11/12/07-11/19/07|Weekly Bird Flu Thread:Bird flu alert strikes Bahrain

JPD

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HEALTH - 11/12/07-11/19/07|Weekly Bird Flu Thread:Bird flu alert strikes Bahrain

Link to Last Weeks Thread:

HEALTH - 11/4/07-11/11/07|Weekly Bird Flu Thread:Indonesian woman dies of suspected bird flu

http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?t=264024

Johns Hopkins on influenza:

http://www.iom.edu/Object.File/Master/33/450/Rashid Chotani.pdf

National Avian Influenza Surveillance Information:

http://wildlifedisease.nbii.gov/ai/

CDC

http://www.cdc.gov/flu/avian/index.htm

WHO

http://www.who.int/csr/disease/avian_influenza/en/index.html

CIDRAP

http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/

Official U.S. Government Web site

http://www.pandemicflu.gov/

FAO

http://www.fao.org/ag/againfo/subjects/en/health/diseases-cards/special_avian.html

Public Health Agency of Canada

http://www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/influenza/avian_qa_e.html

European Union

http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/health_consumer/dyna/influenza/country_en.htm

The World Bank

http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXT...68427~piPK:64168435~theSitePK:1793593,00.html
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu alert strikes Bahrain

http://www.arabianbusiness.com/503882-bird-flu-alert-strikes-bahrain-

by Joel Bowman on Monday, 12 November 2007

Medical authorities are on bird flu alert in Bahrain after the government "re-activated" its health services ahead of a possible outbreak of the disease this coming winter, said senior Health Minister yesterday.

Dr Muna Al Mousawi told Gulf News Daily that there, "was a greater risk of the virus coming to Bahrain in the winter with the increased migration of birds from colder countries."

"We have now sent out letters to all bodies, departments and organisations concerned to be ready in case there is a threat," Dr. Al Mousawi, head of the Health Ministry Communicable Diseases Department, told the Bahraini paper.

A special ward was opened in the Gulf country in March, specifically designed to cope with any sudden outbreak of the disease and the Ministry has stockpiled five times the vaccinations that the World Health Organization recommends countries keep on hand.

"There is still no vaccination for the condition," Dr. Al Mousawi said, "but the WHO has recommended that the high risk population be vaccinated against the ordinary flu to prevent human to human infection in case."

The Salmaniya Medical Complex, which houses the special emergency ward, has been fitted out with the latest equipment and is staffed with chest physicians, intravenous specialists and intensive care specialists.
 

JPD

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Special Report: Future of turkey firm?

http://www.eveningnews24.co.uk/cont...gory=news&itemid=NOED12 Nov 2007 08:25:52:570

12 November 2007 08:24

Standfirst Norfolk turkey producer Bernard Matthews has had a torrid couple of years and last week it was revealed £42m had been wiped off its value. But with Christmas on its way, can the firm turn things around? Sam Williams investigates.

A bird flu outbreak, video footage of alleged cruelty, falling profits and an attack from celebrity chef Jamie Oliver.

To say the last few years have been tough for Norfolk turkey mogul Bernard Matthews would be something of an understatement.

And last week matters got even worse when the company's accounts revealed that £42m had been wiped off the Great Witchingham-based firm's value during 2006.

So where did it all go wrong for Europe's biggest turkey manufacturer? And more importantly can they recover from what has been a torrid two years?

You can trace the most recent decline of the firm back to February 2005 when Channel 4's Jamie's School Dinner hit the screens.

Highlighting the poor quality of school meals, the chef singled out the firm's Turkey Twizzler as a prime example of reconstituted, cheap and fattening products being given to kids across the country.

In the new health conscious age, such criticism from a leading celebrity was never going to be good and sales were hit hard. The infamous Turkey Twizzler's were also removed from school menus.

At the same time, less high profile developments were also beginning to impact on the firm.

On the one hand, Bernard Matthews was facing stiff competition from cheaper factories in the Far East, meanwhile major superstores back in the UK were squeezing down the prices paid to suppliers.

By September 2005 the firm was forced to restructure the company, with the loss of 110 jobs.

When the firm revealed its financial performance last week these changes were cited as the “primary” cause of its poor financial performance in 2006, which saw the company report a loss for the first time in its 57-year history.

But, if truth be told, there have been several other reasons why the firm has lost the confidence of the public, and subsequently their custom.

In April 2006 six workers were secretly filmed hitting turkeys with baseball bats at the company's Beck Farm factory in Felthorpe near Norwich, causing outrage among animal welfare charities and further harming the reputation of the firm.

Then in February this year the firm was devastated after one of its farms became the UK's only confirmed outbreak of the deadly H5N1 strain of avian flu.

Factories were shut as 160,000 birds were culled and the images of vets clad in full protective gear was a public relations disaster, creating major fear over the safety of poultry products.

A major advertising campaign launched a few months after the outbreak appears to have done little for consumer confidence and just two weeks ago the firm's UK chief executive Bart Dalla Mura quit the company.

Whether he fell on his own sword or was pushed on to it from those up above is not yet clear, but what is, is that whomever replaces him has one heck of a task on his hands to rejuvenate the flagging firm.

So what does the future hold for the company, which employs 3,500 people in East Anglia, including hundreds in Norfolk?

Norwich business consultant and brand expert Simon Middleton, of Turton Middleton, in St Andrews Street, warned a lack of “love” from the public could be one of Bernard Matthews' major obstacles to turning things around.

