1/27/07-2/1/07|Weekly Bird Flu Thread:New Outbreaks Asia Pandemic Possibility

JPD

Inactive
New Outbreaks in Asia Remind Experts
of Bird Flu Pandemic Possibility

http://www.voanews.com/english/2007-01-26-voa69.cfm

By Martin Secrest
Washington, D.C.
26 January 2007

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New outbreaks of bird flu are causing concern in Asia. Since the beginning of the year, there have been new bird flu cases in Thailand, Vietnam, and China. Indonesian authorities stepped up a bird eradication plan, while the United Nations in Thailand and health officials in Washington provided testimony about the serious implications of avian flu for humans. Voice of America's Dave DeForest has more.

Indonesian authorities slaughtered thousands of chickens and pet birds in an effort to halt the spread of bird flu that killed five people in the country in two weeks. There are an estimated 350 million backyard chickens in Indonesia.

In Bangkok, officials from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) worry about a spike in bird flu, but the FAO's Laurence Gleeson says the latest outbreak is not as serious as that of 2004. "Where the virus is occurring certainly in mainland southeast Asia, I would say that the outbreaks are under control, in the sense that if they do occur, the resources are there to deal with them."

Avian flu concerns health officials because of its potential for pandemic. In Washington, a Congressional panel heard testimony about bird flu from the Director of the Centers for Disease Control, Dr. Julie Gerberding. "When we have seasonal flu, the mortality rate is certainly less than three percent. We're talking here about a virus, that when it does affect people, has a mortality rate of greater than fifty percent. So that is, in and of itself, a reason for great concern. But more importantly, people do not have any immunity to the H5(N1) virus. So we have to assume that basically everyone in the world is susceptible."

Bird flu remains hard for humans to catch, but experts fear it may mutate into a more contagious form.
 

JPD

Inactive
Health ministry pinched on bird flu care

http://www.bangkokpost.com/topstories/topstories.php?id=116344

By Apiradee Treerutkuarkul

A cash crunch means no patient isolation wards in state hospitals. The wards, technically called "negative pressure rooms," are essential for separating patients put on the bird flu watch-list.

The wards are needed to prevent the possibility of any human-to-human transmission of the virus.

The setting up of influenza isolation wards in community hospitals is also part of the ministry's wider preparedness plan to prevent a bird flu pandemic.

So far, most community hospitals have no such wards as they lack the budget to set them up, said Boonchai Somboonsook, deputy chief of the Health Service Department overseeing the project.

At the moment, altogether only 61 provincial hospitals have these wards, he said.

The previous government last year approved a 40-million-baht budget for the purpose. Each room in an isolation ward costs around 200,000 baht to install, and there are only 200 such rooms in 918 community hospitals across the country.

The budget had been allocated for distribution to local administrative bodies, which were in turn expected to pass it on to community hospitals in their areas. But only a few hospitals have managed to introduce them so far, said Dr Boonchai.

He said since a standard size isolation ward can cost up to two million baht to build, most hospitals could, therefore, build only a small one, and that too was an adapted version of the isolation room for tuberculosis patients.

Dr Boonchai said he would recommend community hospitals, which have yet to receive a budget, to immediately ask for additional financial assistance from local administration bodies to establish the bird flu isolation wards to comply with the ministry's flu pandemic prevention policy.

He has not set any deadlines for the hospitals. But provincial hospitals affected by the re-emergence of the deadly disease, such as in Phitsanulok, Phichit and Suphanburi, have been asked to have them up and running as soon as possible, he said.

According to the World Health Organisation, a negative pressure room should be available at each hospital for isolating patients with bird flu symptoms.

The air, flowing one-way in these special wards, is sterilised and reduces the possibility of the virus circulating in the air. The room is also equipped with a disinfectant ventilation system.

The country is currently experiencing its fifth bird flu outbreak since Jan 15, when the H5N1 virus was first detected in a duck farm in Phitsanulok province.

Since 2004, Thailand has reported 25 human bird flu cases - 17 of them fatal.
 

JPD

Inactive
Receptor Binding Domain Changes in Indonesian H5N1 Cases

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/01260701/H5N1_Indonesia_RBD.html

Recombinomics Commentary
January 26, 2007

There has been a significant upsurge in cases in Indonesia this month. A large number of suspect cases and clusters have been described in the local media. However, the reports of a jump in suspect cases have been accompanied by a jump in confirmed cases. Four of the five confirmed H5N1 infections this month have been fatal. H5N1 sequences from these cases were made public today at Genbank.

There has been concern about changes in or near the HA receptor binding domain. Recently a number of 2005 and 2006 H5N1 bird sequences in China were made public. These sequences had a number of changes in or near the receptor binding domain.

These changes have recently been appearing in human cases this season. In Egypt, the three sequences from patients in Gharbiya had M230I. This polymorphism is in all three human influenza strains, H3N2, H1N1, influenza B and the change creates a match with Influenza B at positions 226-230. The two isolates from the Gharbiya cluster also have a change within the receptor binding domain, V223I. This change has been found in a Qinghai isolate from Mongolia, as well as recent isolates from geese in Shantou.

Sequences from the four fatal cases in Indonesia, A/Indonesia/CDC1031/2007, A/Indonesia/CDC1032/2007, A/Indonesia/CDC1046/2007, A/Indonesia/CDC1047/2007 also have multiple changes near the receptor binding domain position 190. All four have D187N and A188E. These two changes have been seen in H5N1 birds in Shangxi and Hunan. The changes were also in the more recent 2006 sequences in Indonesia, A/Indonesia/CDC887/2006, A/Indonesia/CDC938/2006. The presence of both changes in all four isolates in 2007 raises the possibility that these changes are being fixed in Indonesia.

Moreover, the three most recent 2007 isolates also have a third change, A189E. The latest acquisitions create a stretch of three consecutive changes at positions 187-189.

The rapid acquisition of changes in or near the receptor binding domain in H5N1 isolates from human cases is cause for concern. All of the above cases have been fatal, and represents a jump in the number of cases in Egypt and Indonesia.

These sequences are being acquired onto regional genetic backgrounds via recombination. The increasingly diverse gene pool, coupled with bird migration and recombination is creating an increasing diversity in key regions such as the receptor binding domain as well as drug resistance to the frontline antiviral, Tamiflu.

These rapid changes in an evolving H5N1 which causes fatal infections in patients, is cause for concern.
 

JPD

Inactive
Qinghai H5N1 in Ivory Coast

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/01260702/H5N1_IC.html

Recombinomics Commentary
January 26, 2007

The recent report of Tamiflu resistance in two family members from the Gharbiya governorate in Egypt has focused attention on NA sequences from Qinghai isolates in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. The detection of N294S in samples collected two days after the start of Tamiflu treatment strongly suggests the N294S was present in the H5N1 prior to Tamiflu treatment. This is supported by the failure to find wild type N294 sequences in either patient, as well as prior detection of N294S in ducks in China.

The database of recent Qinghai NA sequences is lacking. NAMRU-3 has made public NA sequences from four of the five recent cases in Egypt, including the two cluster members. However, additional sequences have been limited because most countries with H5N1 infections have failed to report outbreaks.

Recent reports of H5N1 in Nigeria and Hungary provide further support for reporting / detection failures in neighboring countries in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa.

Today’s update of Qinghai H5N1 samples submitted to the NIAID genome sequencing project includes a number of Qinghai isolates from Africa (Egypt, Sudan, and the Ivory Coast). Included are three turkey samples from the Ivory Coast, collected last month (A/turkey/Ivory Coast/4372-2/2006, A/turkey/Ivory Coast/4372-3/2006, A/turkey/Ivory Coast/4372-4/2006), adding additional support for recent H5N1 outbreaks in countries neighboring Nigeria in western Africa.

[Many countries with new H5N1 outbreaks have not reported them. Among samples sent for sequencing under the NIAID Sequencing Project are samples from the Ivory Coast collected last month.

http://www.flutrackers.com/forum/showpost.php?p=61375&postcount=1]


Release of recent H5N1 samples or sequences by countries neighboring the countries acknowledging outbreaks is important for determination of the distribution of Tamiflu resistance. NA sequences from poultry in Egypt are currently being generated.

These sequences are critical for the evaluation of anti-viral treatment options. H5N1 in patients have already been reported in Egypt, and a cluster in Nigeria is under investigation. All H5N1 infected patients in the area (Turkey, Azerbaijan, Iraq, Egypt, Djbouti) have been the Qinghai strain as have all recent high path H5N1 infections in birds Europe, the Middle East, and Africa.

Withholding of H5N1 samples and sequences remains hazardous to the world’s health.
 

JPD

Inactive
Risk from bird flu remains high, says welfare minister

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailnational.asp?fileid=20070127.G01&irec=0

Alvin Darlanika Soedarjo and Yemris Fointuna, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta, Kupang

The government is stepping up its efforts to fight bird flu but the risk from the virus remains very high, Coordinating Minister for People's Welfare Aburizal Bakrie said Friday, a day after the country's 63rd human fatality was confirmed.

He said the government is very serious about addressing the threat in cooperation with local administrations and international partners. Scientists fear the disease could mutate into a form that is even more dangerous to humans.

Last year, the campaign against the disease succeeded in containing human infections in nine out of the 30 bird flu-prone provinces. The disease has also killed millions of birds.

"Even though our continued efforts have yielded significant progress, we are still on the highest alert," Bakrie said while receiving a donation from the U.S. of 2,000 decontamination kits and 200,000 sets of personal protection equipment, the gear that workers wear to handle fowls infected with avian influenza.

The donation is worth US$2.2 million and is part of a $41 million assistance package from the U.S. government and USAID.

