8/11/07-8/17/07|Weekly Bird Flu Thread:Tamiflu creator urges over-the-counter access

JPD

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Tamiflu creator urges over-the-counter access to drug

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2007/08/10/2002160.htm

Posted Fri Aug 10, 2007 5:00pm AEST

The scientist whose work lead to the creation of the anti-viral flu drug Tamiflu, says the Federal Government is wrong to ignore his calls for the anti-viral to be made available over-the-counter.

Professor Graeme Laver says the Government is correct to stockpile the drug for any pandemic, but says it is also needed for seasonal flu.

"Tamiflu has to be taken very soon after you get the first symptoms, but if you have to wait for a prescription it's just not useful at all," Professor Laver said.

There is concern about flu viruses developing resistance to Tamiflu if it is overused, but Doctor Ian Barr from the World Health Organisation Influenza Centre personally supports the idea - with some controls.

"[Controls such as] the pharmacist at least asking some of the symptoms of a patient or doing a rapid test for influenza," Dr Barr said.

The Federal Heath Department says there is no expert evidence that access to Tamiflu without a doctor's diagnosis would reduce flu deaths.
 

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Indonesia won't share bird flu samples with WHO until system is fair - ministry

http://www.forbes.com/business/feeds/afx/2007/08/09/afx4002773.html

JAKARTA (Thomson Financial) - Indonesia will not share bird flu samples with the UN's health body until it is guaranteed access to affordable medicines to treat victims of the deadly virus, a government official said Thursday.

The World Health Organization this week accused Indonesia, which has suffered the highest number of human deaths from the H5N1 virus, of putting the world at risk by failing to share its samples.

Passing on laboratory samples would allow the WHO to keep track of any mutations that might spark development of an even deadlier pandemic strain of influenza, according to the body.

But Lily Sulistyowati, a spokeswoman from Indonesia's health ministry, said authorities here were awaiting a new mechanism that would put new guidelines on sample sharing in place.

Indonesia wants a system that is transparent and allows developing countries affordable access to medicine supplies to treat bird flu, she said.

This is because 'we had difficulties when we wanted to buy Tamiflu,' she told Agence France-Presse, referring to the main drug used to treat victims of the virus.

Tamiflu is manufactured by Switzerland-based Roche Holdings AG.

'We could not get it directly. The WHO told us that we had to queue up with other countries, developed countries, where they don't really have any cases.'

Indonesia stopped sharing virus samples with foreign laboratories in December 2006, saying it feared multinational drug companies could use them to develop vaccines that were not affordable for poor countries.

Jakarta said in May it had resumed sending H5N1 specimens to a WHO laboratory in Tokyo, but a senior WHO official this week said three specimens sent did not contain live flu viruses, and two were from the same person.

Sulistyowati said she could not understand why the WHO had not complained earlier.

Negotiations are under way to reach an agreement on detailed international virus sharing guidelines at a special meeting of the WHO's member states in November. The spokeswoman said the previous mechanism had effectively been abolished by the WHO in May.

Indonesia confirmed its first human bird flu case in July 2005 and has since confirmed 81 deaths.

Scientists worry the bird flu virus could mutate into a form easily spread among humans, leading to a global pandemic with the potential to kill millions.
 

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Second phase of anti-bird flu operations ends

http://www.kanglaonline.com/index.php?template=headline&newsid=38879&typeid=1

The Imphal Free Press

IMPHAL, Aug 10: The second phase of control and containment operations taken up to prevent the spread of avian influenza, consisting of mopping, cleaning and disinfection, winded up today.

With the completion of the second phase, all members of the RRTs of the department have been confined in quarantine at the veterinary hospital, Sanjenthong for seven days from today.

This is being done for observation purposes and in line with the guidelines laid down for tackling cases of avian influenza, according to veterinary department sources.

A total of 135 veterinary staff have been engaged in culling of birds within an area of 5 km radius from the Chingmeirong farm where the avian influenza outbreak occurred since July 26 till August 2, in which altogether 3,31,606 birds were slaughtered.

6200 birds which had been missed in the main culling operations were also slaughtered in the follow-up mopping operations.

This was followed by sanitisation programme which include cleaning and disinfection of bird culling sides as well as farms and backyards.

Sanitisation was carried out at two organised farms run by the state government at Mantripukhri and Porompat, and at 166 semi-organised poultry farms run by private individuals.

In the meantime, to take stock of the measures being taken up to control avian influenza in the state, a high level team from the Union ministry of agriculture, led by secretary, veterinary and animal husbandry, dairying and fisheries, Uma Chakravarty, is arriving in Imphal on Monday.
 

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India

8 boys with bird flu symptoms admitted to CMC, Vellore

http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/002200708111862.htm

Vellore, Aug. 11 (PTI): Eight boys belonging to Chittoor in Andhra Pradesh were admitted to a hospital here with symptoms similar to 'bird flu', Deputy Speaker of Andhra Pradesh assembly Kutulahamma said.

Kutulahamma, who had come here to visit the boys aged 10-12 years, told reporters that they were suffering from high fever and were having symptoms like epilepsy, arousing suspicion that it could be bird flu.

Bird flu incidence has been reported in Chittoor region and Andhra Pradesh government was conducting tests and taking preventive measures to contain the spread of the deadly disease, she said.

She said a medical team from Chittor has come to Vellore to hold discussions with the doctors at Christian Medical College about the fever.
 

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Belarus limits importation of meat from all countries

http://www.itar-tass.com/eng/level2.html?NewsID=11784583&PageNum=0

11.08.2007, 04.13





MINSK, August 11 (Itar-Tass) - Belarus introduces a temporary limitation on the importation of meat in baggage and hand luggage from all countries, effective from Saturday, the press service of the State Customs Committee of Belarus has announced.

In view of the complex epizootic situation in many countries owing to rapidly spreading farm animals' and poultry diseases, such as foot-and-mouth disease, African swine-plague, bird flu, Newcastle disease, etc, the Main Veterinary Department in conjunction with the State Veterinary Inspectorate and the State Food Inspectorate of the Ministry of Agriculture and Food puts a temporary limitation, beginning from August 11, 2007, on the importation of meat products into Belarus from all countries in baggage and hand luggage, the announcement said.

The document specifies that persons concerned must apply to state veterinary supervision agencies for an appropriate permit to bring meat products to the country's territory.
 

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Togo detects new cases of bird flu

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20070811/wl_africa_afp/healthflutogo;_ylt=A0WTcVGg971G.CgALQlvaA8F

Sat Aug 11, 10:17 AM ET

LOME (AFP) - Three new cases of the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu have been detected in poultry on farms in the west African nation of Togo, a report said Saturday.