He said: “Things have gone wrong for them, the Turkey Twizzlers, bird flu, videos of workers abusing animals, these are product crises and if you have lot of love in the bank you can get over that.

“The trouble for Bernard Matthews is they don't have a lot of love in the bank. They haven't managed their brand, they haven't made the Great British public think well of them.”

What is clear is that in the immediate future at least, things will get worse before they get better.

In a statement this week, bosses admitted the financial results from this year, not due out for another 12 months, would again be hit because of the infection and the bad publicity that followed.

To add to these problems, workers employed by the firm are set to strike next week, which union bosses say could affect turkey supplies over Christmas.

Angered at a 2pc pay rise, just half the rate of inflation, Unite's 1,300 members at Great Witchingham, Holton and Dunstable will walk out on Thursday , calling for a minimum wage of £6.50 an hour, up from the current £5.83.

Miles Hubbard, Unite regional industrial organiser, told the Evening News: “The workforce has held this company together through a most challenging year, so have been particularly angered by management's imposition of what is effectively a pay cut.

“It is indicative of the strength of feeling that members have voted for strike action having worked so hard for the company in difficult circumstances. They came under a good degree of pressure from management not to vote for strike action, so we urge Bernard Matthews to return to us with an improved pay offer which they have thus far refused to do.”

The firm, which started out when Mr Matthews bought 20 turkey eggs and an incubator in 1950, was unwilling to put anyone up for interview about this article. However, the quotes trotted out by its PR department tried to remain positive about its future.

A statement said: “Sales continue to slowly recover and the company is very confident about its future and the directors have put in place a long term plan that envisages a return to profitability and growth in the short to medium term.”

And according to Mr Middleton there is hope yet that the firm will survive and regain public trust. He added: “If you are at the bottom the only way is up. With very clever, dedicated brand management and if they wholeheartedly believe in the company they can turn it around.

“They have to admit they got it wrong, then put it right. But they are going to have to work really hard to recapture hearts and minds.”

What do the people of Norwich think about Bernard Matthews?

Ryan Mattioli, 20, unemployed, from Lakenham, said: “I never bought his products anyway, they are too high in salt for my taste. I would choose to buy my turkey from someone else.

“His company was good in its day, it's a successful mass production company, but it is not always the best quality.”

John Dunnett, 60, retired, from Thorpe St Andrew, said: “Factory farming is a reality but there are better ways of running your factory.

“Bernard Matthews hasn't done himself any favours.”

Amy Sharpe, 21, a beauty consultant from Norwich city centre, said: “I still buy Bernard Matthews, I don't buy his stuff a lot but it does taste good. I would still happily eat his turkeys.”

Wendy Bailey, 61, retired, from Kings Lynn, said: “I like Bernard Matthews products, what I've bought so far has been fine.

“I usually buy his turkeys for Christmas and I will do this year.”

David Flounders, 29, a driver from Diss, said: “I don't eat Bernard Matthews products and to be honest I don't think his food is great.

“I don't eat Turkey Twizzlers or his other pre-packed food and I wouldn't buy his turkeys for Christmas.”

Catherine Newey, 42, a teaching assistant from Dereham: “I like to know where my meat comes from and I'm not sure you do know when it's all been mixed up into chicken kievs or whatever.”
 

JPD

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Bird flu outbreak in Eastern England confirmed

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21756820/

updated 44 minutes ago

LONDON - British officials on Monday confirmed an outbreak of bird flu in turkeys on a farm in eastern England.

The department said the turkeys had tested positive for the H5 subtype of the disease. It was not yet known whether it was the H5N1 strain, which has killed dozens of people around the world.

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs said a two-mile protection zone and a six-mile surveillance zone had been set up around a farm in Diss, about 100 miles northeast of London, and all 5,000 turkeys, geese and ducks on the premises would be slaughtered.

Within these zones bird movements will be restricted and all birds must be housed or otherwise isolated from contact with wild birds, DEFRA said, adding that the European Union had been informed.

In February, an outbreak of H5N1 bird flu on a poultry farm in the same part of England led to the slaughter of almost 160,000 turkeys.

No definitive source was found for that outbreak, which matched a strain that had earlier infected geese in southern Hungary.

"It appears to have been detected quite early, " Britain's deputy chief veterinary officer Fred Landeg told British Broadcasting Corp. television, discussing the most recent outbreak. "But we have to establish whether there is any other infection in the area, we have to establish the source of the infection, and we have to establish whether the disease has spread any further."

Landeg said the virus might have been spread by wild birds, by animals at another farm, or by the circulation of contaminated poultry products.

Britain's first case of H5N1 flu was in a swan in Scotland in 2006.

Bird flu has killed or prompted the culling of millions of birds worldwide since late 2003, when it first began ravaging Asian poultry stocks. It has killed at least 205 people worldwide, but remains hard for humans to catch. Experts fear it could mutate into a form that spreads easily among people, potentially sparking a pandemic. Experts think most human cases are due to contact with infected birds.

The bird flu outbreak is the latest in a string of bad news for the British farming industry, which is still recovering from outbreaks of foot-and-mouth and blue-tongue disease over the summer. Neither disease affects humans, but both can sicken animals, and the restrictions and slaughter of livestock imposed in their wake have cost farmers millions of pounds (dollars; euros).
 

JPD

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Q&A: Bird flu

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/3422839.stm

Bird flu has been confirmed in turkeys on a farm in Suffolk.

