HEALTH 7/18/08- 7/24/08 Weekly Bird Flu Thread:Frequent Human H5N1 Transmission in Indonesia

JPD

Inactive
Frequent Human H5N1 Transmission in Indonesia​

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/07180801/H5N1_Indo_H2H_50.html

Recombinomics Commentary 00:30
July 18, 2008

The MOH report also says that 24% of the 116 cases "occurred in 10 clusters of blood-related family members."

But the report offers no opinion on how many cases of person-to-person transmission occurred. As reported previously, person-to-person transmission was considered likely in a widely publicized cluster of eight cases (seven confirmed, one probable) in Sumatra in May 2006.

WHO reports on the Indonesian cases so far this year show only one family case cluster, involving a 38-year-old woman from West Jakarta, who fell ill in late January, and her 15-year-old daughter, who got sick in early February.

The above comments on the Indonesian Ministry of Health report include a gross underestimate of the number of cases in family clusters as well as the frequency of human to human (H2H) transmission in Indonesia.

The evidence for the underestimate can be seen in the confirmed clusters reported this year. Most of the recent confirmed cases in Indonesia have been in family clusters, but the index case was misdiagnosed with lung inflammation, typhus, or dengue fever. As a result, the index case was not tested, but the infection of the relative led to bird flu symptoms and testing, leading to confirmed H5N1 cases, but not to confirmed H5N1 clusters.

These three clear clusters had the appropriate time gap between the index case and the family member signaling H2H. This type of cluster was clear for the first confirmed case in Indonesia in 2005. The index case was infected from an unknown source. She then infected her sister who died without being tested. The father of the two girls was subsequently infected, and he tested positive (and the H5N1 isolated from him was used to make clade 2.1 vaccines, which led to Indonesia’s withholding of samples). Eventually, the index case was confirmed because of elevated H5N1 antibodies.

The second confirmed case in Indonesia was also in 2005 and also a cluster. In this case the index case infected her nephew. Both cases were confirmed, but the source of the index case infection was said to be fertilizer, but a match between putative H5N1 in the fertilizer and the index case was never demonstrated. The nephew was tested because he was a contact, but he never developed pneumonia and quickly recovered.

Both of these clusters clear were H2H, but as noted above, only the Karo cluster was officially acknowledged as H2H. Similar clusters were seen in Garut, but samples were not collected from index cases, who died before contacts were confirmed, and additional contacts who subsequently developed symptoms were treated with Tamiflu and were not confirmed.

Thus, it is likely that the number of H5N1 cluster members is close to half of the confirmed cases in Indonesia rather than the reported quarter.

The news blackout that followed the three recent clusters this year was not a coincidence.
 

JPD

Inactive
Reports examine high H5N1 death rate in Indonesia

http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidrap/content/influenza/avianflu/news/jul1708cases-jw.html

Robert Roos * News Editor

Jul 17, 2008 (CIDRAP News) – Recent reports from Indonesian health officials tie the high fatality rate in human H5N1 influenza cases there to the difficulty of diagnosing the disease, late treatment with antiviral drugs, and a shortage of well-equipped hospitals.

The case-fatality rate (CFR) in Indonesia, which leads the world in H5N1 cases, climbed from 63% in 2005 to 80% in 2006 and 85.7% in 2007, according to a report in the journal Annals Academy of Medicine Singapore. The CFR remains high so far this year, with 15 of 18 cases fatal, or 83.3%, according to World Health Organization (WHO) figures.

By comparison, the CFR for the global total of 385 cases with 243 deaths is 63.1%. The fatality rate with Indonesian cases excluded is 53.2% (250 cases with 133 deaths, based on WHO figures).

Two reports in the Singapore journal discuss H5N1 cases in Indonesia. One, written by Indonesian Ministry of Health (MOH) officials, looks at the 116 cases, including 94 fatal ones, the country recorded from 2005 through 2007 (the article also defends Indonesia's refusal to share H5N1 virus isolates with the WHO). A second article, written by hospital physicians, profiles the 27 cases, including 21 fatal ones, treated at Sulianti Saroso Infectious Diseases Hospital in Jakarta during that period.

Hospital deficit called major factor
According to the second report, Indonesia, like most developing countries, has few primary or secondary care hospitals with the protocols, isolation rooms, or cardio-respiratory support equipment to treat patients critically ill with H5N1 influenza.

"This is probably the largest single contributor to the high mortality recorded," says the report, written by Sardikin Giriputro, MD, and colleagues.

The MOH report cites the infection's nonspecific early clinical features, medical providers' unfamiliarity with the disease, and the late clinical stage of patients when hospitalized as potential causes of the high mortality. But with the increasing CFR over time, it adds, "the probability of an increase in the virulence of H5N1 viruses should also be considered."

Without a fast, convenient test for H5N1 infection, the disease is difficult to diagnose, the hospital article says. Because the early signs and symptoms are not specific, primary care physicians "would find it extremely hard to predict which of their dozens of patients with influenza-like illness is going to turn out to have highly pathogenic H5N1 influenza in a few days time," it states.

The MOH report says that 71% of H5N1 patients in Indonesia were treated with the antiviral drug oseltamivir (Tamiflu), but only two patients received it within the recommended time frame of 48 hours after the first symptoms. Those two patients survived. The survival rate decreased as the time to start treatment increased, the report says.

Because early recognition is critical, the hospital report says, "The only conceivable solution is the development of cheap, effective point-of-care tests for H5N1 influenza that are as easy to use as a pregnancy test for example. These could be used by a rural primary healthcare clinic or district hospital in any developing country. This is clearly a challenge for the global scientific community."

Most H5N1 patients were severely ill by the time they were brought to the hospital, the report says. "The vast majority had evidence of the systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) with marked tachycardia and tachypnoea" (rapid heart and breathing rates).

Gender gap in fatality rate
In other observations, the MOH report says the CFR was significantly higher among females than males—89% versus 73%; it offers no explanation for the difference. Adults had a higher CFR than children, 83% versus 76%, but the difference was not significant. The median age for all case-patients was 20 years.

The MOH report also says that 24% of the 116 cases "occurred in 10 clusters of blood-related family members." But the report offers no opinion on how many cases of person-to-person transmission occurred. As reported previously, person-to-person transmission was considered likely in a widely publicized cluster of eight cases (seven confirmed, one probable) in Sumatra in May 2006.

WHO reports on the Indonesian cases so far this year show only one family case cluster, involving a 38-year-old woman from West Jakarta, who fell ill in late January, and her 15-year-old daughter, who got sick in early February.

According to the MOH authors, less than half of all the Indonesian patients—46%—had an "unmistakable history of direct contact with sick or dead poultry." Another 36% had been near sick or dead poultry without direct contact, and the possible sources for the other 18% were unclear, the report says.

Among the Sulianti Saroso patients, 12 of 27 (44%) had indirect contact with poultry, mainly from visiting markets or areas where poultry outbreaks had occurred, the hospital report says. A smaller, unspecified number had direct contact with poultry, and the source was unclear for the rest. The authors speculate that some of the patients who had no direct contact with poultry might have caught the virus from fertilizers made of chicken manure.

