8/18/07-8/24/07|Weekly Bird Flu Thread:Indonesia tries to allay fears over Bali case

JPD

Inactive
Indonesia attempts to allay fears over Bali bird flu case

http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/news/stories/s2008729.htm

Last Updated 18/08/2007, 18:19:01

Health officials in Indonesia say a sample of the bird flu virus which killed a woman on Bali has been sent to the World Health Organisation.

The officials say the move is to allay fears that the virus it has mutated into human form.

Indonesia confirmed its first human bird flu death on the popular resort island on Monday, raising fears of an impact on tourism.

Triono Soendoro, head of the ministry's research and development, said the sample had been sent to the WHO laboratory in the United States as a precautionary measure.

Health Minister Siti Fadilah Supari says the government has sent the sample to convince the international community that the virus has not mutated into a more dangerous form that can be spread between humans.

Indonesia has now reported 104 confirmed bird flu cases, with 83 deaths - more than any other country.
 

JPD

Inactive
Thousands of poultry culled in Bali, Indonesia

http://mathaba.net/news/?x=561259

JAKARTA, Aug. 17 (Xinhua) -- "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.
 

JPD

Inactive
West Africa Struggles to Contain Bird Flu Virus

http://www.voanews.com/english/2007-08-18-voa16.cfm

By Phuong Tran
Dakar
18 August 2007

The West African country of Togo recently announced more bird flu infections outside its capital, making it the seventh West African country to report finding the deadly H5N1 virus in its poultry. Bird flu experts say sub-Saharan Africa still has a long way to go in its battle against the virus, and any other animal diseases that may develop. Phuong Tran has more from VOA's West Africa Bureau in Dakar.

Togo's government officials say they have been working with farmers since early last year to ask them to report any signs of the virus.

The H5N1 virus re-emerged in poultry in Asia four years ago, and has since been reported to 60 countries around the world, killing more than 200 million poultry and more than half of the some 300 people infected.

Experts praised Togo's fast detection of the virus, but Togolese officials say getting people to listen has been hard.

Alex Thiermann, a director at the Paris-based World Organization for Animal Health, says people who raise animals in sub-Saharan Africa tend to be among the poorest, which makes it hard to convince them to kill their livelihood.

"It is very difficult to explain to them that we need to destroy birds because we worry about a potential pandemic," he said. "They do not have time to worry about the potential. They have so many problems to fight on a daily basis so unless there is a good incentive program where there is an assurance they will not lose anything by reporting, then it is hard to guarantee full participation."

Donors have promoted paying farmers as one way to encourage fast reporting. But there have been problems paying farmers for their lost poultry because it is not easy to prove ownership.

Olga Jonas, the World Bank's economic advisor for influenza programs who coordinates bird flu donor giving, says local officials need to identify poultry farmers and inventory their stock to prevent corruption.

"When there is an outbreak, you do not get into a lot of discussion about whether somebody did or did not have the poultry they are now claiming compensation for," she said.

But she admits it is hard to track small producers who live in remote areas. Noncommercial family-owned poultry farming is common in West Africa, where people often live in close contact with their birds

A second strategy to contain bird flu has been to improve animal health services.

Thiermann with the animal health organization says poor veterinary services in West Africa cripple the region's ability to control diseases that can spread rapidly.

"We are certain we are going to have a pandemic in the near future, but we do not know yet where it will begin and what that agent will be," he added. "We put so much emphasis on not only fighting the immediate problem, but also in building the infrastructure to allow these countries to early report and take rapid action, otherwise the entire world is going to be in danger."

The animal doctor says most diseases that have quickly spread throughout history originated in animals.

Animals are suspected of starting the spread of three major flu outbreaks in the 20th century that killed tens of millions of people.

However, not all potential donors are convinced of the threat that the virus can spread from one person to the next. So far, the virus has spread among animals and on a limited basis, from animals to people.

At a bird flu donor meeting this past September, the World Bank asked countries to raise an additional $1.5 billion.

The response was one-third that amount, and most of the money pledged was from the United States, Japan and European Union.

World Bank economic advisor Jonas is preparing another appeal for the next bird flu donor conference this December.

"The cost of a human epidemic would just be absolutely staggering, trillions of dollars," she noted. "So relative to the cost that we are trying to avoid by these preventative programs and control programs at the source, the two-point-three billion that has been committed so far is just a very small fraction."

This year in West Africa, the H5N1 virus has been detected in Nigeria, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Burkina Faso, Niger and Togo.

Donors have promised sub-Saharan Africa $95 million for bird flu programs, of which $50 million is for Nigeria, which has reported one human death from bird flu.
 

JPD

Inactive
As posted on last weeks thread by ICTYW:


Originally Posted by JPD View Post
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.
 

JPD

Inactive
As posted on last weeks thread by ICTYW:




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.

Here is a search done on CURCUMIN, a constituent of tumeric, on Timebomb. There is much good information.

http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/search.php?searchid=806148
 

JPD

Inactive
India

Expert team to study source of flu outbreak

http://www.e-pao.net/GP.asp?src=1..190807.aug07

Imphal, August 18: A 10 member team of experts including scientists from the High Security Animal Disease Laboratory, Bhopal and the National Institute of Virology, Pune have been entrusted to find out source of the avian flu outbreak, first reported from a farm in Chingmeirong, Imphal.

Speaking to The Sangai Express, Director of Veterinary and Animal Husbandry Dr Th Dorendro informed that Ministry of Agriculture constituted a 10 member team of experts to study and find out source/origin of the outbreak.

Among others, the team will include Joint Commissioner (Livestock-Health) of the Ministry AB Negi.

Th Dorendro who is also a member of the team noted that it is crucial to find out source of the outbreak.

Another official source informed that all the members of the team will be arriving at Imphal on August 21.Shortly after their arrival, the team will conduct a detail investigation.

All the members of the Rapid Response Teams engaged in mass culling of poultry birds who are now under observation will be allowed to go home on August 23 provided there is no complaint of any health problem.

At present, 6 RRTs are currently undertaking surveillance work in 5 to 10 kms radius of the Chingmeirong farm infected by bird flu.

Another 4 RRTs are engaged in culling left out poultry birds in the area within 0-5 kms radius from Chingmeirong.

On the other hand, under the Post Operation Surveillance Plan (POSP), intensive physical surveillance will be carried out by the staff of Joint Director (Veterinary) Imphal East and Imphal West to check that no birds have been introduced into the infected zone (0-5 km radius).

There will be regular fumigation and spraying of poultry farms/units every 15 days.

Physical surveillance in the area within 5-10 kms radius from Chingmeirong will continue to check any unusual morbidity and mortality in poultry birds.

Four teams deployed for collection of avian blood samples, cloacal swabs from poultry birds from 5-10 km radius area will continue their task after every 15 days.

These samples will be sent to the High Security Animal Disease Laboratory, Bhopal to confirm that the area is free from bird flu.
 

JPD

Inactive
Risk of bird flu pandemic 'greater than claimed'

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/08/19/nbirdflu119.xml

Laura Donnelly, Health Correspondent, Sunday Telegraph
Last Updated: 9:34am BST 19/08/2007

The Government has massively underestimated the risk of a bird flu pandemic sweeping across Britain, experts have warned.

