HEALTH 8/1/08- 8/7/08 Weekly Bird Flu Thread:Delayed H5N1 Confirmation In Indonesia

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Delayed H5N1 Confirmation In Indonesia Raises Concerns

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/07310801/H5N1_Indo_Delay_Concern.html

Recombinomics Commentary 21:43
July 31, 2008

The 4 suspected human cases of avian influenza reported in "Avian influenza, human (57): Thailand (Phichit), susp 20080730.2336" have not been confirmed.

It remains true, therefore, that there have been no confirmed human cases of avian influenza in Thailand since 27 Sep 2006 (and none anywhere for several months).

Date: Fri 18 Jul 2008

[Official confirmation, positive or negative, is awaited.... Mod.CP]

The above comments are from today's ProMED commentary on suspect cases in Thailand, as well as a July 19 commentary on media reports on an H5N1 confirmed case in Indonesia.

Recent reports that three of the five suspect cases in Thailand had tested positive for seasonal flu decreased the likelihood that the patients were H5N1 positive.

However, the comment that there had been no confirmed H5N1 cases anywhere for several months is curious. The situation in Indonesia is far from clear, and the lack of transparency has been a cause for concern for some time.

Indonesia declared H5N1 endemic in their last OIE report in the fall of 2006. Although the endemic declaration lowered required reporting frequencies of H5N1 in poultry to once every six months, Indonesia has not filed a report since 2006.

In early 2007 they halted the shipment of clinical samples from suspect H5N1 patients and the number of samples sent for confirmation since early 2007 has been limited to a few patients. Moreover, there have been no public human H5N1 sequences from Indonesia since early 2007.

This year there were a number of obvious clusters which were reported as individual sporadic cases. Index cases were said to have died from lung inflammation, typhus, or dengue fever. Media questions on these index cases have led to cluster denials and a new policy of delayed reporting.

However, IHR regulations require reporting of human H5N1 cases to be made within 24-48 of confirmation, which was noted when Indonesia announced its new policy of delayed reporting. These concerns led to announcements that reporting would be done on a monthly bases.

However, the last government report was made in mid June on two patients. On patient, who was part of a cluster, died in mid-May, while a second case died in early June. Thus, the reporting for both cases violated IHR regulations.

WHO had indicated that they had a good relationship with Indonesia, even though sequences and samples were withheld. WHO maintained that it had no control over Indonesian notifications to its citizens, but WHO had not received any indication that Indonesia had changed policy on notifications to WHO.

Thus, it remains unclear as to when Indonesia is notifying WHO. For other countries, WHO publishes a situation update shortly after they receive notice of a confirmed case. The long delays following lab confirmation of the past two cases raises concerns that either Indonesia is not notifying WHO in a timely manner, or WHO is delaying situation updates for Indonesia, or both.

On July 10, another patient in Indonesia died, She was lab confirmed on July 12. However, Indonesia refused to deny or confirm the confirmation two weeks ago.

It has now been three weeks since the patient died and six weeks since Indonesia issued its last update.

The delays in reporting or acknowledging these lab confirmed cases by Indonesia, WHO, and ProMED remain causes for concern.
 

JPD

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Bird flu saved horse industry: experts

http://wwos.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=607805

The global threat of bird flu saved the Australian horse industry, experts say.

In 2004, the CSIRO Australian Animal Health Laboratory developed a molecular diagnostic test for bird flu, at a time when equine influenza (EI) was not even on the radar.

Three years later, the same test was used in the effort to stop the spread of EI, with Agtrans Research saying it allowed authorities to determine the best ways to contain it.

"It's fortuitous that this diagnostic test could be applied to horse flu, as it's highly unlikely that a similar test could have been developed in a timely manner once the outbreak had been detected," Agtrans' Dr Peter Chudleigh said in a statement.

"The use of the test supported the decision to try for eventual eradication."

Dr Chudleigh said the main benefit from the diagnostic test was how quickly EI could be detected.

Australian Biosecurity Cooperative Research Centre chief executive Dr Stephen Prowse said the economic benefit of using the diagnostic test was more than $134 million.

"It took 125 days to eradicate equine influenza," he said.

