Humble. The state used a $1 million federal grant to purchase enough medicine for 66,000 people; he isn't sure if it will buy more.

Nevada spent a $2 million federal grant on anti-flu drugs, but none of its health districts was interested in buying more.

"There are always competing uses for the money," said state health officer Dr. Bradford Lee. "We're trying to balance what may be needed for a disease that doesn't exist with needs that are immediate."

Whether they buy their own stocks or not, many states don't yet know how they'll successfully dispense their share of the nationally stockpiled Tamiflu and other supplies once federal workers deliver it. A new requirement heading for the states: Figure out exactly how they'll handle the supplies so they get to doctors or pharmacies for proper dispersal.

"Some of these pallets weigh more than 350 pounds," noted Raub. "We think it (the plan) ought to be something more than 'Stick it in the back of the state police car and drive it somewhere.'"

The way to know if all these preparations have a shot at working is to practice them, Raub said -- and there have been few statewide drills yet. But some communities are trying innovative dry runs.

In Hawaii, volunteers pretended to be sick during a mock drive-thru clinic on the island of Maui, letting health workers practice how fast they could decide who to pull out their cars and hospitalize -- and who to send back home.

In Minnesota and Idaho, health workers handed out M&Ms to rehearse how they'd dispense anti-flu drugs.

Communities in at least 15 states have practiced mass vaccination, most by testing how fast they could give people the regular winter flu shot. Billings, Mont., vaccinated more than 6,300 people in a day.

In Washington, Benton and Franklin counties held drive-thru flu shots. They underestimated the demand, and the traffic.

Here's the rub: CDC's Wortley doesn't think super-fast vaccination is the best to practice. The first scarce doses of vaccine to arrive in each state will be reserved for high-risk groups, such as health care workers and those most at risk of death. The federal government currently is debating if other people needed to keep key industries going, such as grocery truck drivers and power-company workers, should be added to that list. But it won't be first-come, first-served.

"You're potentially talking about a vaccination campaign that draws out over more than a year," Wortley warned. "Really the issue isn't how many people can you vaccinate in a day. The issue is how do you pull off this type of campaign where people are going to be wanting vaccine and there's not enough?"

As for drive-thru flu shots, she jokes that it's "the American way," but doubts it will work because of traffic jams.

With scarce vaccine and still unclear drug stocks, strategies to slow the next pandemic "will be primarily classical public health measures that go back to the Victorian era or before," Raub warns -- such measures as staying home when sick and avoiding crowded places.

That's where school closings come in. Children are prime spreaders of the flu, but it's unclear whether closing schools will really help -- and if so, when they should shut. Still, most states told the AP they'd probably leave that decision to local school officials.

"If we just close the schools and everyone goes to the mall, we haven't gained anything," pointed out Jay Butler, Alaska's deputy health director.

Wyoming hopes schools can stay open, so parents don't have to leave their jobs to care for young children.

"Think how that will impact all the doctor's offices, hospitals, grocery stores," said state epidemiologist Tracy Douglas Murphy.

What if states do all this planning and the next pandemic never arrives? Much of the work is applicable to other disasters, too, from earthquakes to bioterrorism.

"People forget that you're supposed to be doing all-hazards preparedness," said Washington Secretary of Health Mary C. Selecky.

"We're trying to be prepared for a range of events," agreed Alabama emergency planner Kent Speigner, his voice echoing in a cavernous warehouse where the state stores flu supplies right next to smallpox supplies. "We really don't know what's coming next."
 

JPD

Inactive
Survivors remember 1918 flu pandemic that killed millions

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/nation/20061216-0918-pandemic-remembering1918.html

By Brett Zongker
ASSOCIATED PRESS

9:18 a.m. December 16, 2006

CHEVY CHASE, Md. – At the height of the flu pandemic in 1918, William H. Sardo Jr. remembers the pine caskets stacked in the living room of his family's house, a funeral home in Washington, D.C.

The city had slowed to a near halt. Schools were closed. Church services were banned. The federal government limited its hours of operation. People were dying – some who took ill in the morning were dead by night.

“That's how quickly it happened,” said Sardo, 94, who lives in an assisted living facility just outside the nation's capital. “They disappeared from the face of the earth.”

Sardo is among the last survivors of the 1918 flu pandemic. Their stories offer a glimpse at the forgotten history of one of the world's worst plagues, when the virus killed at least 50 million people and perhaps as many as 100 million.

More than 600,000 people in the United States died of what was then called “Spanish Influenza.” The flu seemed to be particularly lethal for otherwise healthy young adults, many of whom suffocated from the buildup of liquids in their lungs.

In the United States, the first reported cases surfaced at an Army camp in Kansas as World War I began winding down. The virus quickly spread among soldiers at U.S. camps and in the trenches of Europe. It paralyzed many communities as it circled the world.

In the District of Columbia, the first recorded influenza death came on Sept. 21, 1918. The victim, a 24-year-old railroad worker, had been exposed in New York four days earlier. The flu swept through the nation's capital, which had attracted thousands of soldiers and war workers. By the time the pandemic had subsided, at least 30,000 people had become ill and 3,000 had died in the city.

Among the infected was Sardo, who was 6 years old at the time.

He remembers little of his illness but recalls that his mother was terrified.

“They kept me well separated from everybody,” said Sardo, who lived with his parents, two brothers and three other family members. His family quarantined him in the bedroom he had shared with his brother. Everyone in the family wore masks.

The city began shutting down. The federal government staggered its hours to limit crowding on the streets and on streetcars. Commissioners overseeing the district closed schools in early October, along with playgrounds, theaters, vaudeville houses and “all places of amusement.” Dances and other social gatherings were banned.

The commissioners asked clergy to cancel church services because the pandemic was threatening the “machinery of the federal government,” The Washington Star newspaper reported at the time. Pastors protested.

“There was a feeling that they couldn't turn to God, other than in prayer,” Sardo said. “They liked the feeling of going to church, and they were forbidden.”

The flu's spread and the ensuing restrictions “made everybody afraid to go see anybody,” he said.

“It changed a lot of society,” Sardo said. “We became more individualistic.”

In a list of 12 rules to prevent the disease's spread, the Army's surgeon general wrote that people should “avoid needless crowding,” open windows and “breathe deeply” when the air is “pure” and “wash your hands before eating.”

One slogan was, “Cover up each cough and sneeze. If you don't, you'll spread the disease.”

Those who were healthy wore masks when venturing outside. People who were known to be infected were threatened with a $50 fine if they were seen in public. Sardo remembers people throwing buckets of water with disinfectant on their sidewalks to wash away germs from people spitting on the street.

At the time, rumors swirled that the Germans had spread the disease – which Sardo did not believe.

A second flu survivor, 99-year-old Ruth Marshall, says she, her two sisters and a brother came down with what they thought was a cold. Then the fever struck and the illness became severe, she said.

Marshall, who lived just steps from the Capitol at the time, said the influenza deaths reported in the newspapers came as a surprise.

“We never thought we were going to die. We did pretty good – a lot of prayers,” she said.

Others were not so fortunate. As the death toll started to mount, there was a shortage of coffins. Funeral homes could not keep up. Sardo's father, who owned William H. Sardo & Co., and other funeral-home directors turned to soldiers for help embalming and digging thousands of graves.

Talk of the threat of another pandemic brings back memories for Sardo, who says he has gotten a flu shot every year they are available.

“It scares the hell out of me. It does,” Sardo said.
 

amarilla

Veteran Member
Good point about needing to get out the basic cover your coughs and sneezes and do so into the elbow or shoulder not hand. I took my grandma to the docotr and she coughed all over her hand. It was disgusting.

Another point they need to figure out is what to do with people who heard flu shots were available but aren't the "right" (such as utility workers) people. Personally I would want the utility workers healthy enough to keep the water and electricity on. If those stay on, the masses might not revolt.

A
 

JPD

Inactive
Preparing for a pandemic

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/serv...specialScienceandHealth/home/?pageRequested=1



DIANE PETERS

From Saturday's Globe and Mail

When the SARS outbreak hit Toronto in 2003, Dr. Vincent Lam and Dr. Colin Lee joined their colleagues on the emergency-room floor. But as they soon discovered, the impact of the virus wasn't just confined to hospitals -- or even the sick. Fear and confusion infected the general population too: Some stayed away from restaurants; others donned surgical masks on the bus; still others tried to avoid human contact altogether.

All of which prompted the pair to write The Flu Pandemic and You, a practical guide to the next big bug on the way. While it doesn't flinch on the scary facts -- modest estimates suggest 11,000 to 58,000 Canadians could die from the next influenza pandemic -- it also argues that we can protect ourselves if we don't give in to panic and we make careful preparations.

Here's how they responded to our most pressing questions:

Q: Every winter Canadians get the flu. What makes an influenza pandemic different?

Dr. Lam: A flu pandemic occurs when a strain of influenza comes into existence that the world has not previously been exposed to. It is a strain that causes a higher-than -usual degree of serious illness and death and spreads in many areas throughout the world. Q: And how does it spread?