The new cases were found in dead birds on farms in the Lacs, Golfe and Zio regions east of the capital Lome, national television reported.

In late June, testing confirmed the presence for the first time in Togo of the H5N1 strain in poultry in Sigbehoue, 45 kilometres (30 miles) east of the capital.

About 8,000 poultry birds were slaughtered in the area and local poultry markets were closed. Togolese authorities also stepped up controls on poultry imports.

Togo in October of last year banned the import of live poultry and poultry products from countries affected by the virus.

Worldwide, the virus has killed 191 people out of 313 infected patients since reappearing in late 2003, according to a World Health Organisation toll dated June 15.

Experts fear the death toll could multiply rapidly if the virus were to mutate and become easily transmitted between humans.
 

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Indonesia demands bird flu medicine before sharing samples

http://abc.net.au/news/stories/2007/08/12/2002691.htm?section=world

By Peter Cave

Posted Sun Aug 12, 2007 8:01am AEST

Indonesia has confirmed that it will not share live samples of bird flu virus with the World Health Organisation (WHO) until it is guaranteed access to affordable drugs to fight the disease.

The WHO has accused Indonesia, which has suffered more cases of the disease than any other country, of putting the world at risk by failing to share samples.

Indonesian Health Ministry spokeswoman Lily Sulistyowati says her country was waiting for a new mechanism to be put in place to govern the sharing of samples.

She says there must be a transparent system which allowed developing countries affordable access to any new medicines developed as a result.
 

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Bird flu: Manipur seals poultry farms

http://www.zeenews.com/articles.asp...d=&news=Bird flu: Manipur seals poultry farms

mphal, Aug 12: Health officials in Manipur began sealing poultry farms on Saturday, after an outbreak of bird flu in the state.

Health workers in protective gear sealed the farms after completing the second phase of culling, mopping and sanitizing procedure within a 5 kilometre radius in Imphal where symptoms of the H5N1 influenza were detected.

More than 300,000 chickens have been culled and six thousand mopped since the the disease was detected.
 

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Indonesia confirms two more bird flu deaths, on Bali

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/2007081...ll_070813074835;_ylt=A0WTcUcHKsBGjzkBhi2TvyIi

JAKARTA (AFP) - An Indonesian woman and her five-year-old daughter on the tourist island of Bali have died of bird flu, a health ministry official confirmed Monday, bringing the nation's toll to 83.

The deaths are the first on Bali, where the deadly H5N1 strain of the virus was found more than a year ago.

The 29-year-old woman from the northwest of the island, far from the major tourist centres, died on Sunday, while her daughter died on August 3, said Bayu Krisnamurti, head of Indonesia's national bird flu commission.

"Both people are positive, from (tests at) the Eikman Institute and the health ministry's lab," he told a press briefing.

In Indonesia, two tests must be returned positive before a human infection is confirmed.

A two-year-old girl, a neighbour of the victims, was admitted to hospital on Sunday and is also suspected of being infected, he said.

Joko, from the Bird Flu Information Centre in Jakarta, said that chickens had died in the victims' neighbourhood of bird flu recently.

Indonesia reported its first human bird flu case in July 2005 and has since confirmed 81 deaths, the highest number of any nation.

Scientists worry the bird flu virus could mutate into a form easily spread among humans, leading to a global pandemic with the potential to kill millions.

Infected poultry was first found on the northwest of Bali last year, when hundreds of birds were culled but no human infections were found.
 

JPD

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A little more information....

Bird flu confirmed in Bali

http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/story/0,22049,22237211-5001021,00.html



August 13, 2007 12:00am

HEALTH officials in Bali have confirmed that a woman and her daughter died there from the deadly H5N1 strain of influenza.
The deaths of the 29-year-old woman and her five-year-old daughter were the first from bird flu in Bali and took the nation's toll to 83, a health official said.

The woman, Ni Luh Putu Sri Windani, lived in the northwest of the island, far from the major tourist centres.

She died yesterday, while her daughter died on August 3, said Bayu Krisnamurti, head of Indonesia's national bird flu commission.

"Both people are positive, from (tests at) the Eikman Institute and the health ministry's lab," he said.

In Indonesia two tests must be returned positive before a human infection is confirmed.

Chickens in Ms Windani's neighbourhood were positively infected, said Joko Suyono of the Bird Flu Information Centre in Jakarta.

Ms Windani, from a village in the district of Jembrana, was suffering from a high fever before dying of multiple organ failure, said Ken Wirasandi, a doctor at Sanglah Hospital in Denpasar.

Mr Suyono said there had been sick chickens around the woman's house and many had died suddenly in recent weeks.

"The villagers didn't burn the carcasses. Instead they buried them or fed them to pigs," he said.

Contact with sick fowl is the most common way for humans to contract the H5N1 virus.

The woman had started showing symptoms more than a week ago, but was only admitted to hospital six days later.

She was transferred to Denpasar on Friday, where she was treated in the isolation unit, Mr Suyono said.

A two-year-old neighbour of Ms Windani has also been admitted to hospital in Denpasar.

A spokeswoman for the Australian Department of Health and Ageing said the situation was being closely monitored.

Infected poultry was first found on the northwest of the island - far from the main tourist areas - last year, when hundreds of birds were culled but no human infections were found.

Indonesia reported its first human bird flu case in July 2005 and has since confirmed 81 deaths, the highest number of any nation.

Scientists worry the bird flu virus could mutate into a form easily spread among humans, leading to a global pandemic with the potential to kill millions.

The virulent Indonesia strain has killed more than 190 people since it surfaced in 2003.
 

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Vaccine maker gears up in case of flu pandemic

http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2007-08-12-flu-vaccine_N.htm

By Anita Manning, USA TODAY

SWIFTWATER, Pa. — A new flu vaccine plant here is set to begin operations as soon as next year, boosting the supply of vaccine for the annual flu season and providing a much-desired U.S. source of vaccine for use in a flu pandemic.

The $150 million plant was built by the French company Sanofi Pasteur on its 500-acre campus in the Pocono Mountains. It joins an older plant, built in the 1970s, that produces the only flu vaccine made entirely in the USA.

"We assume that in a pandemic, the only vaccine available to Americans is going to be a vaccine made in America," says Bruce Gellin, director of the National Vaccine Program office in the Department of Health and Human Services. "A goal of our pandemic vaccine program is largely to ensure we have sufficient domestic capacity to meet this country's need."

