12/5/07-12/11/07|Weekly Bird Flu Thread:UN don't lower guard against bird flu

JPD

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UN warns against lowering guard against bird flu

http://www.app.com.pk/en/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=22607&Itemid=2

UNITED NATIONS, Dec 5 (APP): The U.N. agriculture agency warned Tuesday that continued vigilance is needed to avert a global pandemic of avian influenza as Chinese health officials reported a new case of fatal infection in a human.



Jacques Diouf, Director-General of the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), told an international ministerial conference on bird flu in New Delhi that control efforts must be maintained, given that the H5N1 virus responsible for outbreaks in recent years is still circulating in some parts of the world, according to a press statement issued at UN Headquarters in New York.

“The spread of avian influenza typifies the potential emergence of major health crises, with an increased risk of pathogens travelling over large distances in very short time periods, favoured by globalization and climate change” he said.

Diouf stressed the need for robust control efforts led by well-equipped veterinary services when dealing with animals, especially poultry, to prevent the spread of the virus throughout the production chain.

“We are still uncertain as to the precise the role played by wild birds. There are real risks of viruses emerging against which current vaccines provide no protection.”

He added that the international community will have to prepare for other major health crises to potentially emerge from the animal kingdom, especially given the acceleration of international trade and the impact of climate change.

Meanwhile, the UN World Health Organization (WHO) reported Tuesday that China’s national laboratory confirmed on Sunday that a 24-year-old man from Jiangsu province who had developed symptoms last month and then died at the weekend was infected with the H5N1 virus.

“There is no initial indication to suggest he had contact with sick birds prior to becoming unwell” WHO said in a media statement. “Close contacts have been placed under medical observation and all remain well.”

So far in China, of the 26 confirmed human cases of infection with the H5N1 virus, 17 have been fatal. Some 60 countries in Asia, Europe and Africa have been affected by bird flu since 2003, with most outbreaks confined to domestic poultry, such as chickens, turkeys, geese, ducks and quails.
 

JPD

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Saudi culls 60,000, bans shipment of birds to Mecca

http://www.arabianbusiness.com/505655-saudi-culls-60000-bans-shipment-of-birds-to-mecca?ln=en

by Wael Mahdi on Wednesday, 05 December 2007
Around four million birds have not been culled in Saudi Arabia. (Getty Images)
Around four million birds have not been culled in Saudi Arabia. (Getty Images)

Saudi Arabia killed close 60,000 birds on Tuesday in the latest discovery of the deadly disease in the kingdom, bringing the total number birds culled to around four million.

The discovery at another table-egg farm in the Al-Kharj region south of the capital Riyadh is the 15th in the area, as fears continue to grow that the disease may spread to other parts of the kingdom.

The ministry last week assured that farms surrounding the port city of Jeddah, the gateway for pilgrims to Mecca and Medina, are still safe from the bird flu.

Concerns over the spread of the H5N1 strain have grown steadily in recent weeks as Saudi Arabia prepares for the Hajj, with around three million of pilgrims expected to gather in the holy cities of Mecca and Median.

As a precaution, the Agriculture Ministry on Tuesday banned the shipment of live birds from the Riyadh area to Mecca for the next month.

All cases of bird flu in the kingdom so far have come from the Riyadh province.

The ministry on Monday banned the import of hatching eggs from the UK after the World Organisation of Animal Health (OIE) reported the discovery of outbreaks at two farms in Redgrave and Knettishall in November.

The OIE said that 15,300 birds were destroyed at the two locations.
 

JPD

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India needs more cash for "massive" bird flu threat

http://ca.today.reuters.com/news/ne...T_0_NEWS-BIRDFLU-INDIA-COL.XML&archived=False

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India needs more funding to deal with the "massive threat" of bird flu, the prime minister told a conference of international bird flu experts in the Indian capital on Wednesday.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said the international community must renew its commitments to deal with the disease, which has killed more than 200 people since 2003 and could potentially lead to a deadly human pandemic.

"Many pledges have been fulfilled," said Singh, according to a transcript of his speech. "However we need more funding support."

John Lange, the United States' special representative for avian and pandemic influenza, said the U.S. would announce later in the conference a large increase in U.S. funding.