Contingency plans drawn up by the NHS are based on a 3 per cent chance in any given year that the virus will mutate into a form that infects humans. However, an international review at a summit of avian flu experts put the risk of a pandemic during the next year as between 5 and 20 per cent.

Leading scientists described the Government's current assessment as "dangerously optimistic" and called for more money to be made available for drugs to protect the public in the event of an outbreak.

A review carried out by the Department of Health, and described as a "comprehensive and state of the art" assessment of pandemic planning, based its risk rating on one statistic - the number of flu pandemics that took place in the 20th century. With three pandemics in the past 100 years, the probability is an annual risk of 3 per cent, it concluded.

However, the report also admits that medical experts who took part in the global study put the risk of a bird flu pandemic in Britain at 5 per cent, while non-medical experts concluded it was as high as 20 per cent.

Prof John Oxford, a virologist at Queen Mary's College in London, said: "It is a very risky strategy for the Government to opt for the lowest risk assessment possible. When you insure your house you don't just go for the cheapest option, you go for the one that gives you enough cover."

He said the stocks of antiviral drugs, such as Tamiflu and Relenza, should be doubled.

The current stockpile covers 25 per cent of the population, although the Government admits that the lethal virus could infect twice as many people.

Andrew Lansley, the shadow health secretary, said that it was "astonishing" that government plans were based on "meaningless" statistics.

"The Government needs to do more than look at history to make its plans," he said. "All the evidence is that the circumstances that would lead to a pandemic are significantly higher now, especially with this persistent new strain of avian flu, which is widespread in the bird population."

The Treasury is discussing with the Department of Health whether to increase the number of antiviral drugs, which could be used to treat infected people or those who had come into contact with them.

Last week, a deal for "sleeping contracts" to develop sufficient vaccine to protect the whole population was signed.

However, work on the vaccine cannot start until a specific strain of flu has been identified, leaving a time lag of several months during which the virus could spread rapidly.

Since 2003, 192 people have died around the world from the H5N1 strain of bird flu. In February this year, Britain suffered its first big scare when the disease was found in poultry at a Bernard Matthews farm in Suffolk.

The NHS contingency plans warn that a pandemic could kill as many as 750,000 people in Britain.

Documents released alongside the risk assessment predict that hospitals would be overwhelmed, with one per cent of the population needing up to 10 days of intensive care.

That would require 100 times more beds than are available.

Dr Bruce Taylor, the honorary secretary of the Intensive Care Society and the author of NHS guidelines on how critical care departments should react to an avian flu outbreak, said: "There are not enough beds for the population as it is. We have built plans on the ability of hospitals to escalate their services so that they can provide ventilators and very basic intensive care but I would expect hospitals to be overwhelmed."

A spokesman for the Department of Health said that the report from the global summit was "not scientifically robust" and that experts had been consulted by the ministry before the 3 per cent prediction was produced.
 

JPD

Inactive
Veterinarians paid special allowance for bird flu risks

http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/showarticle.php?num=04SOC180807

(18-08-2007)

HA NOI — Veterinarians who directly vaccinate poultry against the H5N1 virus will receive an allowance of at least VND50,000 (US$3.10) per day, according to a recently issued government decision on financial support for the fight against bird flu.

The decision, signed by Deputy Prime Minister Nguyen Sinh Hung, also stipulates that other veterinarians or workers who contribute to preventing or containing the disease by such methods as slaughtering birds, disinfecting the environment or working at quarantine stations will be paid a daily allowance.

For weekends or holidays, the allowance would be doubled.

In another government decision issued on Wednesday, the deputy prime minister also decided to provide similar allowances to workers who participate in the fight against blue ear (Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome) disease in pigs.

The government will also compensate farmers whose pigs have to be slaughtered due to blue ear with VND10,000 ($0.6) per each kilogram of pig.

Bird flu and blue ear diseases in pigs are the two main diseases that have most affected farmers in Viet Nam recently.

Three provinces of Dong Thap, Dien Bien and Cao Bang are still on the black list of bird flu-stricken areas while blue ear is present in the five provinces of Thua Thien - Hue, Da Nang, Quang Nam, Quang Ngai and Long An, according to the Animal Health Department. — VNS
 

JPD

Inactive
Responders get rundown on bird flu

http://www.masslive.com/springfield/republican/index.ssf?/base/news-10/1187509267323200.xml&coll=1

Sunday, August 19, 2007
By STEPHANIE BARRY
sbarry@repub.com

SPRINGFIELD - An outbreak of avian bird flu in Western Massachusetts is not out of the question.

That was the message from local disaster responders conducting pandemic flu preparedness training at a local Red Cross chapter yesterday. Experts said that this highly vaccinated, well-traveled society is fertile ground for illness to sweep a region, state, or even a small country.

"In this sterile community we live in, we aren't as able to fight off illness ... and we can be in the United States one day and in China the next," said Pioneer Valley Red Cross training director Joel Perkins.

There have been confirmed outbreaks of bird flu among humans in Thailand, Vietnam, and Indonesia dating back to 2004, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

There also was a rash of cases among Canadian poultry workers in 2004 and a single confirmed case in New York in 2003, agency records show.

More than a dozen people attended the free training session at the Red Cross office on Cottage Street. They ranged from a school nurse to others who wanted to be educated on flu response, said Perkins.

A pandemic flu differs from seasonal flu in that it is more serious, possibly deadly, and is typically a new strain that can spread around the world in a flash. Symptoms are similar to those of seasonal influenza, including fever, chills, muscle aches, and a sore throat.

In order to prevent pandemic flu, the Red Cross advises commonsense measures such as good hygiene, staying home if sick, and avoiding close contact with those who are ill if one is healthy.

But, yesterday's training focused more on handling a pandemic flu if it hits. Perkins said the participants were receptive and curious.

"They asked a lot of very, very good questions," he said. "It was a really interactive group."

He and other instructors advised families to keep two weeks' worth of food, water, and toiletries on hand to enable them to survive at home for that long if a deadly flu strain spreads.

Other tips included:

Store supplies of extra prescription and nonprescription drugs at home.

Talk with relatives about how they would be cared for if they got sick.

Keep personal items separate if a family member gets sick.

Disinfect knobs, switches, handles, and other surfaces with a mixture of bleach and water.

People also may visit the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Web site at www.cdc.gov for more information.

Perkins said the Red Cross intends to schedule another training session at the Westfield chapter in October.
 

JPD

Inactive
State prepares for bird flu outbreak

http://www.theindependent.com/stories/08192007/new_birdflu19.shtml

LINCOLN Routine testing for avian influenza, or the bird flu, at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln's Veterinary Diagnostic Center means producers get the information they need fast.

When it comes to poultry, time is of the essence, said David Steffen, director of UNL's Veterinary Diagnostic Center, who for the last three years has served on the Nebraska Department of Agriculture's Poultry Livestock Health Committee.

The committee is in charge of a bird flu response plan that outlines what would happen if a highly pathogenic strain of the virus were to hit the state. In addition to the high-path influenza response plan, the center conducts testing to support a voluntary surveillance program for low path bird flu. This virus causes no risk to birds or people but is of concern as influenza viruses can recombine genes among various strains and potentially become more serious.