Sanofi's existing plant, which is set to close down for renovations when the new plant goes online, churns out up to 50 million doses a year. The new one, which the company says will be ready in late 2008 or early 2009 after licensing by the Food and Drug Administration, will produce 100 million doses of vaccine for annual flu seasons. Total output will jump to 150 million doses once the old plant is back in action, which is expected by the end of 2010, officials say.

If a pandemic strikes, Sanofi CEO Wayne Pisano says, "we can essentially change in a day from seasonal to pandemic vaccine manufacturing, assuming we have the virus."
FIND MORE STORIES IN: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention | H5N | Department of Health and Human Services | Sanofi Pasteur | Bruce Gellin

Pandemics occur when a new variety of flu emerges to which humans have never been exposed. Of concern to health experts is the bird flu virus H5N1, which has caused at least 319 human illnesses and 192 deaths since 2003.

It doesn't spread easily in humans, HHS Secretary Mike Leavitt said after touring the new vaccine plant last month, but "the potential continues to be strong" that it could mutate in that direction. "We don't know that H5N1 will be the spark of the next pandemic, but we do know pandemics happen."

Goal: Cell-culture production

Sanofi's expansion, which did not involve federal funding, represents a step toward readiness for a flu pandemic, Gellin says, but it's only "a piece of it." To further bolster U.S. flu vaccine production, HHS awarded $132.5 million in June to Sanofi Pasteur and MedImmune, maker of the nasal spray vaccine FluMist, to renovate plants for flu vaccine-making using the current technology that relies on fertilized eggs to grow viruses. Developed before World War II, it is time-tested, safe and cost-effective, but it is dependent on egg supply and produces varying yields. It's also a slow process; it takes about six months from start to finish.

To assure a more reliable supply, HHS has awarded a big green carrot — $1 billion to six vaccine makers — to speed development of cell-culture production, which will allow large amounts of flu virus to be grown in giant steel vats rather than in chicken eggs.

Cell culture, which is used to make vaccines against polio and rabies and others, "allows you to ramp up and have surge capacity quickly," Gellin says, but it's not cost-effective except at large volumes. "To have a company switch over just because it's stainless steel instead of chickens, companies are never going to do that," he says. "Our interest was surge capacity for a pandemic, so we needed to come up with an incentive to drive a company to do something they wouldn't have done on their own."

The government also is investing in research into next-generation vaccine-making technologies designed to speed production, and in adjuvants, which boost the immune response to vaccines, stretching out the supply. That's important, Gellin notes, because the sole licensed vaccine against H5N1 is effective only at high doses given in two shots.

"Everything we do for pandemic preparation has other public health value," he says. U.S. vaccine plants and a trained workforce offer the ability to make a pandemic vaccine while assuring a plentiful supply to prevent seasonal flu, which kills an estimated 36,000 people each year.

Staying ahead of bird flu

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention forecasts a record 132 million doses of vaccine for use in the coming flu season.

Though there may be a bumper crop of flu vaccine this fall, at the moment there is only enough H5N1 vaccine in stockpiles for 6 million people, and no one knows whether it will match the pandemic strain. Experts say even a less-than-perfect match will give some protection, though, and are drafting guidelines on who should get those doses first in an emergency.

"Every American has a stake in this," Gellin says. "It's important to understand what the limitations are in current technology and why some people will be asked to go before others."

Because there won't be enough vaccine to go around in the first wave of a pandemic, the government is taking multiple other steps, from stockpiling 50.6 million doses of antiviral medications to sponsoring training exercises and flu summits in states and communities. The CDC is holding one of a series of pandemic drills this week at its Atlanta headquarters.

But is all this effort necessary? Bird flu has been around for years and hasn't caused a pandemic yet.

Gellin says yes. "The ball could drop any second," he says. "You want to do as much as you can before that happens, because when that happens, the world will change."
 

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Deaths spark Bali bird flu warning

http://www.news.com.au/travel/story/0,23483,22241970-27977,00.html

By Nick Higginbottom and wires


AUSTRALIAN travellers to Bali have been warned to avoid contact with poultry after a mother and her young daughter died of bird flu.

The 29-year-old woman and her five-year-old daughter lived in a village three hours west of major tourist areas.

All the birds in the village have been destroyed.

The Australian Department of Health said it was monitoring the situation closely and warned anyone travelling to the area to take precautions.

"Any travellers heading to bird-infected areas should be wary of any contact with birds," a spokesperson said.

"Australia has a good relationship with Indonesia and the World Health Organisation and has been monitoring the situation since it was first reported, however it (bird flu) is not transmittable human-to-human so it's just a case of taking the usual precautions."

The woman, from northwestern Jembrana district, died at a hospital in Bali's capital, Denpasar, on Sunday.

Her daughter died on August 3, the head of Indonesia's national bird flu commission, Bayu Krisnamurti, said.

"We will do the most intensive measures in Bali as it is a tourism destination," he said.

Another girl, a two-year-old neighbour of the victims, went to hospital on Sunday with suspected bird flu.

Infected poultry was first found on the northwest of the island last year, when hundreds of birds were culled but no humans were infected.

Indonesia reported its first human bird flu case in July 2005. It's since confirmed a world record 81 deaths.

Scientists worry the bird flu virus could mutate into a form that can spread among humans, leading to a global pandemic.
 

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NTERVIEW - "Uncontrolled" bird flu in region worries India

http://in.reuters.com/article/topNews/idINIndia-28974620070814?rpc=401&

Tue Aug 14, 2007 3:37PM IST

By Kamil Zaheer

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India is intensifying preparations to deal with avian influenza as it borders countries with "uncontrolled outbreaks" in poultry and is also close to nations with human cases, its top health official said.

Central Health Secretary Naresh Dayal referred to Myanmar and Bangladesh -- which have seen several outbreaks in poultry this year and share a long border with India's remote northeast.

"We are surrounded by countries with uncontrolled outbreaks in poultry and birds," Dayal told Reuters in an interview on Tuesday. "And further, there is Vietnam and Indonesia."

Indonesia and Vietnam -- both within a couple of hours flying distance from some Indian cities -- have reported human deaths from bird flu this year.

Indonesia says it has 83 confirmed bird flu deaths since 2003, the highest for any nation.

"Worldwide, human-to-human transmission is feared. We have to be able to tackle that if, God forbid, it starts," Dayal said.

Globally, there have been more than 300 confirmed human cases of bird flu since 2003 due to the H5N1 strain and nearly 200 deaths, according to the World Health Organisation.

The H5N1 virus remains mainly a disease affecting birds, but experts worry it may mutate into a form easily transmitted from person to person.