Dr. Lam: When an infected person coughs or sneezes or talks, they can release large droplets that can infect another person who's close by -- usually less than one metre away. It can also spread indirectly: A person who's infected can release the virus material and deposit it onto an inanimate object -- where it can live on up to two days and infect someone who touches it.

Q: Who's at the highest risk?

Dr. Lee: The people most at risk are those who are not healthy or who have other illness such as chronic lung disease, diabetes or an immune-system problem. How the pandemic is going to affect those who don't have those risk factors is unknowable and impossible to predict. We know from the 1918 pandemic that for some reason pregnant women were more vulnerable. We also know that young and healthy adults were more vulnerable.

Q: How long would an influenza pandemic last?

Dr. Lee: This is not something where you can bear down on your own for a couple of days or a few weeks like we did with SARS. We will have to change the way we live for a number of years.

Q: What did we learn from SARS -- which affected 8,096 people and killed 774 worldwide -- that can help in a flu pandemic?

Dr. Lee: We learned that our infection-prevention-control practices at health-care settings were a little too lax. SARS outlined the importance of doing simple things: ensuring good hand washing, that we have enough rooms to separate people with an infectious disease, as well as the utility of wearing a mask for preventing the transmission of respiratory viruses.

Q: Let's talk Tamiflu: After SARS, people rushed to buy the drug -- but it can run about $250. Is it worth stockpiling?

Dr. Lam: Until the pandemic gets here, we won't know if Tamiflu will actually prove to be helpful. Given that people don't have unlimited resources, we think it's wiser for people to place first priority on planning for emergencies.

Q: So why is Canada stockpiling 55 million doses of Tamiflu?

Dr. Lee: Governments, including the Canadian government, are stockpiling a certain amount of Tamiflu and Relenza, another antiviral. That stockpile will be helpful when the pandemic does arrive to enable our health-care workers to either continue to work or recover as quickly as possible from illness. The downside is there is a half-life to these meds: two to five years from now. There's always the possibility these drugs will not be effective against the pandemic flu.

Q: What about a flu vaccine? Why aren't we stockpiling that?

Dr. Lam: We can't make a pandemic flu vaccine right now. Our current vaccine-development technology relies on a virus already being in existence -- the pandemic virus does not yet exist, and it cannot be predicted exactly when it will exist or what strain will cause it. With the technology we currently have, we think that four to six months into a pandemic there will be a vaccine developed. Canada is at the forefront of this and we hold a contract with a vaccine company to produce pandemic vaccine for us.

Dr. Lee: As well, there are a number of researchers who are currently working on a vaccine for the current avian H5N1. They're doing it because there's a possibility that it will become the pandemic strain. It might not work, though, because in order for the current H5N1 to become a pandemic virus, it will go through some genetic changes. Whether those changes will render the vaccine useless is difficult to predict.

Q: Since we will have a limited supply of antivirals, and a vaccine will take time to develop, who decides who gets treated first?

Dr. Lee: Those tough decisions are being discussed right now by public-health and infectious-disease experts and the government. Health-care workers, truck drivers who deliver food, hydro workers, water workers -- people who will sustain society until everyone gets the vaccine -- they're on the priority list. As are people who are vulnerable. As for antivirals, the priority list is those who are affected. But the big discussion right now is the role of antivirals in preventing illness. For instance, you want health-care workers to be as healthy as possible in a pandemic, so it might be worthwhile to give health-care workers a pill a day as prevention.

Q: For doctors and nurses, getting sick during a pandemic is a real threat. Can and do people refuse to work at these times?
Related to this article

Dr. Lam: Every year with the seasonal influenza, some health-care providers become ill taking care of patients and some don't. That's part of what one does as a health-care worker. During an influenza pandemic, many people in all walks of life will end up being exposed to influenza. The decision to prioritize health-care workers as recipients of antivirals or vaccines is largely driven by a desire to keep them healthy for society; it doesn't mean they're the only people being exposed. There has been a great deal of concern that health-care workers could be forced to work. But during SARS, health-care workers in the vast majority continued to work. That's the nature of people in our health-care system.

Q: Ultimately, your book seems to be advocating that people prepare for a pandemic. But is it possible to overreact and overplan?

Dr. Lam: In a country like Canada that already has a developed public-health system and has money to spend in a discretionary fashion, it's fair to say we should err on the side of overplanning -- because we have the luxury to do so.

Dr. Lee: If the pandemic occurs in the next five to 10 years, we'd probably be criticized for underplanning. If it doesn't arrive, we'll be criticized for overplanning. It's a no-win situation because it's inherently unpredictable.

Flu survival tips

Flu experts Victor Lam and Colin Lee think stockpiling antivirals for a flu that may or may not come may be a waste of your money. But preparing in less expensive ways -- for both the flu and emergencies such as ice storms and blackouts -- is smart:

Get the flu shot every year. The flu that becomes a pandemic just might be one of the three versions you've been inoculated for, even years later, so you've just upped your chances of being immune.

Be wary of birds. Since avian flu is a possible risk, avoid having contact with poultry if you're travelling -- and always cook your chicken and turkey well.

Learn how to limit the spread of flu. Both in a pandemic and during a seasonal flu outbreak, wash your hands well and frequently; stay one metre away from sick people; cover your own face when you cough or sneeze; and wear a mask and gloves if caring for a sick person.

Stay healthy. Exercise, eat right, quit smoking -- all the stuff your doctor and mother have already told you to do. If you're strong and healthy, you're more likely to weather a pandemic.

Buy local. If food supplies get jammed in a future pandemic, supporting local farmers and manufacturers means you'll be able to eat.

Stockpile food. Keep a stash of canned food and dried goods such as lentils and rice in case food supplies become limited or prices soar.

Stockpile meds. Keep a month's supply of any daily medications you need.

Have emergency supplies. A camping stove, radio and telephone that don't require power could come in handy if energy supplies are cut. So could a manual can opener, flashlights and a bicycle. Hold onto some cash too, and make a stash of rubber gloves and hand sanitizer.
 

JPD

Inactive
Korea

Bird flu virus here a different strain from deadly outbreak

http://joongangdaily.joins.com/200612/15/200612152138354709900090409041.html

December 16, 2006 ㅡ The bird flu outbreaks last month in Iksan, North Jeolla province, were caused by a virus strain different from the one in Southeast Asia that infected and killed dozens of humans, the nation's health authorities said yesterday.

South Korea will ask U.S health authorities next week to help assess the potential threat to humans of the most recent strain.

Two farms were infected last month by a highly pathogenic form of the virus. A third outbreak was reported in the region Sunday.

The ministry said the first two outbreaks were caused by the H5N1 strain. An analysis of the samples from the two poultry farms showed that the strain shares the same genetic characteristics as those found in western China. In May 2005, wild birds were infected by the strain in Qinghai, China's midwestern province. Bird flu outbreaks in Russia, Mongolia and Kazakhstan were also later caused by the H5N1 strain, the ministry said.

Human infections have been reported in Vietnam, Thailand and Indonesia. None have been reported here.

"The virus found in Iksan originated from birds, it was not influenced by human influenza virus," said an official from the National Veterinary Research and Quarantine Service, according to the Ministry's statement. "The genetic analysis of the virus for the specimen collected from another outbreak in Gimje earlier this month will be available at the end of this month."

The Ministry of Health and Welfare said it will ask the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention this week to conduct further analysis on the first two samples to determine the possibility of human infection.

Meanwhile, food sales at local discounters and department stores declined in November, dragging down the retailers' overall sales, as the latest outbreak of bird flu scared consumers away from chicken and egg counters, according to Korea's Commerce Ministry.

According a Commerce Ministry survey, the combined sales of the discount chains in November shrank 0.7 percent from a year earlier, despite brisk sales of household goods and apparel. The sales of household goods and apparel climbed 6.7 percent and 4.2 percent, respectively. But the sales of food, a major component of discounters' overall sales, shrank 2.3 percent compared to November 2005.

"The sales declined largely because of sluggish sales of chicken and eggs," the Commerce Ministry said in a statement.
 

JPD

Inactive
State would be overwhelmed by flu pandemic

http://www.courierpostonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061216/NEWS01/61216004/1004/LIVING

Saturday, December 16, 2006

If New Jersey is hit by an anticipated influenza pandemic, more than 8,100 residents will die -- and that's a conservative estimate from the state health department.

Whether the pandemic is due to a flu strain mutated from birds or a human super flu, sick and panicked people will descend on hospitals for help: an estimated 250,000 of them over a two-month wave. Some 40,000 patients would require ICU beds and 20,000 would need a ventilator, many times more than now available.

Could the state's hospitals, health department and emergency management agencies handle such a crisis?

"In a really bad pandemic, our system would be overwhelmed, quite frankly," said Dr. Eddy Bresnitz, deputy health commissioner and state epidemiologist.

Richard Canas, director of the state Office of Homeland Security and Preparedness, has a starker view: In a severe pandemic, state agencies simply will not be able to keep everything running normally.