The virus can cause illness and death in humans, but the chances of being infected are extremely low.

The only people who have developed symptoms are poultry workers, mainly in south-east Asia, who have come into intimate contact with infected birds.

What is bird flu?

Like humans and other species, birds are susceptible to flu.

There are many types of bird, or avian, flu.

The most contagious strains, which are usually fatal in birds, are H5 and H7.

There are nine different types of H5. The nine all take different forms - some are highly pathogenic, while some are pretty harmless.

The type currently causing concern is the "highly pathogenic" Asian strain of the H5N1 virus.

Scientists have discovered four different subtypes of H5N1, and there could well be more. However, all are deadly to birds, and can cause disease - and death - in humans.

However, it is important to stress that H5N1 is overwhelmingly a disease that affects birds - and not humans.

It is true that humans have been infected, but almost all have been poultry workers who have come into intimate contact with birds. H5N1 cannot pass easily from human to human.

Migratory wildfowl, notably wild ducks, are natural carriers of the viruses, but are unlikely to actually develop an infection.

The risk is that they pass it on to domestic birds, who are much more susceptible to the virus.

How do humans catch bird flu?

Bird flu was thought only to infect birds until the first human cases were seen in Hong Kong in 1997.



Humans catch the disease through close contact with live infected birds.

Birds excrete the virus in their faeces, which dry and become pulverised, and are then inhaled.

Symptoms are similar to other types of flu - fever, malaise, sore throats and coughs. People can also develop conjunctivitis.

Researchers are now concerned because scientists studying a case in Vietnam found the virus can affect all parts of the body, not just the lungs.

This could mean that many illnesses, and even deaths, thought to have been caused by something else, may have been due to the bird flu virus.

Is it possible to stop bird flu coming into a country?

There is no failsafe way of preventing its spread.

Experts say proper poultry controls - such as preventing wild birds getting in to poultry houses - are vital.

In addition, they say monitoring of the migratory patterns of wild birds should provide early alerts of the arrival of infected flocks - meaning they could be targeted on arrival.

How many people have been affected?

As of this month, the World Health Organization (WHO) had confirmed 335 cases of H5N1 in humans in Azerbaijan, Cambodia, China, Djibouti, Egypt, Indonesia, Iraq, Thailand, Turkey and Vietnam, leading to 206 deaths.

For the latest WHO information on the numbers of humans infected and killed by avian flu, see related internet links section on right of page.

How quickly is the disease spreading?

After bird flu claimed its first human victim - a three-year-old boy in Hong Kong in May 1997 - the disease was not detected again until February 2003, when a father and son were diagnosed with H5N1, again in Hong Kong.

Since then it has spread westwards through Asia, the Middle East, Europe and Africa.

Despite mass culls, exclusion zones and other measures put in place to prevent its spread, the H5N1 virus has continued to travel.

In one week in February 2006, Italy, Greece, Bulgaria, Germany, Austria, France, Slovenia, India, Iran and Egypt confirmed their first cases of H5N1 in wild birds.

In April 2005, a dead swan in Scotland was found to have the strain.

But it can't yet be passed from person to person?

For the most part, humans have contracted the virus following very close contact with sick birds.

There may have been examples of human-to-human transmission, but so far not in the form which could fuel a pandemic.

A case in Thailand indicated the probable transmission of the virus from a girl who had the disease to her mother, who also died.

The girl's aunt, who was also infected, survived the virus.

UK virology expert Professor John Oxford said these cases indicated the basic virus could be passed between humans, and predicted similar small clusters of cases would be seen again.

It is not the only instance where it has been thought bird flu has been passed between humans.

In 2004, two sisters died in Vietnam after possibly contracting bird flu from their brother who had died from an unidentified respiratory illness.

In a similar case in Hong Kong in 1997, a doctor possibly caught the disease from a patient with the H5N1 virus - but it was never conclusively proved.

What would the consequences of a mass outbreak be?

If the virus gained the ability to pass easily between humans the results could be catastrophic.

Worldwide, experts predict anything between two million and 50 million deaths.

However the mortality rate - which presently stands at around 50% of confirmed cases - could decline as it mutates, they say.

Is there a vaccine?

There is not yet a definitive vaccine, but prototypes which offer protection against the H5N1 strain are being produced.

But antiviral drugs, such as Tamiflu which are already available and being stockpiled by countries such as the UK, may help limit symptoms and reduce the chances the disease will spread.

Concerns have been prompted by news that patients in Vietnam have become partially resistant to the Tamiflu, the drug that doctors plan to use to tackle a human bird flu outbreak.

Scientists say it may be helpful to have stocks of other drugs from the same family such as Relenza (zanamivir).

Can I continue to eat chicken?

Yes. Experts say avian flu is not a food-borne virus, so eating chicken is safe.

The only people thought to be at risk are those involved in the slaughter and preparation of meat that may be infected.

However, the Who recommends, to be absolutely safe all meat should be cooked to a temperature of at least 70C. Eggs should also be thoroughly cooked.

Professor Hugh Pennington of Aberdeen University underlined the negligible risk to consumers: "The virus is carried in the chicken's gut.

"A person would have to dry out the chicken meat and would have to sniff the carcass to be at any risk. But even then, it would be very hard to become infected."

What is being done to contain the virus in the countries affected?

Steps have been taken to try to stop the disease spreading among birds.

Millions of farmyard birds have been culled, while millions more have been vaccinated and confined indoors.