The United States had already pledged $434 million in international assistance a year ago, Lange said.

India, home to millions of farmers who keep poultry in their yards, has seen three major outbreaks of bird flu in poultry since 2006, all of which were brought under control, but has not reported any human cases.

Singh stressed that countries must focus on animal health as well as human health to deal with the disease, and that measures to prevent outbreaks in backyard poultry remained limited for now.

"The best available strategy is to control it at the level of the animal," he said. "Investments in public health will be unproductive without ensuring the health of our livestock."

He said an Indian laboratory had developed a poultry vaccine using the Indian strain, and other research efforts continued.

For now, humans usually contract the virus only after close contact with infected birds, with the virus killing nearly two-thirds of the people it infects.

But experts worry it may mutate into a form easily transmitted from person to person, leading to a pandemic.

Around a fifth of humanity could fall ill should there be another flu pandemic, according to estimates cited by the World Health Organisation, with catastrophic effects on the global economy.

There have been roughly three flu pandemics each century since the 16th century, the WHO says.

(Reporting by Jonathan Allen and Alex Richardson)
 

JPD

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Vietnam to import vaccines against bird flu virus strains H7N3, H7N8

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-12/05/content_7203110.htm

HANOI, Dec. 5 (Xinhua) -- Vietnam has planned to import vaccines against bird flu virus strains H7N3 and H7N8 to prevent potential outbreaks among fowls, local newspaper Saigon Liberation reported Wednesday.

The planned import follows recent outbreaks of H7N3 and H7N8 among poultry in South Korea and Canada.

Now, bird flu virus strain H5N1 is hitting Vietnam's northern Cao Bang province, and central Quang Tri province, according to the Department of Animal Health under the Vietnamese Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development.

H5N1 outbreaks in Vietnam, starting in December 2003, leading to the forced culling of dozens of millions of fowls in the country.
 

JPD

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Ministry set to lift H5N1 bird flu control zones

http://uk.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idUKL0663743220071206

LONDON (Reuters) - The farm ministry announced plans on Thursday to lift poultry movement controls and other restrictions linked to the recent outbreak of the deadly H5N1 bird flu virus in eastern England.

The ministry said in a statement that one of the two protection zones would be lifted on Saturday and the second on Monday if there were no new setbacks in the battle to contain the outbreak.

A requirement to house birds in a restricted zone will also be ended on Monday while the wider restricted and surveillance zones are expected to be lifted on December 19.

Britain confirmed an outbreak at the Redgrave Park farm on the border of Norfolk and Suffolk on November 13.

The virus also spread to the nearby Hill Meadow farm which shares the same workforce.

The ministry has been unable to pinpoint the source of the outbreak although wild birds have not been ruled out.

The virulent H5N1 strain has killed more than 200 people worldwide since 2003 and millions of birds had either died from it or been killed to prevent its spread.
 

JPD

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Spy chief's flu warning

http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/story/0,22606,22876939-910,00.html

AN McPHEDRAN, DEFENCE WRITER

December 05, 2007 08:30pm

AUSTRALIA faces a "real" threat of a flu outbreak as serious as the 1918 Spanish pandemic which killed up to 100 million people, one of the country's top intelligence chiefs has warned.
Peter Varghese, the head of the Office of National Assessments, said Australia faced a "real" threat of a repeat of the pandemic.

He said changes in the flu virus, and in the human and animal populations, raised the threat of a fresh outbreak.

The 1918 pandemic claimed up to 20 per cent of people infected by the virus and about half of those were aged between 20 and 40. The Influenza A virus strain killed more than 12,000 Australians.

In a rare public speech at a security government conference in Canberra yesterday, the ONA boss said the list of issues affecting the nation's security until 2025 was "long and will keep growing". He played down the threat from climate change in the pre-2025 period, but said resource security, including oil supplies, water scarcity and fish stocks, would be major preoccupations of governments. "This will heighten tension among major and emerging powers, but shouldn't by itself cause war," Mr Varghese said.

He predicted Australian forces would be in Afghanistan for more than a decade and said terrorism would remain a destabilising force for at least a generation. Islamic extremism would also be a threat in our region for a decade.

