2/17/07-2/23/07|Weekly Bird Flu Thread:Laos Frantic flurry of bird flu tests

JPD

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Frantic flurry of bird flu tests

http://www.vientianetimes.org.la/Previous_022/Current/Current_frantic.htm

Health workers rushed to te st samples collected from groups of chickens that recently dropped dead in the centre of Vientiane , checking for the H5N1 avian influenza virus.

The health workers took samples from the backyard chickens of Ban Khounta-tha on Monday, where chickens had suddenly died over recent weeks.

The Deputy Head of the District Agricultural Office said about 20 samples of poultry went to the labs for tests.

“The samples will take three or four days before we know positively whether or not these were bird flu cases,” said the Director of the National Animal Health Centre, Dr Bounlom Douangngeun.

About 70 chickens raised in seven backyards inexplicably dropped dead, with the latest reports on January 20 at a property not far from the banks of the Mekong .

The owner buried all the carcasses immediately, fearing the dead chickens could carry a contagious disease such as bird flu.

However, the members of the family whose chickens died are all healthy, the Village Chief, Mr Bounseum Inthalath said.

“Up to now, there were no further reports of chicken deaths in the village,” said the chief.

While waiting for results from the samples, Dr Bounlom said the deaths could have been caused by Newcastle disease or fowl cholera, commonly found on poultry farms.

He said the deaths caused by these diseases look similar to bird flu.

“The cause of the deaths is more likely to be Newcastle if the owners did not vaccinate the birds against the disease,” Dr Bounlom said.

People in this village raise poultry in their backyards for their own consumption, according to the Village Chief.

In a bid to prevent the disease, the authority set up a telephone hotline to inform health workers if the farmers suspected their poultry had died unusually.

“Up to now, we have confirmed that there are no cases of bird flu in our country,” said the Director of the Vientiane Agriculture and Forestry Department, Mr Latsanivong Amarathithada, yesterday.

He called on people to inform officials immediately if their birds die suddenly in significant numbers, and he called on border officials to prevent the smuggling of poultry from neighbouring countries.

By Viengsavanh Phengphachan
 

JPD

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Indonesia will resume sharing its bird flu virus samples with the World Health Organisation.

http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/news/stories/s1850268.htm

Last Updated 17/02/2007, 11:42:08


Indonesia will resume sharing its bird flu virus samples with the World Health Organisation.

Late last year Jakarta declared it would only share the virus with parties who agreed not to use its samples for commercial purposes.

But Indonesia says it has received assurances of better protection for its bird flu data, and improved access to vaccines being developed for the disease.

The W-H-O's Doctor David Heymann says it's a good decision.

"We are very pleased and happy with the leadership that the Minister of Health in Indonesia has shown in the world in calling attention to the need for sharing of the benefits of public health use of these viruses - the H5N1 viruses," he said.
 

JPD

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Beijing-bound athletes to get bird flu shots

http://www.news.com.au/story/0,10117,21241033-2,00.html?from=public_rss

February 17, 2007 11:37am
Article from: Agence France-Presse

THE Australian Olympic Committee has announced it immunise athletes competing at next year's Beijing Olympics amid concern over diseases including bird flu.

The AOC said over the next few months about 1000 potential team members will be offered vaccinations to avoid infections that might affect their performance.

The vaccinations will be for hepatitis, typhoid, polio, tetanus, whooping cough and diphtheria, measles-mumps-rubella and influenza.

"This is simply a precautionary measure to ensure the athletes don't fall ill before or during competition," AOC president John Coates said.

"We have a responsibility to provide our athletes with adequate protection while they compete for Australia at the Games."

At the first team management meeting here Saturday, Coates revealed that the 2008 Australian Olympic team will include a team of 50 specialist medical staff.

He said they will form part of a massive Australian team of approximately 799, including 507 athletes and 292 support staff.

"Beijing is very hot and humid in August and there are concerns about air quality," he said.

"How we can overcome these problems, as well as the cultural differences in China, are all part of our planning.

"The organising committee in Beijing (BOCOG) has made air pollution a priority.

"They are working with the (China's) State Environmental Protection Administration to ensure good air quality during the Games and we expect factories will be closed and cars kept off the roads to minimise the pollution."

Melbourne doctor Peter Baquie, who leads the Australian medical team, said Beijing posed "challenges" not seen in recent Olympics.

"Beijing will introduce some medical challenges not encountered in recent Olympics, but I have absolute faith in BOCOG'S planning and public health strategies to minimise these issues," Baquie told the meeting.

The AOC said Baquie is working closely with each sport to implement a medical strategy well in advance of the Games.

He has already formed two small advisory groups with specialist physicians covering respiratory problems and infectious diseases including bird flu.

Baquie said the immunisation program will begin this month as different teams will be competing in test events in Beijing throughout the year.

He said the process will take six months to complete and duties will be shared between the team medical staff, medical officers attached to the national sporting federations, state sports institutions and local medical practitioners.

Baquie also said food and water hygiene in Beijing was critical.

He said BOCOG has assured the AOC that water in the Olympic Village would be purified and they will provide bottled water for drinking, adding has no doubts about hygiene in the athletes' dining hall.

"BOCOG has assured us it will more than match the four-five star hotel standards in all Asian cities in terms of food and water safety," he said.
 

JPD

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Egypt reports 22nd human bird flu case

http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/200702/17/eng20070217_350763.html

A five-year-old Egyptian boy from the Nile Delta region was tested positive to the deadly H5N1 bird flu virus, bringing the number of bird flu human cases to 22 in this populous Arab nation, the official news agency MENA reported on Friday.

The latest case came from Al-Sharqiya governorate, some 65 km north of Cairo, and he was under treatment, said Health Ministry spokesman Abdel-Rahman Shaheen, without giving more details.

Earlier in the day, the ministry said a 37-year-old woman has died of the deadly virus, bringing the death toll of the infectious disease to 13 in Egypt.

The woman was identified as Nadia Mohammed Abdel-Hafez and she died on Thursday evening, said the ministry.

Abdel-Hafez came from Fayoum, a countryside town located some 85 km south of Cairo. She checked into Fayoum's fever hospital on Feb. 12 after suffering from high temperature and pneumonia, according to the ministry.

The ministry announced that the woman was tested positive to the deadly H5N1 virus on Wednesday.

Egypt found the first bird flu case in dead poultry on Feb. 17, 2006 and then the virus spread to 20 of the country's 26 governorates.

The populous Arab country reported first human bird flu case on March 18 of 2006.

Before the latest case of the five-year-old boy, 21 human cases of the disease have been reported in Egypt, of which 13 have died of the fatal virus and the other eight recovered.

Source: Xinhua
 

JPD

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WHO reports promising results on bird flu vaccines

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-02/17/content_5749493.htm

www.chinaview.cn 2007-02-17 06:06:07

GENEVA, Feb. 16 (Xinhua) -- The world has made "encouraging progress" in developing vaccines against a potential bird flu pandemic, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Friday.

Currently 16 manufacturers from 10 countries are developing prototype pandemic influenza vaccines against the deadly H5N1 avian influenza virus, the UN agency said in a statement.

At present, more then 40 clinical trials have been completed or are ongoing, and "all vaccines were safe and well tolerated in all age groups tested," it said.

According to the statement, a two-day expert meeting on advances in pandemic influenza vaccine development has just ended in Geneva, where the WHO is based.

"For the first time, results presented at the meeting have convincingly demonstrated that vaccination with newly developed avian influenza vaccines can bring about a potentially protective immune response against strains of H5N1 virus," it said.

"Some of the vaccines work with low doses of antigen, which means that significantly more vaccine doses can be available in case of a pandemic," the WHO added.

This was a third such meeting in just two years and its objectives were to review progress in the development of candidate vaccines against pandemic influenza viruses and to reach consensus on future priority activities.

More than 100 influenza vaccine experts from academia, national and regional public health institutions, the pharmaceutical industry and regulatory bodies throughout the world attended the meeting convened by the WHO Initiative for Vaccine Research and the WHO Global Influenza Program.

In spite of the encouraging progress noted at the meeting, the WHO stressed that the world still lacks the manufacturing capacity to meet potential global pandemic influenza vaccine demand.

The world's current vaccine manufacturing capacity is estimated at less than 400 million doses per year of trivalent seasonal influenza vaccine.