Areas where the disease has been found have been isolated and some countries have banned imports of live birds and poultry products.

In January 2006 international donors pledged $1.9bn (£1.1bn) in the fight against bird flu, while the World Health Organization has devised a rapid-response plan to detect and contain a global flu pandemic.

There are also measures recommended when a wild infected bird is found, including protection and surveillance zones.
 

JPD

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Indonesian woman showing signs of bird flu

http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/news/stories/s2089900.htm

Indonesian health officials say a 30 year old woman has been admitted to hospital after showing symptoms of bird flu.

The case comes only days after her husband was confirmed as the 91st bird flu fatality in Indonesia.

Officials say the woman from the island of Sumatra and named Nasniati, was admitted to hospital after showing signs of the H5N1 virus.

The country's bird flu information centre says it's not yet clear if the couple had been in direct contact with infected poultry, a common way for the humans to contract the virus.
 

JPD

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Birds culled a
fter flu outbreak


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/7092057.stm

A cull of thousands of birds is under way after bird flu was confirmed in turkeys on a Suffolk farm.

The virus was discovered at Redgrave Park Farm near Diss, where all 6,500 birds are being slaughtered.

Vets are carrying out further tests on the turkeys at the centre of the outbreak to try to determine if they have the virulent H5N1 strain.

A 3km protection zone and a 10km surveillance zone have been set up and the farm is co-operating with vets.

Officials said the outbreak was of the H5 strain, but it was yet not known if it was H5N1, which can be fatal to humans.

Map of surveillance zone

Police officers are at the entrance to the farm, and vehicles are being sprayed with a jet hose.

A statement issued by the Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) confirmed preliminary tests showed the free-range turkeys at the farm had the H5 strain of bird flu.


Obviously this is another huge blow to the farming industry, which is still dealing with the effects of bluetongue and foot and mouth
National Farmers' Union president

Latest blow for farmers

Some 10% of birds in one shed had died during one night, it said, adding that further tests were needed to see if the virus was H5N1, which has killed some 200 people worldwide.

At the affected premises, all birds - including approximately 5,000 turkeys, 1,000 ducks and 500 geese - will be slaughtered within the next few hours.

It is expected that all the birds will be gassed and then put in sealed containers.

Officials said further surveillance work was ongoing in the area before decisions were made on any culls on neighbouring farms.

Redgrave Poultry, which rents the farm, said that all employees at the site had been given antiviral drugs as a precaution and that the birds on the site had been moved indoors.

Reading out a statement, William Buchanan, one of the farm directors, said staff were "fully" co-operating with Defra.

He added: "Sixty turkeys out of a flock of 1,000 from one house on the site were found dead. The site was immediately isolated and additional bio-security measures imposed."

'Huge blow'

Inside the protection and surveillance zones, bird movements are being restricted and all birds housed or isolated from contact with wild birds.

All poultry keepers on the British poultry register are also being notified about the outbreak and EU officials have been informed.

William and Geoffrey Buchanan, owners of Redgrave Park Farm
The farm's directors said they were co-operating with Defra

National Farmers' Union president Peter Kendall said the discovery of bird flu was bad news for livestock owners.

"Obviously this is another huge blow to the farming industry, which is still dealing with the effects of bluetongue and foot-and-mouth."

Acting Chief Veterinary Officer Fred Landeg told BBC News the disease was discovered on Sunday by a vet, who noticed that there had been an increasing number of deaths among turkeys in one of the five sheds on the farm.

He said that the risk of bird flu spreading was increased during the autumn months because of wild bird migration.

Mr Landeg confirmed the affected birds were free-range - meaning they had access to the outdoors and may have been of greater risk of catching the disease.

Small proportion

A statement released on behalf of poultry producer Bernard Matthews said the affected farm was not owned by the company, and none of the firm's farms fell within the exclusion zone.

More than 160,000 birds were killed after an outbreak of the virulent H5N1 strain of the disease at a Bernard Matthews turkey farm in Suffolk in February.

Consumer confidence is a big concern for the poultry industry, and the Food Standards Agency reassured customers that there was no threat to human health so long as eggs and poultry were properly cooked.

And National Farmers' Union poultry board chairman Charles Bourns insisted that turkey supply over Christmas would not be affected.

He added that the cull accounted for only a small proportion of the 10 million festive turkeys sold each year.
 

Wowser

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http://www.wtop.com/?nid=106&sid=1291154

New Zealand Quarantines 223 Over Bird Flu

November 13, 2007 - 2:53am

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) - New Zealand health authorities briefly quarantined 223 people in a Korean Air plane at Auckland Airport on Tuesday after a South Korean passenger displayed bird flu symptoms, officials said.

The woman was later deemed to be "no risk" and suffering from suspected gastroenteritis, airport police Inspector Richard Middleton said, congratulating the flight crew for notifying authorities about the potential problem.

The woman, whose name was not released, was briefly treated at a hospital in Auckland, Middleton said.

Crew on the flight, from South Korea via Australia, alerted airport authorities when the woman began vomiting and showing other possible bird flu symptoms, sparking a lockdown on the tarmac as the plane landed, said Norman Upjohn, an ambulance duty manager.

The 223 people aboard the Boeing 747 were held for about an hour under "full quarantine procedure" while a paramedic in protective clothing examined the woman, Upjohn said.