"You're going to be staying home for one year. There will be no school, there will be no work," he said. "All we'll be doing is trying to keep ourselves alive."

That's despite New Jersey's government, public health system and many businesses having spent several years preparing for the worst:

- Government officials and other groups have been running tabletop disaster drills and making contingency plans for running essential services.

- Hospitals have been stockpiling surgical gloves and gowns, respirators and flu medicine, plus setting up more "negative-pressure rooms" to isolate infectious patients.

- At least five hospitals have run drills. For example, Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital in Hamilton had "sick volunteers" simulate a crush of 800 flu patients; they had to be triaged and treated by the ER staff while others evacuated four wings to create a new isolation ward.

- Businesses are caching their own supplies and lining up volunteers and equipment to help out. A public-private partnership called New Jersey Business Force that includes about three dozen big corporations last May ran its own tabletop exercise under the scenario that terrorists unleashed an aerosolized bacteria causing the plague at Newark-area transportation hubs.

- The state agriculture department has beefed up testing for avian influenza, or bird flu, at the state's 35 live bird markets, poultry distributors and other sites, and has added a section on avian influenza to its Web site.

- The New Jersey Food Council, representing about 1,200 food retailers, distributors and manufacturers, hosted a tabletop bird flu exercise in October and is working with state agencies to ensure a continuous food supply. Council members will work together if there is a shortage of food, or of clerks or drivers due to illness, to keep a food store open in every area, even if it's the competition.

- Bloomfield and other towns have done mass-vaccination drills, although a vaccine against the flu strain circulating won't be available until months into an epidemic.

- Last year, the state enacted a law spelling out who's in charge and what powers they have in a public health emergency.

- The state has set up a "2-1-1" phone system with call centers where trained staff can give information during an emergency, to relieve the 9-1-1 system, and upgraded its labs to be able to identify influenza strains such as the deadly H5N1 that has triggered so many fears.

"Of what we could do, 75 to 80 percent is done," Dr. Fred Jacobs said of the preparations by the Department of Health and Senior Services, which he heads. "But without a vaccine, we're playing catch-up," he said.

His department is polishing the fourth version of its flu pandemic plan, which covers everything from command-and-control functions to providing counseling for the public and responders helping them.

Under the "Get Flu Ready, New Jersey" campaign this fall, the department set up an information Web site and ran public-service ads on video screens at supermarket checkouts, urging people to stockpile food and bottled water, practice good hygiene and stay home if sick.

It has sent local health departments, schools and universities detailed pandemic planning checklists. Fact sheets and fill-in-the-blank press releases are ready for health officials statewide to update the public and give instructions.

Hospitals are expected to have a surge capacity of 13,319 beds, meaning that within 24 hours they can free up that many beds by canceling elective surgeries and diagnostic procedures, sending home anyone well enough and transferring others to nursing homes or other facilities.

The health department has given $6.5 million from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to local and county health agencies to improve their preparedness. The department is spending another $2.4 million from the CDC on its own stockpile of flu supplies and on rapid flu test kits to go to hospitals, nursing homes and "sentinel physicians" -- doctors who notify the health department weekly of all flu cases, as do all hospitals and many nursing homes and schools.

From its own funds, the department plans to spend $11 million to increase its antiviral medicine stockpile from the current 18,500 treatment courses of Tamiflu to an eventual 945,000, but none is expected before next spring. With the state's share of the federal stockpile, eventually there would be enough to cover a quarter of New Jersey's population.

No one's decided yet how to ration the scarce supply of Tamiflu: Should it only go to sick people or, since it can prevent as well as treat infection, should health workers, relatives of sick people, emergency responders or truck drivers get it prophylactically?

The health department also is grappling with how to maintain essential services such as Meals on Wheels for the most vulnerable people.

And most of the tabletop exercises and hospital drills found inadequate communication, both within organizations and between various state agencies and other groups.

"It's probably the single most important thing we need to tighten up on," said Bresnitz, the deputy health commissioner.

Last week, a report released by The Trust for America's Health ranked New Jersey among the four worst states in preparedness for a flu pandemic or other health emergency. The Garden State only met four of the health policy group's 10 preparedness criteria.

That's despite the state getting a thunderous wake-up call from the 2001 anthrax attacks and the Sept. 11 airliner hijackings that year, which killed 693 New Jersey residents.

Nearly everyone cites a common problem.

"There's not enough money," said Canas, the Homeland Security chief.

He said the money given to states by the federal government is not sufficient for all the supplies and training needed to prepare state workers, 81 acute-care hospitals and 168,000 paramedics, police officers and other emergency responders. New Jersey has received only about $9 million from the federal government.

New Jersey hospitals already are struggling financially and don't have the money for all the necessary preparations, said Valerie Sellers, senior vice president for health planning and research at the New Jersey Hospital Association.

Still, the trade group has set up nine committees to help its members address anticipated problems. Those include keeping adequate staff on duty if workers get sick, making sure supply chains don't break down and arranging for insurers and the government to keep paying their bills so the hospitals can meet payroll and other expenses.

"We have to maintain the financial viability of hospitals, or you're going to see closures left and right," Sellers said.
Associated Press
 

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Inactive
Biocontainment unit ready for first wave of infection

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/nation/20061216-0919-pandemic-quarantineunit.html

By Timberly Ross
ASSOCIATED PRESS

9:19 a.m. December 16, 2006

OMAHA, Neb. – Consider it a biomedical Fort Knox, a fortress for germs instead of gold.

On a quiet floor of the Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha, the most advanced containment system available forms a bulwark against the release of deadly infectious diseases such as the feared bird flu.

Advertisement
The Nebraska Biocontainment Unit has only 10 beds yet is the largest of three quarantine facilities in the country. They would be of no use once a flu pandemic was raging. But if someone shows up with an unusual contagious killer, they might help avert an outbreak.

Nothing is left to chance.

“If we ever had a situation, they certainly would be equipped to handle it,” said Von Roebuck, a spokesman for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

A special set of double doors is installed, with one door closed and locked at all times to prevent bad air from escaping. Hospital staff can use an access system to safely drop off medical supplies or meals by leaving items between the doors for employees inside the unit to retrieve.

A separate staff entrance allows doctors and nurses to walk directly to a locker room where they can change into sterile scrubs. Hooded suits with self-contained air systems are available for cases of severe risk.

A decontamination shower is a required stop before anyone can re-enter the locker room.

The unit's separate air system uses High Efficiency Particulate Air filters and ultra violet rays to destroy germs. The filtered air is released outside rather than into the hospital's ventilation system.

Then there are the tornado-proof windows and fire walls.

The Nebraska facility and two-bed germ-containment units at the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases at Fort Detrick, Md., and Emory University Hospital in Atlanta are meant to nip a dangerous outbreak in the bud.

It is not known how many beds are enough to isolate the very first carriers of disease. Early detection will be critical if bird flu or any such deadly disease comes to the United States.

But these defenses, and plans to turn more space into quasi-containment units should the need arise, would be quickly overrun in a widespread outbreak.

In the event of a bird flu pandemic, federal officials estimate 30 percent of the population could fall ill – perhaps 90 million people.

Depending on the severity of the strain, 865,000 to 9.9 million could require hospitalization and 209,000 to 1.9 million could die, according to these estimates.

The Nebraska unit has not been used since it opened in 2005. The Fort Detrick one has been activated 20 times in 34 years for quarantine of people under observation for exposure to exotic hemorrhagic viruses such as Lassa fever and Ebola. The Atlanta unit, operated by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, has been used twice since it opened in 2002.
 

JPD

Inactive
Wisconsin plans for a pandemic show progress, but gaps remain

http://www.lacrossetribune.com/articles/2006/12/18/wi/02pandemic18.txt

By RYAN J. FOLEY | The Associated Press
.
MADISON — A new state Web site meant to help Wisconsin residents prepare for a flu pandemic has little concrete advice.

“The best way to be prepared,” says the site unveiled Tuesday, “is to take the time to review possible scenarios and discuss with your family, friends, co-workers and neighbors — all of whom can be invaluable resources in the event of an emergency.”

The lack of detail underscores the gaps in Wisconsin’s planning for a potentially devastating flu pandemic despite greater urgency over the past three years as threats of bird flu loomed.

State officials, experts and private sector leaders provided The Associated Press with general planning materials but few of the concrete preparations they insist they are making. Gaps in Wisconsin range from businesses who have no plans to the state’s still-evolving criteria for prioritizing scarce doses of vaccine during an outbreak.

“We are in the process of solidifying our pandemic flu planning. Are we there yet? Probably not, but we are well on our way,” said Bill Bazan, a vice president of the Wisconsin Hospital Association.

The state’s plan estimates that up to 1.9 million residents, more than one-third of the population, could fall ill in a pandemic and an estimated 8,000 could die. Hospitals would overflow. Businesses and schools would be shut down or disrupted. And many elderly and disabled would need care.