The case of bird flu that was discovered recently on a poultry farm near Seward had a screening test for avian influenza come back positive. This indicated the birds had been exposed to the virus.

"Rapid testing was very important as we needed to determine what strain of virus had been present and to determine if active virus was present in birds being sent for processing. Poultry operations are closely orchestrated production systems with birds contracted for slaughter and for replacement chicks based on normal growth. This scheduling is closely coordinated," Steffen said. "So the actions resulting from test reports not only impact the producer, but the hatching facility and the slaughter plant as well.

"If the turkeys can't go to slaughter, those employees don't have any birds that day, and the producers may not have a vacant barn to place new chicks. It really is important to have rapid, accurate testing available within the state."

With the recent positive test, the blood sample then was sent to the National Veterinary Services Laboratory in Ames, Iowa, to determine the bird flu strain. The strain was an H7N9 and was low path, meaning it was not a threat to human health and did not cause clinical disease in the birds.

The national lab provides the definitive tests, but the in-state results are available a day sooner and help the owner and regulatory personnel stage their response.

"The molecular analysis of the virus is accurate, but there are some isolates that don't behave like we expect," Steffen said. "For example, the avian influenza virus that was found in Texas was a high-path virus based on molecular testing but when it was put into birds it didn't kill them like they thought it would. As with most diseases, we don't fully understand all the dynamics of the agents."

This makes the full battery of tests essential to understand an outbreak.

Not all strains of bird flu cause concern. Those with H5 or H7 surface proteins could recombine with other viruses and have a higher probability of becoming highly pathogenic when that happens, Steffen said.

H5 N1 is the strain that was transmitted to people in Asia. The virus near Seward was an H7 strain.

"The flock was exposed weeks before detection and birds going to slaughter are immune rather than infected," Steffen said. Turkeys typically are brought to slaughter at age 15 to 17 weeks and those birds tested have not had active virus present, making them safe for processing and consumption.

Until the flock is cleared of virus, the Seward flock remains quarantined. Low-path avian influenza virus occurs most often in wild and migratory birds and is part of the natural ecosystem of migratory birds as waterfowl are the natural hosts for the virus.

The diagnostic center is part of the university's Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources.
 

JPD

Inactive
Indonesia, Japan to cooperate on bird flu vaccine

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/2007082...an_070820072019;_ylt=A0WTcV3.YMlGazkBDReTvyIi

Mon Aug 20, 3:20 AM ET

JAKARTA (AFP) - Indonesia has offered to cooperate with Japan in developing a human bird flu vaccine, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said Monday during a visit by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.
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Yudhoyono said the pair had "agreed on cooperation in dealing with avian influenza" during talks in the Indonesian capital.

"I have offered Prime Minister Abe bilateral cooperation in developing a human vaccine based on the Indonesian strain of the virus, for the sake of our welfare and the global interest," he said.

Abe said Tokyo had decided to provide 1.7 billion yen (14.8 million dollars) in aid to help fight avian influenza.

Indonesia is the nation worst hit by the H5N1 virus and has reported 104 confirmed bird flu cases, with 83 deaths.

Jakarta has been rapped by the UN's World Health Organisation for failing to share its samples with the rest of the world, saying it will not formally hand more over until is guaranteed access to affordable medicines to treat victims.

Despite Indonesia's position however, a sample of the virus that killed a woman on Bali last week was sent to a WHO laboratory to allay fears that it has mutated into a form that can be transmitted between humans.

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.
 

JPD

Inactive
Housemaid latest avian flu fatality

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailcity.asp?fileid=20070820.C04&irec=3

Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang

The Health Ministry's laboratory has confirmed a Tangerang domestic helper died from the bird flu virus Friday, bringing the country's death toll to 83.

The victim died at Tangerang's Sari Asih Hospital on Tuesday after two days of treatment for a high fever and acute pneumonia, a release made available for The Jakarta Post confirmed Saturday.

The maid's employers, Wahyu Proyato and Winda Amalia, who are residents of Perumnas II in Tangerang regency, said they had no idea how their maid contracted the virus because there were no fowl at their home or in the neighborhood.

Wahyu said his maid was treated at a clinic for a high fever and cough earlier this month. He said her condition improved after taking medication.

"Her condition improved after she took the medicine and she was able to babysit my child," he said.

Wahyu said his family and the housemaid did not have direct contact with live poultry and birds near the house.

"The only contact (with chickens) we had was on July 27 when my maid went with me to the market, just 200 meters from my home, to buy chicken meat," he said.

He said he had never purchased lives chicken from the market.

The maid's body has been claimed by her family to be buried in Cilacap, Central Java.

Yuliah Iskandar, the regency health agency's head of communicable disease prevention, said a team had been assigned to investigate the source of the H5N1 virus in the neighborhood.

"There are no indications that bird flu has spread in the neighborhood, but we have taken blood samples from residents to be tested in a laboratory," she told the Post on Saturday.

Following the deaths of Iwan Siswara, an official at the Supreme Audit Agency (BPK), and his two young daughters early in July 2005, the central government declared Tangerang a bird flu red zone. Since then, the agency has recorded less than ten deaths in the regency, Yuliah said.

Meanwhile, Banten has recorded 14 human cases of bird flu, 12 of which were fatal.

On Jan. 19, Banten Governor Ratu Atut Chosiah issued a bylaw on poultry restrictions, which included a ban on keeping backyard fowl. The ordinance, however, has not yet taken effect due to prolonged protests from the Banten Council.

A similar ordinance was issued by the Jakarta administration following new outbreaks in the capital in January.

Initially a disease that affected poultry and birds, the H5N1 virus is now able to infect humans, but so far there is no evidence to suggest the disease can be transferred from human to human.
 

JPD

Inactive
Indonesian toddler hospitalized for suspected bird flu

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-08/20/content_6570217.htm

2007-08-20 15:27:02

JAKARTA, Aug. 20 (Xinhua) -- A two-year-old girl has been admitted to hospital in Indonesia's Riau province for developing bird flu symptoms, local press said Monday.

The girl is being treated at the Arifin Achmad Hospital in the provincial capital of Riau after local laboratory tests and x-ray result indicated that she had bird flu, reported the national Antara news agency.

"She is now undergoing bird flu therapy. Her blood sample was sent to Jakarta today," the hospital's head Dr Azizman Saad was quoted as saying.

Bird flu fatalities in Indonesia have reached a record 83 since the first human case was confirmed in mid 2005.

The latest victim was a 17-year-old housemaid, who died in the Jakarta suburb of Tangerang last Friday.
 

JPD

Inactive
Australia

National flu epidemic gathering pace

http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,22277389-2,00.html

By Tamara McLean

August 20, 2007 06:13pm
Article from: AAP

AUSTRALIA'S flu epidemic is showing no sign of abating, according to a fresh influenza report which confirms that infection rates are climbing.

Statistics show there were 837 official notifications of influenza nationally in the week to August 11 – about 150 more than reported the previous week.

This is more than triple the cases reported in the worst week of last year, and almost double the rate in the biggest flu week of the severe 2003 influenza season.