In response to this challenge, the WHO launched in 2006 the Global pandemic influenza action plan to increase vaccine supply, a 10 billion-U.S.-dollar effort over 10 years.

One of its aims is to enable developing countries to establish their own influenza vaccine production facilities through transfer of technology, providing them with the most sustainable and reliable response to the threat of pandemic influenza.
 

JPD

Inactive
Russian experts quarantine Moscow suburb as experts
check for possible deadly bird flu strain

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/02/17/europe/EU-GEN-Russia-Bird-Flu.php

MOSCOW: Experts quarantined parts of two suburban Moscow districts Saturday as they checked whether domestic poultry were killed by the deadly H5N1 bird flu strain.

Two dozens birds in total had died in the Odintsovo and Domodedovo districts, and officials were taking worst-case precautionary measures pending the outcome of further tests, senior veterinary official Nikolai Vlasov said in televised comments.

Tests to determine whether the virus was the H5N1 strain could be completed as early as Saturday evening, federal agricultural oversight agency Rosselkhoznadzor spokesman Alexei Alexeyenko told The Associated Press.

Russia saw its first cases of bird flu in Siberia in 2005, and outbreaks have since occurred further west, but mostly in southern areas distant from the capital. If confirmed as H5N1, the most recent bird deaths would be the first outbreaks recorded so close to Moscow.

No human cases of bird flu have been reported in Russia.


Bird flu cases were registered in 93 towns or settlements in Siberia and southern Russia last year, according to RIA-Novosti. The country's first outbreak this year was registered last month in the Krasnodar territory, an agricultural region near the Black Sea.

Since it began ravaging Asian poultry farms in late 2003, the H5N1 strain has killed at least 167 people worldwide, according to the World Health Organization.
 

JPD

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Second person tested for virus in Turkey

http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topi...=133223&version=1&template_id=39&parent_id=21

Published: Saturday, 17 February, 2007, 08:44 AM Doha Time

ANKARA: A second person has been hospitalised in Turkey with suspected bird flu as authorities announced that the virus had affected poultry in four new locations in the mainly Kurdish southeast, the Anatolia news agency reported yesterday.

A 27-year-old man was admitted to hospital in the central province of Konya late on Thursday after coming into contact with wild ducks and falling sick, the doctor treating him told the agency.

“The preliminary symptoms look like bird flu. We have sent blood samples for testing” in capital Ankara, Ibrahim Erayman said.

So far, there have been no reports of suspicious poultry deaths in Konya that could point to the presence of the bird flu virus.

A 67-year-old woman was hospitalised on Wednesday with suspected bird flu in Diyarbakir province in the southeast where the highly pathogenic H5N1 virus resurfaced last week in poultry.

The agriculture ministry said in a statement late on Thursday that bird flu had been detected in four new locations: the hamlet of Bolukcayir as well as the villages of Kocalar and Akbaba in Diyarbakir province, and in a neighbourhood in the city of Batman in the province bearing the same name.

It said further analyses were underway to determine the strain present.
Last week, the ministry confirmed that the potentially lethal strain of H5N1 had infected poultry in the village of Bogazkoy and the hamlet of Esentepe in Batman province as well as the village of Akcayir in Diyarbakir.

A major bird flu outbreak in Turkey killed four teenagers in January last year in a remote region near the border with Iran, from where the virus quickly spread to more than a half of the country’s 81 provinces. – AFP
 

JPD

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Suspect H5N1 Cases Hospitalized Near Moscow

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/02160704/H5N1_Moscow_Suspect.html

Recombinomics Commentary
February 16, 2007

Meanwhile became known about the hospitalization of workers two farmer the economy of the Moscow area. How many men they fell ill and than - thus far it does not communicate. It is known only that the symptoms resemble precisely bird influenza.

The above translation describes farm workers at two locations that have bird flu symptoms. English language media reports indicate H5N1 has been confirmed in the poultry and the workers have pneumonia. If there are several workers and/or workers at multiple locations with pneumonia and other bird flu symptoms, there is cause for concern’

The H5N1 is almost certainly the Qinghai strain, which has spread throughput Europe, the Middle East, and Africa this season and last season. Although the Qinghai isolates have regional markers, the number of countries with confirmed H5N1 is significant. Confirmed cases were first identified in Turkey at the beginning of 2006. These cases were quickly followed by cases in Iraq, Egypt, Djibouti, and Azerbaijan. This season there have been confirmed cases in Egypt and Nigeria. Although the H5N1 from the human cases have changes in the receptor binding domain (S227N in Turkey and Egypt, V223I in Egypt, M230I in Egypt, N186K in Azerbaijan, N186S and Q196R in Iraq.

However, not all human isolates have these changes, and the human cases involve a number of regional changes. Therefore, human cases near Moscow would not be a surprise.

More information on the number of hospitalized patients as well as sequence information would be useful.
 

JPD

Inactive
Tests confirm H5N1 bird flu cases at Russian farms

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-02/18/content_5751791.htm

MOSCOW, Feb. 17 (Xinhua) -- Russia confirmed the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu virus at farms near Moscow, the Interfax news agency reported on Saturday citing an official of the sanitary watchdog, Rosselkhoznadzor.

Laboratory tests have confirmed the H5N1 virus in poultry that died at two private farms in the Domodedovo and Odintsovo districts of the Moscow region, Nikolai Vlasov, a senior Rosselkhoznadzor officer, was quoted as saying. The poultry deaths were reported on Friday.

Some domestic fowl died in the Podolsk district of the Moscow region early on Saturday, but the cause is still unclear.

Villages that have recorded poultry deaths have been quarantined and fowl that were in contact with the dead birds have been culled. Vaccination of birds is underway.

A pet market in Moscow where live poultry is sold has been closed after poultry that died of bird flu was found to have been sold at the market.

Russia's most recent bird flu outbreak occurred in mid-January in the southern region of Krasnodar, but it was contained by February. No human cases of bird flu have been reported in the country.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu continues to spread

http://www.bangkokpost.com/breaking_news/breakingnews.php?id=116893

With the recent outbreak of bird flu in a farm in Suffolk, Britain, after similar episodes in Hungary, Russia, and Nigeria and some Southeast Asian countries, the threat of another wave of the epidemic sweeping the globe is becoming real.

While the new global outbreak was not totally unexpected given the high prevalence of the virus in birds, both poultry and wild, the short interval between the end of the previous global outbreak last year and the onset of the latest one is worrying.

It is a reminder that despite prompt responses to contain the spread of avian flu in the countries affected by it last time, the threat persists even in the immediate term and the measures taken to tackle the problem have not been adequate.

No outbreak has been reported in China so far but Vietnam and Indonesia appear to be the worst hit. While Southeast Asian countries are considered the hotbeds for the avian flu virus, the latest outbreak underlines the role of poultry and migratory birds in spreading the virus to countries across the globe.

Compulsory vaccination of all poultry, in the absence of other biosecurity measures, appears to have had little effect in keeping the infections under check. In fact, and somewhat ironically, this is suspected to be a direct cause for fresh outbreaks and emergence of new strains, the two happenings that make disease control really challenging.

A new bird flu strain--Fujian-like--in poultry, first identified in March 2005 in a duck in Fujian, China, is now noticed in Hong Kong, Laos, Malaysia, and Thailand. It has been found to infect humans as well. The prospects of a complete elimination of the H5N1 virus appear bleak as birds continue to harbour the virus and act as carriers.

The virus has also acquired the ability to infect cats and other mammals. Large-scale infection in mammals may result in the virus adapting itself to mammals and also help it acquire the ability to spread to humans and from one human to another. According to the World Health Organisation, 271 humans have been infected by H5N1 virus since 2003 and 165 have died.

Human-to-human transmission of the virus has been confirmed with the death of seven members of an Indonesian family in May last year.

Backyard rearing of poultry, common in many African and Asian countries, and close intermingling of humans with backyard poultry further provide an ideal environment for the virus to jump species. (Originally published in Hindu.com)
 

JPD

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Mutant in Egypt's bird flu virus not increased danger: WHO

http://www.physorg.com/news91004961.html

A mutation in the deadly bird flu virus that has appeared in Egypt has not made the killer disease deadlier despite making it more drug-resistant, said World Health Organization regional spokesman Ibrahim al-Kerdany on Saturday.