SELF-INTEREST

India this month managed to contain an outbreak of bird flu in chickens in its remote Manipur state bordering Myanmar, which had two flare-ups in poultry in July alone.

India has stepped up vigil on its borders with Myanmar as well as Bangladesh, said Dayal, adding that New Delhi had offered to help its two neighbours fight the disease.

"We are willing to provide help to Bangladesh. It is also in our own interest," he said, adding India was also ready to help Myanmar fight the virus if requested.

New Delhi has reported no human case from its three major outbreaks in poultry since 2006, but health officials are worried about its northeast region, which also borders China, where 16 human deaths have been reported since 2003.

Authorities are increasing the number of laboratories that can test for bird flu in humans.

Besides the three existing facilities, New Delhi will set up a new laboratory in Assam as well as Kolkata, Dayal said.

India has an emergency stock of 900,000 anti-viral Tamiflu tablets and has prevented its sale at retail outlets to ensure no one self-medicates and develops resistance to the drug.

Dayal said more "regional response teams" were being trained to react quickly to deal with any suspected human cases, a crucial need in a densely populated country where the state medical infrastructure is overstretched and of poor quality.

"We will have to react fast but there is no need for panic," he said.
 

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Bird flu testing continues in Bali

http://www.thewest.com.au/aapstory.aspx?StoryName=409050

14th August 2007, 16:16 WST

Test results due on Wednesday will show if two more Balinese villagers have fallen victim to the potentially deadly H5N1 bird flu virus.

A two-year-old girl with bird flu-like symptoms remains in a Bali hospital in a stable condition and appears to be improving, a spokeswoman at Indonesia's Ministry of Health said.

Test results expected on Wednesday will determine if she has the virus that killed her 29-year-old neighbour Ni Luh Putu Sri Windani on Sunday in the first confirmed fatal case of bird flu on the tourist island.

Windani's five-year-old daughter also died eleven days ago after suffering flu-like symptoms.

No samples are available for testing, but authorities say it's likely she also died from H5N1.

The dead woman's husband has also undergone tests, but is not in hospital, the spokeswoman said.

Any further confirmation of bird flu cases will be a blow to Bali's tourism industry, which is just now recovering from the terrorist bombings that shook the Indonesian island in 2002 and 2005.

Australian authorities are closely monitoring the situation in Bali, and travel advice warns of human deaths from bird flu.

Australia's Health Minister Tony Abbott said there was no reason to believe the virus had mutated into a form easily spread among humans.

"It is a disease of birds which is very hard for humans to catch," Abbott told ABC Radio.

"At the moment we have no reason to think that there is human to human transmission."

Bali Hotel and Restaurant Association (PHRI) deputy chief Ray Surya Wijaya said bird flu still appeared to be less of a worry to tourists than terrorism.

"For Australian tourists, what they are most worried about is security," Wijaya said.

"Significantly, this (case of) bird flu hasn't affected us yet.

"If bird flu spreads to Ubud or other tourist destinations, that's the danger.

"What we also worry about is that this news will be used by other countries like Malaysia, Thailand ... to divert tourists to their countries."

There have been 83 confirmed human deaths from bird flu in Indonesia since the first human case two years ago.

Authorities continue to cull poultry around the village of Dauh Takad Aya, in Bali's north west, with hundreds of birds already slain.

"Everything within a one-kilometre radius has been sterilised," Jembrana local parliament head I Made Kembang Hartawan said.

"I don't know how many have been culled, but it was many. Even their favourite pets, we culled them.

"Even if it's very expensive, we have to do that."

A number of chickens had also died in the neighbouring village of Batu Agung in recent weeks, although tests were yet to confirm H5N1, he said.

Authorities are also tracing the dead birds amid reports some of the infected chickens had been fed to pigs.

"That would be certainly something that would be a concern," said John Weaver, a senior technical adviser with the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation.

"One of the issues will be tracing the movements of these birds."

One theory suggests infected pigs could act as a mixing vessel, potentially producing a new and deadly strain of the virus which is more easily transmitted to humans.

Weaver said there had been ongoing cases of bird flu in poultry in Bali since the first confirmed Indonesian case in January 2004.
AAP
 

Exodia

The Forbidden One
Third Suspected Bali Case Doing Better

Doctors treating a two-year-old Balinese girl who is believed to be suffering from bird flu say she is on the mend.

Indonesian health officials have confirmed that an outbreak of the disease in a remote western Bali village has already killed a 29-year-old woman and her five-year-old daughter.

The child, Puyu Narayani, was brought to the Balinese capital of Denpasar for treatment after the deaths of two of her neighbours with the same ominous symptoms - a high fever and difficulty breathing - but unlike them it seems she has received treatment in time.

"The patient is now getting better, not worse, she is under intensive care but she is getting better," said pediatrician Siadi Purniti from Sanglah hospital.

A team from the National Bird Flu Centre is on the way to the village to try to limit the spread of the disease and find how it was transmitted.

http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/news/stories/s2004213.htm
 

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Ailing Balinese infant cleared of bird flu

http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,22249260-663,00.html



From correspondents in Jakarta

August 15, 2007 01:37pm

A TWO-year-old girl on the Indonesian resort island of Bali has been cleared of carrying the deadly bird flu virus, which killed at least one of her neighbours, an official said today.

"We received the test results last night showing that the girl, two years old, is negative for the bird flu virus," said Ningrum, a doctor from the national bird flu information centre in Jakarta.

Indonesia confirmed its first human bird flu death on Bali on Monday, taking the nation's overall toll to more than 80 and raising fears of an impact on tourism, the economic lifeline of the island.

The 29-year-old woman died at the weekend. Her five-year-old daughter died on August 3 suffering flu-like symptoms and her body was cremated before samples were taken for testing, but officials said it could be "assumed" she died due to the virus.

Chickens had been dying in their village, on the northwest of the island far from the main tourist centres. The virus is typically transmitted to people via infected birds.

H5N1 is endemic across nearly all of Indonesia, which has recorded the highest number of bird flu deaths in the world since reporting its first case in July 2005.

Avian influenza was found in poultry on Bali more than a year ago, leading to the culling of hundreds of birds.

Officials in Jakarta have said they will step up measures on the island in a bid to limit any fallout to its tourism industry.

The H5N1 virus is regarded as a global threat because scientists fear it could mutate into a form that is easily spread among humans, leading to a pandemic with the potential to kill millions.
 