But using the test enabled Australia to demonstrate freedom from the disease to the international community much earlier than would have otherwise been possible, he said.

"(And) at a much reduced expense to the industry, and freeing up horse movements," Dr Prowse said.

EI entered Australia through a Sydney quarantine centre, then spread through NSW and Queensland, shutting down the racing industry in those states for three months.

The breakout led to the cancellation of the 2007 Sydney Spring Carnival and the Queensland Summer Carnival, threatened the Melbourne Cup and disrupted breeding, exports and equestrian events.

The federal government is facing millions of dollars in compensation claims from the racing industry after a damning report blamed the quarantine authority for the devastating outbreak.

Australia was officially declared EI free on June 30, six months after the last detected case.
 

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Flu Kills 1,000 Birds in Kano

http://www.thisdayonline.com/nview.php?id=118482

Experts from the federal government in conjunction with officials of Kano state government have depopulated and disinfected birds affected by avian influenza after discovery of an outbreak in a farm at Fagen Kawo village of Dawakin-Tofa local government area, Kano state.
THISDAY checks in Kano revealed that about one thousand birds had been lost in the farm at Fagen Kawo as a result of the outbreak, while the state government and the Federal government had moved in swiftly for intervention.

A statement signed by Surajo Ibrahim Gaya, an official of the state Ministry of Information and made available to THISDAY said a team led by the Kano state Project Desk Officer, Animal Health Component, Dr Sarki B Mohammed, was conducting a detailed epidemiological investigation to trace the source of the out break in the farm and another affected farm in Katsina state.
The statement added that a team set up by the federal government headed by Professor P. A. Abdul of the veterinary teaching hospital; ABU Zaria, in company of experts from Abuja office of Avian Influenza control project and other related agencies have visited the farm and some live birds market in Kano state.

Minister of Agriculture and Water Resources, Dr Abba Sayyadi Ruma, in a press statement enjoined the general public to continue to practice hygienic behaviors and strict bio-security measures on their farms, in the markets and report any suspicion to appropriate authorities.
 

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CDC Says Bird Flu Becoming More Contagious

http://www.ukmedix.com/tamiflu/cdc_says_bird_flu_becoming_more_contagious4046.cfm

In America the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) say that the bird flu virus is changing and that it is developing strains and properties which could possibly increase the potential of it to infect humans from birds. They also said that it was also developing into a virus which could become more contagious between humans.
CDC Says Bird Flu Becoming More Contagious

The research was done on the Influenza A H7 virus types which are very contagious to birds but must not be mixed up with with the extremely deadly H5N1 bird flu virus. Nevertheless it is worth noting that if an H7 bird flu virus mutates it is likely that the H5N1 variant of the virus will also be able to follow suit.

Dr. Jessica Belser who led the research project for the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention explained that it is perfectly normal for influenza viruses to constantly change and in view of the fact that there is the scare of a deadly bird flu outbreak is very important that they are watched extremely carefully at the moment.

Humans get infected by the influenza virus when it attaches itself to sugar receptor molecules that are found in the respiratory tract. The greater the particular influenza viruses’ ability to latch onto these receptors the more contagious they are to humans and the more likely they are to spread quickly among groups of people. Present the deadly H5N1 and the H7 variants of the virus can not latch on to these receptors easily and thus they are not very contagious.

This new research however explains that three H7N2 strains as well as two H7N3 strains of the influenza virus found in North America were seen to be able to latch themselves onto receptors in both birds and humans. In particular one of the H7N2 virus strains was found to have the biggest ability to bind onto human sugar receptors in the respiratory tract.

This research underlines the importance of close monitoring of all bird flu viruses so that the world can prepare itself for any deadly pandemics which could break out as a result of mutating influenza viruses. The research was published by the respected medical journal the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
 

JPD

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Bird flu explodes in southern province

http://english.vietnamnet.vn/social/2008/08/796686/

VietNamNet Bridge – Bird flu was discovered in a flock of 1,000 chickens in the southern province of Dong Thap on July 31, reported the Veterinary Agency.

With this new discovery, bird flu is currently in two provinces, Dong Thap and the central province of Nghe An.