"Suits, respirators, goggles and gloves and decontamination kits help keep our agricultural and health workers safe as they do their important work to control this disease. They will also help us to respond more effectively in case of an outbreak," Bakrie said.

U.S. Ambassador for Indonesia B. Lynn Pascoe handed over the protective gear to be used in biosecurity, vaccination and culling of poultry infected with H5N1.

"We have not yet contained bird flu here in Indonesia and must remain vigilant in both our continued efforts to detect and contain the virus and to educate the citizens of this nation, particularly at the village level," Pascoe said.

So far, bird flu has infected 81 people since it arrived in Indonesia in 2005. The diagnosis of the latest fatality, a six-year-old girl from the Central Java town of Magelang, was announced Thursday.

The new case brought the country's total human deaths from the virus to 63, the highest in the world, with six deaths occurring this month alone.

Following the resurgence of bird flu, the government has intensified its fight against the disease, including banning backyard poultry in Jakarta and nearby provinces. However, mass culling efforts have continued to meet resistance from poultry breeders across the country.

In Kupang, East Nusa Tenggara, the Tenau animal quarantine office rejected at least 1,300 day-old chickens from a Surabaya company Friday.

The quarantine office spokesman, Putu Gede Suardaya, said the chickens were turned down as part of the effort to keep bird flu out of the province.

He said the company was not among those officially listed to supply poultry to the province, and the supplier did not obtain a permit from the province's animal husbandry office. This raised suspicion that the birds might have the disease.

The head of the province's animal husbandry office, Christian Leyloh, said his office would not accept poultry imports that ignore security and standard procedures.

"If there is a company which violates these regulations, there's no other option but to return the poultry or destroy them," he said.
 

JPD

Inactive

'I trust the big names when I crave chicken'

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailcity.asp?fileid=20070127.C05&irec=4

The recent regulation banning backyard poultry in Jakarta has received a warm welcome from many quarters. Poultry breeders, however, are unhappy with both the regulation and the media's coverage of bird flu, which they say are destroying their livelihood. The Jakarta Post asked a number of people for their thoughts on the issue.

Dian Nona Maulani, 24, works for a sports media outlet. She lives in Kebayoran Baru, South Jakarta, with her family:

I think all the media hype about bird flu has gotten to me. With all the coverage, I have become paranoid about the disease.

I limit my consumption of chicken products. I rarely eat chicken, even manufactured chicken products like nuggets.

However, if I crave chicken I go to a fast-food restaurant. I trust the big names, rather than the small sidewalk cafes that also sell fried chicken.

We don't keep chickens in our backyard. But when I was little my family raised chickens. I used to play with them all the time. I patted their heads and let them sit on my lap. It is normal for bird owners to have an emotional attachment to their pets.

However, in the case of bird flu, if a bird or chicken owner refuses to hand over their pets, they're being selfish.

It's clear that birds carry the virus, so owners have to give up their birds, despite any emotional attachment.

Ahmad Zaki Zulkarnain, 24, works at a technology-business magazine. He lives in Pesanggrahan, South Jakarta:

I think the city administration's decision to prohibit backyard poultry is the best solution given the current conditions that the city must deal with.

It's still difficult to detect the virus, and it also spreads rapidly.

So it's the best solution for the very bad conditions that we're dealing with. It's tough, but we have to bear with it.

The only other option would be to relocate people with birds, which would be impossible.

Currently, I am not avoiding eating chicken because I'm confident the virus will be killed if cooked properly. I was a bit paranoid and stopped eating chicken for a while, but now I think it's okay.

I think there's something dodgy about this bird flu outbreak. I think it's a game that multinational pharmaceutical companies are playing. I believe they planted the virus so they can sell vaccines. I mean, it's all just dirty business.

--The Jakarta Post
 

JPD

Inactive
Japan confirms bird flu outbreak

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/6305029.stm

Officials in Japan have confirmed that a recent outbreak of bird flu at a poultry farm was the deadly H5N1 strain of the virus.

The outbreak, at a farm in Hyuga, is the second to strike Japan's main chicken-producing region of Miyazaki.

Samples taken from 3,000 dead chickens from the farm revealed that all had been infected with the H5N1 virus.

Officials said they had begun slaughtering the farm's remaining 49,000 birds on Friday.

A further 50,000 chickens from a farm neighbouring the one that suffered the outbreak will also be killed as a precautionary measure, an official said.

There have been a number of H5N1 outbreaks in Japan since early 2004, but there have been no human deaths from the virus.

The earlier H5N1 outbreak occured in mid-January at a farm in the same region.

Health officials across Asia are on alert as a growing number of countries have reported cases in both birds and humans in recent weeks.

Since the H5N1 virus emerged in South East Asia in late 2003, it has claimed more than 150 lives around the world.

There are fears the virus could mutate to a form which could be easily passed from human to human, triggering a pandemic and potentially putting millions of lives at risk.
 

JPD

Inactive
Five Indonesians in hospital with suspected bird flu

http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/CrisesArticle.aspx?storyId=SP32994

JAKARTA, Jan 25 (Reuters) - Five people with bird flu symptoms have been hospitalised in Indonesia's South Sulawesi province, a doctor said on Thursday.

Tests were being conducted to determine if the five, including three children, were infected with the H5N1 bird flu virus.

Their health was improving, said Khalid Saleh, a doctor in charge of the bird flu ward at Wahidin Sudirohusodo hospital in the provincial capital Makassar.

"They come from the same neighbourhood. It was said chickens have died in the area," he told Reuters.

Indonesia, which has the world's highest human death toll from bird flu, stepped up efforts to stamp out H5N1 after the disease flared again this year following a brief lull.

Five people have died of the disease this year, taking the number of human deaths in the country to 62. The virus is endemic in poultry in most provinces.

Indonesia, the world's fourth-most-populous country that stretches across 17,000 islands, faces an uphill task in fighting the virus.

Millions of backyard fowl live in close proximity to humans and keeping backyard chickens is ingrained in Indonesia's culture while health education campaigns have often been patchy and rules difficult to enforce.

Contact with sick fowl is the most common way people are infected.

Bird flu remains essentially an animal disease, but it known to have infected 269 people worldwide since late 2003, killing 163 of them, according to the World Health Organisation.

Scientists fear the virus could mutate into a strain that spreads easily among people, triggering a pandemic that would sweep the globe.
 

JPD

Inactive
No human-to-human bird flu in Egypt -- spokesman

http://www.kuna.net.kw/home/Story.aspx?Language=en&DSNO=946387

HLT-EGYPT-BIRD FLU-SPOKESMAN
No human-to-human bird flu in Egypt -- spokesman

CAIRO, Jan 27 (KUNA) -- The recent change in the bird flu virus in Egypt did not involve change into human-to-human infection mode, an official spokesman said here Saturday.

Spokesman for the Egyptian Ministry of Health Abdul-Rahman Shahin said in remarks to be published by Egypt's October weekly, Sunday issue, that the recent alteration in the avian flu virus was an expected thing as "it often occurs in the world of viruses", noting that the virus resisted the Tamiflu bird flu drug to take the death rate to 100 percent in lieu of 50 percent.

The official further stressed there is no room for keeping people in the dark on this matter, which concerns the entire world as epidemics do not stop at boundaries or borders. He pointed out there is current research and follow-up to monitor potential virus mutations, in cooperation with the World Health Organization (WHO) and the US Navy's Medical Research Unit No. 3 (NAMRU-3).

Samples taken from virus victims have been sent to numerous research agencies to identify the genetic map of the new virus strain and to determine how effective drugs are, he said.

High alert has been declared at all health departments in the country in a bid to curb spread of the killer virus and develop fresh control plans and strategies in view of local and international developments, the Egyptian health spokesman added.

He reiterated there is constant coordination with all world organizations and agencies involved in the fight against the epidemic.

An Egyptian woman, aged 27, died of bird flu in Bani Suwayf, south Egypt, a week ago, taking the death toll to 11 out of 19 bird flu cases since the outbreak in February 2006.(end) rg.
 

RAT

Inactive
Deadly H5N1 may be brewing in cats

From ProMed Mail

Deadly H5N1 May Be Brewing In Cats
By Debora Mackenzie
New Scientist (print edition)
1-26-7

Bird flu hasn't gone away. The discovery, announced last week, that

the H5N1 bird flu virus is widespread in cats in locations across Indonesia has refocused attention on the danger that the deadly virus could be mutating into a form that can infect humans far more easily.

In the 1st survey of its kind, an Indonesian scientist has found that in areas where there have been outbreaks of H5N1 in poultry and humans, one in 5 cats have been infected with the virus and survived. This suggests that as outbreaks continue to flare across Asia and Africa, H5N1 will have vastly more opportunities to adapt to mammals than had been supposed.

Chairul Anwar Nidom of Airlangga University in Surabaya, Indonesia, told journalists last week that he had taken blood samples from 500 stray cats near poultry markets in 4 areas of Java, including the capital, Jakarta, and one area in Sumatra, all of which have recently had outbreaks of H5N1 in poultry and people.

Of these cats, 20 per cent carried antibodies to H5N1. This does not mean that they were still carrying the virus, only that they had been infected, probably through eating birds that had H5N1. Many other cats that were infected are likely to have died from the resulting illness, so many more than 20 per cent of the original cat populations may have acquired H5N1.

This is a much higher rate of infection than has been found in surveys of apparently healthy birds in Asia. "I am quite taken aback by the results," says Nidom, who also found the virus in Indonesian pigs in 2005. He plans further tests of the samples at the University of Tokyo in February 2007.