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Flu pandemic almost inevitable: Abbott

http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,22249222-29277,00.html

August 15, 2007 02:18pm

AUSTRALIA will almost certainly experience a flu pandemic one day, federal Health Minister Tony Abbott says.

Mr Abbott is refusing to make antiviral stockpiles available this flu season despite the deaths of six children to influenza A because he does not consider it a national emergency.

Today he said Australia had to be prepared for the possibility of being swamped by a dangerous strain, possibly of bird flu.

"One day there will be a flu pandemic – that is almost certain," he said to ABC Radio today.

"But we don't know when, we don't know where and we don't know if the current strain of bird flu is going to be the foundation for the next pandemic."

But Mr Abbott said despite the bird flu deaths of two Indonesians on Bali this week, the deadly virus remained difficult for humans to contract.

"There is no evidence as yet of efficient human to human transmission, so what we have at the moment is a disease of birds," he said.

"If humans catch it, it is very deadly but it is very hard for humans to catch.

"As far as we are aware, there has been no more than one or two, at most, cases of human to human transmissions."

Stockpiles of the flu treatment Tamiflu should not be released unless there was a national emergency, Mr Abbott said.

"The Tamiflu stockpile is out first line of defence against a possible bird flu pandemic and serious though this flu season is, it would be a mere blip if we actually had a bird flu pandemic."

He said Tamiflu was available if prescribed by a doctor.
 

JPD

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Australia's Flu Cases Surge in Nationwide Outbreak (Update1)

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601081&sid=avDgKkQ1kqMs&refer=australia

By Jason Gale

Aug. 15 (Bloomberg) -- Flu cases surged across Australia last month in the country's worst outbreak of the seasonal illness in several years, the health ministry said.

Confirmed influenza cases reached 3,017 in the first seven months of the year, compared with 1,121 in 2006, according to the ministry's notifiable disease surveillance system. In July, 2,111 cases were confirmed by laboratory tests, the highest monthly tally in at least six years.

``Sadly, some influenza infections have resulted in deaths this season, including in a small number of children,'' said John Horvath, Australia's chief medical officer, in an e-mailed statement today.

The fatalities highlight the threat posed by flu, a disease that the World Health Organization estimates causes between 250,000 and 500,000 deaths worldwide each year. The health agency predicts millions could die if a strain that is circulating in some poultry in Asia and parts of Africa becomes more adept at infecting humans, setting off a pandemic.

Australia's flu season is the worst since 2003, said Neil Branch, a spokesman for the Department of Health and Ageing. Only a fraction of flu cases diagnosed by doctors are confirmed by laboratory tests.

Most of the infections this year have been caused by flu viruses belonging to the H3 and H1 subtypes, the department said in a report this month. The bird flu virus that's killed at least 193 people during the past four years in Asia, Africa and the Middle East is from a different family, identified as H5N1.

Cases in Queensland

The northeastern state of Queensland has reported more than 1,400 cases of flu this year, almost three times as many as New South Wales and Western Australia states. Cases in Victoria total more than 220, the department said in its report. The highest rates of the disease have been in children under 4. Four pediatric cases this year have been fatal, it said.

Influenza is different from the common cold and is characterized by sudden onset, fever, tiredness, dry cough, sore throat, nasal congestion and body aches, Horvath said.

Antiviral drugs such as Roche Holding AG's Tamiflu and GlaxoSmithKline Plc's Relenza can reduce the severity and duration of flu symptoms if taken within 48 hours of the onset of disease.
 

JPD

Inactive
Vietnam finds bird flu in poultry near China

http://in.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idINIndia-28987520070815

HANOI (Reuters) - Vietnam has detected a bird flu outbreak in the northern province of Cao Bang bordering China, the country's second infection among poultry so far this month, the Agriculture Ministry said on Wednesday.

Eighty-nine chickens and ducks died at a farm last Saturday and tests in Hanoi have confirmed they were infected by the H5N1 virus, the ministry's Animal Health Department said in a report.

The infected farm is in Thach An district, about 70 km south of the border with China's province of Guangxi.

The previous poultry outbreak was detected on Aug. 2 in the northwestern province of Dien Bien, which -- along with Cao Bang and the southern province of Dong Thap -- remains on the government's watchlist for bird flu infection.

Bird flu has infected seven people in Vietnam so far this year, four of whom have died, bringing the death toll from 100 confirmed infections since late 2003 to 46, the Health Ministry said.

Early this month a 15-year-old boy from the northern province of Thanh Hoa died from bird flu while en route to a Hanoi hospital.

Globally, the H5N1 virus has killed 193 people out of 320 known cases, according to a tally of the World Health Organisation. Hundreds of millions of birds have died or been slaughtered.

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

JPD

Inactive
France Reports Four Ducks Found With Bird Flu

http://www.voanews.com/english/2007-08-14-voa63.cfm

By VOA News
14 August 2007


French authorities say four ducks have tested positive for the H5N1 strain of bird flu in northeastern France.

The ducks were found dead last week in an area known as Diane Capelle in the Moselle region.

Two dead swans had already been discovered with bird flu at the end of July in the same area. The site is just 10 kilometers from where three other swans were found dead with the virus about a month earlier.

That outbreak was the first in France in more than a year.

Authorities have extended the bird flu alert level in the area bordering Germany and Luxembourg. Residents are required to lock up their domestic birds and poultry or surround them with nets to prevent contact with wild birds that may carry the virus.

World health statistics show the H5N1 strain has killed 193 people globally since outbreaks in Asia in 2003. No human deaths have been reported in Europe.
 

JPD

Inactive
Australia

Parents put on flu alert

http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,22252619-2862,00.html



Jane Bunce and Peter Williams

August 16, 2007 12:00am

THE nation's chief medical officer has warned parents to rush to a doctor if their child showed symptoms of a particularly virulent strain of influenza sweeping the country.

And federal Health Minister Tony Abbott said Australia has to be prepared for the possibility of one day being swamped by a dangerous strain, possibly of bird flu.

The nation is in the grip of its worst influenza season in five years, with record infection rates and six children from four states dead after reporting flu-like symptoms.

A Queensland man aged 37 has also died of flu.

The victims had one of two virulent strains of influenza A, either H3N2 or H1N1.

"Australia is experiencing a worse than normal influenza season in 2007, with increased numbers of cases being reported across several states and territories," Australian Chief Medical Officer Prof John Horvath said.

"Parents whose children have flu-like symptoms, including a cough and a fever, and are lethargic, should seek early medical attention."

But Prof Horvath has supported the current access arrangements for flu drug Tamiflu, despite calls by leading scientists for it to be available widely and over-the-counter in pharmacies.