As for the epidemiologic curve, the MOH report says Indonesia averaged 5 cases per month from September 2005 through May 2007, but the rate dropped to 3 cases per month from June through December 2007. The WHO records indicate a similar pace so far this year, with 18 confirmed cases through June, but two thirds of those were in January and February.

While 31 of 33 Indonesian provinces have had H5N1 outbreaks in birds, only 12 provinces have had human cases, the MOH report says.
 

JPD

Inactive
Emergence of H1N1 Tamiflu Resistance on Clade 2C In China

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/07170802/H274Y_China.html

Recombinomics Commentary 13:53
July 17, 2008

NA sequences being released at Genbank include two isolates from China with H274Y. The isolates (A/Zhejiang/Xiangshan522/2006 and A/Gansu/Chenguan/1129/2007) were collected in the 2006/2007 season in August and January, and are related to A/Hong Kong/2652/2006, the prototype clade 2C sequence which is widely circulating in Asia. All three of the above isolates, like the vast majority of clade 2C isolates, has M2 S31N, conferring amantadine resistance.

The presence of H274Y in China in clade 2C has not been reported previously. Moreover, the upcoming paper “Surveillance for neuraminidase inhibitor resistance among human influenza A and B viruses circulating worldwide in 2004-2008” indicated that these patients did not develop the resistance due to Tamiflu treatment. In the 2006/2007 season, public sequences with H274Y were limited to New Caledonia, clade 1 in five isolates in the United States. Four of these isolates were described in the above paper, and only one of the four had been treated with Tamiflu prior to sample collection. In the 2007/2008 the incidence of H274Y exploded in the Brisbane/59 strain, clade 2B and almost all patients positive for H274Y had not been treated with Tamiflu prior to sample collection.

Thus, in the past two seasons, H274Y has been reported on clade 1, 2B, and 2C genetic backgrounds. Moreover, phylogenetic analysis of clade B isolates indicates the H274Y was due to multiple independent introductions.

These independent introductions onto multiple genetic backgrounds which are clustered in time are similar to G743A introductions in H5N1 in early 2007 on a varient of clade 2.2 genetic backgrounds.

These data are most easily explained by homologous recombination with a common source.
 

JPD

Inactive
Detecting Flu Viruses In Remote Areas Of The World

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/07/080714094109.htm

ScienceDaily (July 17, 2008) — Researchers in Ohio and New Mexico are reporting an advance in the quest for a fast, sensitive test to detect flu viruses -- one that requires no refrigeration and can be used in remote areas of the world where new flu viruses often emerge. Their new method is the first to use sugar molecules rather than antibodies.

In the new study, Jurgen Schmidt, Suri Iyer, and colleagues point out that conventional tests for flu viruses -- including bird flu -- rely on antibodies, proteins produced by the immune system, to recognize viruses. But antibody-based tests can be expensive and require refrigeration to remain stable.

Their solution involved development of artificial forms of sialic acid, a sugar molecule found on the surface of cells that flu viruses attach to when they attack humans. In laboratory tests, the researchers showed that their highly-selective artificial sugars could be used to quickly capture and recognize two common strains of influenza viruses, H1N1, which infects birds, and H3N2, which infects pigs and humans.

They used the molecules to differentiate between 2 strains (Sydney and Beijing) commonly found in human infections without isolating the viral RNA or surface glycoproteins. The sugars remain stable for several months, can be produced in large quantities, and exhibit extended shelf life.
 

JPD

Inactive
Turkey producers urged to protect against bird flu threat

http://www.farmersguardian.com/story.asp?sectioncode=29&storycode=20052&c=1

Livestock | 18 July, 2008

PRODUCERS of free-range turkeys have been urged to maintain the highest standards of biosecurity in the face of the threat of avian influenza.

Thousands of turkeys were culled last year in two major avian flu outbreaks on the Norfolk/Suffolk border, prompting industry leaders to look closely at ways to reduce the risk.

Turkeys are highly susceptible to the H5N1 avian flu virus and, coupled with the increase in free-range turkey production, new best practice guidelines have been drawn up to minimise the risk of infection.

The British Poultry Council, NFU and Traditional Farmfresh Turkey Association, all hope turkey producers will follow the guidelines, recommending a copy of the document is displayed prominently on farm.

A spokesman from the BPC warned producers that this was a critical time of the year.

“The 2007 outbreaks in free-range turkey flocks were almost certainly caused by contact with wild ducks and geese. Migratory waterfowl are most active in the four to six weeks from the beginning of October,” he said. “Unfortunately, this period coincides with free-range turkey production for the Christmas market, which is becoming ever more popular.”
 

JPD

Inactive
Mystery of 'vaccinated' chickens dying of bird flu

http://news.asiaone.com/News/Latest+News/Asia/Story/A1Story20080718-77457.html

CHICKENS that are vaccinated against bird flu are supposed to be immune to the disease.

But hundreds of chickens at a poultry farm in southern Vietnam have died of avian influenza - even though the farm owner had earlier reported that the birds were vaccinated against the disease, an official said yesterday.

Since late last month, several hundreds of the 3,000 chickens in the flock have died at the farm in Tan Lan commune in Long An province, 50 km west of Ho Chi Minh City.

Last week, they were tested positive for the H5N1 avian-influenza virus, said Mr Dinh Van The, head of the province's Animal Health Department.

The farm owner reported to the department that all birds in the farm had been vaccinated against bird flu, he said.

"We suspect that he was not honest in his report, or that the vaccine used at the farm was of bad quality," he added.

"We are investigating the case."

H5N1 affects mainly poultry and wild birds, but can infect humans who have close contact with sick fowl.

Scientists fear that, if it spreads unchecked, the disease could mutate into a form that could be transmitted between humans, leading to a worldwide epidemic.

Bird flu has killed five people in Vietnam since the beginning of this year. - THE NATION/ANN
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu claims cargo worker

http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=31&art_id=vn20080718084027700C482867

Belendung - An Indonesian cargo worker died of bird flu, relatives confirmed on Thursday, raising the unofficial toll in the world's hardest-hit nation to 111.

The government recently started delaying announcements about bird flu fatalities, sometimes by several weeks.

But health workers, speaking on condition of anonymity, confirmed that the tests had come back positive.

Asnawi Sandri, a 38-year-old father of two, died in the hospital on July 10, days after he had come down with symptoms of the disease, including high fever, coughing and breathing difficulties, said Abdul Kadir, his brother-in-law.

"The doctor told us that he died of bird flu," he said.

"The tests came back positive from Jakarta," he added.

The H5N1 strain of bird flu has killed at least 243 people worldwide since it began ravaging Asian poultry stocks in late 2003, according to the World Health Organisation.

The disease is still difficult for human beings to catch, with most cases linked to contact with infected birds.

But scientists worry that the virus could mutate to a form that spreads more easily among people, triggering a pandemic that could kill millions worldwide.

Indonesia, seen as a potential hot spot for that to happen, used to announce bird flu deaths immediately.

But, as part of a widely criticised campaign to shift focus to successes in battling the disease, it altered its policy, saying that updates would only be made once a month.