South Korea declared itself bird flu free in June, after reporting no new cases of the H5N1 strain of bird flu _ in birds or humans _ for three months. Australia and New Zealand have reported no infections of H5N1, which has killed at least 206 people worldwide since 2003, according to the World Health Organization.
 

JPD

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Suffolk bird flu confirmed as H5N1

http://new.eveningnews24.co.uk/cont...gory=news&itemid=NOED13 Nov 2007 22:10:33:863

13 November 2007 22:14

The outbreak of bird flu in Suffolk has been confirmed to be that of the H5N1 strain.

All of the 6,500 birds at the Redgrave Park Farm near Diss are being slaughtered to prevent the spread of the harmful virus and a 3 km protection zone as well as a 10km surveillance zone has been put in place around the area.

The farm had 5,000 turkeys, 1,000 ducks and 500 geese, which will be gassed and put in sealed containers as a precaution.

Hilary Benn, environment secretary, said there could be further cases in the area.

She added: “I'm not going to speculate as to whether this outbreak is going to get larger. The most important thing, having locked it down, is to trace the contacts and movements so we can take appropriate action.”

The farm has agreed to cooperate with Defra in order to stop any further spread of the disease.
 

JPD

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China provides WHO with bird flu strains

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-11/13/content_7067412.htm

BEIJING, Nov. 13 (Xinhua) -- China has provided 23 bird flu strains to the World Health Organization (WHO) and publicized all these gene sequences, Vice Agriculture Minister Niu Dun said on Tuesday.

He made the remarks in the Chinese capital at the bird flu control seminar of the Asian-Europe Meeting that aimed to appeal for more investments and inter-governmental scientific cooperation to control the influenza.

Niu noted that the international community should work together to fight against the deadly bird flu virus and to ensure healthy development of the husbandry industry.

"For this, the Chinese government has provided aid in capital, materials and technologies at its own capacity and actively participated in a series of international seminars on bird flu control."

David Nabarro, coordinator of the bird flu section of the United Nations, called for all nations to share responsibilities and conduct bird flu cooperation as an avian influenza outbreak was not bound by borders.

Bird flu first broke out in Southeast Asia at the end of 2003, and spread to Europe and Africa in 2005. To date, more than 60 countries and regions have recorded outbreaks of the fatal influenza.

According to latest WHO statistics, 334 people were confirmed to be H5N1 positive, of which 205 had died.
 

JPD

Inactive
Possible cull at second farm

http://www.eveningstar.co.uk/conten...gory=News&itemid=IPED14 Nov 2007 11:05:53:360

POULTRY farmers in Suffolk rearing turkeys, geese and chickens were today facing their nightmare before Christmas after bird flu was confirmed in the county.

The strain of the disease found at a farm on the Suffolk/Norfolk border was confirmed as being H5N1 - the form of disease which has caused human fatalities in other parts of the world.

Birds were expected to be culled at a second farm, thought to be on the Norfolk side of the county border, as a precaution after a contact moved between the two premises. There is no indication that the disease has been found anywhere else.

The news prompted restrictions to be placed on poultry farmers in Suffolk and sparked fears for the market in specialist meats for Christmas.

William Shipp has 8,000 free-range chickens at his farm in Henley, near Ipswich and is affected by restrictions imposed after the discovery of bird flu.

Today he said: “We haven't heard anything officially yet, but my son has been looking up about bird flu on the computer.

“My birds can still go out, but we have to feed and water them inside so we don't attract any wild birds to the site which can spread the disease.”

The big question worrying experts was: how did bird flu arrive on a farm in the heart of Britain's poultry industry?

The animals hit were a flock of free-range turkeys and geese being fattened at Redgrave Hall Farm, near Diss, for the specialist Christmas market.

They are kept outside, allowing them to be sold as free range, but also allowing them to come into contact with wild birds.

There is a lake at Redgrave Park which is popular with wildfowl and at this time of the year it is home to thousands of migrating birds from continental Europe.

The type of bird flu is the same as that identified in Germany and the Czech Republic earlier this year, prompting fears it could have been brought in by wild birds.

A cull of 5,000 turkeys, more than 1,000 ducks and 500 geese on the infected rearing site at Redgrave Park farm was continuing today, Defra said.

It began yesterday after the alarm was raised on Sunday by poultry producer Gressingham Foods, based in Woodbridge but with farms throughout East Anglia, following turkey deaths at the farm.

Protection and surveillance zones, set at 3km and 10km respectively, and a wider restricted area covering the whole of Suffolk and much of Norfolk have been put in place.

They restrict the movement of birds and require them to be housed and isolated from wild birds.

A report by Defra into the last outbreak of H5N1 at the Bernard Matthews poultry plant in Holton, Suffolk, in February also initially blamed wild birds but it was later decided the most likely source of the infection was imported turkey meat from Hungary.

Cieran Nelson, RSPB spokesman at the society's regional headquarters, said he understood the geese on Redgrave Lake were not migratory, with them staying at the location all the year round.

“It should be innocent until proved guilty as far as wild birds are concerned. It is presumptuous to point the finger in their direction at this stage,” he said.

Mr Shipp said he was not convinced bird flu was brought in by migrating birds.

“It's a long way for a sick bird to get from Germany to Suffolk,” he said.





IPSWICH butcher George Debman has already seen the supply of local meat vary significantly over the last year as farming has been hit by a series of crises.

And he warned that the Christmas favourite - free range turkey - could be difficult to find this year.