"The West will have little ability to influence Islamist ideology or the political environment in Muslim states which will change only slowly," Mr Varghese said.

In just his second public speech in 18 months, he highlighted the emergence of China and India as key strategic and military drivers for the next 20 years. "Barring major setbacks, China by 2025 will have strategic influence beyond East Asia and will have the strongest Asian military," Mr Varghese said.

Australian Security Intelligence Organisation boss Paul O'Sullivan used his speech to warn "non-state factors" such as al-Qaida would continue to be a major threat.

He said al-Qaida and the global Islamic extremist movement had shown it was possible for networked extremists to operate simultaneously across the globe.
 

JPD

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Benin finds two bird flu outbreaks, suspects H5N1

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20071207/sc_nm/benin_birdflu_dc



By Samuel Elijah 26 minutes ago

COTONOU (Reuters) - Benin has discovered two outbreaks of bird flu among poultry which it believes to be the deadly H5N1 strain, the first such cases in the West African country, a senior health official said on Friday.

The cases were discovered late on Thursday in Adjarra, some 9 miles north of the capital Porto Novo, and on a farm in the commercial capital Cotonou.

"We found several dead birds. We went ahead with tests which turned out to be positive," Julien Toessi, a senior public health official, told Reuters in an interview.

"We have taken samples which we have already sent to Italy to be confirmed but we are convinced that these (bird) deaths are due to the H5N1 strain of bird flu," he said.

Health Ministry officials said several hundred birds had been slaughtered as a precautionary measure in a 3 mile radius around the two separate locations. All farms within a nine mile radius were being disinfected.

The import of poultry had been banned and restrictions on the movement of birds between farms imposed.

Benin's eastern neighbor Nigeria has been one of the countries worst affected by bird flu in the region, reporting sub-Saharan Africa's first confirmed human death from the disease early this year.

Its western neighbor, Togo, declared its first outbreak of the most deadly strain of avian influenza in June and has since found new cases.

H5N1 bird flu has killed more than 200 people around the world, mainly in Asia, since the disease re-emerged in Hong Kong in 2003, according to the World Health Organization.

Outbreaks in Africa have raised alarm bells because epidemiologists fear the continent's widespread poverty, lack of proper veterinary and medical facilities and huge informal farming sector could allow outbreaks to go unnoticed for longer, increasing the risk of the virus mutating
 

Tink

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Thanks JPD.

I really need to buy a globe. Never heard of alot of these places till your articles.
 

Wowser

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http://www.reuters.com/article/heal...edType=RSS&feedName=healthNews&rpc=22&sp=true


China says father of bird flu victim also infected

Fri Dec 7, 2007 11:02am EST

BEIJING (Reuters) - The father of a Chinese man who died from the H5N1 strain of bird flu last week has also been diagnosed with the disease, authorities said on Friday.

The National Disease Authority has confirmed that a 52-year-old man surnamed Lu from the Nanjing, capital of the eastern province Jiangsu, was feverish with the H5N1 strain on Thursday, the Ministry of Health reported on its Web site (www.moh.gov.cn).

This latest case raises troublesome questions about how the man was infected.

Humans can contract H5N1 from close contact with infected birds, but scientists fear the disease could mutate into a version that spreads from person-to-person, risking wider outbreaks or even a global pandemic.

Lu's son died on Sunday from the same disease, making the question of how these two infections occurred especially important.

The Xinhua news agency had earlier reported that the son had had no contact with dead poultry and there had been no reported poultry outbreak in the province.

The latest report did not say whether contact with infected poultry had been confirmed in either of the infections.

With the world's biggest poultry population and millions of backyard birds roaming free, China is at the centre of the fight against bird flu.

This latest case brings the number of confirmed human infections of bird flu in China to 27. The Ministry of Health said the World Health Organization had been notified of this latest case.

WHO representatives in Beijing could not be contacted for comment late on Friday evening.

(Reporting by Chris Buckley; Editing by Alex Richardson)
 

JPD

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New China bird flu case raises human-to-human fear

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20071207/hl_afp/healthfluchina



by Dan Martin 1 hour, 5 minutes ago

BEIJING (AFP) - The father of China's latest bird flu victim also has the disease, officials said Friday, prompting World Health Organisation (WHO) fears of possible human-to-human transmission.
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A Chinese health ministry statement said a 52-year-old man named Lu in the eastern city of Nanjing had the H5N1 strain, which killed his son on Sunday and has reportedly caused more than 200 deaths worldwide since 2003.

