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THE BIRD FLU BLOG

The Bird Flu Blog will bring together news and official announcements of the spread of avian influenza throughout the world, the plans to combat its spread and notes from history on previous pandemics and how they were fought.

Thursday, June 28, 2007

Lively Hong Kong Bird Market Silenced By Virus

How Avian Influenza Has Transformed The Chinese Tradition Of Bird-Keeping


The Bird Garden and its surrounding markets provided the perfect environment for the H5N1 virus to spread rapidly - Photo by Evelyn H. Tu

Hong Kong's 'Bird Garden' was one of the more unusual and special attractions of the city's sprawling market-filled streets of the Mongkok district, for visitors, and locals, alike.

But the detection of the H5N1 virus in a migratory bird on sale at the market transformed the 'Bird Garden' overnight. Now it's all but shut down. Health officials have banned the sale of birds. Without the loud shrieks and songs of thousand of birds, and the lively chatter of those seeking a bargain, the 'Bird Garden' has lost its voice and its energy.

But the transformation of the 'Bird Garden' is only one sign of how the avian influenza virus has changed centuries old relationship between the Chinese and the once immensely popular hobby, and trade, of bird-keeping, breeding and selling :

Government workers dressed in surgical masks and suits disinfect the area daily and health officials are checking for signs of disease among hundreds of birds left in the market.

Vendors fear Hong Kong's latest H5N1 outbreak could herald an end to what was a colorful, lively age-old trade, already hit hard since 1997 when the virus made its first known jump to humans, killing six people in Hong Kong.

The virus's appearance a decade ago dampened enthusiasm in Hong Kong for the Chinese tradition of keeping birds. The latest outbreak at the market, the main source of birds for Hong Kong residents, may prompt more bird owners to get rid of their pets.

Bird raising in China dates back to the 17th century, when Manchu nomads conquered Beijing, founded the Qing dynasty and introduced their obsession with these winged creatures.

Freed from the drudgery of work, the newly rich elite spent their days in tea houses showing off their exotic birds.

The hobby has lived on in Hong Kong and some elderly men continue to congregate each morning around dawn in parks, so that their pets can sing along with other birds.

But repeated outbreaks of H5N1 in Hong Kong in poultry since 1997 have led some bird lovers to release their pets, especially after the government warned against kissing pet birds in 2005.

Large numbers of birds are still bought for release into the wild, especially by Buddhists who believe they will benefit in their next lives by giving freedom to living creatures.

"Many people have given up their hobby, released their birds," said Tan, the feed seller.

"Now with this, there will be no recovery. I could hardly make ends meet even before this. If it wasn't for them, I wouldn't be here," said Tan, pointing at his eight pet birds in ornate Chinese bird cages.

The daurian starling bird found with H5N1 last week was left at a market stall by its owner. Health officials discovered it was infected during routine testing of bird fecal samples.

The starling -- a migratory bird that breeds in China and Mongolia and migrates to South and Southeast Asia in the winter -- had no health certificate, raising suspicion it might have been smuggled or illegally captured.

The government has no plan to shut the bird market permanently, but stallholders seem to think it's inevitable as the demand for live birds continues to plummet because of health fears.

"Business was already thin ... Before last week, we were only making around HK$350 (US$45) a day. Now we make nothing at all. I don't see any hope for us," said Mr. Chan, a feed seller.

Posted by Darryl Mason at 3:59 PM 2 comments:
Labels: bird markets, China, Hong Kong
'Jasperites' Prepare For Pandemic

Another interesting glimpse of how a community, this time in Jasper, Canada, is preparing on a local level for a H5N1 pandemic :
A bird flu pandemic would impact all Jasperites, say municipal officials who stress that everyone must work together to prepare for and respond to an outbreak.

Many experts predict that an influenza pandemic will occur in the next five to 10 years.

The Municipality of Jasper and Aspen Health have both initiated Pandemic Contingency Plans.

But according to Greg Van Tighem, Jasper’s fire chief and director of disaster services, businesses and organizations in town have a responsibility to develop individual plans to deal with an influenza pandemic.

An influenza pandemic would have a significant impact on staff all over town, many of whom fulfill important roles, such as providing groceries or fuel, Van Tighem said. He estimated that about 35 per cent of an operation’s workforce would be affected by a bird flu outbreak at any given time.

People are naturally afraid to go out in public when a pandemic hits, for fear of becoming ill, Van Tighem said.