Twelve provinces and cities in Vietnam have blue ear epidemic in pigs. This disease is spreading its wings in the central province of Quang Nam. Local authorities have decided to buy 20,000 doses of blue ear vaccine.

Another central province, Thua Thien-Hue, has said it will allocate VND270 million ($15,900) to prevent this disease. So far, the province has culled more than 1,800 pigs.
 

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Indonesian man dies of bird flu, official says

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080803/ap_on_re_as/indonesia_bird_flu

JAKARTA, Indonesia - An Indonesian factory worker died of bird flu, bringing the death toll in the country worst hit by the virus to 112, a top health official said Sunday.
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The 19-year-old died last week in a hospital just west of the capital, Jakarta, Nyoman Kandun, the director general of communicable disease control at the Health Ministry, said by text message. He gave no additional information.

Indonesia has regularly recorded human deaths from bird flu since the virus began ravaging poultry stocks across Asia in 2003. Its toll of 112 accounts for nearly half the 240 recorded fatalities worldwide.

Bird flu remains hard for people to catch, but health experts worry that the virus could mutate into a form that passes easily between humans, possibly triggering a pandemic that could kill millions. So far most human cases have been linked to contact with infected birds.

Scientists have warned that Indonesia, which has millions of backyard chickens and poor medical facilities, is a potential hot spot for the start of a global pandemic.
 

JPD

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Health Ministry warns to eat well cooked chicken

http://www.miadhu.com.mv/news.php?id=7312

Ministry of Health has warned to eat well cooked frozen chicken as a strong preventive measure against bird flu. Deputy Minister of Health Dr. Abdul Azeez Yoosuf answering a question from Maidhu daily confirmed there is no bird flu in the country but he warned to take all preventive measures to keep the country free from the disease.

Dr Azee further said there is no danger arising from poultry firms in the country. But he said we have to be watchful about migratory birds which travel across the Maldives during some seasons. Dr. Azee made these remarks when he was asked whether there is bird flu in the Maldives and whether frozen chicken has a risk of spreading the disease.

Miadhu asked these questions following rumours of bird flu in the country after some chicks and birds in assorted colours in the Night Market were banned. There was high concern among public about these rumours and many people preferred to eat fish instead of chicken following these rumours. There was concern about a sudden increase in the price of fish which is already very expensive.

But Dr. Azee was very confident of the situation in the country and he said there was no danger of eating frozen chicken but it must be cooked well, he advised. He further said bird flu is acquired through diseased live chicken when you touch it and pluck its feathers. The risk of this disease is from live birds, ducks and chicken, he said. That is why Ministry of Agriculture has banned import of live chicken older than a day.
 

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Bird flu under control

http://www.triumphnewspapers.com/bird482008.html

THE federal government has said it would continue to do everything possible to control Avian Influenza (bird flu) in Nigeria, to prevent its transmission to human beings.

The minister of agriculture and water resources, Dr. Abba Sayyadi Ruma, gave the assurance in a press release issued to journalists in Abuja by the chief veterinary officer of Nigeria, Dr. Junais Maina,

According to the release, Dr. Ruma confirmed new outbreaks of Avian Influenza in Faggen Kawo village of Dawakin Tofa Local Government Area of Kano, and Kadarko quarters, GRA in Katsina states.

The statement which was made available by Surajo Ibrahim Gaya, Kano projects desk officer AICP, enjoined the general public to continue to practice hygienic behaviors and ensure strict bio-security measures on their farms, in the markets and report any suspicious situation to appropriate authorities.

Meanwhile, in Kano, immediate actions have been taken to control the outbreak of the diseases as the affected farms have been depopulated and disinfected by a team led by the state projects desk officer, Dr. Sarki B. Muhammad.

In addition, detailed epidemiological investigation is on going to trace the source of the outbreak.

The release added that a team set up by the federal government headed by Prof. P.A. Abdul of the Veterinary Teaching Hospital, ABU Zaria, in conjunction with officers from Abuja National Office of Avian Influenza Control projects, National Veterinary Research Institute, VOM and Kano state AICP officials have already visited the affected farm where blood sample from birds were taken for analysis at Vom, Plateau state.