Planning for such a scenario is a monumental task, as state officials learned when they recently gathered for their first statewide practice drill of the response plan, said Lori Getter, spokeswoman for Wisconsin Emergency Management.

“It really opened our eyes on how widespread this could be,” Getter said of the Sept. 8 exercise at the state’s emergency operations center in Madison.

Herb Bostrum, deputy administrator of the Wisconsin Division of Public Health, said officials will focus in the coming year on urging residents to prepare for a pandemic. A major part of that effort was the new site, http://pandemic.wisconsin.gov, which assures residents state government is taking the issue seriously.

Gov. Jim Doyle said in a statement Tuesday that Wisconsin “is recognized as a national leader in preparing for an influenza pandemic.” But the Trust for America’s Health, a nonprofit, said in a report the same day that Wisconsin’s preparedness for a health emergency ranked in the middle of the states.

To back up the governor’s claim, an aide released a copy of a nearly 2-year-old e-mail from a Centers for Disease Control official referring to Wisconsin as “the gold standard for state plans.”

Still, The Associated Press found:

# Wisconsin lacks a finished plan for distributing scarce doses of vaccine to immunize the most vulnerable patients against a spreading virus. The guidelines that exist say the governor and other top state officials should be first in line, followed by health care workers, public health officials and first responders.

Vaccines are designed to make people immune to a specific disease. That means a vaccine can’t be produced until an outbreak occurs, and the state will have no control over how long it takes or how much companies can make, Bostrum said. The state’s plan assumes that only 20 percent of the total vaccine needed would be initially available, several months after an outbreak.

# The state does not have a stockpile of antiflu medications to treat disease caused by virus. The World Health Organization recommends a stockpile covering 25 percent of the population and Wisconsin officials told the federal government this summer that the state planned to spend $8 million for that purpose.

The Legislature’s budget committee agreed Thursday to spend $2.2 million as a first payment on the stockpile. That will buy enough medication for 62,000 people identified as key health care workers and responders.

# The Department of Health and Family Services estimates 22,000 hospital beds would be needed — double the state’s current capacity — in an outbreak.

The state believes it would have enough with cots and portable beds but Bazan said hospitals have not secured additional buildings to hold people who have the disease to try to stop its spread.

# Too many businesses have yet to begin planning for how to continue providing services and what to tell their employees during a pandemic, said Vicki Bier, a University of Wisconsin-Madison engineering professor. She hosted a conference this fall meant to get them started.

“There are some that are just starting to wake up and realize this is something they need to prepare for,” she said.

Even a nonprofit she praised as a leader, Madison-based Independent Living Inc., says it is in the beginning stages of figuring out how to care for hundreds of seniors and the disabled during a pandemic. The firm runs 200 units of housing in Dane County.

“Hopefully we’ll have the opportunity to test it out before anything would happen,” said Julianne Dwyer, compliance director of the firm.
 

JPD

Inactive
Russia

2 Geese Die of Bird Flu

http://www.sptimes.ru/story/19822

ST. PETERSBURG (SPT ) — Two geese at St. Petersburg’s zoo died of bird flu on Dec. 8, Fontanka.ru reported Monday.

The zoo was closed down on Monday. The zoo’s management said the closure was for routine maintenance in the run up for the New Year, it was reported.

“There’s nothing extraordinary in what happened. One goose died of old age and an abscess, the other, which was younger, had a tumor.

“We have animals die every month,” Fontanka.ru reported Irina Skiba, the zoo’s director, as saying.

However, the news service reported that the cause of both deaths was bird flu and that this had been confirmed in Moscow.

“There is almost no chance that this is dangerous to people,” an unidentified source told Fontanka.ru.
 

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Inactive
Indonesia

RI ready to produce bird flu vaccine

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailnational.asp?fileid=20061219.H09&irec=8

JAKARTA: The government is ready to develop a homegrown vaccine for the avian influenza virus, an official said Monday.

Amin Soebandrio, chairman of the National Commission for Avian Influenza, said the government would first improve the expertise of local scientists before they started working on the vaccine.

He said Indonesia already had the advantage of controlling good quality antitoxins for the vaccine.

"Along with Vietnam, we have two types of antitoxin for producing the vaccine. So it is illogical to continue to import them," Amin was quoted by Antara as saying.

Bird flu has killed 74 people nationwide, the highest death toll among the countries infected with the deadly disease.
 

JPD

Inactive
White House addresses flu pandemic

http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/newssentinel/news/editorial/16271824.htm

By Richard Clough

Chicago Tribune

(MCT)

WASHINGTON - The White House on Monday said it has met most of its early goals in preparing to deal with a flu pandemic, but added that there are still significant steps that must be taken to implement an effective strategy.

Homeland Security Adviser Frances Townsend told reporters that the federal government has made "significant progress," but needs coordination with local, state and foreign governments to effectively combat a global health crisis. "Preparedness is a shared responsibility," she said.

Internationally, Townsend said this means that the U.S. will support efforts by foreign countries to try to mitigate the effects of influenza outbreaks within their borders.

Domestically, the federal government has developed guidelines and invested $600 million in local and state government preparedness planning.

The focus of the federal government's efforts to combat a pandemic is on vaccination, and Townsend said, "There are a number of barriers that will prevent us from having large amounts of vaccine quickly during a pandemic."

These barriers include limited production capacity, a relatively short shelf life for the vaccine and the possibility that previously developed vaccines will not be effective against a newly mutated virus.

Townsend said the government has stockpiled 3 million doses of vaccine that it hopes could be used against a possible pandemic flu strain, and it expects to have another 5 million by the end of 2007.

In preparing to deal with a possible pandemic, there has been an increased emphasis on coordination of state and local governments, as well as the private sector. The problems range from whether hospitals will have enough beds to whether schools and other public institutions will be closed.

But there are wide disparities in state readiness. In the coming weeks, the government is expected to release its first official assessment of the states' levels of preparedness.

Concerns over the effect of a pandemic flu on the economy have led many businesses to make preparations for dealing with a possible pandemic.

A survey released last week by the Deloitte Center for Health Solutions and the ERISA Industry Committee found that nearly three-quarters of private businesses acknowledge a threat of a pandemic flu. Though only about half of the companies surveyed had taken steps to address the threat, the number of companies taking action is on the rise.

"America's employers are recognizing the need to reform their policies and prepare for the possibility of pandemic flu that could infect a large number of citizens - impacting not only their business operations but the entire U.S. economy," Tommy Thompson, the chairman of Deloitte, said in a statement. The one-time Wisconsin governor was formerly secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services.

Major influenza outbreaks tend to strike on a global scale every few decades, with three flu pandemics in the past century. The worst pandemic hit in 1918, killing an estimated 20 million to 50 million people worldwide.

The H5N1 flu virus, known as the bird flu, has infected 258 people worldwide, according to the World Health Organization, and though it has not hit the U.S., Townsend said the existence of the virus provided an impetus to the government's preparations.

Officials estimate that as many as 2 million people could die if the H5N1 virus becomes a pandemic, but planners recognize the next worldwide outbreak might not be the bird flu.
 

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Inactive
France

The Return of Bird Flu?

http://www.paris-link-home.com/news/121/ARTICLE/1581/2006-12-19.html

With the Holidays just around the corner the mysterious death of approximately 4,000 chickens in Sarrey (Haute-Marne) could not have fallen at a worse time.


Orders are up in preparation for the upcoming year's end festivities but many consumers might chose to pass on the hen this year if laboratory samples turn out positive for a bird influenza outbreak following the rapid death of over 50% of one farm's livestock.

Given that all of the fowl appeared healthy on Saturday morning, the speed of mortality leans towards a bird flu hypothesis at this time. However Dominique Bussereau, the Minister of Agriculture, wishes to downplay this theory, stating that 3,000 chickens remain alive on the farm in question. He explains that the death toll should be much higher in the case of bird flu.

Security measures have gone into place to isolate the incident, if possible, while livestock owners and consumers alike await the laboratory results which could be released as early as today.
 

JPD

Inactive
Russian zoo closes after two geese found dead

http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/CrisesArticle.aspx?storyId=L19232640&WTmodLoc=World-R5-Alertnet-6

Tue 19 Dec 2006 9:56:08 GMT


(Adds top sanitary official denial of bird flu case)

ST PETERSBURG, Russia, Dec 19 (Reuters) - One of Russia's main zoos has closed down after the deaths of two geese sparked a bird flu scare, but the top sanitary official said on Tuesday that tests had not confirmed the outbreak of the disease.

"Samples taken from the dead geese did not test positive for bird flu," chief sanitary expert and head of Russia's consumer rights watchdog Gennady Onishchenko told Interfax news agency.

Zoo staff had also been given health clearance after examination, he added.

The zoo in St Petersburg, one of Russia's oldest, officially refused to explain its unscheduled closure on Monday night, but health officials linked it to the discovery of the two dead birds.

The zoo has about 800 birds in all. A notice at the zoo said it would remain closed until the end of the year.

"They did not die from bird flu," a local expert on bird flu, who had knowledge of tests carried out on the dead geese, told Reuters earlier.