The figures, provided by the federal Department of Health and Ageing today, are believed to be just a fraction of actual flu infections, but they give the best seasonal comparison.

They offer official confirmation that the nation is in the grip of its worst influenza season in many years, with nine lives lost so far.

Six children from four states have died from one of two virulent strains of influenza A virus, H3N2 or H1N1.

Three adults – a 37-year-old Queensland man, a 48-year-old woman from South Australia and a 33-year-old Queensland mother-of-two – have also died after suffering flu-like symptoms.

"These figures are growing proof that we're having a heavier season this year than we have in previous years," said Professor Anne Kelso, director of the Melbourne-based World Health Organisation Influenza Centre.

"It may be that more people are reporting than usual, because of all the publicity, but it does certainly seem that it is more prevalent."

There have been 4422 notifications this year – three times the average in the past five years.

Queensland has had the highest number of notifications, with 2197, followed by New South Wales on 713, Western Australia with 603 and Victoria with 371, according to the report.

The highest rates were among 0-4 year-olds, followed by boys aged 5-9 and females aged 20-24.

Of lab-confirmed cases, 88 per cent were found to be influenza A, while six per cent were influenza B and the rest were unidentified.

This year's flu is characterised by fever, headache, body aches, extreme tiredness and cold sweats.

Flu experts have urged those who catch the bug to stay at home, limit contact with others and seek a prescription with anti-retroviral drugs like Tamiflu in the first 12 hours of developing symptoms.
 

JPD

Inactive
Indonesia again sends bird flu virus specimen to WHO lab

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailgeneral.asp?fileid=20070820201810&irec=1

JAKARTA (Antara): The Indonesian government has sent another bird flu or H5N1 virus specimen to a laboratory of the World Health Organization (WHO), a Health Ministry spokesperson said here Monday.

"The specimen was sent to the WHO’s Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, United States, last Thursday," the ministry’s spokesperson, Lily S Sulistyowati, said.

She said the virus sample was carried out by the Research and Development Agency of the Health Ministry through the U.S. Naval Medical Research Unit-2/NAMRU-2 office in Jakarta.

The specimen consisted of larynx and nose smears taken from a 29-year old woman identified as NLPS, an inhabitant of Jembrana, Bali who was positively infected with the virus and from a 34-month old child identified as NKP who was at first suspected of being infected but eventually tested negative for the virus.

The tests by the CDC in Atlanta were completed and the results were the same as the findings of the ministry’s research and development agency and the Eijkman Molecular Biology Institute.

Head of the Research and Development of the Bio-medics and Pharmacy of agency, Endang Tri Sedyaningsih, said the complete results of the sequencing of the Ribonucleic Acid (RNA) of the specimen would be obtained in the next two or three weeks.

Lily said the sending of the specimen was aimed to prove that no mutation took place in the virus and to inform people in the world that Bali was still a safe place to visit. (**)
 

JPD

Inactive
St. Jude Influenza Survey Uncovers Key Differences
Between Bird Flu and Human Flu

http://news.yahoo.com/s/usnw/200708...ey_differences_between_bird_flu_and_human_flu

The St. Jude team used a mathematical technique to identify specific amino acid building blocks that are statistically more likely to appear in avian influenza virus proteins and those that are more likely to be in human influenza virus proteins. The differences in these amino acids can be used as markers to track changes in H5N1 avian influenza strains that threaten humans. "Influenza mutates rapidly, so that any marker that is not the same in bird flu but remains stable in human flu is likely to be important," said David Finkelstein, Ph.D., research associate at the St. Jude Hartwell Center for Bioinformatics and Biotechnology. "If human specific markers start accumulating in bird flu viruses that infect humans, that suggests that the bird flu may be adapting to humans and could spread."

The researchers also found that various strains of H5N1 that have infected humans are more likely to contain human markers than are H5N1 strains that have not infected humans. Only occasionally have H5N1 samples obtained from human patients shown any of these markers, and no H5N1 strain has permanently acquired any of them.

A report on this work appears in the advanced online edition of "Journal of Virology."

The investigators cautioned that there is no proof yet that the human markers in H5N1 and other bird flu viruses directly contribute to the ability of these viruses to cause pandemics among humans; and H5N1 is not any more adapted to humans today than in the past. However, the fact that the bird viruses accumulate and retain these markers after infecting humans suggests that these changes are important. Therefore, scientists should monitor avian influenza viruses to see if they are acquiring human markers.

"While we can't directly estimate how long it would take an avian virus such as H5N1 to acquire these traits, we can use these markers to roughly measure the distance between an avian influenza and a pandemic," said Clayton Naeve, Ph.D., St. Jude Hartwell Center director and the paper's senior author.

The other authors of this paper include Suraj Mukatira, Perdeep Mehta, John Obenauer, Xiaoping Su and Robert Webster.

This work was supported with funding by ALSAC.

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital is internationally recognized for its pioneering work in finding cures and saving children with cancer and other catastrophic diseases. Founded by late entertainer Danny Thomas and based in Memphis, Tenn., St. Jude freely shares its discoveries with scientific and medical communities around the world. No family ever pays for treatments not covered by insurance, and families without insurance are never asked to pay. St. Jude is financially supported by ALSAC, its fundraising organization. For more information, please visit http://www.stjude.org.

SOURCE St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
 

JPD

Inactive
Second Bali death blamed on bird flu

http://www.smh.com.au/news/World/Second-Bali-death-blamed-on-bird-flu/2007/08/21/1187462238146.html


August 21, 2007 - 2:19PM

A second woman may have died from bird flu on the Indonesian resort island of Bali.

Preliminary test results show the 28-year-old had the deadly H5N1 strain, an Indonesian Health Ministry staffer says.

If more reliable tests being carried out in Jakarta confirm the results, she will be the second person to have died in Bali from the virus within two weeks.

The island's first confirmed victim was a 29-year-old woman, who died on August 12. Her five-year-old daughter died on August 3 after suffering flu-like symptoms, but her body was cremated before samples were taken for testing.

The woman who died on Tuesday in Bali's Sanglah Hospital was a poultry distributor from Tabanan District.

Most human cases of H5N1 are linked to contact with infected birds, but experts fear the virus will mutate into a form that spreads easily among humans, potentially sparking a pandemic.

The woman was admitted to hospital on Sunday suffering bird flu-like symptoms including fever, breathing difficulties and coughing.

A 58-year-old man who is being treated at Sanglah Hospital has also been tested for bird flu.

His condition appeared to be improving, Bali Health Agency chief Dr Dewa Ketut Oka said.

The man, who was a garbage worker, had contact with dead chickens through his job, Oka said.

"They (the woman and man) are still (bird flu) suspects. We already sent the samples to the health ministry in Jakarta," Oka said, stressing that the Jakarta tests were the ones that counted.

An Indonesian Health Ministry staffer, who did not want to be named, told AAP that preliminary test results indicated the woman had H5N1, but the man did not.

"According to information from Sanglah hospital, the regional test for (the woman) is positive but the sample for (the male patient) is negative," she said.

The bird flu issue is sensitive in Bali, where the tourism industry is only just recovering from the 2002 and 2005 bombings.