Dr Graeme Laver, a former molecular biologist at the Australian National University, said health authorities should have acted months ago to stock pharmacies with Tamiflu and Relenza, so they could be dispensed rapidly, over-the-counter, to people with flu.

The two drugs must be taken within 48 hours to work, but are only available by prescription and stocked in a limited number of pharmacies.

But Prof Horvath said a number of illnesses had symptoms similar to flu, and a doctor's diagnosis was needed to ensure the medicine was used safely.

People should wash hands often, cover coughs and sneezes, and stay home when sick, he said.
 

JPD

Inactive
Sinovac begins vaccinating volunteers in pandemic flu trial

http://www.pharmaceutical-business-...asp?guid=7FCF25AA-1F02-4FC3-BE90-D61D3478F97F

15th August 2007
By Staff Writer
Sinovac Biotech has commenced vaccination of volunteers for a clinical trial of its pandemic avian influenza vaccine.

The vaccination is part of the continued research for Sinovac's Phase I clinical trial of whole viron H5N1 vaccine and the beginning of its Phase I clinical trial of split H5N1 vaccine.
Advertisement

Phase II clinical trials for the H5N1 vaccine were approved in April 2007 by the China State Food and Drug Administration (SFDA). The SFDA approval covers a Phase Ib and II trials of whole viron vaccine and Phase I and II trials of split vaccine. Subsequent to these approvals, the preparation work was completed by the end of July 2007.

These clinical trials will be open label and will assess the tolerance and safety of the vaccine. The company anticipates that the Phase II trials will commence shortly and the preliminary results from these clinical trials for both vaccines will be available early next year.

Sinovac said that, in June 2006, the Phase I clinical trial of a pandemic influenza whole viron inactivated vaccine for H5N1 was successfully completed. The vaccine was co-developed by Sinovac Biotech and the Chinese CDC.
 

JPD

Inactive
ndonesia confirms 83rd bird flu death

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_asiapacific/view/294347/1/.html

Posted: 16 August 2007 1702 hrs

JAKARTA - A 17-year-old Indonesian woman has died of bird flu, bringing the death toll from the country worst hit by the virus to 83, a health ministry said Thursday.

The woman, identified only as Lu, died on Tuesday in Tangerang, west of the capital, one day after admission to a private hospital, the health ministry said in a statement.

"The woman started to get sick on August 8, but it was not known whether she had any contact with sick poultry," an official from the bird flu information centre told AFP.

Health ministry investigators were in the neighbourhood where the woman lived and worked as a housemaid to determine where she could have been exposed to the virus.

Indonesia has now reported 104 confirmed bird flu cases, of which 83 died.

The H5N1 virus has become endemic across nearly all of archipelagic Indonesia, the world's fourth most populous nation, since it reported its first case in July 2005.

The bird flu virus is regarded as a global threat because scientists fear it could mutate into a form that is easily spread among humans, leading to a pandemic with the potential to kill millions.
 

JPD

Inactive
Scientists discover new anti-flu drug target

http://news.netdoctor.co.uk/news_detail.php?id=18247550

Researchers have identified a potential new target for the development of drugs against influenza, including strains capable of causing a pandemic.

The flu protein M2 is known to be highly conserved - virtually unchanged - between avian and human strains of the virus and scientists at Cure Lab, a biotechnology company in Massachusetts, have now discovered that the protein is capable of killing human cells single-handedly.

Dr Alex Shneider, company CEO and senior study author, commented: "This effect may constitute a previously unknown mechanism of influenza virus pathogenicity.

"If so, drugs that are shown to prevent M2-dependent cell killing have the potential to be used for the treatment of flu."

Fellow study author Dr Petr Ilyinskii, a principal scientist at the company, said that the finding is "especially important since an increasing number of influenza strains are becoming resistant to the drugs that are now widely used".

The study, which was conducted in collaboration with researchers at Boston University and Harvard Medical School, is published in the journal Cell Cycle.
 

JPD

Inactive
UK signs pandemic flu vaccine deal with GSK

http://investing.reuters.co.uk/news..._WLB0669_RTRIDST_0_GSK-FLU-VACCINE-URGENT.XML

LONDON, Aug 16 (Reuters) - GlaxoSmithKline (GSK.L: Quote, Profile , Research) said on Thursday it had signed an agreement with the British government to provide its pandemic flu vaccine in the event of such an outbreak.

"It is one of the largest contracts signed by GSK to date for its proprietary adjuvanted pandemic flu vaccine," Europe's biggest drugmaker said in a statement.

"GSK plans to supply a `tailored' pandemic vaccine as and when the pandemic strain is identified and made available by the World Health Organisation," it said.

GSK did not give a value for the contract.
 

JPD

Inactive
Ohio to purchase stockpile of influenza drugs

http://www.cleveland.com/news/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/news/1187253643252820.xml&coll=2

Thursday, August 16, 2007
Regina McEnery
Plain Dealer Reporter

Ohio and other states can now purchase influenza drugs for pandemic preparation at a fraction of what it costs on the open market.

But, the deal takes some calculated risks that could ultimately spell trouble down the road for cash-strapped public health agencies.

The exclusive contracts awarded by the federal government to Roche Pharmaceuticals and GlaxoSmithKline, makers of the antiviral drugs Tamiflu and Relenza, lack a provision that would have required the companies to store and maintain Ohio's inventories until a pandemic strikes.

The U.S. government stockpiles medicines and medical supplies for public health emergencies, such as a natural disaster like Hurricane Katrina or a terrorist attack. But this is the first time states have been asked to share in the responsibility, said Bill Hall, a spokesman for the Department of Health and Human Services.

The HHS awarded the contracts amid growing concern that the deadly H5N1 virus, also known as bird flu, that is circulating in Asia would one day evolve into a global flu pandemic along the lines of the 1918 Spanish flu that killed an estimated 21 million people worldwide.

Ohio, one of the first to take advantage of the voluntary offer, will purchase about 1.5 million courses of Tamiflu and Relenza for a little over $20 million, saving taxpayers around $50 million. As an added bonus, the federal government is kicking in $5.8 million to cover the cost of the drugs, so the cost to Ohio will only be $14.5 million. The drugs will be stored somewhere near Columbus and rationed in the event of a pandemic.

The deal was a good one for Ohio, said Steven Wagner, chief of Preparedness Policy and Planning for the Ohio Department of Health.

"We continue to be concerned about pandemic influenza," said Wagner. "And right now, antivirals are one of the best ways to fight it."