The first such posting appeared June 19, but the health ministry said on Thursday that the next one would not come until the end of July.

Sandri lived in Belendung, a village west of the capital, Jakarta, where chickens and ducks freely roam the streets.

But it is not clear where he contracted the H5N1 virus, with residents saying that none of the poultry had fallen ill or died.

Although officials took blood samples from relatives and neighbours, they had not culled any of the birds, Kadir said.

Asked whether she could confirm Sandri's cause of death, health ministry spokeswoman Lily Sulistyowati said: "I can't say now whether the tests were positive or negative . . . but we'll let the public know when we release our report."

A member of the national bird flu commission had, however, confirmed that the cargo worker had died of bird flu, said a local health worker, who requested to remain anonymous. - Sapa-AP
 

JPD

Inactive
H1N1 Tamiflu Resistance at 100% in South Africa

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/07180802/H274Y_South_Africa_100.html

Recombinomics Commentary 23:50
July 18, 2008

In South Africa, a total of 90 A(H1N1) viruses have been isolated during the 2008 influenza season to date, and all of the 23 influenza A(H1N1) viruses tested by the WHO collaborating Centres in London and Melbourne were found to have resistance to oseltamivir by neuraminidase enzyme-inhibition assay.

None of these patients were receiving oseltamivir at the time of sampling, and no unusual clinical feature or underlying conditions have been found.

To date, preliminary test results show that the viruses carry the specific neuraminidase mutation (H274Y) that confers oseltamivir resistance in N1

From Chile, three of the 24 A(H1N1) viruses tested showed the specific neuraminidase mutation (H274Y).

The above comments from the WHO update on oseltamivir (Tamiflu) resistance indicate the frequency has now reached 100% in South Africa (based on the first 23 H1N1 samples tested). In the southern hemisphere, the 2008 flu season is ongoing. Consequently, Chile is also reporting H274Y in the current season. These isolates are almost certainly Brisbane/59 (clade 2B), which has been linked to the vast majority of Tamiflu resistant isolates from the 2007/2008 season.

Earlier positives from last season were on New Caledonia (clade 1) genetic backgrounds in the United States and Hong Kong (clade 2C) backgrounds in China. This season there have been multiple introductions of H274Y onto the Brisbane (clade 2B).

The expansion of H274Y has been facilitated by the vaccine mismatch, which targeted Solomon Islands (clade 2A) this season. There is no evidence for any clade 2A in circulation this season.

The expansion of H274Y via the Brisbane strain is cause for concern. It has now reached 100% in South Africa, which represents a growing reservoir of H274Y, which can clearly jump from one H1N1 clade to another, which is most easily explained by homologous recombination.

This polymorphism is identical to the H274Y on H5N1, suggesting that oseltamivir will have limited value for blunting an H5N1 pandmeic.
 

JPD

Inactive
CDC: Offline generators caused germ lab outage

http://www.ajc.com/wednesday/content/metro/atlanta/stories/2008/07/18/cdc_power_outage.html

Congressman says agency 'must act now to address problems in its system.'

By ALISON YOUNG
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 07/19/08

A critical germ lab at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention lost power last week because the agency had taken two backup generators out of service for upgrades, CDC officials said Friday.

Their absence from a complex, centralized backup generator system created a power fluctuation when the system was activated during a July 11 power outage, causing the whole system to shut down, CDC spokesman Dave Daigle said. The problem is being fixed, he said.

The backup power failure — the second in 13 months — is the type predicted years ago by some CDC engineers. And it has heightened concerns in Congress about lab safety at the Atlanta agency, which experiments on smallpox, Ebola, anthrax and other deadly germs.

"For high containment labs, repeated power failures are repeated safety failures," said U.S. Rep. John Dingell, chairman of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, which has been investigating biolab safety nationally.

"Fortunately, there were no adverse consequences this time," Dingell (D-Mich.) said Friday. "However, the fact that these incidents continue to occur raises serious concerns about the future and highlights the fact that CDC must act now to address problems in its system."

Last week's incident began when a bird shorted out a Georgia Power transformer about 5:40 p.m., cutting off power to part of the CDC's main campus on Clifton Road. The agency's backup generation system initially came on, but quickly shut down, and power remained off for one hour and 15 minutes at four agency buildings.

Three were office buildings. But the fourth, Building 17, housed infectious disease labs, where scientists work with the H5N1 avian flu virus and other dangerous germs. Without power, the labs can't run negative airflow systems that help contain germs in Biosafety Level 3 labs, such as those in Building 17.

CDC officials have said neither workers nor the public was at risk, and that the labs have many other safety systems that don't require electricity. At the time of the outage, no work was going on with high-risk pathogens such as flu, tuberculosis, meningitis or rabies, Daigle said.

The backup generator system is being recalibrated to work with the two missing generators, Daigle said. A test is scheduled for 5 a.m. Monday. After the two generators were removed in April for "refurbishment," tests showed the system worked, Daigle said.

In June 2007, another new CDC lab tower, Building 18, lost power for about an hour after a lightning strike.

CDC construction officials had warned since 2001 against removing generators from critical lab buildings and clustering them to create a centralized system, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported last summer. But agency officials have said the consensus among other experts supported the centralized system.

In a September 2002 e-mail, CDC mechanical engineer Johnnie West wrote: "I have very little confidence in the generators being able to operate as designed, due to the complexity of so many generators being connected."

In an August 2003 e-mail, West warned that linking the generators in a centralized yard created a "slim" likelihood they would work because "they are all controlled by one control system. This system hasn't worked properly since it was installed 4 years ago," he wrote.

"Even though we espouse that the laboratories are the most critical, anyone looking at the electrical system would question that."

West, who has previously declined to be interviewed, could not be reached Friday.

Daigle said that the CDC has completed a recent assessment of the reliability of its centralized backup generator system. He said the agency would soon release that information to congressional investigators.

The Government Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress, has been examining the concerns raised by West and others as part of its probe of the safety of U.S. labs working with potential bioterrorism agents.
 

JPD

Inactive
Siraha prone to bird flu

http://www.gorkhapatra.org.np/detail.php?article_id=3586&cat_id=8

LAHAN, July 18: The District Livestock Service Office, Siraha has announced ten VDCs of the district as bird-flu vulnerable areas.

The areas adjoining the Indian border and known for commercial poultry farming were declared dangerous after chicken started dying.

The 10 vulnerable areas include Siraha municipality, Lahan municipality, Sonmati, Majhaura, Bariyapatti, Itatar, Nawarajpur, Madar, Chikana, Lagadigoth and Inarwa VDCs.

Around 250 samples have been sent for examination to the Regional Laboratory in Biratnagar.

Reports have however been received of poultry and eggs being smuggled into the country, taking advantage of the absence of government officials in the bordering areas.

Meanwhile in Pokhara, Nepal Netra Jyoti Sangh is planning to develop the Himalayan Eye Hospital in Pokhara into a training centre as well to cope up with the lack of enough manpower and increasing number of eye patients.