“The problem is for producers that they are being told to take their birds inside and that means they can't be free-range any more,” he said.

“I don't think this will undermine public confidence in the poultry industry - but it could encourage people to order earlier to ensure they get what they want.”

The region's largest poultry show should have been held this weekend at Trinity Park, allowing butchers to place their Christmas orders with farmers, but that has now been cancelled.

Mr Debman, who runs Debman Butchers in Cliff Lane, said: “I'm lucky, I get my turkeys from a farm in Essex and they aren't affected by restrictions at the moment.”
 

JPD

Inactive
Four More Farms Face Bird Flu Cull

http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/n...more-farms-face-bird-flu-cull-86908-20109321/

Nov 15 2007 By Aidan Mcgurran

THE cull of another 24,000 turkeys was announced yesterday as officials battled the latest bird flu outbreak.

The birds are being slaughtered on four farms linked to Redgrave Park Farm in Suffolk, where 6500 birds are being culled.

All the farms are operated by Gressingham Foods. A Government spokesman said it was "a precautionary measure" to contain the outbreak of the potentially deadly H5N1 strain of the virus.

He added that turkeys on the farms had all had "dangerous contact" from people or vehicles that had earlier been on Redgrave Park Farm.
 

JPD

Inactive
Birds culled in Saudi Arabia

http://tvnz.co.nz/view/page/536641/1449298

Nov 15, 2007 10:54 PM

Saudi Arabia has culled 50,000 birds at a poultry farm near the capital of Riyadh, which were found to have a deadly strain of bird flu, Saudi media reported.

An agriculture ministry statement carried by newspapers said the birds were culled at the farm in al-Kharj, 150 kilometres south of Riyadh, after 1,500 birds died earlier this week.

The statement said it was not clear how the birds had become infected with the H5N1 virus. It gave no more details.

In March, Saudi Arabia said the deadly strain of bird flu had been discovered in peacocks, turkeys, ostriches and parrots at a house in the east of the kingdom and that an unspecified number of birds in the area had been culled.

In February, Saudi Arabia lifted bans going back to 2004 on poultry imports from 42 countries.

Previously, bird flu was reported as having affected several falcons in the kingdom in 2006.
 

JPD

Inactive
BANGLADESH: Return of the bird flu threat

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/IRIN/2b7c451a508fea8f8a09f9a55cd36b40.htm

DHAKA, 15 November 2007 (IRIN) - Avian flu has re-emerged in Bangladesh after four months, with five reported new outbreaks in poultry farms across the country since October.

The contagious viral disease was first detected in Bangladesh in March 2007. Since then there have been 55 outbreaks in 19 of the country's 64 districts.

To halt a further spread of the virus, more than 250,000 chickens have been culled since the original outbreak.

"But indirect losses to farmers far surpass the direct loss," veterinarian Abul Kalam Azad of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) told IRIN in Dhaka, the capital.

Many farms have downsized operations, resulting in significant layoffs and the suspension of business, while producers of poultry feed and farm equipment have also been hard hit.

"The whole US$2 billion industry is in a very nervous state," Azad explained.

A fresh influx of migratory birds is raising further concerns. Hundreds of thousands of Siberian water fowl arrive in Bangladesh from mid-November, taking refuge in the country's vast rivers, lakes and marshlands.

"The winter months are likely to see more outbreaks," ASM Alamgir, a virologist at the Institute of Epidemiology Disease Control and Research, warned.

And though a permanent relationship between migratory birds and bird flu has yet to be proven beyond a doubt, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), "scientists are increasingly convinced that some migratory waterfowl are now carrying the H5N1 virus in its highly pathogenic form, sometimes over long distances, and introducing the virus to poultry flocks in areas that lie along their migratory routes" - all of which worries health officials in Bangladesh.

Risk factors

"At 795 persons per square kilometre, Bangladesh has the highest population density in the world. This close proximity of human beings is a risk element for transmission of any contagious disease like flu," Nazrul Haq, a member of the government's technical working group on avian influenza risk, said, adding that the hot and humid environment helps pathogens spread quickly.

Further compounding the problem is the prominent role of poultry farming. Almost all rural households keep chickens as a source of cheap protein, with about 2.4 million rural women depending on backyard chicken farming as their only source of livelihood. Even well-off families in Bangladesh raise a few chickens to supplement their income.

As a result, communicating appropriate bio-security practices such as separating domestic flocks from wild ones, hygienic slaughtering and waste disposal, use of masks while cleaning chicken coops, disinfection before and after working in poultry farms, as well as the use of personal protective equipment is already proving difficult.

"Behaviours don't change overnight," Habibur Rahman of the Bangladesh Agricultural University told IRIN. "Most of these farms do not maintain necessary sanitary and preventive measures essential for keeping chicken safe from infection," he added, estimating that there were well over 100,000 small and medium-sized farms in the country.

World Bank loan

In July, the Bangladesh government signed an agreement worth $16 million with the International Development Association, the World Bank's concessionary arm, to minimise a possible bird flu threat.

The Avian Influenza Preparedness and Response Project supports the government's National Avian Influenza and Pandemic Influenza Preparedness and Response Plan and is designed to control infections in domestic poultry, while at the same time formulating plans to control and respond to possible human infections, especially an influenza epidemic and related emergencies.

The project will be co-financed initially by a $2 million grant from the bank's Avian and Human Influenza facility; a grant that will be administered by the World Bank and is supported by nine donors, including the European Commission.