But public health experts, both inside and outside the government sector, acknowledge that arrangement is far from risk-free, both medically and economically. Because pharmaceutical companies won't be maintaining the inventories, states must decide what to do with the cache if the drugs are not needed and expire. In the case of Tamiflu, which accounts for about 90 percent of Ohio's stockpile, that would happen five years from now, according to drug maker Roche Pharmaceuticals.

Ohio could be looking at another $21 million expenditure every several years if it decides to keep renewing its prescription.

To get around this, the HHS and the Food and Drug Administration are collecting scientific data to see if the shelf lives of Tamiflu and Relenza can be extended. They are also exploring whether states can recoup some of their losses by selling the antivirals commercially before the drugs expire. This is, in fact, what drug companies do with unused inventories in the national stockpile.

A Roche spokesman based at the company's U.S. headquarters in Nutley, N.J., said staff scientists will be providing information to help federal agencies determine if it is safe and effective to extend the shelf life of Tamiflu.

The company's position for the lay sector is clear, however. "You have to honor the expiration date on the package," said Roche spokesman Terry Hurley.

D.A. Henderson, a Cleveland native who led the smallpox eradication campaign during the 1970s and is now a global expert on disaster preparedness, said encouraging signs in vaccine development could reduce the need for such huge stockpiles of drugs, anyway.

He also said some drugs and vaccines are useable well past their assigned shelf life. "But if they are going to be extended, then the drugs have to be kept in conditions that must be carefully monitored - both for temperature and humidity," he said.

Earlier this year, the FDA approved a vaccine against the deadly H5N1 avian strain, which could mean less reliance on antiviral drugs. But the vaccine only proved effective in about 45 percent of the population and has to be given in several doses.

"I would guess we are at least two years away from being able to produce a lot of vaccine that will have broad-based immunity that protects us," said Henderson. "This is simply a difficult call to make to know what to do."
 

JPD

Inactive
T.O. pandemic breakthrough?

http://torontosun.com/News/TorontoAndGTA/2007/08/16/4422066-sun.html

Study into SARS finds differences in immune system reaction -- and could lead to new treatment of flus

By SARAH GREEN, SUN MEDIA

Toronto researchers have discovered how the body's immune system reacts to SARS -- a finding that has the potential to help in treating severe pneumonias and preparing for an influenza pandemic, a new study shows.

The study, published in yesterday's edition of the Journal of Virology, looked at 40 blood samples taken from Toronto-area patients during the 2003 SARS outbreak.

Dr. Mark Cameron, a scientist at University Health Network and lead author of the study, said researchers found the body's immune system reacted differently in patients who fell critically ill or died from SARS.

In all patients, the viral infection prompted the immune system to unleash a "storm" of interferons -- molecules made by white blood cells which act as the body's first line of defence and literally interfere with the growth of the virus, he said.

"It's an overreaction," Cameron said.

Some patients never recovered from this initial blast in the early stages of the disease and did not go on to develop antibodies against the virus, Cameron said.

The finding will allow doctors to better identify and better treat patients with aggressive cases of pneumonia and bird flu.

Researchers are already seeing "promise in a couple of drugs" which control the immune system response and allow the body to develop antibodies against viral infection, Cameron said.
 

JPD

Inactive
Virus Spreading Alarm and Pig Disease in China

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/16/b...int&adxnnlx=1187349327-cIPI3WyHT9gpu2tlH8Vp/Q

By DAVID BARBOZA

CHENGDU, China, Aug. 9 — A highly infectious swine virus is sweeping China’s pig population, driving up pork prices and creating fears of a global pandemic among domesticated pigs.

Animal virus experts say Chinese authorities are playing down the gravity and spread of the disease.

So far, the mysterious virus — believed to cause an unusually deadly form of an infection known as blue-ear pig disease — has spread to 25 of this country’s 33 provinces and regions, prompting a pork shortage and the strongest inflation in China in a decade.

More than that, China’s past lack of transparency — particularly over what became the SARS epidemic — has created global concern.

“They haven’t really explained what this virus is,” says Federico A. Zuckermann, a professor of immunology at the University of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine. “This is like SARS. They haven’t sent samples to any international body. This is really irresponsible of China. This thing could get out and affect everyone.”

There are no clear indications that blue-ear disease — if that is what this disease is — poses a threat to human health.

Though the Chinese government acknowledges that the current virus has devastated pig stocks in coastal and southern areas, it has not admitted what experts say is clear: the virus is rapidly moving inland and westward, to areas such as this one in Sichuan Province, China’s largest pork-producing region.

“This disease is like a wind that swept in and passed from village to village,” said Ding Shurong, a 45-year-old farmer in a village near here who lost two-thirds of his pigs . “I’ve never seen anything like it. No family was left untouched.”

No one knows for sure how many of this country’s 500 million pigs have been infected. The government says officially that about 165,000 pigs have contracted the virus this year. But in a country that, on average, loses 25 million pigs a year to disease, few believe the figures. In part, the skepticism comes from the fact that pork prices have skyrocketed 85 percent in the last year — an increase that, absent other factors, suggests the losses from disease are more widespread than Beijing admits.

And there are other signs. Field experts are reporting widespread disease outbreaks. Fear among pig farmers that their livestock will contract the disease has led to panic selling. And the government and media here have issued alarming reports that farmers are selling diseased or infected pigs to illegal slaughterhouses, which could pose food safety problems.

International health experts are already calling this one of the worst disease outbreaks ever to hit Asia’s livestock industry, and they fear the fast-mutating pathogens could spread to neighboring countries, igniting a worldwide epidemic that could affect pork supplies everywhere.

A similar virus has already been detected in neighboring Vietnam and Myanmar, and health experts are trying to determine if it came from China.

Health experts say China has declined to send tissue samples to testing labs outside the country for independent verification by a lab affiliated with the World Organization for Animal Health in Paris.

The Chinese government says that it has reported the disease to international health bodies and insists that the disease is under control and that a vaccine has been developed and distributed.

But, some scientists say there is no truly effective vaccine against blue-ear pig disease (which is also known as porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome); other experts say they are not even certain that the blue-ear virus is the one that is spreading.

Scientists who track blue-ear pig disease are puzzled because the disease is generally not so deadly.

“This virus generally makes them ill but on its own it doesn’t cause a lot of deaths,” said Steven McOrist, a professor of pig medicines at the University of Nottingham in England. “The evidence they put up so far is not conclusive.”

If it is blue-ear pig disease, which has infected most parts of the world, including the United States, it may be a new and more virulent strain.

“This is more severe than we’ve seen elsewhere,” said Derek Armstrong, a senior veterinary scientist at the Meat and Livestock Commission in Britain. “It may be a co-infection of pigs with other things.”