“They may have family members that are sick, young children or old grandparents, and they may need to stay home to take care of them, so they don’t go to work,” he said. “So the key point with pandemic planning is to make people aware of the fact that they will be operating with less staff.”

In preparing a pandemic influenza plan, Van Tighem said business owners and heads of organizations should separate their services into three categories: essential, necessary and desired.

Van Tighem said businesses and organizations should plan to default to only providing essential services in the worst-case scenario. He added that employers should define the circumstances under which their plan to offer only essential services would be triggered.

In the event of an influenza pandemic, the municipality would open a Coordination Centre to communicate with the community, the health region, Parks Canada and other provincial and federal organizations. Immunizations would also be provided through the Coordination Centre.

Influenza vaccine is always in short supply in the initial stages of a pandemic, Van Tighem said.

In its contingency plan, the municipality has identified key people who will get the vaccine first, such as essential service providers. He added that sustaining services that keep the town functioning, such as public works and emergency services, would be one of the municipality’s top priorities during a pandemic
Posted by Darryl Mason at 3:48 PM No comments:
Labels: Canada
Outbreak Spreads Across Bangladesh

Bird was first detected in Bangladesh just outside of the capital, Dhaka, in March. Since then, the virus has spread into the northern districts of the country and led to multiple poultry farm closures and the culling of hundreds of thousands of birds. The virus now appears to be spreading west. Just under a quarter of all the districts of Bangladesh have now reported outbreaks of H5N1.

From Reuters :
Bird flu has spread to another district in Bangladesh forcing health and veterinary workers to cull 5,000 chickens, officials said on Wednesday.

The latest case was reported from a village in Thakurgaon district, 500 km (310 miles) northwest of the capital, Dhaka...

Sixteen out of Bangladesh's 64 districts have been affected by the virus, but there have been no reported cases of human infection. About four million Bangladeshis are directly or indirectly associated with poultry farming.
Posted by Darryl Mason at 3:38 PM No comments:
Labels: Bangladesh
Czech, Germany Outbreaks Spread

Fears Of Bird Flu Outbreak Across Central Europe Grows


On Wednesday, Czech authorities confirmed that the H5N1 virus was found in chickens at a poultry farm only four kilometres from another farm where 6000 turkeys were culled last week to stop the spread of the virus.

The virus has also been found in wild birds in Germany, near Nuremberg. On Tuesday came reports that more infected swans had been found in Germany's eastern districts.

While it may still be possible to contain the two outbreaks, clearly European bird flu experts are nervous about the discovery of the virus in what would appear to be growing arcs of infection.

From The Times Of India :

Zbynek Semerad, a spokesman for the Czech veterinary services, said on Wednesday the H5N1 virus had been confirmed by a national laboratory. He said it was "the most serious animal infection" in the country since an episode of foot-and-mouth disease in 2001.

Czech authorities suggested the bird flu had been detected for the first time in Czech domestic poultry which could be due to wild birds contaminating litter. The infection could have been transferred between the two poultry farms which belong to the same cooperative on the shoes of a worker or on a car tyre.

All previous 13 cases of bird flu in the Czech Republic since March 2006 had only affected wild swans.

Some 28,00 chickens as well as all the poultry in the village of Norin will be destroyed, Czech officials said.
Posted by Darryl Mason at 3:28 PM No comments:
Labels: Czech Republic, European outbreaks, Germany
Bird Flu Experts Still Fear Global Pandemic

Scotland is hosting an international summit on bird flu, amid growing fears that the threat of a global pandemic has not abated.

From The Scotsman :
It has been organised by the Avian Flu Task Force under the United Nations' international convention on migratory species, and includes delegates from Europe, Africa, South America and Asia.

They will review outbreaks of avian flu around the world, which have led to the deaths of 191 people since 2003, and examine issues including the surveillance of wild birds in relation to the disease.

Delegates will also discuss contingency planning and response strategies for outbreaks and what information is needed to understand potential infection routes and further local spread.

Professor Colin Galbraith, director of policy and advice at Scottish Natural Heritage, who is a member of the task force, said: "Bird flu is one of the biggest international challenges that exists today. It knows no boundaries. Scientists across the world must work together to understand the nature of the disease and to contain any outbreaks.

"It is crucial there is ongoing contact between countries and we share and learn from each other. The range of delegates and countries represented is a reflection of the seriousness of this issue across the world."

Posted by Darryl Mason at 3:22 PM No comments:

Monday, June 25, 2007

Has Indonesia's H5N1 Strain Become Resistant To Tamiflu?