The hospital will produce eye assistant technicians and it has already applied for affiliation with Centre for Technical Education and Vocational Training (CTEVT) to run the course, according to vice president of the sangh Prof Dr Tirtha Prasad Mishra.

Among the 12 eye hospitals run by the Sangh, Himalayan Eye Hospital is the only one situated in the hilly region. The Sangh also manages 36 primary eye treatment centres.

The hospital is yet to be self-sustained as it is service oriented. It is dependent on donors’ assistance and provides free treatment to poor and helpless patients. It was established 26 years ago with the financial help of Dutch NGO Foundation Eye Care Himalaya.

At a programme organised here yesterday, founder of the hospital Dutch national Dr Gerrard Smith said the Dutch foundation will continue supporting the hospital and nobody should create obstacles to the hospital’s service.

The hospital has conducted free eye camps in remote parts of the country, conducted eye check up of over 500,000 people, operated 30,000 patients for cataract and produced 90 eye assistants since its establishment.
 

FlyLadyFan

Inactive
Thank you, JPD, for making the time and effort to keep us informed on this.

We're all a bit "distracted" by the economic situation right now, but this impending pandemic is important for us to "keep on the radar."

FLF

.
 

JPD

Inactive
Macao's health authority warns of rising flu cases

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-07/18/content_8570737.htm

MACAO, July 18 (Xinhua) -- The health authority of Macao Friday issued a warning of increasing local flu cases which may lead to a small outbreak in July.

Between the 25th and 28th weeks of this year, local patients with symptoms of respiratory infection has increased significantly, as 290 to 330 of every 1,000 outpatient visits to local hospitals concerned respiratory infection, according to a press statement from the Health Bureau of the Special Administrative Region.

Based on years of observation, the outbreak of flu usually peaks in March each year, however, the number of flu cases will also surge in July, the Bureau said in the statement.

As a result, the Health Bureau has called on local residents to pay more attention to personal hygiene and take daily exercises in a bid to keep healthy and stay away from the disease.  
 

JPD

Inactive
Flu-hit Cai Lin and Yih Wey forced to stop training

http://thestar.com.my/sports/story.asp?file=/2008/7/19/sports/21864760&sec=sports



KUALA LUMPUR: The Malaysian swimming camp has been hit by the flu bug and it is causing a lot of worry to coach Paul Birmingham Thomas, especially with the Beijing Olympics just around the corner.

Two of the Beijing-bound swimmers – Khoo Cai Lin and Lew Yih Wey – have been knocked out of training after coming down with flu.

Yih Wey, the Korat SEA Games gold medallist who will be making her Olympic debut in Beijing, came down with flu earlier this week and has returned to her hometown in Seremban to recover.

Korat double gold medallist Cai Lin was floored by the flu bug on Wednesday and has been forced to give up training.

With the Olympics just three weeks away, this is the last thing coach Birmingham wants for the swimmers, who are all based at the National Aquatic Centre in Bukit Jalil.

The swimmers are still in intensive training and will only be tapering down a week before they leave for Beijing in early August.

“Six or seven of our swimmers started coming down with the flu symptoms over the last two weeks and now two of our Olympic-bound swimmers are bed-ridden,” said the Australian, who took over the national swimming team at the beginning of the year.

“Yih Wey’s condition worsened early this week and she has gone back home to recuperate. Cai Lin has not trained for the last two days and I do not know whether her condition is getting better.”

He is keeping his fingers crossed that things will get better.

“We were hoping the swimming programme would not be affected but it’s hard to control things like this when everyone is in the pool together,” said Birmingham.

“Now that it has affected the team, what we can do is to keep their engagements to a minimum and make sure they look after themselves.”

Besides Yih Wey and Cai Lin, the other swimmers bound for Beijing are Siow Yi Ting and Daniel Bego, the only male swimmer in the fray.

Leung Chii Lin, the fifth Malaysian swimmer to qualify for Beijing, is competing in the on-going Asian Schools Championships.

The 17-year-old from Sabah is expected to join her team-mates for centralised training in Bukit Jalil after the Asian Schools meet.

The Olympic swimming competition will be held at the National Aquatic Centre in Beijing, also known as the ‘Water Cube’ from Aug 9, a day after the opening ceremony of the Games.
 

JPD

Inactive
Flu hits hard this year

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/topic/story.cfm?c_id=294&objectid=10522461

5:00AM Sunday July 20, 2008
By Michelle Coursey
If you think this winter's flu season is worse than last year, you're right. Photo / Martin Sykes

If you think this winter's flu season is worse than last year, you're right. Photo / Martin Sykes

About 3300 people visited GPs with flu-like symptoms last week, twice the number for the equivalent period last year.

Environmental Science and Research based the figure on reports of 253 consultations from 75 general practices around the country.

Experts say a relatively small number of people visit doctors. The rest chose to stay home and rest instead.

Gisborne, Wanganui and Northland regions recorded the most cases.

Auckland City Hospital reported that a "significant number" of people needed treatment for flu and other respiratory conditions.

Nationally for the past three years, the middle two weeks of July have been the peak period for the fever, coughs and chesty symptoms that indicate flu.

The number of cases this year isn't as high as in 2005 and 2006, but three strains of the virus were identified last week.

Auckland woman Fatima Avdic fell sick with flu three weeks ago and said it was the worst version of the illness she had ever experienced.

"It was the normal flu symptoms, but multiplied about 20 times," the 36-year-old said.

"Never in my life have I had a flu like that."

Watery eyes, fever, aching muscles, headaches, a cough and exhaustion meant Avdic was off work for a fortnight.

"I couldn't do anything. I went back to work after 10 days, and my boss said I should go home, I wasn't well enough. It was a complete nightmare."

Auckland Regional Public Health medical officer Craig Thornley said numbers in the city usually peaked in the final week of June.

He said the surveillance season runs from May to September, but the number of cases usually started decreasing in August.

Auckland City Hospital general manager of operations Ngaire Buchanan said winter was always busy for any hospital.

She advised anyone who suspected they might have the flu to visit their GP "earlier rather than later".

National Influenza Strategy Group spokeswoman Brenda Saunders said 735,650 doses of the flu vaccine were issued to surgeries this year, around 10,000 fewer than last year.

An estimated 20 per cent of New Zealanders get the flu each year, with the elderly and frail most at risk.
 

JPD

Inactive
Human-to-Human Transmission of Bird Flu Discovered in China

http://www.naturalnews.com/023664.html

(NaturalNews) China's National Disease Authority has confirmed that a man whose 24-year-old son died of the H5N1 strain of bird flu is also infected with the disease, raising concerns about human transmission of the virus.

H5N1 is a particularly virulent and lethal strain of the influenza virus that primarily infects domestic and wild birds. So far, it does not spread easily between birds and humans, but health officials fear that it could mutate into a form that is highly contagious from human to human. Given the intensely lethal nature of the disease, such a strain could easily lead to a global health crisis.

Neither the infected man, identified only by his surname Lu, nor his son were known to have had contact with infected poultry. Health officials are carrying out an analysis on the DNA of the viruses that infected the two men to determine if they are the same strain, or whether the men contracted the virus from different sources.