Amin Soebandrio, head of medical sciences at the Indonesian ministry for research and technology, confirmed the report. He says that the infection has also been found in dogs and cats on the Indonesian island of Bali, which has also had outbreaks of H5N1. The new findings follow reports that unusually large numbers of dead cats have been found near many outbreaks of H5N1. "Javanese farmers even have a word for the cat disease," says Albert Osterhaus of Erasmus University in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. It was Osterhaus's lab which in 2004 found that cats can catch the H5N1 virus. Like humans, some cats die and some recover. But unlike humans, infected cats shed large amounts of the virus and pass it to each other.

Infected cats may not directly increase the danger of people catching the virus, as humans seem to catch the current strain only with difficulty even from birds, which they kill, pluck and eat. The main worry, says Osterhaus, is that as the virus replicates in cats, it will further adapt to mammals and acquire the ability to spread more efficiently to people and from person to person, unleashing a human pandemic.

Nidom's findings are the 1st to indicate what proportion of cats can become infected by H5N1. No cats have been tested in Hong Kong or China. In Bangkok, Thailand all the cats in one household are known to have died of H5N1 in 2004. Tigers and leopards in Thai zoos also died, while last year [2006], 2 cats near an outbreak in poultry and people in Iraq were confirmed to have died of H5N1, as were 3 German cats that ate wild birds. In Austria, cats were infected but remained healthy (New Scientist, 18 Mar 2006, p 6).

Though Osterhaus says Nidom's figures must be confirmed, he says they aren't surprising, and is even encouraged that they aren't worse. A higher percentage of infected predators than prey makes sense, as each predator eats many prey animals. "At least that percentage shows the virus has not completely adapted to cats, yet," Osterhaus says. If it had, all cats in a stricken area should be infected, as with ordinary flu in humans.

Osterhaus emphasizes that the cat infections still pose a potential threat. "We know the 1918 pandemic was a bird flu virus that adapted to mammals in some intermediate mammalian host, possibly pigs," he says. "Maybe for H5N1, the intermediate host is cats." If similar percentages of cats are infected at every outbreak location, there must have been many thousands of cat infections since the virus emerged, compared to 267 confirmed cases in humans. Every sick cat is a chance for the virus to adapt, and with renewed outbreaks this year [2007] in birds, people or both in China, Indonesia, Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, Viet Nam, Thailand, Egypt and Nigeria, it is getting plenty of such chances.

Killing cats won't solve the problem, Osterhaus warns. Like shooting wild birds, it is unlikely to have much impact and could send infected animals elsewhere. It would also lead to a population explosion of disease-carrying rodents, which the cats normally keep in check.

"Cats must just be kept from eating sick chickens," Osterhaus says, though this will be a tall order in open-air markets across Asia and Africa, which are typically swarming with hungry cats. In Jakarta this week, officials are slaughtering thousands of banned backyard poultry then handing them back for their owners to eat. Some of the birds could well be infected despite appearing healthy. It is hard to imagine the local cats not getting their share.

[link to www.newscientist.com]
MP=NLC-nletter&nsref=mg19325883.800


Patricia A. Doyle DVM, PhD
Bus Admin, Tropical Agricultural Economics
Univ of West Indies
 

JPD

Inactive
Thailand

Health Ministry says no new bird flu cases

http://etna.mcot.net/query.php?nid=27578

BANGKOK, Jan 28 (TNA) – Lab tests showed that 222 people nationwide earlier suspected of having bird flu disease have been determined to be free of the deadly disease, said a spokesman of the Public Health Ministry.

Spokesman Dr. Supan Srithamma said lab tests were conducted on 268 persons from 42 provinces between January 1–27 and that the results of lab tests confirmed that 222 of them only had ordinary cough and influenza, not bird flu disease as earlier suspected.

The ministry is awaiting results of lab tests on the remaining 46 persons though, said Dr. Supan.

Although no new bird flu cases have been confirmed since the beginning of this month, the doctor urged people to take precautions. Children are advised to refrain from playing with their pets, especially chickens. (TNA) - E111
 

JPD

Inactive
Japan

Bird death toll in Okayama bird flu outbreak climbs to 31

http://mdn.mainichi-msn.co.jp/national/news/20070128p2a00m0na004000c.html

Preliminary tests show bird flu killed 31 chickens at a farm in Okayama Prefecture, a local government official said Sunday, the latest in a string of recent outbreaks among the country's poultry stocks.

Authorities expect to have definitive lab results showing whether the virus was the H5N1 strain that is harmful to humans after midday Monday, said state official Kohei Kurose.

Officials have begun sterilizing the farm in Takahashi, western Okayama Prefecture, and neighboring farms have been asked to refrain from moving their chickens, he said.

All 12,000 birds at the farm will be slaughtered if the final tests come back positive, the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries said in a statement.

Meanwhile, authorities continued to slaughter chickens at a poultry farm in southern Japan where the H5N1 virus killed 3,000 chickens earlier this week.

About 40,000 of the remaining 49,000 birds at the farm in Hyuga in Miyazaki prefecture, Japan's main chicken-producing region, had been slaughtered by Sunday, Miyazaki official Hisanori Ogura said.

Another 50,000 chickens at a neighboring farm will also be killed as a precaution, Ogura said.

Earlier this month, some 4,000 chickens died from H5N1 in another town in Miyazaki Prefecture.

The H5N1 virus has spurred the slaughter of millions of birds across Asia since late 2003, and caused the deaths of at least 163 people worldwide, according to the World Health Organization.

Japan has confirmed only one human H5N1 infection, and no human deaths.

The bird flu virus remains hard for humans to catch, but international experts fear it may mutate into a form that could spread easily among humans and possibly kill millions around the world. (AP)
 

JPD

Inactive
Jakarta's 10 subdistricts resume poultry slaughter

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailgeneral.asp?fileid=20070128140622&irec=5

JAKARTA (Antara): Some 65 administration units in 10 sub-districts in South Jakarta have resumed the culling of poultry to avoid the spread of H5N1 virus which is responsible for deadly bird flu, an official said.

The move was part of the proposed mass culling of 10,000 fowls some of which were slaughtered last week, head of the South Jakarta municipality's husbandry and fisheries office Edi Santoso said Sunday.

"I don't know the exact number of fowls which have already been slaughtered but I have sent all the officers to 10 subdistricts for the mass culling," he said.

The 10 subdistricts are Pasar Minggu, Tebet, Mampang, Pesanggrahan, Pancoran, Kebayoran Lama, Jaga Karsa, Setiabudi, Cilandak and Kebayoran Baru.

Despite the mass culling, the South Jakarta municipality will push through with its plan to make sweep operations against poultry in the administration units on Feb. 1, he said.

"We want all fowls in South Jakarta culled as of Jan. 31," he said.

Edi also said his office had already issued around 600 bird flu-free certificates to poultry owners although the number of people applying for such certificates had risen to over 5,000.

"There are a plenty of fowls which do not deserve such certificates and that they are subject to slaughter," he said.

Meanwhile, secretary general of the National Chicken Breeders Association (Gopan) Heri Darmawan said in Cirebon, West Java, on Saturday the Jakarta city administration's plan to ban the entry of chickens from other areas into Jakarta would inflict heavy losses to breeders and traders as the capital had by far been the country's largest market for pure-bred chickens.

He made the remarks in reaction to one of the measures to be taken by the Jakarta city government to prevent the spread of Avian Influenza (AI) or bird flu in its jurisdiction.

"The ban should be enforced in stages instead of all at once because it takes time for chicken traders to prepare enough chicken slaughter facilities. Besides, Jakarta residents traditionally prefer to buy live chickens," Heri told the press following a meeting with the executive board of the PoultryBusinessmen's Association (HPU).

The already publicized plan to ban chickens from entering Jakarta had already led to a 50 percent decline in demand for chicken, he said.

"The decline is because people think that pure-bred chickens are also susceptible to Avian Influenza, while in fact they are bred according to the correct procedures, including regular vaccinations, observance of bio-security rules and even close supervision at the time they are about to be transported to Jakarta," he said. (***)
 

JPD

Inactive
Reinforcements called up to battle Mekong Delta bird flu

http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/showarticle.php?num=01HEA270107

HCM CITY — The Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development on Thursday sent three veterinarian teams to the Mekong River delta to intensify the region’s fight against bird flu.

The teams, led by deputy minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Bui Ba Bong, will work in seven provinces currently battling the avian influenza: Ca Mau, Bac Lieu, Soc Trang, Vinh Long, Tra Vinh, Kien Giang, Hau Giang and Can Tho.

Provincial authorities have culled 23,000 infected birds since the disease re-appeared in early December. Localities have also vaccinated more than three million poultry, chiefly free range ducks.

The three veterinarian teams will also inspect prevention efforts in unaffected Mekong provinces. Outbreak in the entire region remains possible as the illegal transport of un-quarantined poultry increases in line with Tet holiday commerce.

The team will also focus on educating people about bird flu and helping them prevent epidemics.

The veterinarian teams will help local authorities disinfect poultry farms and monitor the breeding, transport and slaughter of live poultry.

They also plan to provide more vaccinations, cordon off infected areas and promptly cull sick birds.

The Animal Health Department said on Thursday that the number of Delta communes affected by the bird flu epidemic had dropped by seven thanks to outstanding efforts by local authorities. A total of 32 communes in the region have reported no new bird flu cases over the last three weeks.

Bird flu tests negative

Blood samples taken from dead birds in HCM City’s Phu Nhuan District have tested negative for the H5N1 virus, said Huynh Huu Tho, head of the Test, Diagnosis and Treatment Station at the city’s Animal Health Department.

According to initial health reports, the birds were killed due to afflictions caused by being caged too long. When they were set free, the birds were too weak to fly properly. They flew into a wall nearby and died.