For many countries of the world, Tamiflu is their one and only true medical defence against the H5N1 virus. Hundreds of millions of Tamiflu pill courses have been stockpiled, and countries like Australia have supplies ready to be flown into the H5N1 "hot zone" Indonesia within 24 hours, if needed.

But an Australian researcher claims the Indonesian H5N1 virus is not as susceptiable to Tamiflu as it once was :

Jennifer McKimm-Breschkin says laboratory testing shows the viruses from Indonesia are 20 to 30 times less susceptible to the drug as compared to H5N1 viruses that circulated in Cambodia a couple of years ago.

...she says they may help to explain the high death toll from H5N1 in Indonesia, where 80 of 100 patients have died of the disease.

Posted by Darryl Mason at 2:17 PM No comments:
Labels: Tamiflu resistance
Bangladesh : Mass Poultry Culls Continue As H5N1 Outbreaks Spread

Some 78,000 more chickens have been culled in Bangladesh in the past week following confirmation that the virus had appeared in a 15th district.

The H5N1 avian influenza virus was detected outside the captial, Dhaka, in March. From Central Bangladesh, it has now spread quickly to the districts in the north of the country.

From the China Post :

The latest outbreak was reported from three farms in Lalmonirhat district, 400 km (250 miles) northwest of Dhaka, an official said.

"We have culled a huge number of chickens after the virus spread to the new district," said Khalilur Rahman Siddiqui, joint secretary, ministry of fisheries and livestock.

With the latest cull, about 250,000 chickens have now been slaughtered and more than 2.2 million eggs destroyed in 15 districts since March. There have been no reported cases of human infection.

About four million Bangladeshis are directly or indirectly associated with poultry farming.


Posted by Darryl Mason at 2:12 PM No comments:
Labels: Bangladesh
Bird Flu Hits Togo, Ghana

The West African nation of Togo has reported an outbreak of the H5N1 virus on a poultry farm. This is the first confirmed outbreak of the deadly virus in Togo :
Several thousand poultry birds have been found dead in Togo recently, most of them in the past week on the one farm in Sigbehoue, 45 kilometres (30 miles) east of the capital Lome.

The agriculture ministry said on Thursday that measures had been taken to try and contain the possible spread of the virus, notably the slaughtering and disposal of infected poultry.

Before Friday, no cases of H5N1 bird flu had been officially discovered in Togo, which since October last year had banned the import of live poultry and poultry products from countries affected by the virus.
Ghana, a neighbour of Togo, reportedly recorded its third H5N1 outbreak last week, in a town close to the Togo border.
Posted by Darryl Mason at 2:06 PM No comments:
Labels: Ghana, Togo
H5N1 Hits Southern Germany

The H5N1 virus has been found in seven dead birds in Southern Germany. One goose, a duck and five swans all tested positive.

More on this news here

Bird flu hit EU nations hard in 2006, early 2007. H5N1 infections showed up in wild birds or farmed poultry in Germany, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Sweden, France, Greece, Italy, Austria, Poland and Denmark and Slovenia, according to the World Health Organisation.

Posted by Darryl Mason at 1:57 PM No comments:
Labels: Germany
New Bird Flu Infections In Indonesia, Egypt

In Egypt, a four year old bird has reportedly tested positive for H5N1 infection.

In Indonesia, a three year old girl has caught the avian influenza virus.

More on both here.
Posted by Darryl Mason at 1:51 PM No comments:

Friday, June 22, 2007

Vietnam Reports 2nd Human Bird Flu Death In 10 Days

Only ten days after Vietnam officially announced the death of a 20 year old man, killed by the H5N1 virus, comes the news that a 28 year old woman has now died in Hanoi. The virus killed her only ten days after she became infected.

These two victims are the first human bird flu casualties in Vietnam since November, 2004.

These two deaths brings the Vietnam total of human deaths from the virus to 44.

From France24 :
Since last month, five human cases of bird flu have been reported in Vietnam, two of whom have died. Two others who had contracted the virus have already been released from hospital.

Communist Vietnam, once the nation worst hit by avian influenza, contained earlier outbreaks through mass vaccination campaigns, the culling of millions of poultry, and public education campaigns.