"A mutation has appeared in the latest cases but it does not present a danger," he said in comment carried by the official MENA news agency, adding that the most important fact is that the disease continues to pass only from birds to humans and not between humans.

He added that Tamiflu, the most common anti-flu medication, is only 10 percent less effective against the mutation.

Since its appearance in Egypt in March 2006, 13 people have died out of 20 infections from the H5N1 virus, including at least two from Gharbiya province that suffered from a more drug resistant mutation.

None of those afflicted in the last few months had recovered, but experts say this was not due to increased virulence of the virus but because of delays in reporting symptoms.

Kerdany also called for raising awareness among women and children, who make up most of the victims, and stated the need for more laboratories to cope with a predicted rise in samples.

Outside Asia, Egypt is the country hardest hit by the virus.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu outbreaks blamed on rats

http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/bird-flu-outbreaks-blamed-on-rats/2007/02/18/1171733612885.html


Justin Norrie in Tokyo
February 19, 2007

JAPANESE scientists fear that rats were responsible for carrying avian flu into four poultry farms over the past month, in an alarming development that suggests the virus could spread more quickly than realised.

A team of government-appointed specialists who inspected the farms in the Miyazaki and Okayama prefectures, in the country's south, believes that rodents infected by wild ducks from China may have been carrying the highly virulent H5N1 virus strain.

At all of the farms they found nets and coverings in place to prevent large migratory birds from coming into contact with the poultry. At three of the farms they found scores of dead chickens in areas furthest from the entrance of the coops, leading inspectors to believe that wild birds were not the direct source of the infection.

Toshihiro Ito, a professor of veterinary microbiology at Tottori University, who heads the team of specialists, told the Asahi Shimbun: "It's possible that small rodents, such as rats, carried the virus into the chicken coops."

The task force, appointed by the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, said that nets and other barriers at the farms were sufficient to keep out large birds, such as ducks, but could not have stopped very small animals getting to the chickens.

If the fears were confirmed, it would be almost impossible for farmers to avoid similar outbreaks, the task force said.

Since Japan's first case of avian flu this year, in Kiyotake, on the southern island Kyushu, government workers have slaughtered more than 70,000 chickens and quarantined dozens of farms.

The H5N1 virus has forced authorities to cull millions of birds across Asia since late 2003, and caused the deaths of at least 163 people worldwide, according to the World Health Organisation. Only one human infection has been reported in Japan, and no deaths.
 

Ice

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U.S. companies prepare for bird flu pandemic

Sorry if this was already posted I have not noticed it

http://today.reuters.com/news/artic..._N06268695_RTRUKOC_0_US-BIRDFLU-COMPANIES.xml

U.S. companies prepare for bird flu pandemic

Tue Feb 6, 2007 8:24pm ET

ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) - Exxon plans to keep some refinery workers living in the plants to keep them going. A small Southern grocery chain is thinking about drive-through pickup of soup and bread.

The U.S. Labor Department's Occupational Safety and Health Administration urged employers to develop plans to cope with a possible flu pandemic on Tuesday, suggesting letting employees work from home and encouraging sick workers to stay home without reprisals.

But a few international companies and small regional firms were already making bird flu planning a full-time job, and said on Tuesday they have had to prepare for the unthinkable.

Jay Schwartz, vice president of information systems at North Carolina-based Alex Lee Inc., is worried about what will happen when food supplies begin to get scarce as people become ill, stay home to care for children when schools close or tend to ill relatives.

"Security is a huge issue," Schwartz, whose company owns a chain of grocery stores and an institutional food supplier, told a conference in Orlando.

Big food trucks may be targeted by bandits. "Maybe we'll have someone riding shotgun for added security," Schwartz told the Business Preparedness for Pandemic Influenza summit, sponsored by the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota.

Experts almost universally agree that the world is ripe for a pandemic of some infectious disease. The H5N1 avian influenza virus is considered the leading candidate to cause one. Continued...

It can sometimes infect people and has sickened at least 271, killing 166 of them, according to the latest World Health Organization count.

If the virus mutated in just the right way, it could easily begin spreading like common respiratory infections -- only with much more deadly effect. WHO predicts the outcome would be devastating.

"During a pandemic, workplaces can likely experience high absenteeism -- probably as much as 40 percent of the workforce," OSHA official Amanda Edens told reporters.

LEARNING BY TRIAL AND ERROR

"What we are trying to find are the few who have those critical first-step plans that are going to help others," said Mike Osterholm, a University of Minnesota infectious disease expert who arranged the conference.

One big concern -- how to keep employees on the job if schools close and people begin to fear big gatherings. In a pandemic, the biggest danger may be the person next to you.

"We don't have the option of shutting facilities down. We have the obligation of providing energy," said James McEnery, deputy vice-president for human resources at Exxon Mobil Corp.

"We are going to ask some employees to come in and live in the facility," McEnery told the conference. Continued...

Food suppliers also feel an obligation, Schwartz said.

His stores may switch to products that people can stock, such as canned stew. They may arrange for drive-through pickup to avoid person-to-person contact. But this presents its own problems.

"What do you do if a guy pulls up in a pickup truck and wants to buy all the soup?" Schwartz asked.

Other companies feel well set up to make use of teleworkers.

"Everybody has got a laptop," said James Wall, global managing director of human resources for Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu. "Our plans assume that people would have to shelter in place and stay where they are."

Some companies plan to offer moral support, too.

"We employ approximately 200 chaplains of many faiths," said Ken Kimbro, a vice president at Tyson Foods Inc. "We rely very heavily upon this group in times of stress."

(With additional reporting by Will Dunham in Washington)




ICE
 

JPD

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Fourth outbreak of bird flu confirmed in Russian poultry

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20070218.wbirdflu0218/BNStory/International/home

MIKE ECKEL
Associated Press

MOSCOW — A Russian official reported a fourth outbreak of dead domestic poultry in a suburban Moscow district Sunday as experts tightened quarantines following confirmation of the presence of the H5N1 bird flu strain.

The presence of H5N1, confirmed by tests late Saturday, was the first such outbreak to be recorded so close to the Russian capital.

Dead domestic fowl were reported Sunday in the Taldom district, north of the capital, Andrei Barkovsky, a spokesman for the Moscow regional governor, told Ekho Moskvy radio, though it was unclear exactly when the birds died occurred.

Earlier, officials with the federal agricultural oversight agency Rosselkhoznadzor said that three districts west and south of Moscow had recorded bird deaths.

Agency spokesman Alexei Alexeyenko said late Saturday that tests had confirmed H5N1 in poultry found dead in two districts, Odintsovo and Domodedovo, where two dozen birds died this week. Results of tests taken in the Podolsk district, where nearly four dozen birds died, were pending.

Officials said several people who were in close contact with the dead poultry were taken in for medical observation, but no health problems had been reported.

Russian television broadcast footage showing veterinary workers clad in protective suits checking homes in one district and spraying vehicle tires with disinfectant, while police began enforcing a quarantine in an effort to prevent the virus' spread.

Regulators also shut down an outdoor poultry market in Moscow where some of the dead birds appeared to have been bought and Nikolai Vlasov, a senior Rosselkhoznadzor veterinary official, warned that more outbreaks were possible.

No human cases of bird flu have been reported in Russia, which had its first reported cases of the H5N1 strain in Siberia in 2005. Outbreaks have since occurred farther west, but mostly in southern areas distant from the capital.

Since it began ravaging Asian poultry farms in late 2003, the H5N1 strain has killed at least 167 people worldwide, according to the World Health Organization.

Though it remains difficult for humans to catch, health authorities across the globe are monitoring the H5N1 strain out of concern it could mutate into a form that easily spreads from person to person and spark a pandemic.
 

JPD

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Time to prepare for coming pandemic is now

http://thechronicleherald.ca/Business/559799.html

Karen Blotnicky

HEALTH

DEPARTMENTS and disease experts have been telling businesses that it is time to prepare for the inevitable: the modern-day plague.

A quick visit to the World Health Organization website gives an overview of health risks running amok in various parts of the world.

As residents and business owners in one of the world’s healthiest nations, Canadians tend to be overconfident. For some reason, we really don’t expect that whatever is brewing a continent away will affect us. But the experts say it’s not a question of if a pandemic will hit North America, it’s when.