None of the recent bird flu cases, or suspected cases, were from areas close to Bali's tourist precincts.

Meanwhile, Indonesia has sent bird flu samples to the World Health Organisation to allay fears that the virus had mutated.

Indonesia recently stopped sharing samples with international scientists searching for mutations, saying it wanted assurances that any vaccines developed from its H5N1 virus strain would not be prohibitively expensive.

Health ministry spokeswoman Lily Sulistyowati said samples were sent to the WHO-affiliated Centres for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta last Thursday to prove to the world "that the virus has not mutated in any way ... and that Bali is still safe to visit".
 

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Inactive
Online 'Epidemic' Gives Clues to Bird Flu Spread

http://www.14wfie.com/Global/story.asp?S=6960307

TUESDAY, Aug. 21 (HealthDay News) -- Online role-playing games could provide insight into how infectious diseases such as bird flu spread among people in the real world, American researchers report.

A programming error caused an epidemic of a highly contagious disease ("corrupted blood") among virtual characters in the popular online role-playing game World of Warcraft, scientists from Rutgers University in New Jersey and Tufts University in Boston wrote in the September issue of The Lancet Infectious Diseases.

The company that developed the game tried a number of quarantine strategies, but they all failed due to a number of factors -- the highly contagious nature of the disease; the inability to seal off a section of the game world effectively; and player resistance to quarantine measures.

Resetting the game proved to be only way to halt the epidemic.

Computer programs specifically designed to model infectious disease outbreaks are an important research tool but lack the unpredictable economic and social behavior exhibited by players of virtual online games, scientists Eric Lofgren and Nina Fefferman noted.

"We believe that, if the epidemic is designed and presented so as to seamlessly integrate with the rest of the persistent game world, in such a way as to be part of the user's expected experience in the game, a reasonable analogue to real-world human reactions to disease might be observed and captured within a computer model," they wrote. "By using these games as an untapped experimental framework, we may be able to gain deeper insight into the incredible complexity of infectious disease epidemiology in social groups."
 

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Inactive
New Bird Flu Strain Discovered In Egypt

http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/7008262873

August 21, 2007 9:15 a.m. EST

Manar Ammar - AHN Writer

Cairo, Egypt (AHN) - The Egyptian Ministry of Health confirmed Monday the emergence of a new avian flu virus in Egypt. The ministry discovered the new virus, called H7, in ducks coming into the country from Eastern Europe.

The ducks were found in a pond in Sharkia, in the Nile Delta region, and samples of the virus will be taken and sent abroad for more analysis.

"The infection of the new virus is weak but precautions are necessary," Minister of Health, Hatem Al Gably said.

The H7 strain is not as deadly as the H5, which is a highly contagious pathogenic among birds and birds can either contract the disease via air or contact with faces.

Al Gabaly mentioned that his ministry sent the government data confirming that the original virus is still serious and that the vaccination rate among birds has risen to three per cent.

Egypt is the most infected country outside Asia. Since the first human infection was discovered in the country in February 2006, around 38 cases have been reported. Of those, 23 people have died from the infection.
 

Tink

Veteran Member
Any word on if they expect a bad (regular) flu season in the U.S. this year like Australia's having?
 

JPD

Inactive
Indonesia confirms 84th bird flu death

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_asiapacific/view/295420/1/.html

Posted: 22 August 2007 1758 hrs

JAKARTA: A 28-year-old woman who died on Indonesia's resort island of Bali has been confirmed as the country's 84th human bird flu fatality, a health ministry official said Wednesday.

A second test indicated that the woman, Ayu Srinadi, a chicken vendor who died on Tuesday, was suffering from avian influenza, said the official from the health ministry's bird flu information centre.

Two tests must come back positive for H5N1 before a victim is counted as part of the official bird flu death toll in Indonesia, which is the highest in the world. - AFP/ac
 

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Inactive
Bali man shows bird flu signs

http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/news/stories/s2012135.htm

Last Updated 22/08/2007, 14:39:20

Health authorities on the Indonesian island of Bali are monitoring a 58-year-old man showing symptoms of bird flu, a day after another woman is thought to have died of the virus.

Bali has already confirmed one earlier death due to the deadly H5N1 strain of avian flu, prompting officials to cull more than 6,000 fowl and ban the trading and transport of chicken.

Samples from the latest victim have been sent to Jakarta for testing.

Two tests must return positive for H5N1 before a victim is counted as part of the official bird flu death toll in Indonesia, which is the world's highest at 83.
 

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Inactive
Study finds key markers for bird flu changes

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-08/22/content_6584011.htm

2007-08-22 13:54:11

BEIJING, Aug. 22 (Xinhuanet) -- U.S. researchers said Tuesday that they have found some markers for bird flu changes and the markers show that even the H5N1 avian influenza virus has so far made only a few mutations of what a flu virus needs to become a deadly pandemic strain.

David Finkelstein and his colleagues of St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee, compared the genetic sequences of avian viruses and viruses taken from human patients and identified 32 clear-cut changes in influenza viruses that differentiated a human flu from a bird flu.

They also found some markers for bird flue changes -- DNA sequences that code for amino acids, the basic building blocks of the proteins that make up living organisms, including viruses.

They said even when H5N1 viruses infected people, each one had made one or two of these changes at the most.

"The pandemic virus from 1918, the Spanish flu, is halfway between a bird virus and a human virus. What is reassuring is the H5N1 appears be much more avian than that 1918 virus. So it is still on the bird side of things, which is good," Finkelstein said.

The viruses are mutating constantly, and the study can help scientists watch closely for the mutations most likely to make H5N1 a global threat.
 

JPD

Inactive
Any word on if they expect a bad (regular) flu season in the U.S. this year like Australia's having?

Nothing that I have yet seen but South Africa seems to have some issues with "normal" flu:

Vicious flu outbreak hits Durban

http://www.int.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=125&art_id=vn20070821090039712C139907

August 21 2007 at 12:13PM

By Troy Martens

A vicious flu virus is sweeping across Durban, and people with chest ailments have been warned to take extra care.

The spread of the virus, which has led to several patients being admitted to hospital, has in part been speeded up by the ending of the recent public service strike.

The outbreak does not fall directly within the Durban flu season, which is usually around June and July, but can go on until early September. This season is later than usual.

'This season is later than usual'

Dr Prithy Ramlachan, who runs a medical practice in Newlands, attributes this to the fact that schools were out during June and July because of the public service strike. Now that schools are back the virus is spreading easily again.

Nursing staff, hospitals and paramedics have all confirmed an increase in flu patients in the past week.

According to Ramlachan, this debilitating flu takes only about 10 minutes before people start feeling the symptoms.

"I have seen a marked number of people suffering from the flu, the difference between the early symptoms of this flu and a cold are the chills you will feel in the early stages.

I've been dealing with patients since last week who come into my rooms wearing big jackets and scarves saying they have never been so cold. Yet it was a sunny day outside," said Ramlachan.

'The virus is spreading easily'
"We haven't seen flu like this in Durban in years," said Melanie van der Walt, head sister at the Bluff Medicross Clinic.

She said it was so bad because in many cases it results in people developing lung infections and sinus infections.