The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization is now pressing China to share its research and tissue samples.

“I’ve asked my two vets in Beijing to work with the government and get some of those samples out,” said Juan Lubroth, head of infectious disease at the F.A.O., noting that China has reported its own findings on the disease. “Our experience has shown us that working with carrots is better than working with sticks.”

Government scientists themselves said that last year the virus affected two millions pigs and killed 400,000. Here in Sichuan province, home to some 55 million pigs and one of the world’s most densely populated pig breeding areas, there is devastation. Many pig farmers say that what appears to be the blue-ear virus swept through this region in June and July, killing thousands of pigs.

“First they refused to eat, then they got high fever,” said Zhao Yanjun, 32, who lost all but 5 of his 150 pigs, just months after building a modern barn in Heishi village, about an hour’s drive southwest of Chengdu. “Now, there’s nothing left.”

Liu Minghong, a 38-year-old farmer, said, “Most of my pigs got hit in June and July — 70 of them died.” sitting in a dusty house on the edge of his property, He pulled out a notepad that cataloged the demise of his pigs.

“I sold a lot out of panic,” he says.

Pig farmers who did not sell watched their pigs succumb to a disease that ate away at their insides in a matter of weeks, often turning the pig’s ear blue. In Mr. Liu’s barn, he pointed to one pig that was little more than a skeleton, shivering in a corner, struggling for life.

Now, slaughterhouses here go wanting.

“Last year we slaughtered 1,000 pigs a day; now we’re doing 100,” said Yuan Zi, a manager at the Qiyuan Meal slaughterhouse near the city of Qionglai. “We’ve laid off nearly half the staff.”

Officials in Beijing worry that widespread pork shortages and soaring food prices could prompt panic, unrest or inflation, undermining a sizzling economy.

Trying to contain the damage, the government has announced a series of emergency measures, offering aid, incentives and free vaccines to farmers.

But the government has also warned against price gouging, and vowed to crack down on farmers selling diseased pigs, or injecting a pig with water to bolster its selling weight.

Still, many here say the problem is that pigs are simply in short supply, and it may take months if not a year or two to restock supplies, assuming the disease does not linger, as some scientists say it generally does.

Many experts, meanwhile, worry that China, which the F.A.O. says is the fourth-largest exporter of live and slaughtered hogs, could already be exporting the disease.

“This is already considered to be a threat to the global industry,” said Trevor Drew, head of virology at the Veterinary Laboratories Agency in Weybridge, in southeast England. “It would be naïve to think we could contain this virus.”
 

JPD

Inactive
Chinese bird flu vaccines used in Vietnam still effective

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-08/17/content_6549855.htm

2007-08-17 11:56:26

HANOI, Aug. 17 (Xinhua) -- Recent tests conducted in Vietnam and China indicate that Chinese bird flu vaccines used among poultry in Vietnam are still effective, local newspaper Labor reported Friday.

After testing samples taken in this year's bird flu outbreaks in the two northern provinces of Hai Duong and Ninh Binh and the two southern provinces of Bac Lieu and Hau Giang, Vietnamese experts found that Chinese H5N1 vaccines can protect 90-95 percent of vaccinated fowls from being attacked by the disease.

The experts at the Department of Animal Health under the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development sent 15 samples taken in different Vietnamese localities hit by bird flu in late 2006 and early 2007 to China for testing. Analysis of Chinese experts shows that the protection rate among chickens reaches 100 percent.

Vietnam has so far this year vaccinated over 161.5 million fowls, mainly chickens and ducks, against bird flu viruses. Now, three Vietnamese provinces, Dien Bien and Cao Bang in the North and Dong Thap in the South, are being hit by bird flu, according to the department.
 

JPD

Inactive
Government sends Bali bird flu sample to WHO

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailgeneral.asp?fileid=20070817172646&irec=2

JAKARTA (Antara): The government has agreed to sent a bird flu virus sample that has killed a woman in Bali to the World Health Organization (WHO), Health Minister Siti Fadilah Supari said Friday.

Siti Fadilah said the Bali bird flu sample sharing was necessary to prove that the deadly virus had yet to spread from human to human.

Besides, it was also important to avoid panic in Bali, which is a famous tourist destination in the world, she said.

The government has refused to share bird flu sample with the WHO as Indonesia could not afford to buy bird flu vaccines produced by international laboratories based on samples from various countries including Indonesia.

It has repeatedly demanded better access to pandemic vaccines.

Bird flu has killed 83 people in Indonesia, the highest death toll in the world. (***)
 

JPD

Inactive
Thousands of poultry culled in Bali, Indonesia

http://english.people.com.cn/90001/90782/6242537.html

The local government of Indonesia's Bali province has culled a total of 5,286 chickens following the death of a local resident infected with bird flu (Avian Influenza) virus of H5N1 recently, an official said Friday.

"The cull will continue for one week in areas within one kilometer radius of the bird flu victim's home at Banyar Dangin Tukar Aya village and its surroundings" in Jembrana district, Antara news agency quoted head of the Jembrana agricultural, forestry and fishery office I Gusti Sanjaya as saying.

A 29-year-old woman died on Aug. 12 on the Indonesian resort island of Bali, it was the first bird flu case on the world famous resort island. The case may further tarnish the image of Bali, which is still recovering from terror attacks in 2002 and 2005, as the country's premier tourist destination.

The Jembrana administration also sprayed insecticides throughout the district three times, said the report.

To prevent the virus from spreading to wider areas, Jembrana was temporarily "isolated" from other areas, by not allowing transportation of poultry into or out of the district, he said.

A report of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) said recently around 60 percent of all Indonesian households keep an estimated 300 million birds in their backyards.

To date, 319 people from a dozen countries have been infected with the virus. Of them, at least 191 have died, including 83 in Indonesia alone. Nearly all of them were believed to have been infected through contact with poultry.
 

ICTYW

Contributing Member
Definitely not!!!!

JPD, A bit OT here, but I fought (and lost) the immu. battle of HPV for my daughter. She did not need it! I have NO doubt in my mind. I've yet to find supportive proof, but I believe the vaccine weakened her immune system thus making her "atopic dermatitis" extremely difficult to control. I've got to equip myself to win these battles "when" the various flu vaccines become manditory.

I remember reading something here as a non-member quite awhile back about the healing benefits of turmeric(?) against AF. Would you (or anyone) have any info. about this?

I sure need to learn to search and navigate the site.

Many thanks to all for your patience with this newbie.
 
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