Government measures

Meanwhile, officials in Bangladesh have also taken measures, including a ban on the import of poultry-related products from affected countries, monitoring of imported day-old chicks from non-affected countries, the control of illegal poultry product trading, an improvement of laboratory facilities, as well as forming a national task force representing relevant stakeholders - including the private sector.

The government has imposed a 1km restricted area around any confirmed infection point and all poultry within the area is culled, while strict controls are imposed on the movement of poultry and poultry products within a 10km radius.

According to Abdul Motaleb, director of the government's department of livestock, the proper disposal of dead birds and contaminated materials such as eggs and faeces is also now ensured, while surveillance and monitoring have been strengthened.

"We have trained 320,000 community volunteers on bird flu prevention. They are going from door-to-door in rural Bangladesh to communicate and train women on safe and sanitary practices that can prevent bird flu," Motaleb added.

According to WHO, as of 12 November, 335 humans have been infected with the virus globally, of whom 206 died. That means 61 out of every 100 human cases are fatal. Nine of the 12 countries where bird to human transmission took place are in Asia.

There have been no cases of human infection in Bangladesh.
 

JPD

Inactive
Workers in Al-Kharj Test Negative for Bird Flu

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1&section=0&article=103624&d=16&m=11&y=2007

Arab News


RIYADH, 16 November 2007 — Poultry workers, who recently came into contact with birds carrying the bird flu virus in Al-Kharj, 150 kilometers south of Riyadh, tested negative to the virus, the Ministry of Health recently announced in a statement carried by the Saudi Press Agency.

The ministry also added that all of the 50,000 birds at the farm were culled and that the measures were taken after the death of 1,500 birds at the farm caused by the H5N1 strain of bird flu.

The Ministry of Agriculture is also investigating the source of the disease and has taken steps to guarantee that the disease does not affect other farms in the area.

The ministry has also called upon poultry farmers to strictly implement safety regulations. The Kingdom had banned all live poultry imports after bird flu was last detected in at a farm in the Eastern Province.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu effort reaches new level

http://www.eveningstar.co.uk/conten...gory=News&itemid=IPED16 Nov 2007 11:16:11:190

VOLUNTEER staff from all departments at Suffolk's Endeavour House headquarters were today joining trading standards officers to try to defeat bird flu in Suffolk.

About 30 extra staff were drafted in from desk jobs in Ipswich to join trading standards officers visiting premises in the control zones near the original outbreak at Redgrave on the Suffolk/Norfolk border.

Three other farms had their birds culled yesterday because staff had travelled between them. Initially it was not thought that the disease itself had spread.

But later it was announced that scientists believed the disease had spread to a farm at Botesdale - next to Redgrave - which is part of the Redgrave Farms company.

However while there were signs that the disease had spread through human contact, there is as yet no sign that it has got into the wild bird population.

County council officials are helping civil servants from the government's Department of the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA), who are trying to manage the outbreak.

County spokesman Francis Thomas said: “We are visiting people with poultry and telling them how they should be keeping their birds inside.

“We are issuing notices, and if necessary offering assistance to them. It is not always easy to move a few free-range birds into a shed.

“We asked for volunteers to help the trading standards team during this situation, and about 30 people from all departments have volunteered to help out,” he said.

DEFRA has asked people in the area to monitor any dead wild birds they find - but so far none has tested positive for the lethal H5N1 virus.

The incubation period of the disease is up to five days - so if no wild birds are found in the next 48 hours there will be hopes that bird flu has been confined to the two farms on the Suffolk/Norfolk border.



POULTRY keepers were today reminded to house their birds as animal health experts tried to get on top of the bird flu outbreak in Suffolk.

Suffolk County Council issued an advisory note to poultry keepers in the controlled zones around Redgrave stating that if they are directed by a veterinary inspector on welfare or other grounds to isolate their birds instead of housing them, they must:

ensure there is no contact with poultry or captive birds on other premises

cover all food and water so there is no access for wild birds

minimise contact with wild birds and use wild bird deterrents

have stringent biosecurity controls in place

check the welfare of birds daily for signs of disease, and

report any signs of disease to a vet immediately or to Animal Health at Bury St Edmunds on 01284 778150.

For information about the control zones and the latest news, please check the DEFRA website at www.defra.gov.uk or the Suffolk County Council website at www.suffolk.gov.uk.
 

kelee877

Veteran Member
Thanks JPD..it is so great to have you back..

I have couple things to add; new outbreaks
Bangladesh(SP)
U.K
Vietnam
Saudi Arabia...

I found this about CHina..and we do not hear much from them about any outbreaks, because of the upcoming Olympics there...this artical has put hospitals in China on alert and to report any SARS or Bird Flu cases...If we have not heard of any outbreaks in their poultry, then why would they raise the alert levels in their hospitals...:spns:

http://english.eastday.com/eastday/englishedition/metro/userobject1ai3227972.html

City wary about unidentified pneumonia 14/11/2007 16:01





Echo Hu/ Shanghai Daily news
Shanghai is stepping up efforts to prevent infectious respiratory diseases as viruses that lead to human bird flu, flu and severe acute respiratory syndrome could become active.

The Shanghai Health Bureau issued a warning yesterday and ordered local hospitals to report any unidentified pneumonia case through an online network to health bureaus at the district or county levels promptly from tomorrow to April 15.