"The birds had been vaccinated against bird flu."

Bird flu remains essentially an animal disease but it has infected more than 250 people worldwide since late 2003, killing more than 150, according to the World Health Organisation.

Experts fear the virus could mutate into a form that is easily transmissible between humans and spark an influenza pandemic, killing millions of people.
 

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Inactive
Bird flu recurrence triggers red alert in Vietnam

http://www.thanhniennews.com/society/?catid=3&newsid=23375

Bird flu has reared its head again in two Mekong Delta provinces, Bac Lieu and Ca Mau, after over one year during which Vietnam managed to keep the epidemic out.

At a conference held Tuesday by the National Steering Committee on Bird Flu Control, Cao Duc Phat, Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development and the committee’s head, slammed the two provincial administrations for negligence and delay in discovering the outbreaks which had occurred at the start of December.

On December 6 the disease broke out in Ca Mau’s Tran Van Thoi district, killing 2,520 chicks and ducklings, all of which later positive for the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu virus.

The next day five duck flocks took ill in Hoa Binh district in Bac Lieu. Some 3,500 ducklings died, all of which too tested positive for H5N1.

The committee claimed the dead birds had not been vaccinated because they had been hatched illegally.

There is a real threat now of the disease spreading to other places since the farmers threw away the birds’ carcasses before the outbreak came to light.

The current cool weather is an ally for the virus.

Phat instructed the two provinces to quickly quarantine and sterilize their infected areas, and others to maintain extreme vigilance.

He also directed local agencies to find out the cause of the outbreaks since there were no reports of recurrence in areas neighboring the two provinces.

If any new infections occurred, Phat warned, the local administrations would be held responsible.

No new cases were reported in the last 13 months in Vietnam while some 140 million poultry were vaccinated against H5N1.

Bird flu has been detected in more than 50 countries and 154 people have died.

In Vietnam 93 people have been infected by bird flu, with 42 fatalities reported since the disease first appeared in December 2003.
 

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Inactive
U.N. team studying bird flu outbreaks in South Korea

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2006/12/19/europe/EU_GEN_UN_SKorea_Bird_Flu.php

ROME: A team of experts from a U.N. crisis management center is studying the spread of bird flu in South Korea after three outbreaks this month forced the country's authorities to cull more than a million poultry, a U.N. food agency said Tuesday.

The nine-member team will collect data on cases in rural areas south of the capital Seoul, the Rome-based Food and Agriculture Organization said in a statement.

The team is analyzing the spread of the disease and looking at how it could potentially move to other countries in the region. The experts are investigating all risk factors for the virus' spread, including migrating wild birds and practices used by the local poultry industry, the statement said.

It is the first full-scale effort by the crisis management center, launched by the FAO and the Paris-based World Organization for Animal Health in October.

More than 770,000 chickens were destroyed as a result of the first two outbreaks, caused by the H5N1 virus, which the World Health Organization says has killed at least 154 people worldwide since 2003.
Today in Europe

In the third outbreak, 365,000 quails and chickens were destroyed in Gimje, about 260 kilometers (160 miles) south of Seoul. Authorities believe the H5N1 strain is the likely cause.

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

Infections among people have been traced to contact with infected birds, and some experts fear the virus could mutate to a form easily transmitted between people, triggering a human pandemic.
 

JPD

Inactive
UK Oil and Gas Producers Plan Ahead for Pandemic Flu

http://www.ukooa.co.uk/media/view-press.cfm/417

The UK Offshore Operators Association (UKOOA), the representative organisation for UK oil and gas producers, has issued an information pack on pandemic flu to its member companies in support of preparations being made industry-wide to minimise the impact of a major influenza outbreak on their activities.

The pack has been produced in response to a government request for contingency planning for such an event and is the result of a number of meetings between industry and government officials from the Scottish Executive and Westminster.

It contains a Pandemic Influenza Information DVD; documents giving key facts and answers to frequently asked questions; and a checklist to help companies manage the potential impact of a pandemic on their staff and business, including tips on how to develop business policies, allocate resources, communications, and co-ordination and liaison with external organisations and the community.

"Although the timing and nature of a possible influenza pandemic is highly uncertain, we must accept that should there be major outbreak of flu in this country, the offshore oil and gas industry will not be immune", says Malcolm Webb, UKOOA's chief executive. "It makes good sense to plan ahead, not just from aspects of business continuity but also in light of the vital need to keep essential supplies of primary energy running for our lighting and heating.

"This pack provides general information about pandemic flu and identifies specific activities which our member companies can do to prepare."


Notes to Editors
Journalists wanting a review copy of the UKOOA Information Pack: Pandemic Influenza What you need to know, should contact the UKOOA Press Office on Tel. 020 7802 2400.
The UK Offshore Operators Association (UKOOA) is the representative organisation for oil and gas companies licensed by the UK government to explore for and produce hydrocarbons offshore around the British Isles. It has 41 members.

For further information, please contact:

Trisha OReilly UKOOA Media Relations
Tel: 0207 802 2422/2400
Fax: 0207 802 2401
Email: toreilly@ukooa.co.uk
Pager: 07659 183 999



13/12/06
 

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Inactive
USAID provides 4,500 kits for bird flu

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2006\12\20\story_20-12-2006_pg11_9

ISLAMABAD: The US Agency for International Development (USAID) has announced a new training project for the use of avian influenza (bird flu) equipment for 10 officials of the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Livestock.

The two-day training programme, being held in collaboration with the Development Alternatives Inc (DAI) and Leadership in Environment and Development (LEAD), will cover the use of personal protective equipment, the correct use of decontamination kits and effective practices for gathering samples and preparing them for shipment to laboratories. USAID will also provide 4,500 personal protective kits to increase Pakistani health authorities’ preparation in countering a possible outbreak. These kits will protect workers who cull affected birds and those surveying human infections. The kits will be divided between the Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Livestock and the National Institute for Health (NIG) and will be stored at provincial level.

USAID will start similar training programmes and will also provide the kits to 22 other countries.

Since its first outbreak in Southeast Asia in 2003, bird flu has swept across Asia, Europe, and Africa and at least 258 human cases of bird flu were confirmed, with 154 fatalities in 10 countries. USAID has announced the provision of $191 million to support various projects for fighting bird flu and related activities in 53 countries.

In Pakistan, USAID is working on the national and provincial levels to prepare for any possible future outbreak of bird flu. Through the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), USAID has provided more than $350,000 to the National Reference Lab of Pakistan for Poultry Diseases. The funds will be used for field surveillance, post-vaccination monitoring and disease reporting throughout the country.

In addition, USAID will also provide over $5.5 million during the next three years to the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention to start a Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Training Programme (FELTP) at the NIH. This programme will provide training to health officials at the national, provincial and district levels to conduct investigations into any infectious diseases.

The United States, through the USAID, will provide over $1.5 billion in development assistance to Pakistan over the next five years to improve education, health, governance and economic growth. In addition, the United States has pledged a total of $510 million in earthquake relief and reconstruction efforts to assist Pakistan and to support Pakistani government relief and reconstruction efforts. staff report
 

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Vietnamese government confirms bird flu outbreak

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

The Vietnamese government has announced that thousands of poultry have died of bird flu in the last two weeks in southern Vietnam. This is the country's first reported outbreak in a year.

The deputy director of the Department of Animal Health, Hoang Van Nam, said that tests have revealed that approximately 5,500 one-month-old ducks and 500 chickens have died of the H5N1 bird flu strain in the southern Mekong Delta provinces Ca Mau and Bac Lieu.

There was no immediate comment from the World Health Organisation.
In recent months, Vietnamese authorities had asked farmers and local authorities to remain vigilant as winter conditions are considered favourable for the development of the virus. The government has also tried to prevent the movement of bird flu through a mass-vaccination campaign (126 million birds have been vaccinated), however, Nam warned this time the virus could spread.

"The risk of the bird flu virus spreading further is very high because some farmers dumped dead ducklings into canals," Nam said.

A report by the Hanoi-based national animal health department said the birds had been illegally hatched and were not vaccinated.

Related links:
Vietnam Department of Animal Health
World Health Organisation
 

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Inactive
Cell-cultured bird flu vaccine

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

The University Of Maryland School Of Medicine is looking into a bird flu vaccine which is cultured in laboratory-grown cells and not traditionally with chicken eggs.

An advantage of this new method is the ability to produce large amounts of vaccine - drug companies would not be limited by the supply of specialised chicken eggs used for the manufacture of traditional flu vaccines.

The vaccine being tested is made from a virus grown in a line of kidney cells originally taken from African green monkeys, which are now self-propagating. According to Dr James Campbell, the lead investigator on the study, as many of the kidney cells as needed can be cultured.