Pandemic is not too strong a word to describe what will eventually come our way. Bruce Erskine’s article in Wednesday’s edition of The Chronicle Herald underscored the importance of coming to grips with the possibility of what a pandemic will mean to your firm, and to prepare for it as soon as possible. Such preparations take time. If you wait until the pandemic hits it will be too late. Imagine suddenly having only half of your staff available to run the business for several months. Such limitations can easily run your business into the ground.

While larger firms have been accused of dragging their feet on pandemic readiness, little attention has been paid to small- and medium-sized enterprises. This is unfortunate because small business is the backbone of the Canadian economy. If small businesses fail, the economy fails.

A variety of things will happen if a pandemic hits. People who are feeling ill will be expected to stay home to prevent the spread of infection. Others will be required to stay home to care for ailing family members. Still others will be afraid to go to work.

Hospitals will attempt to protect their non-flu patients from influenza exposure. Emergency planning will result in many community centres, schools and universities being used to house those with the flu. This may mean your workplace may become a temporary hospital, or your children may have no schools to go to.

Up to 35 per cent of the population will fall ill. This means your suppliers may be affected and the goods and services that you need will not arrive in a timely fashion to carry on business as usual.

Clients are not likely to use your services as frequently as they struggle to maintain their own businesses or families. As a result, sales will fall, and receivables are likely to be slower than usual. This may limit your ability to meet your financial obligations.

Pandemics can last two years or more. Typically, illness comes in waves, each of which can last for a few months. Each wave can be several months apart. Therefore, your business should be able to survive for up to two years with limited human and financial resources.

There are a number of things you can do to prepare your organization for a pandemic. The first is to create an emergency action plan.

First, determine what your critical staff positions are and how they will be staffed.

Telecommuting is an excellent idea when it is possible to provide customer service or staff support remotely. However, your firm will need to invest in the infrastructure and training to make this possible. Must computers be deployed in employees’ homes? What software is needed? How much of an investment is required?

It is important to determine who will staff physical business locations. It is also important to consider the needs of young family members and elderly relatives when choosing who will fulfil these requirements and for how long.

Communications are essential during such events. It is important to create a plan to communicate with staff and customers. This should be done on an electronic platform that can be updated easily and remotely. It is important to assign qualified individuals to handle this key responsibility.

It is also important to prepare financially as much as possible. This is difficult to do because experts cannot predict exactly when a pandemic will hit. This means that your organization must have some additional funds to use as working capital if cash flow should slow down for an extended period of time.

It is important to educate your staff about how to protect themselves and their loved ones in case of a pandemic. Information is available online to facilitate education and business planning.

The Nova Scotia government has a website — www.gov.ns.ca/govt/pandemic — to facilitate the pandemic planning process. This website has links to downloadable material to assist businesses of all sizes in their planning.

Leadership is critical during stressful times. It’s time for small business owners to take a leadership role in preparing their organizations to work through a pandemic.

’... preparations take time. If you wait until the pandemic hits it will be too late.’

Karen Blotnicky is president of TMC The Marketing Clinic and a professor at Mount Saint Vincent University. ( kblotnicky@herald.ca)
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu deadly strain found in Moscow market

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1170359886492&pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull

By ASSOCIATED PRESS
MOSCOW

Russian officials traced dead domestic poultry in several suburban Moscow districts to a single market Sunday as experts reported new outbreaks and tightened quarantines following confirmation of the presence of the H5N1 bird flu strain.

The presence of H5N1, confirmed by tests late Saturday, was the first such outbreak to be recorded so close to the Russian capital.

Four separate incidences of domestic poultry dying involved birds that were purchased at a market located just outside the Moscow city limits, federal agricultural oversight agency Rosselkhoznadzor spokesman Alexei Alexeyenko said.

The market was closed Saturday and experts were trying to determine the original source for the birds on sale there, he said. On Saturday, Alexeyenko said tests had confirmed the H5N1 strain in poultry found dead in two districts where roughly two dozen birds had died - Odintsovo and Domodedovo. Results of tests taken in a third district where nearly four dozen birds died - Podolsk - were still pending, he said.
 

JPD

Inactive
AP CENTERPIECE: Grocers prepare for bird flu with little help

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/storie...ME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2007-02-18-14-14-46

By TIMBERLY ROSS
Associated Press Writer

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) -- Stocking up on food is as simple as a trip to the grocery store, a veritable land of plenty for Americans.

"It's so easy when you have three grocery stores in your vicinity," said Becky Jones of Omaha, who stocks up once a week for her family of three. "You think: how could you possibly not get what you needed?"

But will fresh fruits and vegetables, meat, bread, milk and other household staples still be available if the U.S. is hit with an anticipated bird flu pandemic? If state and federal officials urge people to stay away from public places, like restaurants and fast-food establishments, will they be able to get the groceries they need to prepare food in their homes?

For Jones, the prospect of not having access to food is frightening. She said most people, herself included, only have food on hand for three or four days.

Unlike other critical infrastructure sectors like water, energy and health care, the food industry isn't getting much help from state and federal governments when it comes to disaster planning. That puts the burden on individual supermarket chains and wholesalers to deal with a potentially large number of sick workers that could affect store operations and disrupt the food supply.

"The industry is actively thinking through contingency plans, so if it should happen, our members would be well prepared to deal with it," said Tim Hammonds, president of the Food Marketing Institute, an advocate for grocery wholesalers and retail supermarkets nationwide.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services estimates a third of the population could fall ill if the H5N1 strain of the bird flu mutates into a form that spreads easily from person to person. It's not clear if that will ever happen and no human cases of bird flu have ever been traced to eating properly cooked poultry or eggs.

But if a pandemic emerges, the Department of Homeland Security projects worker absenteeism to reach 40 percent or more over a prolonged period. Hammonds said retail food stores would have to contend with worker shortages and disruptions in the supply chain.

The food and agriculture industry is listed among 13 critical-infrastructure sectors that the Department of Homeland Security says must remain functional during a pandemic.

"Having those critical facilities open - like power, water, food - becomes very important" during a national disaster such as a pandemic, said Keith Hanson, an outreach coordinator for Nebraska's Center for Biopreparedness Education.

Hanson works with local businesses, helping test their preparedness plans. He will speak about the importance of that testing at the Public Health Preparedness Summit in Washington, an annual conference designed to help public health workers prepare for emergencies. This year's meeting started Friday and ends Feb. 23.

Hanson said continued operations of power and water utilities are of the utmost importance, but grocery stores rank highly too. That's because people today keep less food on hand, opting instead to make weekly trips to the grocery store.

Americans are also dining out more than they have in the past. Money spent on food prepared outside the home rose from 34 percent of total food costs in 1974 to about 50 percent in 2004, according to a report by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

The Food Marketing Institute's Hammonds said a widespread pandemic will likely cause food consumption to shift away from restaurants and fast-food establishments and toward in-home eating, causing a greater demand for groceries.

"That means stores would need to be prepared for an increase in volume," he said.

Hy-Vee, a West Des Moines, Iowa-based supermarket chain that operates more than 200 stores in the Midwest, does not have a disaster plan developed in the event of avian flu. But company spokeswoman Chris Friesleben said the company keeps abreast of the illness through the Food Marketing Institute.

"The food supply is essential to the well-being of the community," said Hammonds. "We've been through a lot about what we need to do as a supermarket."

That includes urging wholesalers and retailers to talk with their suppliers about alternative sources for their products and to anticipate what products will be in high demand in a pandemic situation, such as medicines and food staples.

Stephanie Childs, a spokeswoman for Omaha-based ConAgra Foods Inc., said a company task force was formed more than a year ago to develop an operating plan in the event of a national disaster. The plan specifically addresses bird flu, examines areas that could be affected and how the company could respond, she said.

ConAgra is one of the nation's largest food companies, with brand names that include ACT II popcorn, Banquet, Chef Boyardee, Marie Callender's, Egg Beaters and Orville Redenbacher's.

The company employs about 27,000 people, but Homeland Security projections indicate that number could fall to 16,200 during a pandemic.

Childs said such worker shortages and difficulties with suppliers getting their products to ConAgra plants were among the potential problems the company identified. She did not disclose how the company would address those issues.

The federal government and public health agencies are urging people to stock up on nonperishable food, like canned goods and dried fruit, to ensure they have to food to eat during a pandemic.