The district’s preventive health team is now disinfecting the area and monitoring the health of residents living in the area.

Tho called on city residents to restrict their contact with wild birds. — VNS
 

JPD

Inactive
IN THE LAB: Fighting the bird flu, fast

http://www.latimes.com/features/health/la-he-lab29jan29,1,3832186.story?coll=la-headlines-health

By Linda Marsa, Special to The Times
January 29, 2007

There's no effective vaccine yet, but researchers are working to speed up the production process of six to eight months.

IF the bird flu afflicting poultry flocks in Asia starts spreading efficiently among people, many millions could die. We have no natural immunity to this virus, and no effective vaccine is available. And even if we did have a potent bird flu shot, vaccine production is such a slow, unwieldy process that vaccine makers couldn't produce sufficient supplies fast enough to avert a catastrophe.

Health researchers are trying to tackle this problem — to prepare for the H5N1 bird flu threat and for other lethal strains that might crop up. And they are making some headway. A couple of experimental bird flu vaccines in clinical trials can be made much more swiftly than the conventional influenza vaccines we get shots of each flu season.

One approach entails using cells in a lab fermenter to quickly churn out the viruses needed to make a vaccine. (Normally, flu vaccines are made by growing viruses on millions of chicken eggs.) Another method uses just one gene of the virus, instead of the whole flu virus, to stimulate a protective immune response.

"These methods could shorten the window of time it takes to make the avian flu vaccine," says Terrence Tumpey, a microbiologist and avian flu expert at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta. "If we can make a vaccine in three months versus the six to eight months required now, that would save lives."

So far, there hasn't been an outbreak because bird flu is hard to contract: The H5N1 avian flu virus doesn't migrate that easily from birds to humans, and when it does, it doesn't spread readily among people. But public health officials worry that this might change — causing disaster because the virus kills more than half of its victims.

Of the 265 people who are known to have been infected with H5N1 flu since 2003, 159 have died, according to the World Health Organization in Geneva. Were it to evolve into a more contagious strain because of the speed of air travel, health officials predict we could face a worse global flu pandemic than the one that struck in 1918, when a bird flu spread to humans and claimed at least 50 million lives.

Although this threat has lent urgency to the search for an effective avian flu vaccine, the path is littered with roadblocks. For starters, influenza viruses are notorious shape shifters: The H5N1 avian flu strains that recently emerged in Indonesia and China, for example, are different from the H5N1 culprit behind the initial 1997 outbreak in Hong Kong. That means researchers cannot stockpile bird flu vaccine, because even if a vaccine prevented infection from the original strain, it might not protect against new variants.

This is a problem because if the pandemic hits, the world will quickly need hundreds of millions of doses. Yet making flu shots takes six months or more if done conventionally — namely, growing viruses in fertilized hens' eggs, then collecting, killing and processing them into vaccine. It takes months to line up supplies of eggs and months more to incubate them. It's virtually impossible to ramp up production quickly.

"The influenza viruses are a moving target, and keeping up with their variability is a perpetual challenge, which is why we're exploring these new technologies," says Dr. Gary J. Nabel, director of the Vaccine Research Center at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md.

The two novel ways of making vaccines could dramatically speed up vaccine production. Cell-based vaccines use mammalian cells (often ones originally derived from canine kidneys) instead of eggs. The cells are bathed in nutrients in big vats and are used as hosts for the growth of modified avian flu viruses that can be used in vaccines. This method reduces production time by about a month, and the cells can be frozen for stockpiling in case of emergencies.

Early tests of this method have yielded promising results. A 2006 clinical trial revealed that one cell-cultured avian flu vaccine triggered a strong immune response in 65% to 96% of human participants, depending on the strength of the doses they received.

The vaccine, developed by Baxter International of Deerfield, Ill., was tested on 270 healthy adults, each of whom received two shots spaced 21 days apart. What was especially encouraging is that the vaccine showed evidence of cross-protection against several H5N1 strains. Larger tests of humans are slated to start this year.

A similar cell-based vaccine is just beginning a clinical trial at the University of Maryland that will eventually include as many as 100 healthy volunteers.

Other experimental vaccines are speedier still — shrinking production time from months to weeks. Two groups of scientists are working on methods that use the gene for a certain flu virus protein, hemagglutinin, to provoke an immune response.

Hemagglutinin was chosen because it normally sits on the outside of a flu virus and is one that the immune system recognizes and uses to neutralize flu viruses.

In one method, Nabel and colleagues at the NIH's Vaccine Research Center spliced a bird flu hemagglutinin gene into a ring of DNA and then inserted it into bacteria. The bacteria were then incubated in fermentation tanks, becoming biological factories that made many, many copies of the gene.

In the vaccine method, the DNA is injected into a person's muscle, where it enters cells and directs the formation of hemagglutinin. The immune system recognizes the hemagglutinin — and now should protect against attack by any virus that carries a similar-enough hemagglutinin.

Another technology, under development by Dr. Andrea Gambotto, an immunologist at the University of Pittsburgh, uses the hemagglutinin gene in a different fashion. The gene is inserted inside the genome of a harmless, modified cold virus which is then reproduced in mammalian cells. The virus is injected into people, where it enters cells but does not spread or cause disease. Again, hemagglutinin is manufactured — triggering a protective immune response.

In recent animal studies, these approaches were 100% effective in mounting protective immune reactions against various influenza viruses, including avian H5N1. Last December, the NIH team began human tests involving 45 volunteers. Gambotto plans to start clinical trials of his vaccine this year.

Even if all goes well, it will be several years before any of these experimental approaches become standard tools. "If an outbreak occurred within the next couple of years," Nabel says, "we'd have to rely on conventional methods to make the hundreds of millions of doses we'd need."

At least four H5N1 bird flu vaccines are in development using the conventional method of growing influenza virus on eggs — ones by Sanofi Pasteur, GlaxoSmithKline, Novartis and Chinese scientists. However, a viable bird flu vaccine using such methods won't be on the market for at least another year, and all require two shots to stimulate a protective level of antibodies. In the event of a pandemic, existing production facilities could not produce enough vaccine for everyone.

One approach could stretch the supply of vaccine during a crisis. A turbo-charged version of GlaxoSmithKline's bird flu vaccine (containing an immune-boosting additive called an adjuvant) raised a protective immune response in 80% of 400 volunteers at a far lower dose in trial results reported in 2006.

More tests are needed before it becomes available.

"We don't have a perfect vaccine yet," says Dr. Kenneth Zangwill of UCLA's Center for Vaccine Research. "But if a pandemic comes knocking on our doors, I'll take what we've got."

— Linda Marsa
 

summerthyme

Administrator
_______________
The already publicized plan to ban chickens from entering Jakarta had already led to a 50 percent decline in demand for chicken, he said.

"The decline is because people think that pure-bred chickens are also susceptible to Avian Influenza, while in fact they are bred according to the correct procedures, including regular vaccinations, observance of bio-security rules and even close supervision at the time they are about to be transported to Jakarta," he said. (***)

Good Lord! YES, "purebred chickens" ARE susceptible to H5N1... and at this point, there aren't any "regular vaccinations" which will help that!!

Sheesh!

Now, it is a fact that nothing shows that the infection is transferred to the egg, and so chicks which are hatched at a clean hatchery (all the commercial hatcheries in this country at least have NO adult birds on the premises, and I believe the employees are prohibited from owning poultry at home, as well) can be guaranteed healthy... right up until they are taken out of the box and placed anywhere that birds have been before.

Summerthyme
 

JPD

Inactive
Azeri boy suspected of having bird flu dies

http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/art...RBAIJAN-DC.XML&WTmodLoc=SciHealth-C4-Health-2

BAKU (Reuters) - A 14-year-old Azeri boy, treated for suspected bird flu in a medical institute in the capital, Baku, died on Sunday before his diagnosis could be finally established, a Health Ministry spokesman said.

"According to information from the institute, the boy died today in the morning," Anar Kadyrly said. "Azeri specialists suspected he had bird flu, but three tests conducted in Baku showed he had acute pneumonia."

Kadyrly said the boy's blood sample had been sent for analysis to a laboratory in London endorsed by the World Health Organization (WHO), but no results had returned so far.

The boy was from the southern region of Salyan, one of two centers of last year's bird flu outbreak.

His sister was one of five people who died last year in an outbreak of H5N1 strain bird flu in the former Soviet republic lying between Turkey and Russia.

Bird flu has killed more than 160 people since 2003, according to the WHO. H5N1 is the most deadly strain so far identified.
 

JPD

Inactive
Jakarta facing serious bird flu threat, says official

http://www.antara.co.id/en/seenws/?id=26664

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - The fatal bird flu virus may spread so rapidly in Central Jakarta unless immediate precautionary measures are taken, an official said.

With a high population density and an area covering 18,000 square kilometers, efforts to immediately curb the spread of the H5N1 virus which is responsible for bird flu or avian influenza is very necessary, Central Jakarta Mayor Muhayat said in a statement made available here Sunday.

"Today bird flu infection has nearly reached the third stage, namely from poultry to people. Jakarta will face a big disaster if bird flu infection is in its fourth stage, namely, from humans to humans," he said.

In the statement, Muhayat said that current efforts to curb the spread of the deadly bird flu virus in Central Jakarta are made for people only.

The community in Senen district conducted a depopulation of five species of poultry in Kramat Sentiong area on Sunday.

About 1,000 healthy chickens out of 5,000 registered chickens were culled in Kramat Sentiong and eaten after they were cooked.

Officials said last week the number of deaths from the bird flu in the country had reached 62.