A total of 69 people who had come into close contact with Lu's son have been quarantined, but health officials report that none of them have shown signs of the disease. This suggests that even if the infection did pass to Lu from his son, it is not yet a highly contagious form.

Human-to-human transmission of avian flu has been confirmed in Hong Kong, Indonesia and Vietnam, but these have also not been highly contagious strains, spreading mostly within families whose members came into close contact.

The National Disease Authority said that the World Health Organization, along with the authorities of Hong Kong, Macao, Taiwan and other governments had been notified of the case.

A total of 27 human cases of bird flu have been confirmed in China, leading to 17 fatalities. In contrast, the 1918 flu pandemic, which killed between 50 and 100 million people worldwide, had a fatality rate of only 2 percent.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu relapses in Mekong Delta

http://www.thanhniennews.com/healthy/?catid=8&newsid=40435

The bird flu epidemic has relapsed in the Mekong Delta province of Dong Thap, the Veterinary Bureau under the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development announced Sunday.

Three hundred fifty chickens out of 500 from a breeding site in Chau Thanh District’s Tan Nhuan Dong Commune have died due to causes associated with the H5N1 virus.

Local authorities said the provinces of Tra Vinh and Dong Thap are still in the midst of a 21-day period before they can be declared epidemic-free.

In related news, blue ear pig disease has also relapsed in over 11 provinces nationwide.
 

JPD

Inactive
World warned over killer flu pandemic

http://www.independent.co.uk/life-s...d-warned-over-killer-flu-pandemic-872809.html

By Ben Russell, Political Correspondent
Monday, 21 July 2008

The world is failing to guard against the inevitable spread of a devastating flu pandemic which could kill 50 million people and wreak massive disruption around the globe, the Government has warned.

In evidence to a House of Lords committee, ministers said that early warning systems for spotting emerging diseases were "poorly co-ordinated" and lacked "vision" and "clarity". They said that more needed to be done to improve detection and surveillance for potential pandemics and called for urgent improvement in rapid-response strategies.

The Government's evidence appeared in a highly critical report from the Lords Intergovernmental Organisations Committee, which attacked the World Health Organisation (WHO) as "dysfunctional" and criticised the international response to the threat of an outbreak of disease which could sweep across the globe.

The Government said: "While there has not been a pandemic since 1968, another one is inevitable." Ministers said it would could kill between two and 50 million people worldwide and that such an outbreak would leave up to 75,000 people dead in Britain and cause "massive" disruption.

Peers joined ministers calling for urgent action to build up early warning systems across the Third World that can identify and neutralise outbreaks of potentially deadly new strains of disease before they are swept across the globe by modern trade and travel. Peers also called for new action to monitor animal diseases, warning of the potentially disastrous effects of conditions such as the H5N1 bird flu virus jumping to humans and demanded that Britain step up funding for the WHO to tackle the threat.

With international tourist journeys now reaching 800 million a year, giving unprecedented potential for epidemics to spread across borders, and many cities rapidly growing in developing countries, which would provide "fertile ground" to spread disease, peers on the committee warned that conditions such as Sars, avian influenza and ebola "have the potential to cause rapid and devastating sickness and death across much of the world if they are not detected and checked in time".

Their report said: "We have been warned that an influenza pandemic is overdue and that when – rather than if – it comes the effects could be devastating, particularly if the strain of the virus should be of the H5N1 variety that has been seen in south-east Asia in recent years.

"While much progress has been made in the past 10 years in improving global surveillance and response systems, much remains to be done if we are to detect new strains of the virus and counter them before they have had the chance to spread."

The report called for a fundamental overhaul of the WHO's regional offices around the world. "Given the threats to global health that we face from newly emerging infectious diseases, a dysfunctional organisational structure within the world's principal policy-making, standard-setting and surveillance body simply cannot be afforded."

A government briefing given to the committee warned: "Not all countries have the resources or capacities to put in place a seasonal influenza vaccination policy and, in the event of an influenza pandemic, it is also recognised that current stock will not meet world-wide demand.

"There needs to be an improvement to rapid response strategies in poorer, more vulnerable, countries."

Ministers warned that there was "no agreed vision or clarity over roles" among the international bodies working in the field.

Lord Soley, the committee's chairman, welcomed efforts to guard against a flu pandemic but warned: "They are not good enough. We have a pandemic twice every century. If something developed in a country with a developed healthcare system you would stop it and stop it before it went round the world. You cannot have that confidence about the developing world," it warned.

Norman Lamb, the Liberal Democrats' health spokesman, likened the threat from a pandemic to the threat of international terrorism. He said: "Globally there has been massive attention to the threat from terrorism and rightly so. But the potential for loss of life from a pandemic is massive, enormous and yet we stare a disaster in the face and we see a chaotic, uncoordinated and incoherent international response to it.

"Disease can spread like wildfire. We have to dramatically step up the response."

A spokeswoman for the Department of Health acknowledged that "more clearly needs to be done improve detection, surveillance and general response capacity building". She said Britain was working to improve the international response to bird flu and a potential pandemic and was working to improve international co-ordination on the issue.

She added: "We agree that there is considerable scope to improve the effectiveness and coherence of intergovernmental organisations working in this area."
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu hits one more Vietnamese province

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-07/22/content_8745675.htm

HANOI, July 22 (Xinhua) -- Bird flu has stricken Vietnam's central Nghe An province, raising the total number of affected localities in the country to three, according to a local veterinary agency on Tuesday.

Bird flu has, since July 18, killed 30 chickens and 160 ducks raised by a household in Nghi Loc district, the Department of Animal Health under the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development said, adding that Nghe An and the two southern provinces of Dong Thap and Tra Vinh are being hit by the disease.

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

JPD

Inactive
S. Korea to start year-round monitoring for bird flu

http://www.straitstimes.com/Latest+News/Asia/STIStory_260245.html

SEOUL - SOUTH KOREA will start year-round monitoring for bird flu after this year's outbreak - the country's worst - began later than normal, the agriculture ministry said on Tuesday.

It said migratory and resident wild birds would be monitored regularly and all chicken and duck farms would be inspected every other week for both the virulent and less contagious strains of avian influenza.

Some 23 monitoring teams will be established nationwide.

Quarantine authorities were caught by surprise when an outbreak began in early April and swept through most of the country.

In the past a heightened bird flu alert was in force from November to March, when migratory birds stay in the country and weather conditions may help spread the virus.

The government culled more than eight million birds and the cost of the outbreak was estimated at 264 billion won (S$350.4 million).

No confirmed case has been reported since May 12. If no other case emerges, the agriculture ministry will declare South Korea free of the disease in August.

The ministry said the country's 2,384 duck farms would be watched especially closely because ducks have longer incubation periods and were found to be the main cause of the spread of bird flu.

'Because of this decision, the government will require even small duck farms to be registered so they can be checked,' Mr Lee Sang Kil, head of the ministry's livestock policy bureau, was quoted by Yonhap news agency as saying.

Following outbreaks in major cities including Seoul and Busan, a new standard operating procedure would be formulated for urban areas.