The WHO in Geneva said there were three possible explanations for the father-son case: either they were infected by the same animal, by transmission between them, or by exposure to two different infected animals.

The deadly H5N1 strain has passed from human to human only in very rare cases but scientists fear that such transmission could become more efficient and widespread through mutation, causing a global pandemic.

Jiangsu province health department said this week that it had not determined how the dead man contracted the virus as he was not known to have had contact with dead poultry.

The new case brings to at least 27 the number of infections in China, where 17 people have died from bird flu.

"The patient, a 52-year-old male surnamed Lu from Nanjing in Jiangsu, is the father of the serious case of bird flu diagnosed on December 2," said the statement posted on the health ministry website.

"On December 6, the China Disease Prevention and Control Center confirmed the presence of the H5N1 bird flu strain."

The man developed a fever and pneumonia symptoms on Monday while under medical observation following his son's death, the statement said.

The ministry added that all people who had been in contact with the older man were under observation but no new cases had appeared, and that it had promptly notified the World Health Organisation.

WHO spokesman John Rainford said cases of human-to-human transmission are very rare, citing only three previous cases in Vietnam, Cambodia and Indonesia.

Another WHO official, Christiane McNab, said 69 people had been in contact with Lu, and none seemed to have bird flu.

"If this is a case of contact between humans, the virus isn't virulent, otherwise other people would have been infected," she said.

Lu's son, 24, was hospitalised 10 days ago after developing pneumonia, Xinhua news agency reported at the time, citing Jiangsu health department. His condition deteriorated in hospital and he died on Sunday, Xinhua said.

The Chinese health ministry gave no further details on the condition of the new patient, whether he had had contact with poultry, nor any information on possible human-to-human transmission.

While the disease is usually associated with contact with infected birds, only one confirmed human case in China has followed a poultry outbreak.

China conducted a huge campaign last year to contain the disease, slaughtering tens of thousands of fowl.

Vice Agriculture Minister Yin Chengjie, however, warned this September that much of the country remained ill-equipped to prevent its spread.

The H5N1 strain has killed more than 200 people worldwide since 2003, according to the WHO
 

JPD

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WHO confirms father of Chinese bird flu victim also infected

http://www.straitstimes.com/Latest+News/Asia/STIStory_184528.html

BEIJING - THE father of a Chinese man who died of bird flu has also been infected with the H5N1 virus that causes the disease, the World Health Organization reported on Friday, saying it could not rule out the possibility of human-to-human infection.

Joanna Brent, a Beijing-based WHO spokeswoman, said the father began presenting symptoms on Monday and was confirmed as having the virus on Wednesday. She said he was being monitored in hospital.

'Because the possibility of human to human transmission cannot be ruled out, we will be monitoring this case closely,' Brent told reporters.

'If it is found to be easily passed between humans, we would be concerned,' Ms Brent said.

Ms Brent said there was no evidence that the man had been infected by his 24-year-old son, who died on Dec 2, but said the possibility could not yet be eliminated. Chinese news reports gave the man's age as 52. Both he and his son, who lived in the eastern province of Jiangsu, were identified only by their surname, Lu.

Ms Brent said it was also possible that both men were infected by the same bird, or that they were infected separately from different sources.

Ms Brent said health authorities were monitoring another 68 people who were in close contact with the son, none of whom have so far shown symptoms of H5N1 infection. She said that seemed to indicate that it was unlikely that the virus was being easily passed between humans.

China has not confirmed any cases of human-to-human infection, although the sister of a Chinese boy who was diagnosed with H5N1 in 2005 later became sick and died. Authorities were not able to confirm whether the girl had been infected with H5N1.

Sporadic human-to-human transmission of the highly viral and hard-to-treat H5N1 flu strain has been reported in Hong Kong, Vietnam and Indonesia, but none of the cases have been proven, and officials determined there was no epidemiological significance because the spread was not sustained.