These can damage the lining of the air passages and leave people with a persistent cough for a long period of time.

"People with a history of lung problems, asthma or emphysema, should be extra cautious, as should children under five and the elderly," said Van der Walt.

"We have had to book many people off work and school because of the incapacitating nature of this flu," said Van der Walt.

Besides the chilled feeling, the symptoms are fairly typical of the flu, head and back pain, runny nose and sore throat. People may also experience feelings of prostration, and laziness.

"This is the body's way of telling you that you should stay in bed and rest," said Ramlachan.

He said there was a fairly new medication he was prescribing to his patients called Tamiflu, which in his opinion treats the symptoms effectively.

Hospitals are also having to deal with the flu outbreak.

"We have a number of admissions at Netcare St Augustine's currently, mainly those with bronchitis resulting from influenza, but there is no cause for alarm," said St Augustines' spokesperson, Leanne Nyiri.

Dr Jaco Folmer, Director of SAA Netcare Travel Clinics, said this strain of virus is an A strain. "It is the Wisconsin virus that is currently causing quite a lot of illness," he said.

Paramedics have also reported that they have been transporting increased numbers of patients who are suffering from this flu virus.

ER 24 spokesperson Derrick Banks said: "In the past week we have experienced an increase in the number of flu patients.

"We have to be very careful when transporting them as it's very contagious. We have to decontaminate and wipe down all equipment to curb the spread of the virus."
 

JPD

Inactive
Continent-wide plan would aim to slow flu pandemic

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/serv...onal/?page=rss&id=RTGAM.20070822.wamigospan22



GLORIA GALLOWAY

From Wednesday's Globe and Mail

August 22, 2007 at 4:38 AM EDT

OTTAWA — Canada, the United States and Mexico would work together to slow the spread of an influenza pandemic but a new, continent-wide plan says closing borders and other highly aggressive measures may be worthless.

The North American Plan for Avian and Pandemic Influenza was presented yesterday at the end of a meeting among leaders of the three countries in Montebello, Que., and was cited as a key accomplishment of the summit.

Rather than impose strict conditions to control a long-predicted global influenza - a disease that could have found its genesis in an avian flu already detected in Asia and Europe - the plan is subordinate to domestic preparations being made within each of the three countries.

Instead, it promotes communication between health authorities across North America, as well as a flexible framework to reduce the impact of the infection. It seems aimed at keeping economic engines running.

"All countries have the sovereign right to control the movement of people and goods across their borders," says the plan. "However, in the event of a widespread pandemic, highly restrictive measures to control the movement of people and goods might initially delay but would not stop the eventual spread of a novel strain of human influenza to North America and could have significant negative social, economic and foreign policy consequences."

Canada, the U.S. and Mexico intend to co-ordinate travel restrictions from affected countries, and to encourage voluntary restrictions from areas where the disease has been found, says the report.

But "once the disease exists in one North American country, the others will likely experience outbreaks soon thereafter."

The plan lays out a timetable, stretching into next summer, for establishing the full set of protocols to be followed in the event of a pandemic. In the meantime, it calls for each country to be on guard for the disease by monitoring the domestic and wild birds that have been associated with its spread.

The three countries have committed to help each other maintain critical infrastructure such as energy, health care, food, water and transportation - a pledge that could turn controversial if the supply of vital commodities dwindles.

Donald Low, the head of microbiology at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto and a leading public-health expert who managed the 2003 SARS outbreak, said the long-awaited plan is a good step.

"What I am seeing here is a commitment to work together, and to communicate, and to share plans between the three different countries. In principle, they want to be on the same page when decisions are made, but they also recognize that countries are going to do different things," Dr. Low said.
 

JPD

Inactive
Updated WHO Bird Flu (H5N1) Management Guidance
Reinforces Tamiflu as First Line Treatment

http://www.juraforum.de/jura/news/news/p/1/id/181381/f/109/

Basel, Switzerland (ots/PRNewswire) - The World HealthOrganization (WHO) has reinforced that Tamiflu (oseltamivir) is theprimary recommended antiviral of choice in managing patients infectedwith H5N1 in updated guidance published on the WHO website today.Experts believe that a human influenza pandemic is imminent and couldbe triggered by the highly pathogenic H5N1 strain, which to date hasinfected 321 humans causing 194 deaths worldwide (as of Aug 16 2007).

"Experiences clearly show that to reduce mortality patients shouldreceive treatment with oseltamivir as early as possible, buttreatment remains effective even when patients present late,"commented Professor John Oxford, Professor of Virology at StBartholomew's and the Royal London Hospital, "H5N1 has proven to bean extremely virulent virus in humans and in some countries we haveseen the need to use higher and longer doses of oseltamivir to gainmaximum benefit."

The latest advice is based on evidence presented to the WHO byexperts in countries that have reported human cases of bird flu.Tamiflu is the only neuraminidase inhibitor to have been used in themanagement of human cases of H5N1 and is the only antiviral stronglyrecommended for treatment of H5N1 infected patients by the WHO.

With this latest evidence WHO recommends:

- Standardising care and promptly sharing clinical andtreatment information to improve understanding of the disease andidentify appropriate therapy

- Tamiflu remaining the primary antiviral treatment both early andlate in the infection as there is evidence of prolonged replicationwith H5N1

- Modified Tamiflu treatment regimens - higher and longer dosingmay be necessary given the virulence of some forms of H5N1 seenrecently

- Possible combination therapy with adamantanes (case by casebasis), particularly in patients with pneumonia or progressivedisease

The guidance also states that inhaled zanamivir has not beenstudied in human H5N1 illness and that the adequacy of inhaledzanamivir delivery in patients with serious lower respiratory tractor extra pulmonary disease is a major concern. Ongoing modificationswill be made to the WHO guidance based on continual researchfindings.

During the clinical development programme Roche carried outstudies looking at higher doses of Tamiflu. The safety profile atthese higher doses was supportive of further investigation A highversus standard dosage study has recently started in patients withsevere influenza, both H5N1 and seasonal , in conjunction with theNational Institutes of Health (NIH), to determine which is the mosteffective dose in severe disease.

WHO coordinates the global response to human cases of H5N1 avianinfluenza and tracks the corresponding threat of an influenzapandemic, providing access to both technical guidelines andinformation useful for the general public.

Tamiflu is an oral neuraminidase inhibitor that is active againstall strains of influenza A and B tested. More than 80 governmentsworldwide are now stockpiling Tamiflu in preparation for a pandemicand many global businesses are in discussions with Roche and are nowstockpiling for their employees and their families in line with locallaws and regulations.

Notes to Editors:

About the guidance http://www.who.int/csr/disease/avian_influenza/guidelines/clinicalmanage07/en/index.html

About pandemic influenza

An influenza pandemic occurs when a new strain of influenza Avirus appears, against which the human population has no immunityresulting in several, simultaneous epidemics worldwide with enormousnumbers of deaths and illness. The most severe influenza pandemics todate include: 'Spanish flu' A (H1N1): 1918 caused in excess of 50million deaths worldwide, 'Asian flu' A (H2N2): 1958 caused 1 milliondeaths worldwide, 'Hong Kong flu' A (H3N2): 1968 caused 800,000deaths worldwide in six weeks. The WHO believes that we are as closeto the next pandemic as we have been any time in the past 37 years,with two of the three widely-recognised prerequisites for a humanpandemic met to date in the avian influenza outbreak in East Asia.Firstly, a new influenza virus strain has emerged (H5N1), andsecondly, the virus has spread to humans. The final barrier will beeffective transmission of the virus from human to human.