"It is somewhat quicker than growing it in eggs and there is essentially no limit to the amount of cells, the number of cells you can infect, whereas with eggs there is a limit," said Campbell.
Related links:

* The University Of Maryland School Of Medicine Bird flu
 

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Inactive
National Strategy For Pandemic Influenza
Implementation Plan

http://www.pandemicflu.gov/plan/federal/stratergyimplementationplan.html

Summary of Progress
December 2006

Introduction

This document consists of a compendium of actions due to be completed within 6 months of the release of the National Strategy for Pandemic Influenza Implementation Plan (Implementation Plan), along with responses from Departments and Agencies.

The actions below are reproduced from the Implementation Plan. Each action is followed by a summary of progress, in italics, prepared by the relevant Department(s) and Agency(ies) for this report. The assessment is indicated directly after the action number. A determination of “complete” indicates that the measure of performance has been met, but does not necessarily mean that work has ended; in many cases work is ongoing.

http://www.pandemicflu.gov/plan/federal/stratergyimplementationplan.html
 

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Inactive
Lurking on the Horizon: Experts predict the bird flu
to be the next global pandemic

http://www.aapress.com/index.php?subaction=showfull&id=1166580747&archive=&start_from=&ucat=3&

By Doug Ekbom

It’s noon and the lunchroom is packed. Across from me sits Dr. Bob Gleeson, Northwestern Mutual’s bow-tie-wearing vice president and medical director. Despite the multiple conversations surrounding us, his words pierce through the lunchtime chatter.

“This is one of the rare moments in history where we actually have a chance to watch a global pandemic develop.”

Gleeson is referring to the H5N1 virus, more commonly known as the bird flu.
Since 1996, strains of this influenza virus have infected birds across China and Southeast Asia. More than 200 cases of bird flu in humans have been reported in the past two years, and more than half of these cases have been fatal.

Over the last 25 years, Gleeson has become an expert in medical risk management: he predicts how long you will live.

“As of right now, the highly pathogenic H5N1 virus has mostly been transferred from bird to bird or bird to human,” said Gleeson. “We have calculated that there is 20 percent this virus becomes goes human to human in the next two years.”

Earlier this year, eight people from the same household in Indonesia came down with the bird flu. This is the largest example of human to human transfer to date.
Some leading health experts estimate that, if the virus mutates sooner rather than later, as many as 360 million people (1/5 of the world’s population) could be dead.
The Humane Society’s director of Public Health and Animal Agriculture, Dr. Michael Greger, recently delivered a lecture titled “Surviving the Next Pandemic” to students at Hamline University.

Greger outlined humanity’s role in the evolution of the bird flu.

“Before the domestication of ducks, no one got the flu,” said Greger. “Our methods of raising animals have changed and factory farms have become a health menace. When the next beak’s no further than three inches away, there’s no limit to how deadly a virus can become.”

Some of you may have seen the images of overcrowded chicken farms where thousands of birds live in filth, crammed in like sardines. This is how viruses like H5N1 mutate into deadly killers.

Considering by some to be the world’s leading expert on bird flu, Dr. Rob Webster believes that an avian flu pandemic is inevitable.

In the fall of 2002, one of Webster’s researchers discovered that the H5N1 virus was highly lethal to chickens and ferrets (an animal who susceptibility to viruses mirrors that of humans,) but numerous ducks experimentally infected with the virus didn’t die.

Killing chickens infected with the bird flu simply wasn’t enough; ducks can be a permanent nesting ground for the virus.

There are over two billion ducks in East Asia.

“Should the bird flu become transmissible human to human, it would take as few as 20 infected people for the virus to spin out of control,” said Gleeson.
Currently, no vaccine for the bird flu exists. Even after a vaccine is discovered, it would still require many months to mass produce it.

Thirty years ago, the Dean of Yale University said there were “no new diseases to be discovered.” Little did he know that as humanity enters the year 2007, a global pandemic looms on the horizon.
 

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Sparrow Deaths in Turkey Increase H5N1 Survellance Concerns

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/12200602/H5N1_Turkey_Sparrows.html

Recombinomics Commentary
December 20, 2006

5 sparrows suddenly dropped dead from a tree, they were rushed to the municipality veterinary clinic for examination with suspect of "Bird Flu".

This happened in the city of Bingöl ..

About 250 km west of Van ....

The above translation of a Turkish language media report add to the concerns generated by the poultry deaths in Tokat earlier this month. Bingol is about half way between Tokat and Van, the site of the first human H5N1 fatalities reported for the Qinghai strain of H5N1. The December deaths this year in Turkey closely parallel events in Turkey last year at this time.

Turkey reported H5N1 poultry deaths in October, 2005 in western Turkey. Linkage to poultry deaths in eastern Turkey were denied. However, after patients in eastern Turkey were rushed to Van at the end of 2005 and died in early 2006, Turkey acknowledged that H5N1 had been detected throughout Turkey in December, 2005. Similarly, Egypt did not report H5N1 infections until February, 2006, but recently released sequences for a teal isolated in Egypt in December, 2005 showed that it was the Qinghai strain and was closely related to the sequence isolated from a turkey in Turkey in October, 2005, indicating that H5N1 had migrated through eastern Turkey in the fall of 2005.

The recent reports of dead poultry in Tokat and dead sparrows in Bingol suggest H5N1 is again causing avian deaths in Turkey. Such deaths would not be unexpected because H5N1 has been reported in the Ukraine, Egypt, and Sudan this season, and is likely to be widespread in the area.

The failure of countries in the area to detect and report H5N1 this season remains an area of increasing concern.
 

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Inactive
Fresh Bird Flu Concerns in Nigeria

http://www.voanews.com/english/2006-12-20-voa25.cfm

By Gilbert da Costa
Abuja
20 December 2006

Da Costa report - Download 669k audio clip
Listen to Da Costa report audio clip

Experts say a fresh outbreak of avian influenza in Nigeria is more widespread than thought. As Gilbert da Costa reports from Abuja, this has provoked fears of long-term risks.

The Nigerian Veterinary Association says the highly pathogenic H5N1 strain of bird flu remains a major problem in Nigeria and warns that the country risks triggering an even bigger round of infection.

Veterinary Association spokesman Bala Mohammed says more states have reported new cases of the disease, in the last few weeks.

"What we considered a resurgence is becoming alarming. From an initial three, then 10 states, almost all the states have been having a recurrence," he said. "That is a very serious challenge and it also calls for a review of the entire process that we adopted. In the last month, we've heard about Delta State, Akwa Ibom, Rivers, Cross River and a lot of cases in Lagos."

Nigeria and two other countries are considered the weakest link in the worldwide campaign to stem the disease.

John Lange heads the U.S government programs for foreign governments and international organizations to deal with avian influenza. He says Nigeria should step up its surveillance program.

"It is very important having the federal government working closely with state governments and local government areas to fully implement their plans on avian influenza. And, as part of that strategy is the need to undertake surveillance activities, to send veterinarians and others to all the states of Nigeria to really verify the level of avian influenza outbreaks," he said.

Millions of birds have died or become infected in Nigeria since the avian flu outbreak was first detected, last February, causing severe hardship for farmers, who have had very little support from the government.

Veterinary officials believe widespread disaffection with the compensation system put in place by the government is keeping farmers from reporting bird deaths, making tracking of the virus more difficult.

Garba Sharabutu is a veterinarian and president of the Nigerian Veterinary Association.

"We had cause to disagree with the government over this compensation. The first signal that the disease, avian influenza, is on a farm is when you estimate the total loss to be more than 50 percent," he noted. "Now, when move in there and you go and pay for those animals that you were able to actually destroy, when know that the cardinal signal is that 50 percent has already died, you go and pay compensation for only 50 percent, there is going to be a problem."

Lange, who met several poultry farmers on his recent trip to Nigeria, acknowledges that the compensation package for farmers is a huge drawback.

He says it is more of an international problem.

"The idea that the birds will be culled so that there will be no more outbreaks from that particular infection and then compensating the owners is an issue not just in Nigeria, but all over the world. In fact, at a meeting in Vienna, Austria, in June, we discussed the need for more expertise on culling and compensation," he added. "I discussed that here and, in fact, when we met yesterday with the Kaduna State Poultry Association, they were frustrated at the delays for receiving compensation for birds that have been culled."

Scientists warn that the H5N1 virus may mutate into one that is transmissible among humans, triggering a pandemic.

Backyard farmers are particularly at risk because of poor surveillance and greater human-to-animal contact.

The United Nations Food and Agricultural Association estimates that backyard poultry farmers keep 60 percent of Nigeria's 140 million poultry.

Mohammed says, with major Christian and Muslim festivities planned for the next couple of weeks, the risk of bird flu is even more acute.

"I look at seasons like this where you have festive seasons; Christmas, Sallah and New Year, as an important season when we must step up public enlightenment," he added. "You will agree with me that these are the periods people go for these chickens and they do it all cost. Everybody must have chicken on his table. It is a very big issue in Nigeria."

Experts on bird flu are increasingly worried that Nigeria risks becoming a permanent host to the virus.
 