The state communication component desk office had carried out sensitization and awareness campaign on hygienic practices for the disease prevention at the affected area.
 

JPD

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Bacteria were the real killers in 1918 flu pandemic

http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn14458-bacteria-were-the-real-killers-in-1918-flu-pandemic.html

Medical and scientific experts now agree that bacteria, not influenza viruses, were the greatest cause of death during the 1918 flu pandemic.

Government efforts to gird for the next influenza pandemic – bird flu or otherwise – ought to take notice and stock up on antibiotics, says John Brundage, a medical microbiologist at the Armed Forces Health Surveillance Center in Silver Spring, Maryland.

Brundage's team culled first-hand accounts, medical records and infection patterns from 1918 and 1919. Although a nasty strain of flu virus swept around the world, bacterial pneumonia that came on the heels of mostly mild cases of flu killed the majority of the 20 to 100 million victims of the so-called Spanish flu, they conclude.

"We agree completely that bacterial pneumonia played a major role in the mortality of the 1918 pandemic," says Anthony Fauci, director of National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Disease in Bethesda, Maryland, and author of another journal article out next month that comes to a similar conclusion.
Double whammy

That pneumonia causes most deaths in an influenza outbreak is well known. Late 19th century physicians recognised pneumonia as the cause of death of most flu victims. While doctors limited fatalities in other 20th-century outbreaks with antibiotics such as penicillin, which was discovered in 1928, but did not see use in patients until 1942.

This is not to say that flu viruses do nothing, says Jonathan McCullers, an expert on influenza-bacteria co-infections at St Jude Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee.

McCullers' research suggests that influenza kills cells in the respiratory tract, providing food and a home for invading bacteria. On top of this, an overstressed immune system makes it easier for the bacteria to get a foothold.

However, the shear carnage of 1918 caused many microbiologists to reconsider the role of bacteria, and some pointed their fingers firmly at the virus.
'Unique event'

When US government scientists resurrected the 1918 strain in 2005, the virus demolished cells grown in a Petri dish and felled mice by the dozen.

"The 1918 pandemic is considered to be – and clearly is – something unique, and it's widely understood to be the most lethal natural event that has occurred in recent human history," Brundage says.

But to reassess this conclusion, he and co-author Dennis Shanks, of the Australian Army Malaria Institute in Enoggera, Queensland, scoured literature and medical records from 1918 and 1919.

The more they investigated, the more bacteria emerged as the true killers, an idea now supported by most influenza experts.

For instance, had a super virus been responsible for most deaths, one might expect people to die fairly rapidly, or at least for most cases to follow a similar progression. However, Shanks and Brundage found that few people died within three days of showing symptoms, while most people lasted more than a week, some survived two – all hallmarks of pneumonia.
Local bugs

Military health records for barracks and battleships also painted a different picture. New recruits – men unlikely to have been exposed to resident bacteria – died in droves, while soldiers whose immune systems were accustomed to the local bugs survived.

And most compelling, Brundage says, medical experts of the day identified pneumonia as the cause of most deaths.

"The bottom line is we think the influenza virus itself was necessary – but not sufficient – to cause most of the deaths," he says.

As the world's health experts prepare for the next influenza pandemic, many have looked to 1918 as a guide, planning for a deadly super-virus.

The H5N1 bird flu strains jetting around the world seem to kill humans without the aid of bacteria, but those viruses aren't fully adapted to humans, McCullers says. If H5N1 does adapt to humans, bacteria may play a larger role in deaths, he adds.

"Everyone is focused exclusively on the virus, and that's probably not the best idea," he says.

Antibiotics and vaccines against bacterial pneumonia could limit deaths in the next pandemic. And while an effective influenza vaccine should nip an outbreak in the bud, such a vaccine could take months to prepare and distribute.

"The idea of stockpiling [bacterial] vaccines and antibiotics is under serious consideration," says Fauci, who is on a US government taskforce to prepare for the next flu pandemic.

At a recent summit on pandemic influenza, McCullers said health authorities were increasingly interested in the role bacteria might play, but there had been little action taken.