Despite that, Dr. David Nabarro, the U.N. official coordinating the global fight against bird flu, said last month that the risk of a worldwide human-to-human pandemic remains as great today as it was when H5N1 first gained intense media attention in mid-2005.

Bird flu in poultry and wild birds has since spread to 60 nations, but improved responses have limited it mainly to just six nations: Indonesia, parts of Bangladesh, Vietnam, Egypt, Nigeria and China.

Experts say the virus has not been able to commingle its genetic material with that of a human influenza virus and, in so doing, acquire the ability to be transmitted from person to person.

Most people killed by the disease so far have been infected by domestic fowl, and the virus remains very hard for humans to catch; about half the people infected die. But experts fear it could mutate into a form that easily spreads among humans, sparking a pandemic that some have said could kill anywhere from 5 million to 150 million.
 

JPD

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Human Source of Bird Flu Infection Can't Be Ruled Out, WHO Says

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aVbDhWQkg4s4&refer=home

By Jason Gale and Belinda Cao

Dec. 8 (Bloomberg) -- Human-to-human transmission can't be ruled out as the source of bird flu in a man whose son died of the infection in eastern China six day ago, a World Health Organization official said today.

The WHO was informed of the case late yesterday and is ``hoping to arrange a meeting with China's Ministry of Health to offer support and to get more details'' on the case, said Joanna Brent, a Beijing-based spokeswoman for the United Nations agency.

The 52-year-old man from Nanjing in Jiangsu province was confirmed to have the H5N1 avian influenza strain on Dec. 6, the health ministry said yesterday in a statement on its Web site. He developed a fever on Dec. 3, a day after his 24-year-old son died. An initial investigation found no evidence the younger man had contact with sick birds prior to becoming unwell.

``We are not ruling anything in or out'' in determining the source of the father's infection, Brent said in a telephone interview. He may have been infected by a common virus source, a separate source, or from his son's respiratory secretions, she said.

At least 336 people in a dozen countries have contracted the virus since 2003. Three of every five cases were fatal and most were caused by contact with infected poultry, such as children playing with them or adults butchering them or plucking feathers, according to the Geneva-based WHO.

Disease trackers monitor clusters of two or more linked cases to gauge whether the virus is becoming adept at infecting humans not just birds. Millions of people could die if H5N1 develops the characteristics of seasonal flu and begins spreading easily between humans through coughing and sneezing.

Inefficient Transmission

The WHO ``would be concerned'' if the H5N1 virus had been passed between family members in China's latest case, Brent said. In the event that it did, it's unlikely that it would represent the ``efficient'' human-to-human transmission that could signal the start of a pandemic, she said. ``No further medical abnormalities have been detected'' by Chinese authorities in the 70 or more people in close contact with either man, she said.

Excluding the two most recent cases, China has reported 25 human H5N1 infections, 16 of which were fatal. The previous case had occurred in May in a 19-year-old male soldier serving in Fujian province. There had been no initial indication to suggest he had contact with sick birds prior to becoming unwell, the WHO said in a May 30 statement.

A study by researchers in China in June found that so- called wet markets where fresh meat and vegetables are sold might be an important host of avian flu viruses in urban centers.

Researchers led by the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention in Beijing looked for the source of H5N1 avian influenza infection in six patients who lived in cities and had no known exposure to sick or dead birds. They found all had visited so-called wet markets before becoming ill, and may have touched contaminated surfaces or inhaled virus-containing dust.
 

JPD

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New center of bird flu virus found in Poland

http://en.rian.ru/world/20071209/91546908.html

WARSAW, December 9 (RIA Novosti) - A new center of H5N1 bird flu virus has been found in central Poland, the country's chief veterinary doctor said on Sunday.

This is the fourth case of avian flu registered by Polish veterinary authorities since last week when the deadly virus was discovered at three turkey farms in the country.

Ewa Lech said the Polish veterinary authorities had set a safety zone around the site to prevent the spread of the virus.

Russia imposed on Thursday temporary restrictions on the import of poultry, eggs and all poultry products from Poland following an outbreak of bird flu in the country.

Russia's agricultural watchdog Rosselkhoznadzor said the restrictions also applied to bird feed and feed additives, as well as used bird-farming equipment.