Jones, the Omaha woman, said that's a proactive approach, but was worried that people with limited incomes may not be able to afford a large stockpile of food.

She stopped short of calling for the government to oversee the food industry's pandemic planning, but said, "If they see a crisis that is on the horizon, they do have to give us some type of warning."
 

JPD

Inactive
Government Recommends Food Stockpiles

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/storie...ME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2007-02-18-14-15-46

The U.S. government is urging Americans to stock up on nonperishable food and other needed items in the event of a bird flu pandemic. Here are some of the items that are recommended:

- canned goods, including meat, fish, fruit, vegetables, beans and soup

- fruit bars or dried fruit

- cereal or granola

- peanut butter or nuts

- crackers

- canned juices

- bottled water

- vitamins

- soap

- toilet paper

- flashlight

- portable radio

- batteries

- manual can opener

Source: U.S. government, http://www.pandemicflu.gov/index.html
 

Anne in TN

Deceased
Quote-
"What do you do if a guy pulls up in a pickup truck and wants to buy all the soup?" Schwartz asked.

End Quote-

Anyone care to answer that question?
 

ofuzzy1

Just Visiting
What do you do if a guy pulls up in a pickup truck and wants to buy all the soup?

Notice the Pickup Truck guy would be the only ninny to some stunt like that.

"Maybe we'll have someone riding shotgun for added security
That's another gem of a comment.
 

JPD

Inactive
Poultry research lab ready for rebuilding

http://www.accessnorthga.com/news/hall/newfullstory.asp?ID=111802

by The Associated Press

ATHENS - The country's main avian influenza research program is poised for a major renovation, including the possible creation of a new research laboratory that would become one of the largest buildings in the city.

The University of Georgia's Southeastern Poultry Research Laboratory is showing its age, but the federal government is considering a $16 million plan to design a new facility for the lab. The item was included in President Bush's proposed budget for the 2008 fiscal year.

Congress has not yet approved the funds for the plan.

The 552,000-square-foot National Bio- and Agro-Defense Facility would help confront threats from emerging disease pandemics or bio- and agro-terrorism.

It would be part of the federal Department of Homeland Security and would include biosafety labs where scientists can research and create diagnostic tools for foreign animal and zoonotic diseases, or those that can be passed between animals to humans.

Homeland Security officials are considering proposals for 18 sites. Finalists will be announced in June and a decision on the final site selection would be made next October. The building would become operational in 2013 or 2014, according to the Department of Homeland Security schedule.

Lab director David Swayne said design and budget costs typically are about 10 percent of the cost to build the project, which means the project could cost about $160 million.

Swayne said the research going on at the 46-year-old facility is vital for national security. The scientists there played a large role over in recent years in helping reconstruct the 1918 flu virus that killed between 50 million and 100 million people worldwide.

Now the lab is home to the country's main research on bird flu, a virus that many fear could kill millions of people again.

The lab was built in 1960 and designed to house 20 people. Now 65 people work in the 30-building complex, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which runs the lab, plans to close down a similar facility in Michigan and moved the 15 jobs to Athens.

At 552,000 square feet, the proposed lab would be about 25 percent bigger than UGA's 420,000-square-foot Ramsey Student Center, and more than twice the size of the 200,000-square-foot Student Learning Center.

UGA offered two large tracts of land for the facility. University officials estimate the building not only would employ 500 workers in well-paid jobs, but indirectly lead to the creation of hundreds more jobs, pumping as much as $6 billion into the Athens-area economy over 20 years.

It could make UGA and Athens a world leader in research into some of the world's most troubling diseases, said Ralph Tripp, a Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar in animal vaccine development.

``Research-wise, it would clearly demarcate Georgia as a a primary facility in the United States for infectious disease research,'' Tripp said.

On the Net:

UGA facility: http://www.uga.edu/nbaf
 

JPD

Inactive
Shops checked for bird flu meat

http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/art...BRITAIN-shops.xml&WTmodLoc=HP-C1-TopStories-2

By Peter Graff

LONDON (Reuters) - The Food Standards Agency said on Friday it was investigating whether meat contaminated with bird flu had reached shops, but said there was no threat to consumers.

The alarm was raised after the government concluded on Thursday that a bird flu outbreak at a giant turkey farm was probably caused not by wild birds but by contaminated shipments from Hungary, possibly of processed turkey meat.

"If it was found that (infected) meat had got into the food chain it would be illegal and we would take appropriate action," an agency spokeswoman said.

"I couldn't tell you what we would do. But we wouldn't want that meat there. At the moment we are not in the process of withdrawing any turkey products from supermarket shelves."

She added: "If infected meat had got into the food chain it wouldn't be a safety risk to consumers."

Supermarket chain Sainsbury's reported a 10 percent drop in poultry sales over the past five days compared with a year ago, although other retailers said they had seen no impact.

Bernard Matthews, Europe's largest turkey producer which has had 160,000 birds destroyed after Britain's first outbreak of the H5N1 strain of bird flu in domestic poultry last week, has acknowledged shipping 38 tonnes of partially processed turkey meat from Hungary per week.

The firm suspended shipments from Hungary after the British government concluded on Thursday that the virus which caused the outbreak was identical to one found in Hungary in January.

But Hungarian poultry processing firm SaGa Foods Zrt, a unit of Bernard Matthews, said its exported products could not be the source of a bird flu outbreak in Britain.

SaGa said in a statement its export shipments did not carry any infection and its products met food safety requirements. It added it did not do any business with the goose farms in eastern Hungary where bird flu was detected last month.

MOVEMENTS OF MEAT

British officials initially said they believed the virus was brought to Britain by wild birds and was unlikely to have been linked to the Hungarian outbreak weeks earlier. But they changed their minds on Thursday, saying they now believe the strain found in Britain was identical to that found in Hungary.

The virus may have been brought to Britain from Hungary in turkey meat, or by contaminated vehicles, Britain's deputy chief veterinarian Fred Landeg told BBC radio.

"The virus has got here somehow. We are focussing our investigation ... on possible movements of poultry meat and vehicles from Hungary, and possibly personnel," he said. "There is quite a lot of movement of poultry and poultry products within Europe. Those are legitimate and legal movements."

Hungarian officials said they too were checking whether there was a link between the two outbreaks, but expressed scepticism that live British birds could have been contaminated by virus present in processed meat.

"In theory a link is possible, but in practice it is very difficult to imagine that," Chief Veterinarian Miklos Suth told Reuters, adding the virus in Hungary hit geese not turkeys.

The H5N1 virus has spread into the Middle East, Africa and Europe since it re-emerged in Asia in 2003 and although it remains largely an animal disease, it can kill people who come into close contact with infected birds.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird Flu of Moscow Region Threatens Human Beings

http://www.kommersant.com/p-10139/bird_flu_Moscow/

The variety of the Moscow Region’s bird flu is dangerous for human-beings, the RIA Novosti news agency reported. The birds in five districts of the Moscow Region have been infected with the H5N1 strain of the flu that could pass to a man, said Alexey Alekseenko, briefer of Russia’s Federal Veterinary and Phytosanitary Control Service, Rosselkhoznadzor.

The infected bird was bought on the Ptichii Rynok (Bird’s Market) in the southeastern Moscow. The market was closed February 17 and the experts are to determine the exact type of the flu during a day.

In the Moscow Region, the bird flu was registered only in the private farms, so the virologists of the Virus Institute of Russian Academy of Medical Science claim the infected birds couldn’t have reached the markets of Moscow.
 

JPD

Inactive
Criminal case initiated over bird flu outside Moscow

http://www.itar-tass.com/eng/level2.html?NewsID=11264564&PageNum=0

19.02.2007, 12.17





MOSCOW, February 19 (Itar-Tass) - The environmental prosecutor’s office has instituted criminal proceedings in connection with the violation of veterinary rules resulting in an outbreak of bird flu in the Moscow region, office sources said on Monday.

They said investigators must look into all circumstances of the case, determining the source of the disease and people responsible for the violation of veterinary rules. The investigation is controlled by the regional prosecutor’s office.

Domestic poultry deaths have been registered in five suburban districts, a report of the environmental prosecutor’s office said. Lab tests confirmed the presence of the deadly H5N1 bird flu strain, it said.