About Tamiflu

Tamiflu is designed to be active against all clinically relevantinfluenza viruses and works by blocking the action of theneuraminidase (NA) enzyme on the surface of the virus. Whenneuraminidase is inhibited, the spread of the virus to other cells inthe body is inhibited. It is licensed for the treatment andprophylaxis of influenza in children aged one year and above and inadults.

Roche and Gilead

Tamiflu was invented by Gilead Sciences and licensed to Roche in1996. Roche and Gilead partnered on clinical development, with Rocheleading efforts to produce, register and bring the product to themarkets. Under the terms of the companies' agreement, amended inNovember 2005, Gilead participates with Roche in the consideration ofsub-licenses for the pandemic supply of Tamiflu in resource-limitedcountries. To ensure broader access to Tamiflu for all patients inneed, Gilead has agreed to waive its right to full royalty paymentsfor product sold under these sub-licenses.

About Roche

Headquartered in Basel, Switzerland, Roche is one of the world'sleading research-focused healthcare groups in the fields ofpharmaceuticals and diagnostics. As the world's biggest biotechcompany and an innovator of products and services for the earlydetection, prevention, diagnosis and treatment of diseases, the Groupcontributes on a broad range of fronts to improving people's healthand quality of life. Roche is the world leader in in-vitrodiagnostics and drugs for cancer and transplantation, a market leaderin virology and active in other major therapeutic areas such asautoimmune diseases, inflammation, metabolism and central nervoussystem.
 

JPD

Inactive
S'pore sets up bird flu control system in Indonesia's Tangerang city

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/singaporelocalnews/view/295428/1/.html

By Foo Siew Shyan, Channel NewsAsia | Posted: 22 August 2007 1908 hrs

SINGAPORE : Singapore has established a bird flu control system for its bird flu pilot project in Indonesia's Tangerang city.

Charun Sopandi, head of the husbandry division at Tangerang's municipal agriculture and husbandry office, said two volunteers would be stationed at each of the more than 100 villages.

They would get first-hand information on suspected bird flu sufferers, and would then inform the city administration and the central government of suspected bird flu cases for quick treatment.

The Indonesian official said Singapore has also provided Tangerang with 208 motorcycles, 13 disinfectant sprayers and two computers equipped with special programmes to record bird flu cases. - CNA /ls
 

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Inactive
Ghana

Bird flu under control-Deputy Minister

http://www.myjoyonline.com/health/200708/7869.asp

The number of bird flu cases recorded in the country recently has been reduced, a deputy Minister of Food and Agriculture, Anna Nyamekye has said.

Speaking to the Times in Accra on Monday, she attributed the containment of the disease to effective measures put in place by the government.

She said a task force was set up when the flu broke out to ensure that poultry products were not imported from bird flu affected countries.

A surveillance team was also tasked to screen birds on poultry farms in the country to ensure that the flu does not spread.

Ms Nyamekye said that should the current situation stabilize, the government will reconsider its decision to import poultry products.

She noted that all the affected farmers who had their poultry and its products as well as properties destroyed as a result of the disease outbreak have been compensated.

The deputy Minister expressed government's satisfaction with the promptness with which the epidemic was curbed and said that the veterinary and wildlife institutions are fully equipped to combat fresh cases.

She said that the public must not hesitate to report deaths of their birds to the nearest agricultural and veterinary office.

"The ministry has embarked on a campaign to educate poultry farmers on how to handle sick birds and other safety precautions," she said.

Ms Nyamekye said the government's attention is now focused on bio security on poultry farms to prevent the spread of the disease and other poultry diseases from farm to farm.

Source: The Ghanaian Times
 

JPD

Inactive
Indonesia

Hotels and restaurants dropping chicken off the menu

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailgeneral.asp?fileid=20070823175627&irec=1

DENPASAR (JP): A number of hotels and restaurants in Bali are dropping out chicken from their menus amidst bird flu threat in the island, with two human victims confirmed in the island.

“Some hotels and restaurants have reduced the amount of chicken in their menus due to the recent bird flu outbreak,” head of Bali chapter Indonesian Hotel and Restaurant Association (PHRI) Cok Oka Ardhana Sukawati said Wednesday.

According to Ardhana, a restaurant in Ubud had totally slashed chicken off their menu while others reduced the amount of chicken in their menus by up to 60 percent. “They create a completely different menu for their guests,” he said.

The step was taken in the wake of a death of a 29-year-old woman, SW from Negara, Jembrana regency of avian influenza last week.

The Health Ministry confirmed Wednesday that another suspected bird flu victim, AS, 28 from Kediri, Tabanan regency was infected with the virus. This is the second casualty of bird flu in the resort island, adding the nation’s death toll of 84 from 105 confirmed human cases from bird flu, the highest for any country in the world.

P>“We took that step after we heard the news of the woman’s death last week,” Nusa Dua’s The Westin Resort Hotel spokeswoman Reinata Tjoa said Wednesday.

Even though WHO says avian influenza is not transmitted through cooked food, Reinata said that the step was a preventive measure, “…after all, our restaurant actually focuses on seafood.”

She said the Ikan restaurant of the Westin Resort Hotel would keep the chicken free menu until bird flu occurrences in Bali have abated.

Several restaurants, including Kupu-Kupu Amphitheatre restaurant at Nusa Dua’s Niko Bali Resort and Spa, however keep serving chicken to their guests.

”We assure that our suppliers are certified and have been audited by the Health Ministry. We also make sure that all meat are cooked up to 70 degrees Celcius,” spokesperson Fretty Widiasafitri said.

Bali chapter Indonesian Farmers Union head Nyoman Suparta said that the demand for chicken was still within the average of 100,000 per day. He said that farmers have taken bio-security measures by spraying disinfectants to chicken coops every 2 days. (Prodita Sabarini/**)
 

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Inactive
Council recommends Bali needs a tropical disease hospital

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailgeneral.asp?fileid=20070823180304&irec=0

DENPASAR (JP): Amidst the spread of avian influenza outbreaks in birds and recent deaths of two women of bird flu, the regional council said Thursday that Bali needed a hospital dedicated for tropical disease to make sure the island’s preparedness of a pandemic.

Bali Regional Council Commission IV head in charge of Health and Tourism affairs Ketut Kariyasa Adnyana said that the island-province needs a specialized hospital for bird flu patients.

“This will make it easier to treat bird flu patients,” he said.

Currently the island has three general hospitals –- Denpasar’s Sanglah Hospital, Gianyar regency’s Gianyar Hospital, and Tabanan regency’s Tabanan Hospital -- as referrals for bird flu patients.

The Sanglah Hospital had treated six suspected bird flu patients in their tropical disease unit, of which two died of the virus. It has 14 isolated rooms with a capacity of 23 beds.