The latest death was the 62nd in a total of 80 bird flu cases, and the fifth in 2007. Indonesia has the world`s highest death rate of the disease.

Vietnam had 42 human deaths from the virus, and practically none in more than a year.

The Indonesian government has banned backyard poultry farms from residential areas in nine provinces.

The ban which previously applied to the capital city of Jakarta, West Java and Banten provinces, now also covers entire Java island, the world`s most densely-populated island, and beyond.

The government also placed tight restrictions on the movement and sale of poultry and poultry products across nine provinces, and is preparing more hospitals to treat people infected with H5N1 virus.

Most bird flu victims in the world had direct contact with sick fowl, but scientists fear the virus could mutate into a form easily transmitted between humans, sparking global pandemic that could kill millions. (*)
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu is back

http://www.budapesttimes.hu/?do=article&id=2206&issue=124

Countries quick to ban poultry & swine

The Agricultural Ministry last Wednesday confirmed that the deadly H5N1 strain of the bird flu virus has once more been discovered in Hungary, the first time the disease has been detected in the European Union since August 2006. The virus broke out on a goose farm in Csongrád County, southeast Hungary, earlier in the week. Around 40 birds fell sick or died and samples from the deceased animals were brought to Budapest for testing.

“The laboratory has detected the highly-pathogenic H5 virus, and according to tests so far it looks like the N1 strain,” the ministry said in statement.

Samples have been sent to the EU’s official laboratory in Weybridge, England, for further tests and the EU has been officially informed of the situation.

All of the 3,300 geese on the farm have been culled since the new outbreak was discovered and a 3km protective zone – with police roadblocks checking cars – and a 10km surveillance zone have been established around the farm.

The ministry said that the measures brought into place so far were satisfactory, and that further restrictions or culls would not be necessary. The European Commission said it was also satisfied by the measures and that there was no “immediate threat” to Hungarian poultry or exports.

However, neighbouring Croatia and Serbia appeared not to be calmed by the preventative measures, and last Wednesday they froze all poultry imports from Hungary as a precautionary measure. The poultry industry suffered a serious drop in sales during the last bird flu scare, and a further prolonged outbreak could cause more damage.

Hungary’s problems were further compounded by the news that Japan had banned the import of Hungarian pork after swine fever was discovered in three wild boars in North Hungary. The CEO of Pick Szeged, László Kovács, said that Japan was one of Hungary’s key export markets, and that a ban on Hungarian pork exports could cause a major crisis in the industry.

Hungary saw its first cases of bird flu in February 2006, when it cropped up amongst wild birds. The disease spread to domestic poultry, and hundreds of thousands of birds were culled. All protective measures were cancelled in August last year when no more cases were reported. The last reported case of bird flu in the EU was uncovered in a wild bird in Germany in August 2006, but there have been continued cases across Asia.

According to the latest figures released by the World Health Organization, the H5N1 strain has claimed the lives of 163 people. Experts fear the disease could mutate and cause a global pandemic that would wipe out hundreds of millions of people.
 

JPD

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Nigeria testing 14 human samples for bird flu

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L29137446.htm

ABUJA, Jan 29 (Reuters) - Nigeria is testing samples from 14 people, including three who died, for possible bird flu, a senior official at the Health Ministry said on Monday.

Samples from a mother and daughter who died in Lagos and a woman who died in remote eastern Taraba state after suffering flu-like symptoms are being tested to determine whether the H5N1 strain of bird flu was present.

Authorities gave conflicting information about tests on the mother and daughter, however.

Lola Sadiq, in charge of monitoring Nigeria's bird flu crisis at the World Health Organisation (WHO) office in Abuja, said they had tested negative for bird flu.

She did not have any information about the Taraba case.

Abdulsalam Nasidi, in charge of efforts to prevent bird flu from spreading to humans in Nigeria, said the three had tested positive for flu which is very common at this time of year due to the seasonal harmattan wind.

"The tests will show if it was common flu or bird flu," Nasidi said, adding that they were being conducted at a laboratory in the capital Abuja. The other 11 samples are from people who came into contact with those who died.

Nigeria, Africa's most populous country, was the first on the continent to detect bird flu a year ago. The virus has spread to 17 of the 36 states but no human case has been confirmed so far.

Bird flu has killed at least 163 people around the world, according to the most recent figures from the WHO. There are fears it could spark a pandemic in which millions could die if it mutates into a form that passes easily from person to person.

Experts warn surveillance in Nigeria may not be completely effective because of poor health services. Many Nigerians die young of a variety of diseases and few families can afford the luxury of a doctor to determine the cause of death.

Nigeria is one of three countries regarded by experts as the weakest areas in the global attempt to stem infections among birds.

The disease was first discovered in the northern state of Kaduna a year ago and despite measures such as culling, quarantine and a transport ban on live birds it spread quickly across the country.

Millions of Nigerians keep live poultry in their backyards and in the absence of refrigerators in most households, birds are transported and sold live and killed just before eating.

The majority of Nigeria's 140 million people live below the poverty line and cannot afford to reject diseased birds. This has raised concern among experts that the country could become a permanent host to the virus.
 

JPD

Inactive
Japan reports another bird flu case

http://www.teluguportal.net/modules/news/article.php?storyid=29970

Tokyo, Jan 29 (DPA) The highly virulent H5 strain of avian flu was confirmed Monday at a poultry farm in Japan's Okayama prefecture, after dozens of birds died in the past few days, the agricultural ministry said.

It is the third outbreak of bird flu in Japan this month, with the two other outbreaks reported in Miyazaki prefecture.

The 12,000 poultry on the farm near Takahashi city were to be culled, authorities announced. Prefecture officials inspected 15 poultry farms within a 10-km radius from the infected farm but found no virus at those farms.

Bird flu epidemics first swept Asia in 2003 and 2004 when eight Asian countries were hard hit by the poultry plague and then spread to Europe, the Middle East and Africa in 2005 and 2006, infecting altogether 40 countries worldwide.

No human deaths caused by the disease have been recorded in Japan.
 

JPD

Inactive
Analysis of Salyan resident suspected of bird flu and died
to be sent to WHO reference laboratory, Jan.31

http://en.apa.az/news.php?id=19964

[ 29 Jan. 2007 12:47 ]

The analysis of Salyan resident, 14 year-old Ajdar Askerov suspected of bird flu and died on January 28 will be sent to World Health Organization reference laboratory on January 31, World Health Organization office in Azerbaijan told the APA.

Azerbaijan has already appealed to the laboratory and asked to announce the results of the analysis in a short time. The results are expected to be announced at the end of this week. The representation said that they regularly inform the WHO head office about the epidemiological situation in Azerbaijan and if bird flu is found, the experts of the organization will possibly visit Azerbaijan.

Health Ministry Sanitary Epidemiological Inspection Department Chief Victor Gasimov told the APA that the H5N1 virus can not remain in the village of Dayikend where it was found in spring last year.

“The remaining period of the virus is 40 days. It does not bear the heat. The virus can not remain in summer,” he said.

He again noted that Askerov has no bird flu symptoms and said that he died of pneumonia.

Head physician of Scientific Institute of Lungs Diseases Khayyam Mammadov told the APA that Askerov was cured of pneumonia and they took all necessary measures. Askerov brought to the institute on January 24 had no H5N1 virus.

State Veterinary Service press secretary Yolchu Khanveli told the APA that there is no bird flu virus in that village. He said that as soon as Askerov was suspected of bird flu State Veterinary Service and Health Ministry reviewed the village. No death of poultries and wild fowls was observed. He noted as bird flu virus was not confirmed in Dayikend State Veterinary Service sees no need to impose quarantine on that village. /APA/
 

JPD

Inactive
Two more dead birds test positive for H5N1 in HK

http://www.shanghaidaily.com/article/?id=304494&type=National

TWO dead birds found earlier in urban Hong Kong have tested positive for the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu, bringing the year's tally of cases to seven, the government said in a statement today.

The two birds -- a peregrine falcon and a house crow -- were found last week in Hong Kong's Kowloon peninsula, which adjoins the Chinese mainland, The Associated Press reported.

The latest laboratory test results bring the number of wild birds confirmed with H5N1 this year to seven.

Hong Kong has discovered sporadic cases of the disease in dead birds, but there is no sign it has infected humans.

The territory tested 11,000 birds for the H5 strain of bird flu in 2006 and 17 were positive.

Hong Kong aggressively tests for bird flu because of the outbreak in 1997, when the disease jumped to humans and killed six people. That prompted the government to slaughter the entire poultry population of about 1.5 million birds.

Bird flu has killed or prompted the culling of millions of birds across Asia since 2003.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu angst continues in US

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

29 Jan 2007

The US has never had a case of avian influenza, but new cases this month in Asia and Hungary are making the American poultry industry anxious.

"A case of bird flu in the US could be devastating," said Don Dalton, president of the US Poultry and Egg Association. Overseas buyers would likely ban US chicken and consumers here could shy away from it, he added.

John Clifford, a deputy administrator at USDA's Animal Plant Health and Inspection Service, stated that the government is continuing its extensive surveillance program to ensure the disease does not arrive via migratory birds or imported birds. In addition, the government has spent money and provided resources to fight the disease overseas. Clifford said, "If we can reduce the level abroad, we can therefore reduce the risk of it being introduced into the US."
 

JPD

Inactive
Hungary tests more geese for bird flu

http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/CrisesArticle.aspx?storyId=L29137160&WTmodLoc=World-R5-Alertnet-3

Mon 29 Jan 2007 10:07:24 GMT


BUDAPEST, Jan 29 (Reuters) - Hungary has found more suspected bird flu cases among geese near a farm where the highly pathogenic strain of the virus was confirmed last week, the Agriculture Ministry said on Monday.