"There's no preparation yet. They are just starting to get to the recognition stage," he says. "There's this collective amnesia about 1918."

Journal reference: Emerging Infectious Disease (DOI: 10.3201/eid1408.071313)
 

JPD

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GPs refuse to treat bird flu patients

http://www.news.com.au/perthnow/story/0,21598,24129555-949,00.html



By Tory Shephard

August 04, 2008 10:01pm

BIRD flu will hit Australia but some GPs will refuse to treat patients - preferring to keep themselves and their families safe, research shows.

Others say they are unprepared to deal with the "horror" situation and hope it never happens, although experts say it is a matter of "when", not "if" disaster strikes.

Research in the latest Medical Journal of Australia shows only one of the 10 South Australian GPs surveyed felt prepared for a pandemic.

The report's authors said the doctors "felt their responsibility to themselves to stay healthy and to protect their families outweighed their responsibility to continue working".

Australian Medical Association state president Dr Peter Ford said most doctors had received no formal training in dealing with a flu pandemic.

SA Health estimates more than 2500 South Australians would die and 70,000 would be incapacitated if pandemic influenza strikes.

Vaccine expert Professor Nikolai Petrovsky, Flinders Medical Centre's director of endocrinology, is working on vaccines to protect against bird flu. A lack of funding and of political will means the whole health system is unprepared for a pandemic that is already "overdue", he said.

"The reality is that we will be hit by an influenza pandemic at some point. But we don't know if it will be this year or in 50 years' time so governments are loathe to spend the money and the effort when they don't know," he said.

Public Health and Clinical Coordination executive director Dr Stephen Christley said the Pandemic Primary Care Working Group had completed a final draft of a plan with guidelines on how to prepare if there was a pandemic in Australia.

The plan is expected to take effect in November.
 

JPD

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Delayed H5N1 Cluster Reports In Indonesia Raise Concerns

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/08040801/H5N1_Tangerang_Delay_Cluster.html

Recombinomics Commentary 23:52
August 4, 2008

An official from Indonesia's health ministry recently confirmed that a 19-year-old man died from an H5N1 avian influenza infection.

The man, a cargo worker, died in Tangerang, a suburb of Jakarta, Xinhua, China's state news agency, reported yesterday.

The confirmation of the man's death by an Indonesian health official appears to deviate from the country's recent policy of foregoing official announcement of H5N1 cases as they occur, opting instead for periodic updates. In early June, health minister Siti Fadilah Supari said the country would announce cases at longer intervals, perhaps as long as 6 months, according to previous reports.

Healthcare workers and family members alerted the media about Indonesia's last H5N1 case, that of a 38-year-old man who reportedly died on Jul 10. However, a health ministry spokeswoman declined to confirm the case and said officials would release the information in an H5N1 case update at the end of July. No updates appear to have been posted on the government's health ministry or avian influenza Web sites.

Also, it's not clear if Indonesia has notified the WHO about the two cases.

The above comments detail the reporting deficiencies associated with lab confirmed H5N1 cases in Indonesia. As noted above, it is unclear if the reporting delays are due to Indonesia’s failure to report the cases to WHO, in violation of International Health Regulations, which require notification of H5N1 human cases within 24-48 of confirmation, or if the delays are due to WHO failing to issue H5N1 updates in a timely manner.

Although the responsibility for the delays remains cloudy, the effect is to decrease transparency in Indonesia, which remains a cause for concern. It is unclear if the two cases from last month represent a geographical cluster or a contact cluster. Both cases were near the airport in Tangerang, just west of Jakarta. However, if the latest case was a cargo worker (some reports indicate he was a factory worker), then the two confirmed cases at the airport would be cause for concern.

Both patients were misdiagnosed. The early case was initially said to be a TB case, while the more recent case was initially diagnoses as dengue fever. These misdiagnosis are common in Indonesia and have been used to deny recent familial clusters. In those clusters, the index cases were misdiagnosed as lung inflammation, typhus, and dengue fever.

The majority of these recent cases were in Tangerang, raising concerns of more efficient transmission. However, a clearer picture of these clustered cases is hampered by misdiagnoses and increasing reporting delays by Indonesia, WHO, or both.
 