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Experts Urge Nations To Report Flu Cases Immediately, Share Data

http://usinfo.state.gov/xarchives/d...cember&x=20061220104931lcnirellep6.954372e-03

Flu meeting delegates also call for increased veterinary, human health services

By Cheryl Pellerin
USINFO Staff Writer

Washington -- Delegates from more than 72 countries are calling on all nations to report influenza cases immediately and share epidemiological data and samples.

The reporting and data sharing provisions are in a declaration issued December 18 after the Fourth International Conference on Avian Influenza December 6-8 in Bamako, Mali.

At the ministerial and pledging conference, hosted by the African Union and Mali in conjunction with the European Union, donor governments pledged nearly $500 million to address avian influenza outbreaks that have occurred in 55 nations and to prepare for a possible human pandemic. (See related article.)

At the meeting, the United States pledged $100 million, bringing its total to $434 million for international assistance, a key component in the U.S. national strategy for dealing with pandemic influenza.

“I want to pay tribute to the United States for their continued engagement on this issue,” Dr. David Nabarro, senior U.N. system coordinator for avian and human influenza, said at a December 19 briefing at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, “and … on trying to make sure that the focus on avian influenza, and in particular on the potential pandemic, is one that is maintained long term.”

The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) reports that, to date, more than 200 million domesticated birds have died or have been culled to prevent disease spread, and the World Health Organization (WHO) reports that 258 human cases of avian influenza have been reported in 10 countries, with 154 deaths.

INTERNATIONAL HEALTH REGULATIONS

The Bamako Declaration, approved by all delegates, says the fight against highly pathogenic avian influenza “should be used to strengthen the struggle against other emerging diseases” and urges renewed efforts to build capacity in animal and human health services through early voluntary implementation of WHO's revised International Health Regulations.

The updated rules are designed to prevent and protect against the international spread of diseases and minimize interference with world travel and trade.

“We in the United States government,” said Ambassador John Lange, the State Department’s special representative on avian and pandemic influenza, “are urging other nations around the world to comply now with the provisions of the revised International Health Regulations … before those regulations enter into effect next year.”

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt announced December 13 that the United States has accepted formally the International Health Regulations and will begin to implement the new international rules now rather than wait until they officially take effect in June 2007.

Under the revised regulations, countries that accept the regulations have much broader responsibility for preventing, detecting and responding to public-health emergencies of international concern, such as avian influenza. (See related article.)

Current regulations, adopted by WHO member states in 1969, apply to three diseases -- cholera, yellow fever and plague. The revised regulations include smallpox, polio, severe acute respiratory syndrome and new strains of human influenza, whose occurrences member states must report immediately to WHO.

ANIMAL AND HUMAN HEALTH

Animal and human health are linked inextricably, and experts around the world are urging a buildup of capacity in veterinary and human health infrastructures to deal with the current avian flu outbreak and with future emerging diseases.

“The ongoing spread of the disease in affected countries and new outbreaks are an expression of the lack of veterinary infrastructure,” said Ron DeHaven, administrator of the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service at the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

To help build such infrastructure, the United States is working with the FAO and the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE).

On December 19, a nine-person team of bird flu experts from the Crisis Management Center, an FAO-OIE initiative, arrived in the Republic of Korea to assess regional risks and protective measures after three recent outbreaks of the disease among domestic poultry in rural areas south of Seoul.

The team, drawn from South Korea and other nations, includes veterinary epidemiologists, wildlife veterinarians, biologists and poultry specialists who will examine the relationships among poultry production, marketing and wildlife sectors to understand better potential disease movement among chickens and risks to or from wild birds, FAO said.

“This threat is not going to go away in a hurry,” Nabarro said. “It’s going to be with us for years to come and our defenses are still not strong enough to cope with it.”

For ongoing coverage of the disease and efforts to combat it, see Bird Flu (Avian Influenza).

More information about the revised International Health Regulations is available at the WHO Web site.

(USINFO is produced by the Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)
 

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Bird flu outbreak spreads in Vietnam's Mekong Delta

http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/CrisesArticle.aspx?storyId=HAN131133&WTmodLoc=World-R5-Alertnet-5

HANOI, Dec 21 (Reuters) - Vietnam's first outbreak of bird flu since August has spread to four more areas in the Mekong Delta, where nearly 8,300 birds have been killed by the virus or slaughtered to hold it back, the Agriculture Ministry said.

Three outbreaks spotted between Dec. 11 and Dec. 20 in Ca Mau province killed over 2,500 chickens and ducks, while one in neighbouring Bac Lieu province killed dozens of ducks, the ministry's Animal Health Department said in a report on Thursday.

The outbreaks of the H5N1 virus were the first in Vietnam since August. The initial eruptions killed around 6,000 newly hatched chickens and ducklings that were not vaccinated against bird flu.

Farmers have since thrown dead birds into water channels or let ducks roam on rice fields, helping spread the virus that first arrived in the Delta in late 2003 and has since killed 42 of the 93 people infected in Vietnam.

Vietnam, which has had no human bird flu cases since late 2005, has a human death toll second only to Indonesia's 57, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).

WHO says bird flu has killed 154 people out of 258 infected globally since late 2003.

Vietnamese animal health officials said on Wednesday that temperatures were falling in the southern region incorporating the delta, which would help the spread of a virus that thrives best in cooler temperatures.

Experts fear the virus could mutate into a form that is easily transmissible among humans and spark an influenza pandemic that would kill millions.

The Mekong Delta outbreaks caused health officials in nearby Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam's largest city, to tighten inspection of poultry and step up monitoring of breeding farms, state media reported on Thursday.
 

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Livestock officials nationwide instructed to resume
close surveillance of bird flu due to colder weather

http://www.thaisnews.com/news_detail.php?newsid=199498

The Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives has instructed provincial Livestock Development officials nationwide to monitor the bird flu situation closely due to colder weather.

Deputy Permanent Secretary for Agriculture and Cooperatives Yokol Limlamthong (ยุคล ลิ้มแหลมทอง) said the Livestock Development Department has been told to draw up an around-the-clock surveillance plan and to report the number of sick and dead animals everyday beginning January 1, 2007.

Although no cases of bird flu have been found within the country for more than 137 days, a nationwide campaign will begin shortly to x-ray, for bird flu, all areas where poultry is raised.

The Ministry has besides set up a special committee to review bird flu preventive measures including a possibility to use vaccine and mutation of the disease. The deputy permanent secretary expects results of the study to be made known by February 2007.
 

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Inactive
Nigeria

Bird flu reported in 44 LGAs in 15 states

http://www.thetidenews.com/article....ted in 44 LGAs in 15 states&qrColumn=BUSINESS

Tuesday, Dec 19, 2006

Forty-four local government areas in 15 states of the federation have so far reported cases of Avian Influenza (AI), a workshop heard in Zaria. The Director, Federal Department of Livestock and Pest Control, Dr Jumada Maina, gave the figure at the opening of the three-day workshop organised by the EU for AI surveillance officers.

He said the workshop was aimed at strengthening and building capacity in controlling the spread of the bird flu. Maina, represented by Dr Joseph Nyager, said the virus, which was reported in the country in February, was under control.

He said some 500 suspected cases and 126 confirmed ones were recorded in the affected areas, including the FCT. Maina called on the workshop participants and veterinarians to ensure that the AI surveillance was carried out with all seriousness to stem the spread of the virus.

The Dean, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, Prof. K.A. Esievo, had earlier said that active surveillance of the flu determined the extent of its spread and control measures.
 

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H5N1 Re-emerges in Nigeria

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/12200603/H5N1_Nigeria_2.html

Veterinary Association spokesman Bala Mohammed says more states have reported new cases of the disease, in the last few weeks.
"What we considered a resurgence is becoming alarming. From an initial three, then 10 states, almost all the states have been having a recurrence,"

Experts on bird flu are increasingly worried that Nigeria risks becoming a permanent host to the virus.

The above comments describe the re-emergence of H5N1 in Nigeria and raise additional concerns on H5N1 surveillance. Data from last season indicates H5N1 should once again be re-emerging in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. However, only a handful of countries in the region (Ukraine, Egypt, Sudan, and now Nigeria) have reported the re-emergence of H5N1.

Last season H5N1 was reported in Turkey and Romania in October, 2005. Although neighboring countries denied H5N1 infections until early 2006, subsequent data indicate infections began in the fall and were widespread by December of 2005. The failure to report outbreaks in these countries again this season is cause for concern. Thus far only one sequence from Egypt has been made public this season. Although the isolate had many regional markers, it had a number of new polymorphisms indicating new H5N1 was migrating into the area. The increasing number of reports in Africa raises questions about reporting in the Middle East and Europe.

H5N1 has been recently confirmed in South Korea and Vietnam, signaling additional migration in those areas.

The rapid spread in Nigeria, couple with H5N1 in South Korea signal a new season with increased infections, yet the same countries that failed to report H5N1 in the fall of 2005 are also failing to report H5N1 from the same time period this season.

Failure to report and address the infections will lead to additional spread. H5N1 surveillance remains scandalously poor, even though H5N1 has been aggressively spreading since 2003.
 