Poland is still subject to a two-year Russian embargo on its meat products, imposed over allegations Poland was supplying poor-quality meat from third countries. In retaliation, Poland has vetoed talks on a new Russia-EU partnership and cooperation agreement.
 

JPD

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Father of bird flu victim in E China shows signs of recovery

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-12/08/content_7219146.htm

NANJING, Dec. 8 (Xinhua) -- The father of a young man who died from the H5N1 strain of bird flu in east China's Jiangsu Province last Sunday was recovering on Saturday after he was infected with the same virus, the provincial health authorities said.

The 52-year-old man surnamed Lu from Nanjing, capital of Jiangsu, showed "signs of improvement", according to bird flu prevention experts in Jiangsu.

Lu was feverish on Monday when he was under medical observation at home. Medical experts immediately sent him to the designated hospital for treatment.

The experts said the signs of improvement proved his treatment was timely and effective.

The local government had taken prevention and control measures. All the people who had close contact with Lu have been put under strict medical observation. So far, they have shown no signs of the disease.

The Ministry of Health had also reported the case to the World Health Organization, authorities in Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan, and some foreign governments.

Lu's son was said to have no contact with dead poultry and the Jiangsu Animal Husbandry and Veterinary Bureau said no bird flu epidemic had been discovered in the province.

China has reported 27 human cases of bird flu since 2003. Lu's son was the 17th Chinese who died of the disease since 2003.

Scientists fear the virus could mutate into a form that could pass easily from person to person, sparking a global pandemic.
 

JPD

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China hunts father-and-son bird flu link

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20071210/hl_nm/birdflu_china_dc

BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese health authorities said on Monday they were hunting for the causal link between a son and his father both struck by bird flu, but have found no evidence that the virus has mutated into a new strain.

The 52-year old father was diagnosed with the H5N1 strain of bird flu late last week in the eastern province of Jiangsu, days after his 24-year old son died from the disease.

This rare case of two family members struck by the disease has drawn urgent concern from health authorities, because humans almost always contract H5N1 from infected birds.

Experts fear the virus could mutate into a strain that jumps easily from person to person, risking wider outbreaks.

Chinese Health Ministry spokesman Mao Qun'an said analysis of a sample taken from the dead son indicated the bird flu virus had not mutated, but he could not exclude the possibility of human-to-human infection in this case.

"The virus is still avian and has not undergone a mutation in its nature," he told a news conference.

Mao said one of the men might nonetheless have infected the other through close contact, or they might have become infected from another source or separate sources.

"We can't offer a final determination on these three possibilities," he said, according to a government Web cast (www.china.com.cn). "There is a thorough investigation under way."

Hans Troedsson, the World Health Organisation's China country representative, said that even if the man was infected by his son, he had no epidemic fears at present following the new case.

"We know that this strain that we have seen here in China, Vietnam, Indonesia and Thailand has a very limited capability for human-to-human transmission," he told a news conference.

"As long as it is that limited it can't cause any larger human-to-human epidemic," Troedsson added.

The official Xinhua news agency earlier reported that the son had had no contact with dead poultry and there had been no reported poultry outbreak in Jiangsu province.

With the world's biggest poultry population and millions of backyard birds, China is at the centre of the fight against bird flu. There have been other cases of human infection without confirmed outbreaks among birds in the same area.

A Hong Kong newspaper controlled by the mainland said on Monday that the two men had both eaten chicken that was not fully cooked. The Ta Kung Pao paper cited unnamed sources as saying they had eaten the partly raw chicken in a restaurant in Nanjing, capital of Jiangsu.

Troedsson said there had been no confirmation of that.

The latest cases bring the number of confirmed human infections of bird flu in China to 27, with 17 deaths.

Spokesman Mao said the father was now in a stable condition and showing signs of improvement.
 

JPD

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Indonesia confirms another bird flu death

http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=31&art_id=nw20071211093116222C227458

December 11 2007 at 10:50AM

Jakarta - A 28-year-old woman from the outskirts of the Indonesian capital has been confirmed as dying of bird flu, raising the toll in the nation worst affected by H5N1 to 92, the health ministry said on Tuesday.

Two laboratory tests on the woman, who died on Monday at a hospital in Jakarta, showed that she was infected with the highly pathogenic virus, a statement from the ministry's bird flu information centre said.