Bali has two confirmed deaths of bird flu, SW, a 29-year-old woman from Negara, Jembrana regency, and AS, a 28-year-old woman, from Kediri, Tabanan regency.

After the wake of human deaths of bird flu in the province, the Bali administration is allocating Rp 1.8 billion for Sanglah Hospital for bird flu treatment. The allocated budget would be spent to expand the hospital’s tropical disease unit.(Prodita Sabarini/**)
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu suspect cleared on Indonesia's Bali

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com...on_Indonesias_Bali/rssarticleshow/2303178.cms

JAKARTA: Health authorities have cleared a 58-year-old man of bird flu after he was hospitalised on the Indonesian resort island of Bali with symptoms of the disease, the health ministry said today. "He tested negative," said Ningrum, a doctor at the health ministry's bird flu information centre. The patient, admitted to hospital on Monday, had a history of contact with dead chickens.

Transmission of the disease usually occurs directly from birds to humans. Two people are confirmed to have died of bird flu in Bali this month, both women involved in raising and selling chickens. The bird flu deaths were the first reported on the island and have prompted officials on the island to cull more than 6,000 fowl and ban the trade and transport of live poultry.

The outbreak has raised fears of another downturn in tourism, Bali's main industry. Tourism on the island is only just recovering after two deadly bombings in 2002 and 2005 left hundreds dead, mostly foreign tourists.

The first death occurred far from the island's tourist centres but the second happened in an area nearer to some resorts. Indonesia has reported 84 confirmed human bird flu deaths, the worst toll of all countries affected by the worldwide viral outbreak, and H5N1 is now considered endemic across the archipelago nation.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu fear rises in Indonesia's Bali with another patient

http://english.people.com.cn/90001/90782/6246536.html

A 48-year old woman was admitted to hospital on the Indonesian resort island of Bali Thursday for developing bird flu symptoms, raising fear for a major outbreak after two women died of the disease on the island earlier this month.

The woman, identified by her initials LMR, was treated at an isolation room of the Sanglah Hospital in Bali's capital of Denpasar.

But doctors said laboratory test had not been carried out to confirm if she had bird flu, reported the national Antara news agency.

Besides her, another elderly woman is being treated at the same hospital for suspected bird flu.

Indonesia has confirmed 84 bird flu deaths so far, making it the highest toll among the affected countries so far.
 

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Inactive
Bird Flu Found in Arava Kibbutz

http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/Flash.aspx/132139

IsraelNN.com) A blood test revealed a non-virulent strand of bird flu on Thursday in chickens belonging to Kibbutz Grufit, located in the Arava desert north of Eilat. Kibbutz workers said the chickens had not suffered an unusually high mortality rate, and that the birds had shown no symptoms of the illness. Government workers took more blood samples, the results of which will be known on Friday.

The virus was found in Israel in 2006 as well, in birds in the Lachish region and in villages in and around Gaza. Israeli officials worked with members of the Palestinian Authority to stop the spread of the virus. All chickens in the affected areas were killed.
 

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Inactive
One more bird flu suspect found in Indonesia

http://www.vnanet.vn/Home/EN/tabid/119/itemid/210427/Default.aspx

Ha Noi (VNA) – Another bird flu suspect was found on the Indonesia ’s resort island of Bali on August 24.

The suspect, identified as one-and-a-half-year-old infant Ni Putu Aprilia Dewi, is currently being treated at the Sanglah hospital in Denpasar, the Jakarta Post reported.

Bird flu outbreaks on Bali have claimed the lives of two people, bringing the country’s total death toll from the disease to 84.-Enditem
 

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Inactive
No bird flu found in southern Israeli farm

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-08/24/content_6597559.htm

JERUSALEM, Aug. 24 (Xinhua) -- Tests conducted by Israeli veterinary authority indicated that chickens in a southern Israeli farm kibbutz were not infected with bird flu virus, Israel's top-selling daily Yedioth Ahronoth reported on Friday.

There is no fear that the chicken coops of in Kibbutz Grofit in the Arava region have been infected with the fatal bird flu virus, Moshe Haimovitch, head of the national Veterinary Services, was quoted as saying.

Sample tests conducted on Thursday by the Health Ministry, the Agriculture Ministry and the Veterinary Services revealed that the bird flu virus may have infected the chicken coops in Kibbutz Grofit.

As a result of the initial tests, additional tests were taken, and the henhouses were quarantined on Thursday morning.

"We are currently conducting peripheral tests that are part of sample tests done in a bid to map the country, in compliance with international requirements," Haimovitch said on Thursday.

The bird flu epidemic, which broke out in many areas across the world in recent years, appeared in Israel in March 2006. Millions of hens were culled following three separate outbreaks throughout the month in order to stop the epidemic from spreading.
 

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Inactive
Mass chicks die in Vietnam's southern province

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-08/24/content_6596365.htm

HANOI, Aug. 24 (Xinhua) -- A number of chicks raised by a household in Vietnam's southern Dong Thap province died of being suspected to have contracted bird flu, according to local newspaper Vietnam Agriculture on Friday.

The local Veterinary Bureau has culled over 100 ill chicks in the flock in Lap Vo district. Specimens from the ill fowls are being tested for bird flu virus strain H5N1.

Bird flu now is hitting two communes in the two northern provinces of Dien Bien and Cao Bang, according to the Department of Animal Health under the Vietnamese Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development.

Bird flu outbreaks in Vietnam, starting in December 2003, have killed and led to the forced culling of dozens of millions of fowls in the country.
 

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Inactive
Flu raids in Manipur - Shopowner in custody

http://www.telegraphindia.com/1070824/asp/northeast/story_8229179.asp

Imphal, Aug. 23: Manipur police and officials of the state veterinary department today seized 208 newly hatched chicks and a large quantity of chicken feed from a shop located at Nagamapal market here.

A senior official of the state veterinary department said the seized chickens were culled while one truckload of chicken feed was destroyed at a safe place later in the afternoon.

The police sealed the shop and took into custody Yumnam Umabati Devi, the wife of the shop owner Y. Pradip, who is a resident of Ningthoukhong now living in Imphal West.

Umabati Devi told the police and veterinary officials that the chickens and the feed arrived from Guwahati only yesterday.

The veterinary officials collected a few chickens and portions of the feed to test for bird flu.

The police and veterinary officials also raided Nagamapal and neighbouring marketplaces to check if any other shops are selling chicken or chicken feed, which are banned within a 10-km radius of a farm affected by bird flu in Chingmeirong of Imphal East district.

However, no further arrests or seizures have been reported.

The officials said a ban on sale of live poultry, eggs or chicken feed was enforced in the vicinity of the affected poultry farm even after culling and cleaning-up operations were completed.

The veterinary department, however, said the sale of dressed chicken or ducks was allowed.

“The dressed chicken should be brought in from outside the 10-km radius. No live poultry is allowed within this zone,” the official said.

Culling of poultry began on July 26, a day after the outbreak of H5N1 strain of avian influenza was confirmed at the Chingmeirong farm.

The culling operations concluded on August 2, killing nearly 3.5 lakh poultry within a five-km radius of the affected farm.

Rapid response teams are continuing post-culling surveillance activities within the 10-km radius to allay fear of villagers.
 
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