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Inactive
Bird Flu Spreads in Nigeria to Farms in Three States

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601202&sid=awZp4hR.qInQ&refer=healthcare

By Jason Gale

Dec. 21 (Bloomberg) -- Bird flu reached every region of Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation, after government inspectors found infections in three states.

The H5N1 strain of avian influenza was detected by the National Veterinary Research Institute in samples collected from the southern state of Delta, the western state of Kwara which borders Benin, and the northeastern state of Borno, which borders Chad, Cameroon and Niger, the United Nations said yesterday in an e-mailed report.

More than 50 countries in Asia, Europe and Africa have found the H5N1 virus in fowl, including France, the European Union's biggest poultry producer, according to the Paris-based World Organization for Animal Health. Nigeria was the first African nation to report the presence of the virus in February. Since then, the disease has spread in Africa to Niger, Egypt, Cameroon, Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Sudan and Djibouti.

Disease trackers are concerned that H5N1, which mainly affects birds, may mutate to become more easily spread among people. At least 154 of the 258 people known to be infected with the strain during the past three years have died, according to the World Health Organization in Geneva.

H5N1 outbreaks have now been reported in 17 of Nigeria's 36 states as well as the Federal Capital Territory, reaching every part of the country. No human infections have been recorded in Nigeria, on the western edge of a continent ravaged by poverty and HIV/AIDS. Egypt and Djibouti have reported human cases.

Asian Outbreaks

Reports from the Federal Departments of Livestock and Pest Control Services showed that outbreaks were reported in three small-scale poultry farms in Borno, the UN report said.

The outbreak in Delta state occurred on a farm in Ughelli North, the report said. Details of the outbreaks aren't yet known, the UN said.

The disease was first reported on a farm in Kwara state's Galladima village on Nov. 27, according to the report. More than 5,000 fowl died or were culled because of infection, the UN said.

The virus is also spreading in Asia. Vietnam, which hadn't reported any H5N1 infections in a year, yesterday said the government detected the virus in poultry after thousands of chickens and ducks died in the Mekong Delta. South Korea has found three avian outbreaks in the last month, the first infections in the nation since 2003.
 

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Inactive
Indonesia claiming bird flu success as cases drop

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2006/12/21/asia/AS_GEN_Indonesia_Bird_Flu_Cases_Drop.php

The Associated Press
Published: December 21, 2006

JAKARTA, Indonesia: Human bird flu deaths in Indonesia have slowed markedly over the last three months, a drop local officials attributed Thursday to a more aggressive fight against the virus.

But the World Health Organization cautioned that the fall — a rare piece of good news in the country worst hit by the H5N1 virus — did not indicate a trend and refused to speculate on possible reasons for it.

Health Minister Siti Fadillah said the success was due to a more forceful vaccination and culling policy which led the government to recently declare 14 of its 33 provinces free of the virus in poultry stocks.

She also cited an ongoing public education campaign.

"The drop in cases is because of the success of the government ... which is now unified and moving quickly," she told The Associated Press on Thursday. "If the birds are free of the virus, so are humans."

The virulent H5N1 form of bird flu began devastating Asian poultry stocks in 2003, but Indonesia did not record its first human case until two years later. Its number of cases quickly soared, and it has now logged 74 human infections, 57 of them fatal.

International experts have accused the country of not doing enough to tackle the virus, which experts fear may mutate into a form that could spread easily between humans and potentially kill millions globally.

Stopping the spread in Indonesia, a sprawling island nation of 220 million people, is a priority because it has been the only country regularly reporting new cases in humans.

Confirmed cases reported to WHO by Indonesia have slowed considerably since the beginning of October, according to data posted on the agency's Web site. Of the 36 cases so far this year, only five have occurred since the beginning of October, and none has been recorded so far in December.

More than double the number of cases were confirmed over the same period in 2005.

"I thank God that the cases are going down, but we cannot celebrate yet," said Nyoman Kandun, director-general of communicable disease control at the health ministry, adding it would take at least three more months of declining cases to start believing it may be permanent.

WHO said it was too soon to read anything into the data, saying "it does not indicate any trend, and we cannot speculate at all about the reasons, nor what may happen, in the coming weeks."

Vietnam, the second worst-hit country by the virus, has not reported any human infections since November 2005, although this week it reported its first outbreak in poultry in a year. Thailand has reported three human fatalities this year, while China's last reported case was in July.

David Nabarro, the United Nation's coordinator for avian and pandemic influenza, recently praised Indonesia's government for boosting its campaign against the virus, but warned that major challenges remained.

"There is a lot, lot more to do," he said in September during a trip to the country. "I'm not at all saying it's under control."

The government initially baulked at slaughtering birds in infected areas and vaccinating flocks, citing lack of funds.

It recently launched a large-scale public education campaign, including TV commercials urging people to wash their hands after coming into contact with poultry and to report sick or dying birds to the authorities.

Kandun also said most suspected cases now turn out to be negative, meaning the country's surveillance system is working effectively — a massive challenge in such a large, spread-out country.
 

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Inactive
Korea

4th Bird Flu Outbreak Found in Asan

http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/nation/200612/kt2006122123391611990.htm

By Yoon Won-sup
Staff Reporter

The Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry said Thursday that it had confirmed a fourth case of the highly pathogenic avian influenza in Asan, South Chungchong Province.

``The deaths of ducks in Asan, which was reported on Dec. 11, turned out to be related to avian influenza after testing,’’ a ministry official said. ``However, it remains unclear whether it was the virulent H5N1 virus.’’

The ministry said that it will cull around 23,000 poultry within a 3-kilometer radius of the area in an effort to prevent the spread of the potentially deadly disease.

It is the second time for poultry in the area to be infected following a similar outbreak in February 2004.

Quarantine officials are conducting epidemiological tests to discover the cause of the latest infection.
 

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Inactive
Bird flu hits Indonesia's tsunami-battered Aceh

http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/RWB.NSF/db900SID/STED-6WPR3U?OpenDocument

JAKARTA, Dec 21, 2006 (Xinhua via COMTEX) -- Avian Influenza has infected tens of thousands of fowls in Aceh province, which was devastated by tsunami in December 2004, an Indonesian Health Ministry official said here Thursday.

After infecting scores of chickens in one district in North Aceh regency at the end of December last year, the highly pathogenic H5N1 virus now has contracted tens of thousands of chickens in seven districts of the regency, said Suyono, a member of the investigation team of the ministry for combating avian flu, who has just returned from the province.

Mahrozar, an official of the health department of the North Aceh regency, said all preventive measures had been taken to prevent the virus from spreading.

The Indonesian health ministry has ordered to slaughter all poultry in radius of one kilometer and to vaccinate all of them in radius of three kilometers.

The official said two out of the seven districts were hit by the tsunami in 2004, the Senedon district and Santa Lira Bayu district.

On Dec. 26, the Aceh province is to commemorate the second anniversary of the tsunami.
 

JPD

Inactive
Vietnam battles three new bird flu outbreaks in poultry

http://rawstory.com/news/2006/Vietnam_battles_three_new_bird_flu__12222006.html

dpa German Press Agency
Published: Friday December 22, 2006

Hanoi- Authorities in Vietnam have identified three new outbreaks of bird flu in the Mekong Delta, raising fears of a larger-scale return of the deadly H5N1 virus after a year of relative calm, an official said Friday. No human cases of bird flu have been reported, but chickens and ducks have died of bird flu in three new areas in the Mekong Delta provinces of Ca Mau and Bac Lieu, which this week reported the first confirmed cases in more than a year.

"The situation is alarming," said Hoang Van Nam, director of the Epidemic Unit under Vietnam's Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development.

Thousands of chickens and ducks in the affected areas have been slaughtered as authorities try to limit the spread of the virus, which has killed hundreds of millions of chickens and at least 42 people in Vietnam since 2004.

"Our assessment is that bird flu is likely to spread far outside the outbreak confirmed localities," Nam said. "Once the virus spread to the environment, other provinces will be affected."

Nam said the onset of winter represents heightened vulnerability for infection in both poultry and humans - especially as the coming lunar new year celebrations usually see families slaughtering chickens for feasts.

The H5N1 strain of bird flu is not easily contagious among humans, but people can be infected through close contact with infected poultry.

The virus has raised fears among scientists because up to 60 per cent of people known to have been infected have died.

International health organizations warn that H5N1 also could someday mutate into a new human influenza pandemic strain.

A new flu pandemic - which hasn't been seen since the 1960s - could kill as many as 62 million people, according to a study published this week in the medical journal The Lancet.

Most efforts in preventing a pandemic have focused on controlling the virus in domestic poultry, which would deny H5N1 the contact with humans that would make it most likely to mutate.

Vietnam has been one of the most successful countries in controlling the virus through an aggressive programme of poultry vaccinations, which took the country from having outbreaks in all 63 provinces in 2005 to no reported cases in poultry or humans for more than a year.

This week's reported outbreaks apparently were at small farms that had avoided the government-mandated vaccinations, officials said.
 
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