Two positive results of tests on blood and tissue samples from a victim are needed before Indonesian authorities confirm a bird flu infection.

Muhammad Nadhirin, an official at the centre, said that a team of five experts had been dispatched on Monday to the victim's neighbourhood.

No birds however had died in the area in the past six months

The team said that "the source of infection could be from poultry 100 metres away from the victim's house, but we're waiting for test results on whether the poultry is infected with the virus", Nadhirin told AFP.

He said the victim, who had sold ornamental plants, bought plant fertiliser from the neighbour which may have been contaminated by the faeces of infected birds. No birds however had died in the area in the past six months and the poultry appeared healthy, he added.

The virus is usually transmitted to humans from infected birds.

Scientists fear, however, that the virus may mutate into a form easily transmissible between humans, sparking a deadly global pandemic that the World Bank has said could cost up to two trillion dollars.

The victim, named Mutiah, lived in the satellite city of Tangerang, just west of Jakarta, where three other bird flu deaths have been reported since October.

Confirmation of the latest death comes as some 10 000 international visitors attend a UN climate change summit on the Indonesian resort island of Bali, about 970 kilometres away from Jakarta.

The latest Indonesian H5N1 death follows that of a 24-year-old man in China's eastern Jiangsu province on December 2 from the same virus.

The man's father was also infected, raising fears of human-to-human transmission, but there was no biological evidence of this, Chinese officials said Monday. No reports of outbreaks in birds had occurred in the province.

The World Bank said last week that international donors had committed more than 400 million dollars to fight bird flu at a conference on the virus in New Delhi aimed at devising ways to tackle the disease.

But the Bank has projected a need for 1,2 billion dollars over the next two to three years to help countries fight bird flu.

Excluding the latest death, H5N1 has killed 207 people worldwide since late 2003, though the number of deaths has declined from 79 in 2006 to 49 this year, according to the World Health Organisation's official toll.
 

JPD

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China Warns Of Bird Flu in Winter Time

http://www.efluxmedia.com/news_China_Warns_Of_Bird_Flu_in_Winter_Time_11638.html

Chinese authorities released a warning of a “very high” possibility of outbreaks of bird flu in the next few months of winter and spring. Health officials are searching for the link between a son and his father, who both got infected with the virus.

Last week a 24-year-old man surnamed Lu died after he was infected with the H5N1 strain of bird flu. His death is the first one in the country since June and brings the death toll from the bird flu to 17.

His father, 52, also surnamed Lu, was hospitalized of bird flu last week. Questions were raised of how he was infected.

Xinhua said that the son hadn’t had any contact with dead poultry and that no outbreak of bird flu was reported in Jiangsu province, home of the two men, Reuters reports.

China has the biggest poultry population in the world and is the main country fighting against bird flu.

Vice Agriculture Minister Yin Chengjie said Tuesday expressed his fears for the winter and spring months, saying he is not optimistic because in this period the virus is very contagious, Voice of America informs.

Yin also said that the methods of poultry breeding, slaughter, delivery need to be improved and that in some regions the prevention measures were not completed.

He urged local authorities to hurry on the immunization process and testing of poultry at the borders and in wetlands.

Chinese health officials are searching for an answer of how the Chinese man, whose son died of bird flu, got the disease. They fear that the virus could duffer mutation and be transmitted from person to person.

According to the World Health Organization, in China there have been 26 human infections with the virus of bird flu in recent years, 17 of the cases ended in death.

Last months outbreaks of bird flu were reported in South Korea, Burma and Hong Kong.

Since its first outbreak in 2003 over 200 people have died of it, according to the WHO.
 

JPD

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Poland battling against 4th bird flu outbreak

http://www.worldpoultry.net/news/id2205-37385/poland_battling_against_4th_bird_flu_outbreak.html

11 Dec 2007

The Polish Agricultural Ministry has stated that the avian influenza virus is spreading further among poultry in the country.

The deadly H5N1 strain of the virus had been found on a poultry farm in Sadlowo, north-west of Warsaw, which is approx. 2km away from another farm that has been hit with AI only a few days earlier.