"Due to the strong suspicion of bird flu it was necessary to order the culling of 9,400 geese on the morning of January 27," the ministry said in a statement.

The village of Derekegyhaz where the sick geese were found is in the southeastern Csongrad county, close to the area where authorities culled 3,300 geese last week.

Several countries have imposed import bans on Hungarian poultry after the bird flu outbreak, the first in the European Union this year.
 

JPD

Inactive
WHO says Nigeria bird flu tests prove negative

http://thestar.com.my/news/story.as...01_NOOTR_RTRJONC_0_-285444-1&sec=Worldupdates

ABUJA/GENEVA (Reuters) - The World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Monday that initial tests on samples from 14 Nigerians, including three people who died, showed they were not victims of bird flu.

In Geneva, a WHO official said all 14 samples had tested negative for the H5 strain of flu but positive for another type. Samples from the 14 have been sent to London for a second check, the U.N. agency said.

A Nigerian official gave a different account, saying he was awaiting the outcome of tests at a laboratory in the capital Abuja.

Samples have been taken from three people who died of unknown causes and 11 people who came into contact with them.

The H5N1 bird flu virus remains primarily an animal disease but can kill people who have close contact with infected birds.

It has killed 163 people around the globe since 2003 and experts fear it could spark a pandemic in which millions could die if it mutates into a form that passes easily from person to person.

The samples include ones from a mother and daughter who died in Lagos and from a woman who died in remote eastern Taraba state after suffering flu-like symptoms.

Abdulsalam Nasidi, in charge of efforts to prevent bird flu from spreading to humans in Nigeria, said samples from the three people who died had tested positive for flu which is very common at this time of year due to the seasonal harmattan wind.

"The tests will show if it was common flu or bird flu," Nasidi said.

The director of the Abuja lab could not be reached for comment.

Nigeria, Africa's most populous country, was the first on the continent to detect bird flu a year ago. The virus has spread to 17 of the 36 states but no human case has been confirmed so far.

Experts warn surveillance in Nigeria may not be completely effective because of poor health services. Many Nigerians die young of a variety of diseases and few families can afford the luxury of a doctor to determine the cause of death.

Nigeria is one of three countries regarded by experts as the weakest areas in the global attempt to stem infections among birds.

The disease was first discovered in the northern state of Kaduna a year ago and despite measures such as culling, quarantine and a transport ban on live birds it spread quickly across the country.

Millions of Nigerians keep live poultry in their backyards and in the absence of refrigerators in most households, birds are transported and sold live and killed just before eating.
 

JPD

Inactive
FACTBOX-WHO figures for bird flu cases in humans

http://today.reuters.com/News/CrisesArticle.aspx?storyId=L2963624

Mon 29 Jan 2007 11:00 AM ET

Jan 29 (Reuters) - The World Health Organisation (WHO) confirmed on Monday on its Web site the death of a six year-old Indonesian girl from bird flu.

Her death brought to 63 the number of H5N1 deaths in the country.

The virus has killed 164 people since 2003, according to WHO. At least 200 million birds have died or been culled.

Following is a list of confirmed human cases of H5N1 from WHO in Geneva. Total cases include survivors.



Deaths Total cases
AZERBAIJAN 5 8
CAMBODIA 6 6
CHINA 14 22
DJIBOUTI 0 1
EGYPT 11 19 I
NDONESIA 63 81
IRAQ 2 3
THAILAND 17 25
TURKEY 4 12
VIETNAM 42 93 ------------------------------------------------- TOTAL 164 270 -------------------------------------------------

Initial testing usually takes a day or two to confirm if someone has H5N1. More detailed testing by government laboratories or those affiliated with the WHO can take a week or more.

The H5N1 virus remains mainly a virus of birds, but experts fear it could change into a form easily transmitted from person to person and sweep the world, killing millions within weeks or months.

So far, most human cases can be traced to direct or indirect contact with infected birds.
 

JPD

Inactive
First bird flu outbreak of the year in Russia

http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/breaking-news/world/europe/article2194421.ece

Monday, January 29, 2007
An outbreak of bird flu has been registered in southern Russia, officials said today, and news reports said the first cases recorded in Russia this year were the deadly H5N1 strain.

Birds were killed by avian flu at three farms or at households in the Krasnodar territory, a heavily agricultural region in the southern part of European Russia on the Black Sea, said a spokeswoman at the federal agricultural oversight agency, Rosselkhoznadzor.

The spokeswoman said she was unaware whether the strain of bird flu had been determined, but the RIA-Novosti news agency quoted Rosselkhoznadzor's chief spokesman, Alexei Alexeyenko, as saying it was H5N1. He said efforts were being made to prevent the spread of the disease.

Russia recorded its first cases of bird flu in Siberia in 2005, and since then outbreaks have occurred further west, but the country has registered no cases of human infection.

According to RIA-Novosti, bird flu cases were registered in 93 towns or settlements in Siberia and southern Russia last year, but none had been recorded since August.
 

JPD

Inactive
Scientists Assess Risk of Potential Flu Pandemic Spread
Via Global Airlines

http://www.infectioncontroltoday.com/hotnews/71h29903650086.html

Posted on: 01/29/2007

An Indiana University School of Informatics-led team of researchers has constructed a model that predicts how an emerging pandemic influenza might spread across the globe by airliners. The study, "Modeling the Worldwide Spread of Pandemic Influenza: Baseline Case and Containment Intervention," appears in the January issue of the journal PLoS Medicine. The model they devised is said to be the world's largest-scale epidemic simulation of its kind.

Study investigators were Vittoria Colizza, informatics visiting assistant professor; Alessandro Vespignani, professor of informatics; Marc Barthélemey, informatics visiting scholar; Alain Barrat, Université Paris-Sud, France; and Alain-Jacques Valleron, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, France.

H5N1 avian influenza, commonly referred to as bird flu, has not yet resulted in a pandemic influenza because the virus lacks the ability to spread efficiently and sustainably among humans. However, public health officials are greatly concerned that a human flu strain could be triggered by the H5N1 virus, which is found in bird flocks around the world and has repeatedly crossed the species barrier and infected people.

The recent outbreaks of avian flu started in Southeast Asia in mid-2003. Within two years, the virus had spread beyond that region, very likely carried by wild birds along their migratory routes. The avian influenza virus has been reported in several Asian countries, the Balkans region, Western Europe and some regions in Africa.

"The threat of a pandemic is pushing the international community to discuss scenario analysis and develop adequate preparedness plans," Colizza said. "This calls for the need to understand the possible propagation of a pandemic, in order to devise and test appropriate intervention strategies to contain and mitigate its evolution and impact on the population."

The researchers developed a mathematical model using massive passenger-flow databases from the International Air Transport Association, an organization of airlines comprising 99 percent of worldwide commercial air traffic. Census information from more than 3,000 urban centers in 220 countries and related disease patterns from those areas also was analyzed.

The model already was introduced in a previous study conducted by the same researchers more than a year ago, showing in detail how air-transportation-network properties are responsible for the worldwide pattern of diseases. Using advanced computational tools, the team was able in both studies to simulate how an influenza pandemic would spread, both over time and geographically, and to provide forecasted scenarios and confidence intervals.

Here's one scenario the model predicts: A flu virus, say, originating in Hanoi, Vietnam, with a reproductive number of 1.1 (a measure of how many people are infected on average by an infectious person) poses only a very mild global threat. Increase that number to 1.5 and the flu potentially could infect half the population in more than 100 countries. Intervention measures would therefore be necessary.

The researchers show that strict travel restrictions would do little, if anything, to prevent the flu from spreading throughout the globe.

Encouragingly, the model predicts that the use of antiviral drugs would significantly thwart a global flu outbreak within certain ranges of infectiousness if every country in the world had a drug stockpile sufficient to treat 5-10 percent of their populations.

Next, the study focused on realistic scenarios in which antiviral resources are not equally distributed, with a higher concentration in wealthy countries. Different strategies are compared: a selfish strategy in which each country relies on its own supplies, as opposed to a cooperative approach in which prepared countries would donate part of their resources for global use.

"Surprisingly," said Vespignani, who is internationally known for his research in the statistical analysis and computer modeling of epidemic spread, "the cooperative strategy is shown to be more effective in delaying the pandemic evolution and mitigating its impact on the population of both donor and recipient countries."

Predictions therefore are strongly in favor for a cooperative sharing of resources, which could be organized and managed by the World Health Organization, as an efficient way to deal with an emerging influenza pandemic waiting for vaccine development.

The IU School of Informatics study was funded by the National Science Foundation and the European Community Directorate for Information Technology.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird Flu Confirmed in Hungary; Virus Spreads in Japan

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601101&sid=aXKcSO6166zA&refer=japan

(Update2)

By Jennifer M. Freedman and Karima Anjani

Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) -- Geese in Hungary tested positive for the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu, marking the first confirmed infection in the European Union since August. Japan found a third outbreak of avian influenza on a poultry farm.

Authorities found the H5N1 avian influenza strain in two separate flocks of geese in Hungary, European Commission spokesman Philip Tod said today. Japan's agriculture ministry reported an H5 virus in chickens in the western prefecture of Okayama, after H5N1 outbreaks on the southern island of Kyushu.

Countries in Europe, Asia and Africa reported fresh outbreaks of the H5N1 virus starting in November, after going months without finding infections. Egypt and Indonesia later found seven human cases, six of whom died. There are no signs that the virus is evolving to become more easily spread among people, a World Health Organization official in Indonesia said.

``There haven't been changes and that's good news,'' Georg Petersen, the WHO's country representative in Indonesia, said in an interview on Jan. 25. Indonesia has reported more H5N1 fatalities than any other country, with 63 confirmed by WHO.