According to preliminary reports, starting from February 5 residents of the Taldom, Domodedovo, Podolsk, Naro-Fominsk and Odintsovo districts have purchased at a poultry market Sadovod just outside Moscow different amounts of poultry. Chickens were kept together with other household poultry, the sources said.

In view of an emergency situation in the Moscow region, measures have been taken to prevent the spread of bird flu. No cases of bird flu among humans have been registered as of yet.

The H5N1 stain has killed at least 167 people worldwide since the start of a bird flu epidemic at Asian poultry farms in 2003, according to the World Health Organization.
 

JPD

Inactive
Nigeria

Still on bird flu scourge

http://www.thetidenews.com/article....le=Still on bird flu scourge&qrColumn=OPINION

Bird flu or influenza is an infectious disease associated with poultry farms. But it could be transmitted to human beings through contact with poultry. It is a virus infection primarily of the air passages. Its symptoms, medical experts say, include fever, headache, catarrh and weakness. Meanwhile, an outbreak of the disease has again been reported in Nigeria. And, according to reports, a woman infected with the disease died in Lagos.

Following the death of the woman, World Health Organisation officials arrived the country. To this end, the Director of Public Health in the Federal Ministry of Health, Mr. Abdullahi Nosidi said the experts would meet with Federal Government officials to draw up an action plan now that the disease had claimed its first human victim in our country.

However, Laboratory test by the World Health Organisation confirmed that the death of the young woman in Lagos was as a result of the avian flu. The woman died on January 16, 2007. In the meantime, the outbreak of the disease has also been reported in Anambra State. According to the report, thousands of birds have been killed by the bird flu. As a proactive measure the Federal Ministry of Health has designated the Specialist Hospital and the Federal Medical Centre, Gombe, as isolation centres.

In any case, it will be recalled that outbreak of the avian flu was reported first in February, 2006 in some farms in Kaduna, Kano and Jos. Also affected were states such as Lagos and Ogun. During the first outbreak thousands of fowls were killed. It should be noted that the economic life of many Nigerians depend on the poultry business which is obviously threatened by the outbreak of the bird flu in Nigeria. If the threat is not checked thousands of people will lose their source of livelihood and this can kill millions of people if urgent measures are not taken to control it from spreading. We therefore appeal to the authorities to take every necessary measure to contain the avian influenza in the country.

At this stage, the public are advised to buy their fowls from registered hatcheries under the umbrella of Poultry Association of Nigeria. Hatcheries registered under the latter will not sell diseased fowls. Fowls should be well cooked or well fried before they are eaten. Smuggled chickens should not be bought. Vaccines should be prepared to give protection against known strains of influenza virus. Finally, veterinary experts should visit all the poultry farms in the country to check the spread of the disease.

Dr. Tolofari is a director in the Rivers State Ministry of Information, Port Harcourt.
 

JPD

Inactive
H5N1 Spreads in Moscow Suburbs

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/02190701/H5N1_Moscow_Spread.html

Recombinomics Commentary
February 19, 2007

The presence of H5N1, confirmed by tests late Saturday, was the first such outbreak to be recorded so close to the Russian capital.
Four separate incidences of domestic poultry dying involved birds that were purchased at a market located just outside the Moscow city limits, federal agricultural oversight agency Rosselkhoznadzor spokesman Alexei Alexeyenko told The Associated Press.

The market was closed Saturday and experts were trying to determine the original source for the birds on sale there, he said.

On Saturday, Alexeyenko said tests had confirmed the H5N1 strain in poultry found dead in two districts where roughly two dozen birds had died -- Odintsovo and Domodedovo. Results of tests taken in a third district where nearly four dozen birds died -- Podolsk -- were still pending, he said.

The Moscow region's chief veterinarian, Olga Gavrilenko, told Ekho Moskvy radio on Sunday that dead domestic birds had been reported in the northern Taldom district.

Russian news agencies also reported a fifth incident of birds dying in the southwestern Naro-Fominsk district,

The above comments describe multiple outbreaks of H5N1 in suburbs ringing Moscow. Many of the outbreaks are said to be linked to a local market, but the source of the infection in the market is unclear.

Recently, outbreaks of the Qinghai strain of H5N1 were reported along the northern shore of the Black Sea in Krasnodar and there has recently been a large die off of migratory birds in Krasnodar.

Last year Qinghai H5N1 was confirmed in Tula, just south of Moscow, but the current series of outbreaks have surrounded the city.

Recently, there have been additional outbreaks of H5N1 in Pakistan, Hungary, England, Egypt, Turkey, and Nigeria. Last year, a large number of countries in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa reported H5N1 outbreaks fro the first time in February and March.

Similar reports are expected this year as the H5N1 in wild birds in the region combine with winter conditions to produce deaths that are identified by a poor surveillance network in the region.
 

JPD

Inactive
Laos reports fresh outbreak of bird flu among poultry near capital

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/storie...ME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2007-02-19-09-09-56

BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -- A fresh outbreak of a virulent bird flu strain has been reported in poultry at two farms near the Laotian capital Vientiane, the World Organization for Animal Health said Monday.

The outbreak of H5N1 in Vientiane's Sisatannak district was detected on Feb. 7, the Paris-based group said in a statement.

The Department of Livestock and Fisheries of the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry reported that 100 ducks at a commercial farm had died, as had 12 birds at a nearby backyard farm where chickens, ducks, geese and pigeons were raised.

The last reported outbreak of the H5N1 virus among poultry in Laos occurred in July 2006, also near Vientiane.

The disease has claimed at least 167 lives worldwide since it began ravaging Asian poultry farms in late 2003, according to the World Health Organization.

Laos has reported no human cases of H5N1, although there have been 25 human infections, including 17 deaths, in Thailand, just across the border from Vientiane.

Bird flu remains hard for humans to catch. But international experts fear it may mutate into a form that could spread easily between humans and potentially kill millions around the world, including in wealthy nations that have so far been spared human cases.
 

JPD

Inactive
United Nations warn of Avian Flu Pandemic

http://www.first4farming.com/F4F/ne...d=EUJEPX0W10UIJWNJH4WCFEQ?article_id=27100003

The United Nations (UN) system coordinator for avian and human influenza, David Nabarro, blamed the poultry trade for the current spread of H5N1 avian flu, at a press conference at the UN Headquarters in February.

Briefing journalists on the situation over the last two months, which has seen outbreaks in China, Indonesia, Vietnam, Thailand, Japan, Egypt, Nigeria, South Korea, Hungary, UK and Turkey, Mr Nabarro said that more outbreaks were expected in May and June but it was difficult to predict where they would occur in the world.

He also warned against letting ?down our guard? and seeing avian flu as only a disease in birds not humans, as the development of a human pandemic was still a threat.

?I?m generally and personally very happy with the way in which countries have organised themselves to try to respond to these challenges,? he said.

But he added: ?We have to not only maintain focus on the challenges of avian influenza, but we must get more pandemic ready.?
 

JPD

Inactive
Russia confirms five H5N1 bird flu outbreaks

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L19265631.htm

By Robin Paxton

MOSCOW, Feb 19 (Reuters) - Moscow's best-known pet market was in quarantine on Monday as health officials confirmed a strain of H5N1, potentially lethal to humans, was responsible for five bird flu outbreaks around the Russian capital.

Veterinary officials traced all five outbreaks, in separate villages around Moscow, to birds bought in the past two weeks at the capital's Sadovod market, commonly known as "Ptichka" ("Birdie"), where masked officials guarded empty stalls.

Laboratory tests confirmed that the H5N1 bird flu present in all five cases was highly pathogenic and potentially dangerous to humans, said Nikolai Vlasov, head of veterinary surveillance at Russia's animal and plant health watchdog, Rosselkhoznadzor.

"It is probably related to the Asian type of the virus," he told Reuters.

The outbreak is Russia's second this year and the first ever recorded close to the capital. The H5N1 strain killed poultry in three settlements in the southern region of Krasnodar last month.

No human cases of bird flu have been recorded in Russia.

The virus has killed 167 people worldwide since 2003, mostly in Asia and in cases where the victims had been in direct contact with infected birds. A total 273 cases have been recorded in humans.

Health experts fear the virus could mutate into a form that passes easily from human to human, sparking a pandemic that could kill millions. Five people have died from eight cases in neighbouring Azerbaijan.