Reports state that around 360,000 chickens were due to be culled throughout the day, with a protection and surveillance zone set up around the area.
This is the fourth reported case of the avian virus in the past 10 days, all of which are in the north-western part Masowien region, approx. 100 km away from the countries capital Warsaw.

Polish officials on 1 Dec confirmed that 4,200 turkeys were culled following the first outbreak of H5N1 bird flu in Poland.
 

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Study says 3 H5N1 variants reached Germany

http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidrap/content/influenza/avianflu/news/dec1007germany.html

Robert Roos * News Editor

Dec 10, 2007 (CIDRAP News) – Scientists say they have found three distinct variants of H5N1 avian influenza virus in wild birds in Germany, two of which might have been brought in by wild birds migrating from Russia.

Researchers from the Friedrich Loeffler Institute in Insel Riems, Germany, analyzed 27 H5N1 isolates collected mostly from wild birds in widely scattered locations in Germany in 2006 and this year. Writing in the journal Veterinary Microbiology, they say the findings suggest that the virus was brought into the country on three separate occasions—two of them in early 2006 and the third in 2007.

The strains that appeared in early 2006 are closely related to viruses found in southern and central Russia, suggesting that wild birds on their winter migration from Russia might have brought the strains to Germany, says the report by E. Starick and colleagues.

In Germany in 2006, the report says, the highly pathogenic H5N1 virus was found in 343 dead wild birds, a black swan in a zoo, three stray cats, and a stone marten and on one turkey farm. In June and July of this year the virus was found in 96 wild birds in scattered areas of southeastern Germany and in one backyard goose. More recently, the disease killed ducks on a farm in Bavaria in late August (an outbreak not covered by this study).

The researchers collected 27 H5N1 viruses from 17 species of wild birds, the turkey farm, one stray cat, and the stone marten, the report says.

Previous study of the H5N1 viruses found in Germany indicated they all belonged to the strain that killed many wild waterfowl at Qinghai Lake in northern China in April 2005, called clade 2.2, the authors say. The new analysis of the 27 isolates showed that they fell into three groups that formed geographic and temporal clusters.

The viruses collected in 2006 formed two groups: one from northern Germany, designated subclade 2.2.2, and one from southern Germany, called subclade 2.2.1. The isolates gathered in 2007 formed a third type, which the authors called subclade 2.2.3, no examples of which were found in 2006.

Some members of both of the 2006 subclades were found in central Germany, and both types were involved in the poultry farm outbreak, the report says. In addition, one isolate of the "northern" type (subclade 2.2.2) was found in southern Germany, and one of the "southern" type was identified in northern Germany.

The authors write that the three subclades they identified match up with three clades described by other researchers who analyzed the complete genomes of 71 H5N1 viruses from Europe, the Middle East, and Africa (EMA). The northern Germany isolates fit in EMA group 2, those from the south in EMA group 1, and the 2007 isolates in EMA group 3, the report says.

"Our data suggest the simultaneous introduction in early 2006 of two closely related but distinct H5N1 variants into the wild bird population of Germany," the report states. "The source of these viruses and the exact time of introduction could not be identified."

But because the two subclades are closely related to H5N1 variants from southern and central Russia, the authors add, "an introduction, possibly via wild birds on winter escape from these regions, early in 2006 appears to be a highly likely scenario."

The separate subclade found in Germany in 2007 appears to represent a "new incursion," whose sources and routes of introduction remain unknown, the report adds.

David A. Halvorson, DVM, a veterinary pathologist and avian flu expert at the University of Minnesota in St. Paul, commented that the similarity between the German and Russian isolates doesn't necessarily mean the viruses were brought to Germany by wild birds.

"What is clear is that related viruses were introduced into Germany and they were observed in wild waterfowl before they were observed in domestic poultry," Halvorson told CIDRAP News. "This suggests that waterfowl may have been the source of introduction, but it doesn't prove it. This was known before the viruses were sequenced."

Starick E, Beer M, Hoffmann B, et al. Phylogenetic analyses of highly pathogenic avian influenza virus isolates from Germany in 2006 and 2007 suggest at least three separate introductions of H5N1 virus. Vet Microbiol 2007 (in press; early online publication Oct 18) [Full text]
 
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