JPD

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Pre-pandemic flu vaccine test starts

http://www.asahi.com/english/Herald-asahi/TKY200808060061.html

About 70 doctors, nurses and pharmacists Monday received vaccine shots to protect against new strains of avian influenza at a Tokyo hospital, health ministry officials said.

It was the first phase of a large-scale clinical trial--the world's first to test the effectiveness of pre-pandemic immunization to prevent the spread of a new influenza virus.

A total of 6,400 doctors and quarantine officers will receive trial immunizations with a vaccine made from a strain of virulent H5N1 influenza found in Indonesia and China.(IHT/Asahi: August 6,2008)
 

JPD

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Bird flu hits one more Vietnamese province

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-08/05/content_8972219.htm

HANOI, Aug. 5 (Xinhua) -- Bird flu has stricken Vietnam's central Quang Ngai province, raising the total number of affected localities in the country to three, according to a local veterinary agency on Tuesday.

Late last month, bird flu killed 70 ducks and sickened 150 others raised by a household in the province's Binh Son district, whose specimens have recently been tested positive to bird flu virus strain H5N1, the Department of Animal Health under the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development said, adding that the whole duck flock has been culled.

Now, bird flu is hitting southern Dong Thap province, and Nghe An and Quang Ngai in the central region.

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

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Health Officials Release Controversial Pandemic Flu Warning

http://www.wlwt.com/health/17094469/detail.html

People Urged To Make Plans, Get Emergency Kits

CINCINNATI -- A new television ad from Ohio health officials is geared toward scaring the public into making some smart choices when it comes to the flu.

In 1957, when a pandemic case of the flu hit, more people died from influenza than in WWI. That’s one of the history lessons from the new ad.

But some people said the ad goes too far and could create unnecessary fear over the flu.

Health experts said the threat of a new pandemic flu is real that that people need to be prepared.

“It is an issue that might not be front and headline right now but it's that could be on the horizon and they don't want people to forget about it,” Springdale Health Department worker Cammie Mitrione said. “Things like, having an emergency kit at home with extra food and medication, emergency phone numbers and other documentation, being able to sustain yourself at home for up to two weeks in the event of an emergency like a pan flu.”

Tri-State health departments said they will continue to send out material and hand out emergency kits.

To learn more about the pandemic flu or to watch the new ad, head to the Ohio Department of Health’s Web site.
 

JPD

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Three Dead In Bird Flu Outbreak In Sumatra

http://www.nasdaq.com/aspxcontent/N...dlinereturnpage=http://www.international.nasd

(RTTNews) - Three persons have died and 13 others admitted to a hospital with symptoms of bird flu in the Asahan District of North Sumatra province in Indonesia, media reports said Wednesday.

Reports said that local residents began showing symptoms of avian flu after a large number of chickens suddenly died last week. Three persons died in the Air Batu village after suffering bird-flu like symptoms. About 13 others, including a baby boy and a seven-year-old girl, were admitted to the hospital with high temperature and respiratory problems, reports said.

Not all of them had contact with infected fowl, which is the most common way of contracting the virus. Cluster cases of bird flu in the same vicinity raised concerns about rare human-to-human transmission.

Last week, a 19-year-old man fell prey to bird flu, taking the total human toll to 112 in Indonesia. Indonesia is the country worst hit by the H5N1 bird flu virus, which can be transmitted from bird to human.
 

JPD

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13 Indonesians hospitalized with bird flu symptoms

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/storie...ME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2008-08-07-05-27-44

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) -- Health workers rushed to a village in western Indonesia to test for bird flu Thursday after 13 people were hospitalized with symptoms of the disease and dozens of chickens died, a government official said.

It will take days for test results to come back, said Memed Zulkarnaen, spokesman for the National Bird Flu Commission, adding that the condition of those suffering from high fever and respiratory problems "appears to be improving."

The 13 were admitted to two hospitals in the past week after chickens started dying in Air Batu, their village on Sumatra island, 680 miles (1,000 kilometers) northwest of the capital, Jakarta. The birds tested positive for the H5N1 virus.

A team of epidemiologists was sent to the village Thursday to take blood and swab samples from family members and neighbors of those living near the outbreak, Zulkarnaen said.