The WHO is tracking the virus in case it becomes more infectious among people, possibly leading to a pandemic like the 1918 outbreak that killed as many as 50 million people worldwide. At least 164 of the 270 people known to be infected with bird flu since 2003 have died, including a six-year-old Indonesian girl in Central Java Province, the Geneva-based WHO said today.

High Risk

The European Union hasn't had any human cases. The last reported avian infection in Europe was a wild bird found in Germany in August, according to the Paris-based World Organization for Animal Health.

Tod said the EU is ``in a period of high risk,'' adding that the bloc's 27 members have been asked to be particularly vigilant for signs of bird flu.

Hungary is investigating an outbreak among geese at a farm in the southern town of Derekegyhaza, about 5 kilometers (3 miles) from the site of the initial outbreak. Authorities ordered all 9,400 geese to be slaughtered Jan. 27 after some of the fowl began showing symptoms associated with avian flu, Hungary's Agriculture Ministry said in an e-mailed statement.

``There's a big lake nearby, and some wild ducks were there to enjoy the incredibly mild winter weather,'' ministry spokesman Andras Dekany said in a telephone interview. ``They spread the virus through their feces.''

Infections in Asia

Governments across Asia are intensifying surveillance for H5N1 after the virus resurfaced in domestic poultry and wild fowl in South Korea, Thailand, China and Vietnam in the past few weeks. Hong Kong's government today confirmed that two more birds found earlier this month carried the H5N1 virus, adding to the three already discovered in the city.

Demand for poultry products has dropped by as much as 50 percent in the Indonesian capital, Jakarta, following the local government's ban on raising backyard flocks, effective Feb. 1. The Rome-based FAO today encouraged Indonesians to continue eating poultry, saying that the meat is safe as long as hygiene procedures are followed.

``Controlling highly pathogenic avian influenza is difficult enough, without having to deal with the economic consequences of a market collapse, which affects the livelihoods of so many people,'' Anni McLeod, senior officer for livestock policy, said in the FAO statement.

Companies and countries are preparing for an outbreak of pandemic flu with medicines and vaccines. GlaxoSmithKline Plc, Europe's largest drugmaker, today asked European regulators to approve an H5N1 vaccine that could be given to people before the virus begins spreading widely in humans.

Taiwan's National Health Research Institute conducted successful animal tests of a vaccine against the bird flu strain, the Associated Press reported today. The vaccine might be ready for mass production in two years after human testing is completed, the wire service reported, citing Pele Chong, leader of the Institute's vaccine development program.
 

JPD

Inactive
M230I Convergence in Qinghai H5N1 in Egypt

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/01290701/H5N1_M230I_Convergence.html

Recombinomics Commentary
January 29, 2007

Recently NAMRU-3 has released HA sequences from fatal H5N1 infections in Egypt this season. The initial sequence was from an infection in Gharbiya in October and contained a change, M230I, adjacent to the receptor binding domain. This change had not been previously reported in H5N1 Qinghai isolates. However, it is present is all three human seasonal strains, H3N2, H1N1, and influenza B. Moreover it creates a five amino acid match with influenza B at positions 226-230 (QSGRI). M230I is also in other serotypes involved in transmission between mammals. It is in H3N8 found in horses as dogs. Moreover it is in recent H7 outbreaks in the Netherlands (H7N7), Canada (H7N3), and England (H7N3) that were associated with transmission to humans. These outbreaks were likely due to wild birds.

In December Egypt reported an H5N1 cluster in Gharbiya. The family lived 12 miles from the first case and all three infected family members died. Sequences from two of the cluster members were released. The HA sequences also had M230I and the NA sequences had the Tamiflu resistance marker N294S.

To determine the origin of the newly introduced M230I, H5N1 HA sequences were generated by NAMRU-3 from poultry from backyard farms in Menoufeya, Beni Suef, Gharbiya, and Damietta, and a commercial poultry facility in Fayoum. All isolates except Beni Suef had M230I. However, only the isolate from Damietta had G754A. The other three isolates had G754T, which was present in the H7N3 outbreak in England in 2006.

Thus, two different codons for M230I converged in the Egypt. One had been reported previously in H5N1 in Asia. This codon was in all the Gharbiya human sequences. The other codon was in H7N3 isolates from England, which were also thought to be transported by wild birds.

The convergence of two different codons for M230I in Qinghai H5N1 in Egypt is curious. The new acquisitions were on a Qinghai Egyptian genetic background, yet they traced back to distinct H5N1 or H7N3 isolates. The acquisitions are most easily explained by recombination. The convergence of M230I may signal a mammalian intermediary because of the linkage of M230I to serotypes that are linked to mammal -to-mammal transmission. Moreover, M230I may be transported downstream to Djibouti and Sudan in eastern Africa, as well as countries in western Africa, such as Nigeria and Ivory Coast which have had recent H5N1 Qinghai outbreaks.

In Egypt, the acquisition of mammalian polymorphisms in association with Tamiflu resistance remains a cause for concern.
 

JPD

Inactive
Qinghai H5N1 Confirmed in Krasnodar

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/01290702/H5N1_Krasnodar.html

Recombinomics Commentary
January 29, 2007

Rosselkhoznadzor said in a statement the virus was detected in dead birds found in three domestic yards in the Krasnodar region of southern Russia.

The above comments describe H5N1 at three farms in Krasnodar. These reports follow confirmation of H5N1 in Hungary and raise additional questions about detection failures in neighboring countries.

In Azerbaijan, just south of Krasnodar, the fatal pneumonia case (14M) who was a brother of a H5N1 case from last season that was linked to wild birds, is under investigation. The H5N1 to the north in Krasnodar and to the south in Egypt suggest H5N1 infections in the Middle East are going unreported or undetected.

All of the H5N1 in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa last season was the H5N1 Qinghai strain, which is transported and transmitted by wild birds. The recent confirmed cases in these regions raise serious questions about reporting deficiencies in neighboring countries.
 

JPD

Inactive
China meeting warns of bird flu mutation risk

http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/CrisesArticle.aspx?storyId=PEK200089&WTmodLoc=World-R5-Alertnet-3

Tue 30 Jan 2007 2:45:12 GMT

BEIJING, Jan 30 (Reuters) - The deadly H5N1 form of the bird flu virus is rapidly mutating and the world must be on guard even though the disease has yet to be transmitted between humans, experts told a meeting in Beijing, Chinese media said on Tuesday.

The closed door conference, attended by experts from the Chinese and U.S. centres for disease control and the World Health Organisation among others, opened on Monday, the official newspaper of the Chinese Health Ministry reported.

"The experts said that despite there being no evidence yet of human-to-human transmission of bird flu, the highly pathogenic H5N1 form of the virus is continuing to rapidly mutate, and human infections keep happening," the Health News reported.

"H5N1 is a virus that has the potential for mass transmission, and people cannot slacken off in their control efforts," it added in a front-page story.

The report provided no other details, except that the meeting will discuss bird flu vaccines.

The virus has killed 164 people since 2003, according to the WHO.

"These might not be large numbers but we cannot let that lull us into a false security," Henk Bekedam, the WHO's representative in China, said in a speech at the meeting, a copy of which was obtained by Reuters on Tuesday.

"Right now, a growing public health challenge is overcoming effects of 'bird flu fatigue'," he said.

"Just because an avian influenza pandemic has not hit, or because there is lower media coverage at times, does not mean the very real and ongoing threat of one has gone away," Bekedam added.

"Right now, the H5N1 virus does not transfer easily from animals to humans or from humans to humans. But that could change at any moment and we must prepare for that possibility."

The H5N1 virus remains mainly a virus of birds, but experts fear it could change into a form easily transmitted from person to person and sweep the world, killing millions within weeks or months.

So far, most human cases can be traced to direct or indirect contact with infected birds.

China has not reported a poultry outbreak since Sept. 20 last year, though earlier this month the health ministry confirmed a man in the eastern province of Anhui had contracted bird flu but subsequently recovered.
 

JPD

Inactive
Adds more details

Boy with suspected bird flu dies in Baku

http://www.itar-tass.com/eng/level2.html?NewsID=11197610&PageNum=0

28.01.2007, 23.23

BAKU, January 28 (Itar-Tass) -- Azhdar Askerov, 14, who was taken to hospital with suspected avian influenza several days ago, died at the Lung Disease Research Institute in Baku on Sunday.

A source at the Azerbaijani Health Ministry said the boy died of pneumonia. A special laboratory of the Agriculture Ministry’s veterinarian service did not find the bird flu virus in the boy’s bloodstream. Nevertheless, blood samples were sent to a London laboratory of the World Health Organization (WHO) for more tests.

Askerov lived in the Salyan district on the bank of the Kura River, where migrant birds hibernate. Several bird flu cases occurred in the area last year. Five people died, including four from the village of Daikend. Three were close relatives of the deceased boy.
 

JPD

Inactive
Nigeria runs new bird flu tests on human samples

http://in.today.reuters.com/news/ne...R_RTRJONC_0_India-285609-1.xml&archived=False

Tue Jan 30, 2007 4:46 PM IST17
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ABUJA (Reuters) - A laboratory in Nigeria was running new bird flu tests on Tuesday on samples from 14 people after earlier checks produced inconclusive results, a World Health Organisation (WHO) doctor said.

The samples are from three people who died after suffering flu-like symptoms and from 11 others who came into contact with them. Nigeria was the first African country to detect bird flu in poultry but it has not had a confirmed human case.

"The tests we ran yesterday produced inconsistent results," said David Olaleye, who is taking part in the testing at a laboratory in the capital Abuja.