MIGRATING BIRDS

Vlasov said the virus was probably brought to Moscow by migrating birds from the Caucasus or the Middle East.

"Preliminary data show the virus could have come from the region around Azerbaijan or Iran," the health official said.

Controls were in place limiting movement to and from the five villages where bird flu had been found since Friday, in the Taldom, Domodedovo, Podolsk, Naro-Fominsk and Odintsovo districts, and the Sadovod market would remain closed until further checks had been carried out, he said.

The Moscow Region prosecutor said in a statement that a criminal investigation was under way to determine whether veterinary regulations had been breached at the market, and confirmed that residents of the five affected villages had bought birds at the market since Feb. 5.

Tight controls were also in place at other poultry farms around Moscow, though the region's largest poultry producer has said these would not affect operations.

"We always have strict controls in place," Vadim Kamashev, deputy general director of Mosselprom, told Reuters on Saturday. "In principle, we hope strict measures will limit uncontrolled poultry breeding," he said.

The World Animal Health Organisation, which monitors the global bird flu situation, has so far this year received a report from Russia only on the bird flu outbreak in Krasnodar in January, data published on its Web site on Monday showed.

Russia recorded more than 90 bird flu cases in chickens and other birds last year, mostly in the North Caucasus region that borders Georgia and Azerbaijan, and in Siberia's Novosibirsk and Omsk regions. (Additional reporting by Maria Golovnina, Aleksandras Budrys)
 

JPD

Inactive
Farm restrictions remain as Miliband warns of more bird flu outbreaks

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/li...tml?in_article_id=437164&in_page_id=1770&ct=5


Environment Secretary David Miliband warned that there was a continual risk of further bird flu outbreaks. And he indicated restrictions in the area wont be lifted until the second week in March.

But he told the Commons there had so far been no re-occurrence of the virus since the cull at the Bernard Matthews factory in Suffolk.

And he indicated restrictions in the area could be lifted as early as the second week in March.

Mr Miliband was updating MPs on the situation as it was reported that hundreds of workers face being laid off due to the bird flu outbreak.

Mr Miliband said that since the turkey cull, tests had been completed on 12 dead wild birds and results were negative.

Tests had also been completed on poultry samples from 21 premises in the protection zone and in all cases there was no evidence of infection.

"The experts say that a period of two weeks from an outbreak is the time of greatest risk, but it is vital that we do not in any way relax our guard."

The earliest time at which bird flu restriction zones in Suffolk could be lifted was the second week of March - provided there were no further outbreaks or suspect cases in the area.

Mr Miliband said officials' working hypothesis was now that the spread of the virus was associated with the import of poultry products from Hungary but this was not being pursued to the exclusion of other possibilities.

"We are examining all possible routes of transmission, but our investigation of the cause of the incident has focused on transport links between Hungary and the site in Holton and at biosecurity at the site."

more to follow
 

squeeksmom

Deceased
Thank you, JPD!! I wouldn't be able to keep up with all of this if you didn't put it all in once place for me. Thanks for your work.

squeeks
 

JPD

Inactive
Thousands tested after Russian H5N1 outbreak

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article1408932.ece

5,000 residents of the outskirts of Moscow are being tested after cases of bird flu are found 30 miles from the capital

Tony Halpin in Moscow

Thousands of Russians were undergoing tests tonight after an outbreak of bird flu at chicken farms on the outskirts of Moscow.

Health officials confirmed that chickens at two farms within 30 miles of the capital had died from the deadly H5N1 strain of the virus. Dead birds were also being tested at three other locations around Moscow that are suspected of being contaminated.

“Medical monitoring is under way for 5,453 residents in the relevant areas, including 20 citizens who were in direct contact with the infected birds,” said Gennady Onishchenko, Russia’s chief epidemiologist. He added that no illnesses had been reported among humans so far.

This is the first time that bird flu has been detected so close to Moscow, which is home to more than 10 million people. Officials quickly established quarantine zones around villages in the affected areas and commenced vaccination programmes for birds.

Veterinary officials have established that the bird flu virus came from chickens bought at a Moscow bird market. More than 150 birds have died at private farms around the city in the past 10 days.

“From the very beginning we have been taking safety measures assuming that it was this strain so the confirmation does not change anything,” said Nikolai Vlasov, director of veterinary inspection for Russia’s state agricultural agency.

H5N1 has killed 164 people out of 270 reported human infections worldwide since 2003. The fear among health experts is that the deadly bird virus could mutate and spread from human to human, triggering a worldwide pandemic.

The virus was previously found in 2005 in poultry plants in Russia’s Krasnodar region, 625 miles south of Moscow. Sergei Yeremin, director of the World Health Organisation’s bird flu programme in Russia, said that this experience had left Russia “highly prepared” for the current outbreak.

“There have been no cases of human infection in Russia though it is located in a migratory zone for wild birds. This is one of the signs that Russia is ready,” he said. “What worries us more is the source of the infected birds, how they wound up at the market.”

The Moscow regional prosecutor said in a statement that it had begun a criminal inquiry to establish “the source of the illness and the guilty parties who violated veterinary rules”.

Russia’s Interior Ministry ordered measures to prevent any possible spread of the infection. Police visited every house in the affected districts to seek information about possible sick birds, while road traffic inspectors were checking all poultry vehicles.

Valery Sitnikov, Moscow’s chief veterinarian, said that he was confident that the spread of the virus had been contained. He said: “The incubation period of the disease is one to two days which means that if there had been a massive die-off of hens elsewhere, we would have learned about it.” Estonia responded to the outbreak by banning the sale of birds in markets. Azerbaijan also banned imports of poultry from farms around Moscow.

The Emergency Situations Ministry said that more than 128 million doses of bird flu vaccine had been distributed around the regions of Russia since last year. More than 94 million birds had been vaccinated.
 

JPD

Inactive
India

Avian flu virus detected in samples at Belgachhia

http://147.208.132.198/onlineCDA/PF....81.141.122/news/181_1932695,000900030001.htm

Subhendu Maiti

Kolkata, February 19, 2007

The deadly H5N1 avian flu virus has been detected in the serum of about 12 samples of chicks in the blood test conducted at the Regional Disease Diagnostic Laboratory (RDDL) at Belgachhia in the city last week.

The blood samples were collected from poultry birds in the state-run Golapbag poultry farm in Burdwan town soon after bird flu cases were reported in a European country and then in neighbouring Pakistan.

This is the first time samples tested positive in Bengal since the deadly disease hit Jalgaon of Maharashtra exactly one year ago.

The serum test report has sent shock waves among the scientists of Belgachhia RDDL, sole well-equipped laboratory in the entire eastern India for confirmation of avian flu virus among poultry birds.

It was learnt that the RDDL authority has sent the samples along with their lab test report to the High Security Animal Disease Laboratory (HSADL) to Bhopal for final confirmation.

Dr Dilip Das, director of the state animal resource development (ARD) told the Hindustan Times, "We have got H5N1 positive in serum of several samples of poultry birds during eliza tests at RDDL. We have sent the serum samples along with our lab test report to the HSADL in Bhopal for confirmation. We are waiting for their report. Right now there is no case of birds dying due to the H5N1 attack anywhere in the state. As a result, there is no reason to create panic. It will affect the poultry industry."

Das said, "We have started eliza tests on blood samples at Belgachhia lab since January 19. The Central government has given us kits for the test."

Some officials of the state animal resource and development department said that the blood samples were collected from poultry birds in the Golapbag area of Burdwan town soon after the bird flu case was reported in a European country and then in neighbouring Pakistan.

Golapbag is one of biggest government-run poultry farms in the state. Huge quantities of chickens are supplied to markets across the state from the poultry farm regularly.

"During the past couple of weeks serum of about 100 poultry birds were tested in Belgachhia RDDL with the kits supplied by the Central Government. Most of the samples tested negative while only the 12 samples collected from Golapbag showed the avian flu virus positive reports. This prompted us to keep watch on poultry birds at Golapbag. We are taking stock of the situation at Golapbag poultry farm every day since the H5N1 strain was found in the samples," one of the officials said.

He said, "We will get the HSADL report within one week because the lab is overburdened with about 4000 to 5000 samples from different states every week."