The country has been hit by bird flu outbreaks three times. But no South Korean is known to have contracted the disease, even though the H5N1 strain found here has killed more than 240 people worldwide since late 2003. -- AFP
 

JPD

Inactive
ASEAN states to test readiness on bird flu pandemic

http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5h6iwnJyC1DWBosVtx84D12CwJBlQ

JAKARTA (AFP) — Bird flu chiefs from across Southeast Asia have agreed to assess the ability of their governments to respond to a deadly human pandemic of the virus, an Indonesian official said Wednesday.

A three-day meeting of representatives from members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) agreed countries must be better organised to tackle a human-to-human outbreak of H5N1, Bayu Krisnamurthi told AFP.

Many of the 10 states had little organised bureaucracy or infrastructure to tackle a pandemic, which could kill millions if it mutates into a more easily transmissable form, Krisnamurthi said.

"Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, have experienced human cases. Others have not. That's the main difference between countries," the official, who heads Indonesia's bird flu committee, said after the meeting in Medan.

"First we would like an assessment of ASEAN countries on pandemic preparedness ... if pandemic influenza happened in one of the (ASEAN) countries, the reach and the impact would be on a regional scale," he said.

Countries are expected to finish assessing their preparedness by January or February next year, Krisnamurthi said.

Health ministers from the 10 ASEAN states will also meet in the Philippines capital Manila in October to discuss preparedness and the need to develop a "common language" to deal with the threat, he said.

Indonesia is the country most heavily affected by the H5N1 virus, with 110 of the worldwide total of 243 confirmed human deaths, according to the World Health Organisation.
 

JPD

Inactive
Emergence of H1N1 Relenza Resistance In New Jersey?

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/07220801/Q136R_NJ.html

Recombinomics Commentary 20:32
July 22, 2008

The recent explosion of oseltamivir (Tamiflu) resistance in H1N1 has focused attention on the emergence of resistance against all approved anti-virals. H5N1 clade 1 had two resistance markers for the amantadines, which included M2 S31N. Several years ago S31N began to appear in H3N2 seasonal flu and approached 100% in most countries, This was followed by appearance of S31N in H1N1, which has been limited to clade 2C (Hong Kong). The S31N level in clade C in the United States appears to be near 100%. Resistance to Amantadines has been seen previously, but not at these levels, indicating S31N did not reduce the fitness of H3N2 or H1N1.

However, the emergence of H274Y in NA was a surprise because a fitness penalty had been previously described. H274Y was also reported in H5N1 in patients treated with Tamiflu, as well as wild birds. The presence of H274Y in wild birds indicated there was not a fitness penalty in H5N1, but the recent data on seasonal H1N1 indicated there was no penalty in H1N1 either.

H274Y began to appear in the 2006/2007 season in patients who had not been treated with Tamiflu. Isolates from the United States had H274Y on a New Caledonia background (clade 1), while isolates in China had H274Y on a Hong Kong (clade 2C) background. The presence of H274Y on two distinct genetic backgrounds suggested movement by homologous recombination.

However, this season H274Y levels exploded worldwide. Initial reports cam from Norway, where more than50% of H1N1 isolates had H274Y. High levels were also seen in Russia, France, and Canada, but many countries had levels above 10%. Most recently the level rose to 100% in the first 23 samples tested in South Africa. The explosion of H274Y was in Brisbane (clade 2B), although phylogenetic analysis identified multiple introductions into clade 2B, providing additional evidence for recombination.

In addition to oseltamivir resistance, additional H1N1 resistance was found in Asia. This resistance (Q136K) was for zanamivir (Relenza) and was on a Solomon Island (clade 2A) background during the 2006/2007 season. It then jumped to a clade 2B background in the 2007/2008 season.

This season it also appeared as a mixture in a sample from Pennsylvania. That sequence had a mixed signal of the first position of the 137 codon, signaling a mixture of wild type and Q136K. More recently an isolate from New Jersey, A/New Jersey/08/2008, was identified which also had a mixed signal in the 137 codon. However, in this patient the mixture was at the second position, signaling wild type and Q136R. It is likely that this change will also generate Relenza resistance because both changes reflect a switch from an acidic to a basic amino acid. The amino acid sequences from both isolates were identical except for position 137 raising concnerns that the deposited sequences may represent quasi-species. Plaque purification and sequencing of the clones would be useful.

The appearance of Relenza resistance follows Tamiflu resistance and Amantadine resistance in H1N1, which creates significant pandemic concerns, since the above drugs represent the entire anti-viral arsenal currently approved for seasonal or avian influenza.
 

JPD

Inactive
`Bird Flu Strain Can Be Transmitted to Mammals'

http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2008/07/117_28022.html

By Kim Tae-jong
Staff Reporter

Quarantine authorities said Tuesday that the virus strain of avian influenza that swept the country in April could be transmitted to mammals, but not necessarily to humans.

The Ministry of Food, Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries sent samples from infected birds to the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention for detailed analysis.

The U.S. agency concluded the virus from the sample could be transmitted to mammals but that there was no proof it could infect humans, an official from the ministry said.

``It was impossible to directly test if it can cause illness in humans. Alternatively, we chose a weasel for testing and when it was infected, it showed similar symptoms to bird flu,'' the official said at a news briefing.

He declined a ``yes or no'' answer over the possibility of the virus infecting humans, citing the lack of human testing.

He said the ministry was implementing a system to monitor poultry farms and bird habitats all year round and set up new procedures to quickly cope with any bird flu outbreaks.

The decision came as the disease caused massive damage to the nation last April ― some 8.46 million birds were culled at a cost of 263 billion won ($260 million).

The ministry said it will specially monitor all 2,300 duck farms in the country because ducks have a longer incubation period for bird flu and were found to be the main cause of the spread. Chickens die more quickly from the disease.

The government will strengthen countermeasures against less virulent strains of bird flu and implement preventative culling to prevent possible mutation. It will also strengthen monitoring of traditional open-air markets and distributors to check for signs of sick birds or sudden deaths, and push new laws to prevent restaurants from butchering infected birds.

The sale of live birds at traditional markets to restaurants contributed to the spread of this year's outbreak. On the cause of the latest outbreak, migratory birds that spend the winter in warmer climates may been responsible as they stopped in South Korea on their way north, government officials said.

The ministry said all countermeasures to cull and disinfect areas affected by this year's bird flu outbreak were concluded by May 15, so South Korea can declare itself a ``clean zone'' to the World Organization for Animal Health on August 15.
 

Exodia

The Forbidden One
Hawaii--
Teams use airport to stage bird flu drill

By Bali Fergusson
bfergusson@starbulletin.com
http://starbulletin.com/2008/07/23/news/story11.html

Local, state and federal workers and military and civilian health care personnel worked as a team in a bird flu drill yesterday at Honolulu Airport.

The drill, Lightning Rescue '08, simulated what would happen if an airliner from Asia arrived at Honolulu Airport bearing more than 300 passengers with some experiencing symptoms of avian influenza or "bird flu."

"We take it very seriously," said Dr. James Ireland, medical director at Honolulu Airport. "It's unlikely that something like this would happen but we want to be ready."