District and county-level health bureaus are responsible for organizing medical experts within 24 hours to check if the cases involve human bird flu or SARS, and cases that are suspected to be bird flu should be reported to the city's health bureau immediately.

Local medical institutes are required to isolate patients who are diagnosed with infectious respiratory diseases or have similar symptoms to prevent the viruses from spreading.

The city's 43 monitoring sites that are designated by health authorities should report the number of flu cases to district and county-level disease control and prevention centers on a daily basis, the health bureau said.

The Shanghai Health Bureau reminds residents to be vigilant about respiratory diseases and receive treatment at medical institutes as soon as possible.


 

JPD

Inactive
Suffolk bird flu zone census

http://www.eveningstar.co.uk/conten...gory=News&itemid=IPED17 Nov 2007 07:59:51:527

AN army of volunteers has visited more than 3,000 homes within the bird flu surveillance zone in a bid to prevent the virus spreading.

It came as Redgrave Poultry last night confirmed that turkeys found dead on a second farm in Botesdale had tested negative for the disease.

Defra said a poultry census was now underway in the 10km surveillance area set up around Redgrave Park Farm - where the highly-pathogenic H5N1 strain of bird flu was confirmed earlier this week - to establish exactly how many birds were there.

Defra's regional operations director Heather Peck said: “We are still in what the chief veterinary officer has called a period of uncertainty.”

She said council workers had volunteered to help carry out this work and to give advice to residents on what to look out for.

Speaking to the EADT on a visit to the region, East of England minister Barbara Follett praised farmers for the way they had dealt with the current bird flu outbreak and the bluetongue cases earlier this year, as well as those now leading efforts to contain avian influenza.

“This is a really professional operation. What is so impressive is seeing so many different agencies working with the owners of poultry,” she said.

“There is no sense of frantic activity but a great deal of care being taken regarding public safety.

“The stress for farmers must be immense. Everybody in this region must be congratulated for the way they have been stoic in what they have been through.”

All of the workers tested earlier this week have been declared clear of the disease.

Defra has traced every movement on and off Redgrave Park Farm, including checking feed lorries, waste trucks, straw trucks and rodent control workers.

Poultry at Grove Farm, Botesdale, was slaughtered on suspicion of having the virus after dozens of birds were found dead by officials. But tests on 30 birds showed they did not have the virus.

Redgrave Poultry's operations director Geoffrey Buchanan said no evidence of bird flu had been found at three other sites operated by the company in the wider restricted area where precautionary culls are underway.

All four premises share staff with Redgrave Park, and were being culled because of fears they had been exposed to the virus through workers.

Mr Buchanan said Defra began culling birds at Hill Meadow Farm, Knettishall, Suffolk, yesterday and would be starting culls at Stone House, West Harling, Norfolk, and Bridge Farm, Pulham Market, Norfolk, last night.

Acting chief veterinary officer Fred Landeg said: “Whilst this is good news and we've had no more cases confirmed, we're still at a very early stage of this outbreak.”

Preliminary results on ducks and geese culled at Redgrave Park showed they also tested negative.
 

JPD

Inactive
Saudi Arabia Links Two New Farms To Deadly Bird Flu Outbreak

http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/7009184963

Windsor Genova - AHN News Writer

Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (AHN) - Saudi Arabia's Agricultural Ministry on Friday said 90,000 birds from two more poultry farms near the capital Riyadh were culled after coming in contact with the avian influenza.

Dr. Fahad Balghunayim, with the ministry, said Saudi Arabian officials are trying to contain the bird flu outbreak to just two farms located 50 miles (80 kilometers) west of Riyadh.

These two new farms join a third confirmed case of the deadly H5N1 strain of the virus.

The first farm linked to the outbreak is located in Al-Kharj, 50 miles south of Riyadh. On Wednesday, the ministry said 50,000 birds were culled from the Al-Kharj farm after 1,500 birds tested positive for the virus.

Authorities found no human cases of bird flu.

Authorities are suspecting that the outbreak was caused by migratory birds. But an investigation is ongoing to determine the source of the outbreak.
 

JPD

Inactive
21 monitored for bird flu

http://www.ameinfo.com/138750.html

21 people have been put under observation in hospitals across Saudi Arabia after developing symptoms similar to those associated with bird flu, reported the Saudi Gazette. All of the patients have tested negative for the virus thus far but a number were involved in the mass culling of 100,000 birds in various locations in the kingdom after the H5N1 strain was discovered in Al Kharj.
 

JPD

Inactive
Cull ends at bird flu farms in East Anglia

http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5hsb0TxqDoo4pGn9PS531Iu2eXA8A

LONDON (AFP) — Officials have completed a cull aimed at stopping a bird flu outbreak in eastern England from spreading, the environment ministry said Sunday.

It said it had finished culling operations at four premises identified as having had dangerous contact with the farm where the potentially lethal H5N1 strain of avian influenza was confirmed on Tuesday.

"Laboratory tests on samples from these premises are under way. There is no timetable for when the results will be received," the ministry said in a statement.

Approximately 28,600 birds were culled in total, including those on the original farm in the country of Suffolk.

The outbreak is the latest blow to the British farming industry this year.

Suffolk was hit by an outbreak of H5N1 at a turkey farm in February.

Some 159,000 turkeys were killed as a precaution. An official report said it was most likely the virus reached the flock via imported turkey meat from Hungary.

Britain's first foot and mouth disease cases since 2001 were found in August and the country's first ever cases of bluetongue disease in cattle soon after.
 
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