But the virus has come back strongly this year, hitting scores of poultry farms in an unusual summer-time outbreak, especially in the densely populated northern Red River delta region in recent weeks.
Since May, the avian influenza virus has been found in 18 localities across Vietnam

Vietnam Tries To Combat Bird Flu Spread By Strengthening Vaccination Programs
Posted by Darryl Mason at 12:06 AM No comments:
Labels: Vietnam

Thursday, June 21, 2007

'Lesser' Bird Flu Strain Poses A Real Danger To People

The outbreak of the H7 strain of avian influenza in Wales may prove to be more dangerous, and impact harder on the health care resources of the UK, than originally thought.

While none of the four people hospitalised due to infection from H7 in Wales last month died, the infection and subsequent illness was serious enough to soak up medical resources already in short supply.

From Science Daily :

"When you have to hospitalize someone for respiratory illness in the U.K., where hospital beds are hard to allocate, then the person has a serious illness," said Jonathan Nguyen-Van-Tam, a senior lecturer at Public Health Laboratory Services in London.

"In this outbreak, we had four people who tested positive for H7 influenza strain, and three of them were hospitalized," he told United Press International. "One person was a candidate for intensive care before he finally came around.

"I think we need to reconsider the H7 strain on the basis of this outbreak," Nguyen-Van-Tam said in reporting how British authorities dealt with the disease encountered on small farms in Wales in the spring of this year.

...a lesser-known relative of the H5N1 virus may be emerging as an equally formidable threat, based on what health authorities encountered recently on a handful of tiny chicken farms in Wales and northern England.

Nguyen-Van-Tam said 23 people developed some form of influenza-like symptoms during the course of the (recent H7 virus in Northern England) investigation and cleanup. Fourteen of those individuals had secondary contact, but none showed immediate exposure to H7 virus.

Nguyen-Van-Tam said the investigation was even more difficult because the outbreaks occurred during the seasonal influenza outbreak, making it difficult to determine with sophisticated testing if the patients were infected by the seasonal bug or by avian flu.

"This was a challenging incident," Nguyen-Van-Tam said, "complicated in terms of time and space. No evidence of person-to-person transmission has been found, but serology tests are awaited."


What happens if someone infected with H7 is then exposed to H5N1? There is little research to be found online that explains the results of multiple infection by various strains of avian influenza.
Posted by Darryl Mason at 11:37 AM No comments:
Labels: H7N2, Wales

Friday, June 15, 2007

Poultry Industry Gets Nervous About 'Invisible' Bird Flu

World Poultry has run a short update on the 'invisible' bird flu strain now infecting chickens in Indonesia, where some bird have been found to be infected with H5N1, but are not ill, and show no outward symptoms of infection :
Indonesia has found traces of the highly pathogenic bird flu in healthy-looking poultry. This creates a major obstacle in detecting the disease.

Clinical signs of bird flu range from respiratory distress to coughing and sneezing, to dead chickens. If no clinical signs can be observed – asymptomatic chickens - the risks of the virus spreading are much higher, which also means that humans can become more easily infected with bird flu due to the virus's ability to adapt to new environments and hosts.

"The poultry death rate is not so high, but there is a trend that chicken or poultry are infected by the virus but they don't die," says Musny Suatmodjo, director of animal health.

Hong Kong-based researchers have also detected such "asymptomatic" chickens and other poultry in mainland Chinese markets in recent years, which they believe were responsible for most of the H5N1 human infections there.

Taking into account reports yesterday that Indonesia's 80th bird flu victim died after eating infected chicken meat, the 'invisible bird flu' development means that entire poultry stocks will need to be regularly tested, or vaccinated, and poultry meat will have to undergo more rigorous inspections and testing before it reaches the marketplace, particularly in countries like Indonesia where H5N1 is already at epidemic levels in bird populations.

Should a wave of human bird flu deaths as a result of eating infected poultry, poultry that showed no symptomatic signs of infection by the virus, the impact on domestic poultry sales, and exports, will be devastating.

The largest poultry companies around the world have mounted aggressive PR and marketing campaigns, costing tens of millions of dollars, to ensure consumers that they cannot become infected with the H5N1 virus from eating chicken or duck meat. A usual added proviso is that the meat is safe if "properly cooked".

In early 2006, Vietnam mounted a huge poster and advertising campaign warning poultry consumers that they needed to boil poultry meat until it was yellow before it should be considered safe to eat.

There has been at least three deaths believed to have resulted from eating infected poultry in as many months.

Marketing and PR alone will not assure the public this food product is safe if deaths continue.


Posted by Darryl Mason at 8:02 AM No comments:
Labels: chicken meat deaths, poultry industry
Indonesia's Official Bird Flu Death Toll Hits 80

Man Dies After Eating Infected Chickens

While some quarters of the mega-billion dollar global poultry industry will shout from the rooftops that you cannot catch bird flu and die from eating chickens, people still catch bird flu and die from eating chickens. Chickens infected with the bird flu virus.