Dozens of emergency response personnel from different agencies, clad in protective masks and gear, administered first aid to mock patients who were civilian or military volunteers.

The simulation included setting up an emergency intensive care unit in the airport gate called an "Isolation Treatment Facility," with full emergency care facilities designed to run continuously for up to five days, at which time any patients requiring further care would be transferred to a hospital.

Toby Clairmont, director of the Hawaii Disaster Medical Assistance Team, said it would take about two hours to set up the response facilities. The arrival gate used for the drill has a separate air vent system from the rest of the airport, and the air conditioning was turned off to prevent contamination.

The coordinated response plan included personnel from the Hawaii Disaster Medical Assistance Team, federal Centers for Disease Control, airport paramedics, airport firefighters, medical personnel from neighbor island and Oahu hospitals, U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents, Joint Task Force-Homeland Defense and others.

On Friday, Lightning Rescue '08 will continue with a second simulation staged at the Naval Pacific Missile Range facility on Kauai. The exercise will examine what happens if there is an excessive amount of bird flu-contaminated flights coming in to Honolulu Airport. The overflow would be diverted to Kauai, where an emergency isolation "Safe Haven" would be set up to quarantine and treat the infected.

http://starbulletin.com/2008/07/23/news/story11.html
 

Exodia

The Forbidden One
Flu Pandemic May Cripple US Hospitals, Alternate Care Centres Not Prepared

ANN ARBOR, Mich -- July 22, 2008 -- A new study suggests that if an influenza pandemic hits the United States and nursing homes are expected to assist with the patient overflow from hospitals, many are not prepared for the task. The study is published in the July 23 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Of the more than 400 nursing homes included in the study, only 23% had a specific pandemic influenza plan. Another quarter had a pandemic response incorporated into an overall disaster response plan, and 52% did not have any pandemic plan.

"If nursing homes are called upon to serve as alternative care centres for patients who can't be treated in overcrowded hospitals, the impact on the nursing homes could be vast," said lead author Philip W. Smith, MD, Section of Infectious Diseases, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, Nebraska.

"Nursing homes may not be equipped to handle an influx of influenza as well as noninfluenza patients. They may also be unwilling to accept overflow patients, if it means displacing their current residents," said senior author Lona Mody, MD, University of Michigan Health System and Veterans Affairs Ann Arbor Healthcare System, Ann Arbor, Michigan.

"Specific areas for improvement include communication with nearby health departments and hospitals at planning stage and exercising formulated plans. Planning for staff shortages is also critical," said Dr. Mody.

Half of the nursing homes in the study had stockpiled some commonly used supplies such as gloves and hand hygiene products. Less than half had provided pandemic education to staff members. Just 6% had conducted pandemic influenza outbreak exercises.

In more optimistic findings, 77% of all Michigan and Nebraska nursing homes had a person or staff position designated as being responsible for pandemic preparedness. Access to laboratory facilities for the detection of influenza was available at 84% of these nursing homes. Another 71% provide mental health and/or faith-based services.

SOURCE: University of Michigan Health System

http://www.docguide.com/news/conten...=FDE48C5AAAA580E785256BD5007E630B&lan=English
 

JPD

Inactive
U.S. vaccination plan puts health care workers first

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/health/20080723-1017-birdflu-vaccine-usa.html

WASHINGTON – Essential health care workers would be immunized first if a flu pandemic broke out in the United States, the government said Wednesday.

The Department of Health and Human Services released long-awaited details on who would get vaccinated and when if a serious global influenza epidemic emerged.

The plan put a million health care workers, such as emergency room staff and nurses skilled in vaccinating others, at the top. Next were military and “mission critical” personnel, public health workers and hospital and nursing home staff.

All of these play a “critical role in providing care for the sickest persons; highest risk of exposure and occupational infection,” the plan read.

“This guidance is the result of a deliberative democratic process,” HHS Secretary Mike Leavitt said in a statement. “This document represents the best of shared responsibility and decision-making.”

Many public health experts believe some sort of influenza pandemic is inevitable, although no one can predict when it might come and how severe it may be.

Likewise, it is impossible to predict what strain of flu might cause it, although H5N1 avian influenza is the main suspect now. It has become entrenched in birds in Asia, Europe the Middle East and possibly Africa.

So far, 385 people have been infected with this virus since 2003 and 243 have died. Experts fear that by mutating, H5N1 could acquire the ability to spread easily from one human to another, setting off a pandemic – a serious global epidemic.

A severe pandemic could kill hundreds of millions of people, disrupt society and wreck economies.

WAITING MONTHS

Since it would take many months to produce enough vaccine to protect everyone, experts agree a plan is needed to determine who gets the first doses.

The HHS plan designates 700,000 “deployed and mission critical personnel” to follow the key health care workers. After that, 300,000 public health workers, 3.2 million inpatient health care providers, 2.5 million outpatient doctors, nurses and other professionals, and 1.6 million long-term care workers would be next to get the vaccine.

“It should be noted that during the 1918 pandemic, more American soldiers died of illness than in combat during the First World War,” the plan says.

Emergency services, law enforcement, makers of pandemic vaccines and drugs, pregnant women and babies and toddlers are also in the first designated groups.

“The need to target vaccine to maintain security, health care, and essential services will depend on how severe the pandemic is, as rates of absenteeism and the ability to supply essential products and services will differ for more and less severe pandemics,” reads the plan, available at www.pandemicflu.gov/vaccine/allocationguidance.pdf.

“As a result, groups targeted for earlier vaccination will differ by pandemic severity.”

Healthy adults not in any other priority group come last.

“The ultimate goal of the pandemic vaccination program is to vaccinate every person in the United States who wants to be vaccinated,” the plan reads.

At least 16 manufacturers in 10 countries are working on vaccines against H5N1. Antiviral drugs can help protect people but they are also in short supply and the U.S. plan also calls for closing schools, limiting public gatherings and other measures to prevent flu transmission.
 

JPD

Inactive
Cat May Have Died of Bird Flu

http://english.chosun.com/w21data/html/news/200807/200807240020.html

Quarantine authorities are investigating whether a cat died of bird flu in Gimje, North Jeolla Province, where a highly pathogenic strain of the disease broke out in April. If the cat is found to have died of avian influenza, it would be the first mammal to die of the disease in Korea. Dr. Kim Chul-joong, a professor at the College of Veterinary Medicine at Chungnam National University, said Wednesday, “We isolated the highly pathogenic strain of avian flu from the dead cat found along the Mangyeong River in Gimje and have asked the National Veterinary Research and Quarantine Service to confirm the cause of death of the cat.”

The strain of bird flu found in the country in April and May is known to infect not only poultry but also mammals such as rats and ferrets. If the cat is confirmed to have died from bird flu, quarantine authorities may have to order a cull of dogs, cats and other mammals in the wild. However, Kim Chang-seob, chief veterinary officer of the Ministry for Food, Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, said, “Even though the cat might have died from the avian influenza virus, cats’ somatological characteristics do not transfer the virus to human bodies. Therefore the chances of humans being infected with the virus remain slim."
 