It was learnt that three RDDL scientists Dr AG Bandopadhaya, Dr Tushar Pal and Dr Gurucharan Dutta had attended a meeting with the top officials of animal resource development wing under the agriculture ministry in Delhi last week to discuss about precautionary measures on bird flu threat in the country.

The Centre has asked the RDDL authority to form two special teams comprising four bird flu experts each in order to take preventive measures if the deadly disease hit any state of the eastern region.

The official said that some members of the two teams have the on-the-spot experience on how to combat bird flu when it had landed in Jalgaon in January in 2006.
 

JPD

Inactive
Russia

Villages sealed off as bird flu reaches outskirts of capital

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article1409204.ece

Tony Halpin in Moscow

Thousands of Russians were undergoing tests last night after an outbreak of bird flu at chicken farms on the outskirts of Moscow.

Health officials confirmed that chickens at two farms within 30 miles (49km) of the capital had died from the H5N1 strain of the virus. Dead birds suspected of being contaminated were also being tested at three other locations near Moscow.

“Medical monitoring is under way for 5,453 residents in the relevant areas, including 20 citizens who were in direct contact with the infected birds,” said Gennady Onishchenko, Russia’s chief epidemiologist. No illnesses had been reported among human beings so far, he said.

This is the first time that bird flu has been detected so close to Moscow, which is home to more than ten million people. Officials established quarantine zones around villages in affected areas and began bird vaccination programmes. Veterinary officials have established that the bird flu virus came from chickens bought at a Moscow bird market. More than 150 birds have died at private farms around the city in the past ten days.

“From the very beginning we have been taking safety measures, assuming that it was this strain, so the confirmation does not change anything,” said Nikolai Vlasov, director of veterinary inspection for Russia’s state agricultural agency.

The virus was found previously in 2005 in poultry plants in the Krasnodar region of Russia, 625 miles south of Moscow.

Sergei Yeremin, director of the World Health Organisation’s bird flu programme in Russia, said that this experience had left the country “highly prepared” for the present outbreak.

“There have been no cases of human infection in Russia, though it is located in a migratory zone for wild birds. This is one of the signs that Russia is ready,” he said.

“What worries us more is the source of the infected birds, how they wound up at the market.”

The Moscow regional prosecutor said that it had begun a criminal inquiry to establish “the source of the illness and the guilty parties who violated veterinary rules”.

Russia’s Interior Ministry ordered measures to prevent any possible spread of the infection. Police visited every house in the affected districts to seek information about possible sick birds, while road traffic inspectors were checking all poultry vehicles.

Valery Sitnikov, Moscow’s chief veterinarian, said that he was confident that the spread of the virus had been contained. “The incubation period of the disease is one to two days, which means that if there had been a massive die-off of hens elsewhere, we would have learnt about it,” he said.

Estonia responded to the outbreak by banning the sale of birds in markets. Azerbaijan also banned imports of poultry from farms around Moscow.
 

JPD

Inactive
H5N1 bird flu came to Russia from Azerbaijan, Russian official stated

http://www.today.az/news/society/36701.html

20 February 2007 [07:00] - Today.Az
Moscow's best-known pet market was in quarantine on Monday as health officials confirmed a strain of H5N1, potentially lethal to humans, was responsible for five bird flu outbreaks around the Russian capital.

Veterinary officials traced all five outbreaks, in separate villages around Moscow, to birds bought in the past two weeks at the capital's Sadovod market, commonly known as "Ptichka" ("Birdie"), where masked officials guarded empty stalls.

Laboratory tests confirmed that the H5N1 bird flu present in all five cases was highly pathogenic and potentially dangerous to humans, said Nikolai Vlasov, head of veterinary surveillance at Russia's animal and plant health watchdog, Rosselkhoznadzor.

"It is probably related to the Asian type of the virus," he told Reuters.

The outbreak is Russia's second this year and the first ever recorded close to the capital. The H5N1 strain killed poultry in three settlements in the southern region of Krasnodar last month.

No human cases of bird flu have been recorded in Russia.

The virus has killed 167 people worldwide since 2003, mostly in Asia and in cases where the victims had been in direct contact with infected birds. A total 273 cases have been recorded in humans.

Health experts fear the virus could mutate into a form that passes easily from human to human, sparking a pandemic that could kill millions. Five people have died from eight cases in neighbouring Azerbaijan.

Vlasov said the virus was probably brought to Moscow by migrating birds from the Caucasus or the Middle East.

"Preliminary data show the virus could have come from the region around Azerbaijan or Iran," the health official said.

Controls were in place limiting movement to and from the five villages where bird flu had been found since Friday, in the Taldom, Domodedovo, Podolsk, Naro-Fominsk and Odintsovo districts, and the Sadovod market would remain closed until further checks had been carried out, he said.

The Moscow Region prosecutor said in a statement that a criminal investigation was under way to determine whether veterinary regulations had been breached at the market, and confirmed that residents of the five affected villages had bought birds at the market since Feb. 5.

Tight controls were also in place at other poultry farms around Moscow, though the region's largest poultry producer has said these would not affect operations.

"We always have strict controls in place," Vadim Kamashev, deputy general director of Mosselprom, told Reuters on Saturday. "In principle, we hope strict measures will limit uncontrolled poultry breeding," he said.

The World Animal Health Organisation, which monitors the global bird flu situation, has so far this year received a report from Russia only on the bird flu outbreak in Krasnodar in January, data published on its Web site on Monday showed.

Russia recorded more than 90 bird flu cases in chickens and other birds last year, mostly in the North Caucasus region that borders Georgia and Azerbaijan, and in Siberia's Novosibirsk and Omsk regions. Reuters
 

JPD

Inactive
Russia confirms 5 cases of lethal bird flu strain

http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topi...=133746&version=1&template_id=39&parent_id=21

Published: Tuesday, 20 February, 2007, 11:43 AM Doha Time

MOSCOW: Moscow’s best-known pet market was in quarantine yesterday as health officials confirmed a strain of H5N1, potentially lethal to humans, was responsible for five bird flu outbreaks around the Russian capital. Veterinary officials traced all five outbreaks, in separate villages around Moscow, to birds bought in the past two weeks at the capital’s Sadovod market, commonly known as “Ptichka” (“Birdie”), where masked officials guarded empty stalls.

Laboratory tests confirmed that the H5N1 bird flu present in all five cases was highly pathogenic and potentially dangerous to humans, said Nikolai Vlasov, head of veterinary surveillance at Russia’s animal and plant health watchdog, Rosselkhoznadzor.

“It is probably related to the Asian type of the virus,” he told Reuters.
The outbreak is Russia’s second this year and the first ever recorded close to the capital. The H5N1 strain killed poultry in three settlements in the southern region of Krasnodar last month.

No human cases of bird flu have been recorded in Russia.
The virus has killed 167 people worldwide since 2003, mostly in Asia and in cases where the victims had been in direct contact with infected birds. A total 273 cases have been recorded in humans.

Health experts fear the virus could mutate into a form that passes easily from human to human, sparking a pandemic that could kill millions. Five people have died from eight cases in neighbouring Azerbaijan.

Vlasov said the virus was probably brought to Moscow by migrating birds from the Caucasus or the Middle East.

“Preliminary data show the virus could have come from the region around Azerbaijan or Iran,” the health official said.

Controls were in place limiting movement to and from the five villages where bird flu had been found since Friday, in the Taldom, Domodedovo, Podolsk, Naro-Fominsk and Odintsovo districts, and the Sadovod market would remain closed until further checks had been carried out, he said.

The Moscow Region prosecutor said in a statement that a criminal investigation was under way to determine whether veterinary regulations had been breached at the market, and confirmed that residents of the five affected villages had bought birds at the market since February 5.

Tight controls were also in place at other poultry farms around Moscow, though the region’s largest poultry producer has said these would not affect operations.
“We always have strict controls in place,” Vadim Kamashev, deputy general director of Mosselprom, told Reuters on Saturday. “In principle, we hope strict measures will limit uncontrolled poultry breeding,” he said.

The World Animal Health Organisation, which monitors the global bird flu situation, has so far this year received a report from Russia only on the bird flu outbreak in Krasnodar in January, data published on its website showed.

Russia recorded more than 90 bird flu cases in chickens and other birds last year, mostly in the North Caucasus region that borders Georgia and Azerbaijan, and in Siberia’s Novosibirsk and Omsk regions. – Reuters
 
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