Indonesia has regularly recorded human deaths from bird flu since the virus began ravaging poultry stocks across Asia in 2003. Its death toll of 112 accounts for nearly half the 240 recorded fatalities worldwide.

Bird flu remains hard for people to catch, but health experts worry the virus could mutate into a form that passes easily between humans, possibly triggering a pandemic that could kill millions. So far most human cases have been linked to contact with infected birds.
 

JPD

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Indonesia testing 13 for bird flu in Sumatra village

http://thestar.com.my/news/story.as...01_NOOTR_RTRMDNC_0_-348739-1&sec=Worldupdates

JAKARTA (Reuters) - Thirteen people from a village in North Sumatra are due to be tested for bird flu after falling sick, Indonesian health officials said on Thursday.

The 13, from Air Batu village, were hospitalised this week after suffering fever, but their conditions had improved on Thursday and they might not be suffering from the disease, a health official said.

A bird flu surveillance team from Indonesia's health ministry has been sent to the area.

"Although they found dead chickens in the area, the symptoms are not like bird flu," said Erna Tresnaningsih, the health ministry's director of animal-borne disease control.

A seven-year-old girl and an eight-month-old child were being treated in Adam Malik hospital in North Sumatra's capital Medan with Tamiflu, the medication most often used to treat bird flu, said hospital spokesman Sinar Ginting.

A spokeswoman for the World Health Organisation said she was not authorised to comment on the case.

The country's largest known cluster of bird flu cases in humans occurred in May 2006 in the Karo district of North Sumatra province, where as many as 7 people in an extended family died.

The World Health Organisation said at the time that limited human-to-human transmission could not be ruled out but that the virus samples from the scene did not show any significant genetic mutations.

Ginting was quoted by media as saying on Wednesday that not all the patients were believed to have had contact with fowl, which is the most common way of contracting the H5N1 bird flu virus, after some chickens in the area had died suddenly and were found to have been infected.

Suspected cluster cases can raise concerns about rare human-to-human transmission or that the virus might have mutated into a form that can pass easily among people, triggering a pandemic.

Bird flu remains mainly an animal disease but experts fear the H5N1 virus might mutate into a pandemic strain that would sweep the globe, possibly killing millions and hobbling economies.

Health experts say monitoring of the virus across Indonesia's thousands of islands to detect any genetic changes is vital, but there has been some confusion over the government's stance on reporting cases.

Indonesian Health Minister Siti Fadillah Supari, who has clashed with the international community over virus sharing, said in early June her ministry would only report cases every six months, although the ministry has reported three deaths since.

The virus is known to have infected 385 people in 15 countries, killing 243 of them since late 2003, according to the WHO's June 19 tally.

Indonesia reported on Sunday that a 19-year-old man died from bird flu last week, bringing the total death toll in the Southeast Asian country to 111, the highest of any nation.
 

JPD

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13 people show bird flu symptoms

http://ukpress.google.com/article/ALeqM5hWmqYCLU2t8e5V2Lk2855An4PqQw

Health workers rushed to a village in western Indonesia to test for bird flu after 13 people were hospitalised with symptoms of the disease and dozens of chickens died, a government official said.

It will take days for test results to come back, said Memed Zulkarnaen, spokesman for the National Bird Flu Commission, adding that the condition of those suffering from high fever and respiratory problems "appears to be improving."

The 13 were admitted to two hospitals in the past week after chickens started dying in Air Batu, their village on Sumatra island, 680 miles north-west of the capital, Jakarta. The birds tested positive for the H5N1 virus.

A team of epidemiologists was sent to the village to take blood and swab samples from family members and neighbours of those living near the outbreak, Zulkarnaen said.

Indonesia has regularly recorded human deaths from bird flu since the virus began ravaging poultry stocks across Asia in 2003. Its death toll of 112 accounts for nearly half the 240 recorded fatalities worldwide.

Bird flu remains hard for people to catch, but health experts worry the virus could mutate into a form that passes easily between humans, possibly triggering a pandemic that could kill millions.

So far most human cases have been linked to contact with infected birds.
 
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