JPD

Inactive
Call for DFAT alert on China traffic danger

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24071392-5013404,00.html

THE Australian Government has been urged to put out an urgent, red alert for travellers to China during the Olympics.
But unlike normal Foreign Affairs travel advisories which deal with terrorist threats, avian flu, drug busts or earthquakes, this is an urgent request about the dangers of walking in China.

And it's not about the soul-destroying hamstring injury to Australia's gold-medal walking hope, Nathan Deakes, but simply about crossing the street in Beijing or Shanghai.

Alarmed by the hair-raising traffic tactics of Chinese motorists, motorcyclists and bus drivers who take the “little green man” as a sign to tear through pedestrian crowds, the Pedestrian Council of Australia has appealed to Foreign Minister Stephen Smith to issue an urgent DFAT travel advisory “to avoid Australians being killed or injured in road crashes in China”.

Council chairman Harold Scruby told the Foreign Minister in a letter that there had been “a huge focus and funding for terrorism” threats, and the real threat to road safety was being ignored.

Mr Scruby has already appealed to the International Olympic Committee and the Australian Olympic Committee over his concerns about pedestrian safety in China.

Mr Scruby told The Australian it was far more likely an Australian Olympic tourist or competitor would be killed by a bus than a terrorist in Beijing.

“We should remember that at the Sydney Olympics in 2000 an African competitor was killed crossing the road in Penrith,” Mr Scruby said.

The African athlete had only been in Australia 47 hours when he was killed crossing the road.

Mr Scruby told Mr Smith “most Australians are used to crossing the road in an environment where vehicles are driven on the left”.

But he said it wasn't just traffic coming from a different direction, which had been a problem for tourists during the Sydney Olympics when the Pedestrian Council helped paint warning signs to “Look Left” and “Look right”, but a disregard for traffic lights and pedestrian crossings all through China.

In China recently, Mr Scruby filmed buses and trucks going through red lights and stranding pedestrians in the middle of traffic.

“You will see scores of examples of motorists driving through red lights (while pedestrian lights are on green) while police and traffic wardens stand by and do absolutely nothing,” Mr Scruby told Mr Smith.

Mr Scruby said the driving in Chinese cities was potentially lethal and that “motorists generally treat pedestrians with utter contempt”.

Mr Smith's office has received the appeal and Mr Smith is currently in Singapore.
 

JPD

Inactive
Around 37,000 at risk of death if pandemic flu strikes

http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/p...if-pandemic-flu-strikes-wales-91466-21394029/

Jul 24 2008 by David Williamson, Western Mail

HALF the population of Wales could fall ill and 37,000 people may die if the nation is hit by a pandemic flu outbreak, according to Assembly Government estimates.

Experts are preparing for a surge in admissions to hospitals and clinics, pressures on mortuaries and demand for dignified funerals.

Arrangements are in place to obtain vaccines for the entire population once a pandemic breaks out and the strain is identified.

Chief Medical Officer for Wales Dr Tony Jewell said: “As is the case with influenza, the majority of care in a pandemic will be provided in people’s own homes with the support of primary and social care services. This strategy will help to ensure that hospitals have the capacity to deal with those patients that develop complications that require hospital treatment and are also able to cope with the routine emergency admissions that occur every day.”

He added: “A key part of managing a pandemic will be public support to help reduce the spread of infection. As we move into a pandemic, public health messages will reinforce the importance of people adopting good routine hygiene practices such as regular hand washing and also for the public to stay at home at the first sign of symptoms.

“The public will also be advised as to how they can access treatment if it is needed. In the meantime, work is continuing across organisations on business continuity plans and partnership working so that key public services can be maintained through a pandemic or other emergency situation.

“With the increase in numbers of people becoming ill during a pandemic there is likely to be an increase in the number of people who will die. The Home Office is leading work across England and Wales on developing arrangements to manage the potential increase in the number of deaths.

“This includes increasing business continuity of death certification and registration, funeral services and burials and cremations, and increasing mortuary capacity. Every effort will be made to ensure dignity for the deceased is maintained and respected.”

The medical and scientific community is braced for any future strain of the bird flu virus which could be passed among humans. There are fears that even if this does not emerge, another flu pandemic will hit Wales.

The Assembly Government described its plans in response to a Freedom of Information request from the Western Mail.

The possibility that 50% of the population – 1,485,000 people – could fall ill is described as a “reasonably foreseeable worst- case scenario”.

Previous pandemics have had a fatality rate of between 0.2% and 2%.

The statement reads: “With a clinical attack rate at the highest rate of 50% a fatality rate of 0.4% would lead to 5,900 excess deaths while one of 2.5% would lead to 37,000 excess deaths.”

There are no plans to quarantine individuals or communities.

An Assembly Government spokesman said: “[We plan] to procure more medicines to increase preparedness in Wales in the event of a pandemic flu outbreak, subject to approval from the Treasury. The plan includes increasing the antiviral stockpile to deal with a worst-case scenario, with further antivirals to cover people in the households of those that become ill.

“The plan also includes procurement of pre-pandemic vaccines for at-risk groups, and antibiotics to treat cases that get secondary bacterial infections such as pneumonia.”

David Bailey, chairman of BMA Cymru’s GP committee, said: “The whole of British general practice will drop stumps and deal with it... You just roll your sleeves up and get on with it.”

He added: “It’s not going to be possible to treat the majority of these patients in hospital because, simply, there won’t be room.”

A focus will be on preventing cross-contamination. Telephone advice will be given where possible.

The Royal College of Nursing wants its members to have as much protection before an outbreak occurs as possible as they will be on the frontline of any pandemic.

Richard Jones, interim director of RCN Wales, said: “It is the case that no-one knows if or when a pandemic will hit the UK and how serious it could be. If a pandemic occurs, nurses will be at the centre of plans to implement the vaccination programme, manage the use of hospital beds.

“They will also train care support workers to administer flu vaccinations and other nursing activities while advising on workforce developments during the crisis. It is therefore important that they and all healthcare workers are protected from the virus before an outbreak occurs.”

Professor Ronald Eccles, director of the Common Cold Centre at Cardiff University, said: “There is no doubt it will hit us at some time. It could be something much milder than we expect; it could be a total disaster for the world.”

The last major pandemic surfaced in Hong Kong in 1968 and spread to the United States where it caused around 33,800 deaths.

Prof Eccles said: “A lot of people did die. I can remember school colleagues who had fathers away in Asia who died from it.”

The Westminster Department of Health is spearheading a drive to encourage better hygiene through its “Catch it, Bin it, Kill it” campaign. A Welsh version, “Coughs and Sneezes Spread Diseases” is targeted at schools.

Professor Lindsey Davies, National Director of Pandemic Influenza Preparedness, said in a statement of support for the English publicity drive: “Good hygiene practice (both hand and respiratory) will have a major role to play in slowing the spread of pandemic influenza and we hope that by getting staff and the public into good habits now, we will be well prepared to respond when a pandemic arrives.”

Liberal Democrat health spokeswoman Jenny Randerson said: “Half the country experiencing symptoms, and up to 37,000 deaths are sobering figures. It shows all of us must remain vigilant about this disease.”
 
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