Olaleye said two initial rounds of tests over the weekend had proved negative but results from Monday's third round of tests had produced a pattern that was "unreliable" and did not allow him to make a clear call on the outcome.

"That is why we have pulled out a fresh batch of samples from the same people and we have started a completely new set of tests," he said.

Gregory Hartl, a spokesman at the WHO's headquarters in Geneva, said tests carried out in a laboratory in Nigeria on Saturday and Sunday had been "consistent" in showing no H5 flu virus. "That is already a good sign," he added.

Hartl said further tests would be conducted at the WHO's Collaborating Centre for influenza in London. "The samples are being sent today (from Nigeria). We won't know for a few days," he said.

The three people who died were a mother and daughter from Lagos in the southwest and a woman from remote Taraba state in the east.

The H5N1 strain of bird flu remains primarily an animal disease but it can kill people who come into close contact with infected birds.

It has killed 164 people around the globe since 2003 and experts fear it could spark a deadly pandemic if it mutates into a form that passes easily from person to person.

Nigeria, Africa's most populous country, detected bird flu in chicken in northern Kaduna state a year ago. The virus has since spread to 17 of Nigeria's 36 states despite measures such as culling, quarantine and bans on transporting live poultry.
 

JPD

Inactive
New bird flu outbreak suspected in Japan - farm min

http://in.today.reuters.com/News/ne...163607Z_01_NOOTR_RTRJONC_0_India-285610-1.xml

Tue Jan 30, 2007 4:46 PM IST17

TOKYO (Reuters) - A new outbreak of bird flu is suspected in Japan after 23 birds died at a poultry farm in the southwestern prefecture of Miyazaki, the Agriculture Ministry said on Tuesday.

Authorities are conducting preliminary tests on chickens at the farm, which keeps about 93,000 birds for their eggs, the ministry said in a news release.

If confirmed, it would be the fourth bird flu case reported in Japan since the beginning of the year.

On Monday, Japan confirmed its third outbreak of bird flu at a farm in the western prefecture of Okayama. Further tests are being carried out to confirm whether that case is due to the lethal H5N1 strain. The H5N1 virus has killed at least 164 people worldwide since 2003, most of them in Asia, and over 200 million birds have died from it or have been culled to prevent its spread.

There have been no reported cases of human infection from the virus in Japan.

Earlier this month, Japan had two H5N1 outbreaks among poultry in Miyazaki, the country's biggest poultry producing region.

There had been no H5N1 cases in the country for three years.

In 2004, Japan had four H5N1 poultry outbreaks between January and March, including one in Kyoto in western Japan in which 240,000 chickens were culled and 20 million eggs destroyed.

Last week, authorities in Hong Kong confirmed a third case of H5N1 virus found in dead birds, while six people have died of bird flu in Indonesia since Jan. 1.
 

JPD

Inactive
Experts investigate bird flu infection in Nigerians

http://www.vanguardngr.com/articles/2002/features/health/gh130012007.html

Story by Chioma Obinna

Experts on bird flu are increasingly worried that Nigeria risks becoming a permanent host to the avian flu virus, even as the Avian Flu Crisis Management Centre (AFCMC) is investigating suspected cases of Avian Influenza infections in humans in Nigeria.

Minster of Information, Mr. Frank Nweke who disclosed this in a statement made available to Good Health Weekly said preliminary analyses of tissue samples obtained from the suspected victims have tested positive to Influenza Virus Type A, which is the same virus that causes common cold, rampant during the Harmattan.

He further hinted that confirmatory tests are in progress to establish the exact strain of the virus and the Federal government will make further statements as soon as the results are received.
Meanwhile, Nigerians are warned to restrict contact with poultry products. The public are also advised to report instances of unusually high mortality of birds immediately to the Avian Flu Crisis Management Centre on the following numbers: - 0803 700 6849,- 0803 704 4433 or contact the nearest Veterinary/ Health Officials.

Recently, a fresh outbreak of avian influenza was confirmed in three states of Edo, Kwara and Sokoto with resurgence in some other states.
Since the avian flu outbreak was first detected in February 2006 millions of birds may have died or become infected in the country. This has also continued to cause severe hardship for farmers, who have had very little support from the government.

In recognition of these problems posed by the avian flu resurgence in some states of the country, the Federal Ministry of Health last week in Lagos held a sensitization workshop for media executives tagged "Risk and Crisis Reporting for Media Chief Executives." The workshop was graced by experts on bird flu and cream of media executives. The workshop was also to explore and exploit avenues for collaboration in the control and containment of avian influenza in the country.

Said Nweke: "It poses a grave threat to human health on account of its high mortality rate among victims as well as the scary scenario of human pandemic.
Disclosing that government has been proactive in its commitments and adoption of specific interventions involving a multi disciplinary approach, Nweke said the disease has spread to 17 states of the country.

The states are Anambra, Bauchi, Borno, Edo Enugu, FCT, Jigawa, Kaduna, Kano, Kastina, Kwara, Lagos, Nasarawa, Ogun, Plateau, Sokoto, Taraba and Yobe.
Component Coordinator (Animal Health) Avian Influenza Control and Human Pandemic Preparedness and Response Project (AICP) Mohammed Sai’du on the "Status of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) in Nigeria" disclosed that the government has paid up N55,891,720.00 compensations to the affected farmers.

He noted that the country has about 140 million poultry population of which they have not been able to determine the entry point of the virus into the country or its pattern of spread.
Sai’du who expressed fear for the resurgence of infection stressed the urgent need to expand laboratory capacity and supplies in the country.

Federal Ministry of Health representative, Dr. Shuaib Belgore who noted the pressure on the health system said since the outbreak health capacity and human and financial resources have been overstressed by the demands of the disease adding those laboratory confirmations of human H5N1 infections is technically challenging, expensive and demanding on human resources.
The World Bank gave Nigeria a credit of $50 million in support of the fight against the virus. The donation which was in three components, comprised of $18.25 million allocated to human health, animal health got $29.20 million while information was given $4.08 million.
 

JPD

Inactive
New bird flu mutation risk

http://tvnz.co.nz/view/page/411319/973581

Jan 30, 2007

The deadly H5N1 form of the bird flu virus is rapidly mutating and the world must be on guard even though the disease has yet to be transmitted between humans, experts told a meeting in Beijing, Chinese media said on Tuesday.

The closed door conference, attended by experts from the Chinese and US centres for disease control and the World Health Organisation among others, opened on Monday, the official newspaper of the Chinese Health Ministry reported.

"The experts said that despite there being no evidence yet of human-to-human transmission of bird flu, the highly pathogenic H5N1 form of the virus is continuing to rapidly mutate, and human infections keep happening," the Health News reported.

"H5N1 is a virus that has the potential for mass transmission, and people cannot slacken off in their control efforts," it added in a front-page story.

The report provided no other details, except that the meeting will discuss bird flu vaccines.

The virus has killed 164 people since 2003, according to the WHO.

"These might not be large numbers but we cannot let that lull us into a false security," Henk Bekedam, the WHO representative in China, said in a speech at the meeting, a copy of which was obtained by Reuters on Tuesday.

"Right now, a growing public health challenge is overcoming effects of 'bird flu fatigue'," he said.

"Just because an avian influenza pandemic has not hit, or because there is lower media coverage at times, does not mean the very real and ongoing threat of one has gone away," Bekedam added.

"Right now, the H5N1 virus does not transfer easily from animals to humans or from humans to humans. But that could change at any moment and we must prepare for that possibility."

The H5N1 virus remains mainly a virus of birds, but experts fear it could change into a form easily transmitted from person to person and sweep the world, killing millions within weeks or months.

So far, most human cases can be traced to direct or indirect contact with infected birds.

China has not reported a poultry outbreak since September 20 last year, though earlier this month the health ministry confirmed a man in the eastern province of Anhui had contracted bird flu but subsequently recovered.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu kills one million fowls in RI (Indonesia)

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailgeneral.asp?fileid=20070130203622&irec=2

JAKARTA (Antara): As many as 1,058,157 fowls in Indonesia died of bird flu or Avian Influenza (AI) in 2006, Agriculture Minister Anton Apriyantono said Tuesday.

"The number of fowls killed by bird flu in 2006 was lower than the figures recorded in the preceding years," the minister said after receiving assistance in the form of equipment for overcoming Avian Influenza worth US$500,000 from the South Koreangovernment.

According to the minister, the fowls killed by bird flu in the August-December period of 2003, numbered 4,179,270 compared to 5,014,273 in the January-December period of 2004.

In the January-December period of 2005, the number of dead poultry due to the AI virus was recorded at 1,066,372, the minister said, adding that the districts/cities affected by the AI virus since August 2003 to January 2007 totaled 223 in 30 provinces.

"So, there are only three provinces -- Gorontalo, Maluku and North Maluku -- which are still free from bird flu," the minister said.

On efforts to deal with bird flu outbreaks, he said the Agriculture Ministry was focusing its attention on the supervision of poultry trading activities.

The minister said the movement of poultry in the regions was difficult to control because in certain areas, the fowls were traded only in small numbers and on an individual basis.

"Big commercial poultry farms are relatively safe because they can be controlled more easily and farmers protect their fowls by themselves," he said.

The Agriculture Ministry would draw up regulations allowing only slaughtered fowls to be traded and banning trade in live ones, he said.

He said the number of families breeding fowls on a non-commercial basis in residential areas reached 30 million with each family keeping an average of 10 animals.

The assistance from the South Korean government which was symbolically handed over by South Korean Ambassador to Indonesia Lee Sun Jin among other things consisted of antiseptic powder and manual knapsack sprayers. (***)
 
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