But now we know that a strain of the bird flu has mutated and chickens can carry the virus without showing any outward signs of infection, how are Indonesians in particular supposed to avoid eating H5N1 infected chicken meat?

From the Jakarta Post :
An Indonesian man died of bird flu after eating sick chickens, a leading health official said Thursday, raising the national death toll to 80.

Multiple blood tests confirmed the 28-year-old had the deadly H5N1 strain of the virus...

The symptoms were the standard : cough, headaches, high fever. He died three days after being hospitalised, and presumably despite being treated with antivirals like Tamiflu, which are now standard issue for any bird flu patients in Indonesian hospitals.

Perhaps Vietnam had the right idea back in early 2006 when they distributed large posters through the cities showing chicken meat that had been boiled for more than half an hour until it was yellow.

Go here for that story, and to see the 'Boil It Safe' poster
Posted by Darryl Mason at 1:07 AM No comments:
Labels: chicken meat, Indonesia

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

30 Countries Reported Bird Flu Outbreaks In Past Twelve Months

The Facts And Figures Of Bird Flu




Reuters has run a short, but comprehensive summary of bird flu related facts and figures, resulting since the "outbreak of highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza began in Asia in 2003".

Amongst the more startling is this one : In the past twelve months alone, some 30 countries have reported outbreaks of bird flu virus. Some 59 countries and territories in total have reported outbreaks since 2003.

At least 190 people have died from the bird flu virus in the past four years, according to the World Health Organisation, from an infected base total estimated to be more than 320.

However, most experts would agree that countries like Indonesia, China and Vietnam, with huge population masses spread across hundreds of islands and rural territories, and with vast numbers of people sharing their living quarters with poultry, have probably had higher than the WHO official totals of bird flu infections and subsequent deaths.

WHO has confirmed human deaths in Indonesia, China, Vietnam, Egypt, Nigeria, Laos, Turkey, Cambodia, Iraq, Thailand and Azerbaijan.

Here's some more facts and figures :
* According to WHO, Vietnam and Indonesia have the highest number of cases, accounting for 121 of the total deaths.

* H5N1 is not the only bird flu virus. There are numerous strains. For example, an outbreak in 2003 of the H7N7 bird flu virus in the Netherlands led to the destruction of more than 30 million birds, around a third of the country's poultry stock. About 2.7 million were destroyed in Belgium and around 400,000 in Germany. In the Netherlands, 89 people were infected with the H7N7 virus, of whom one (a veterinarian) died.

* The H5N1 virus made the first known jump into humans in Hong Kong in 1997, infecting 18 people and killing six of them. The government ordered the immediate culling of the territory's entire poultry flock, ending the outbreak.
The Reuters piece also compiles a list of symptoms of human bird flu infection, including :
...fever, cough, sore throat, muscle aches, conjunctivitis, pneumonia, acute respiratory distress, viral pneumonia...

Posted by Darryl Mason at 11:49 AM No comments:
Labels: history, human deaths

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

When Bird Flu Becomes Invisible

If true, this development could prove to be staggeringly bad news for Indonesia, and the world, as the most effective methodology for detecting bird flu infection in poultry stocks has, thus far, been looking for birds that are showing symptoms of infection, or have been killed by the virus :
Chickens infected by bird flu in Indonesia are now mostly symptom-free, confounding efforts to fight the virus in the world's hardest hit country, an Agriculture Ministry official said Monday.

"It's really giving us a headache," said Musni Suatmodjo, the director of animal health.

Chickens are testing positive for the H5N1 virus, but they are staying healthy, making it difficult to identify which are infected.

John Weaver, of the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization, noted that several researchers have said many infected chickens appear to be surviving in Indonesia, triggering questions about whether the virus may have become less pathogenic.
It's an interesting and important question. If more birds can carrying the H5N1 strain of the bird flu virus, and survive, and show no outward signs of infection, this may mean that further mutations of the virus could prove far more deadlier than what has been seen so far.

The virus may be becoming less pathogenic, or simply more effective in transmitting itself.

Bird Flu Infection Chickens In Indonesia Showing No Symptoms
Posted by Darryl Mason at 11:33 AM No comments:
Labels: H5N1 mutations, sympton-free bird flu
A More Effective Method For The Mass-Culling Of Infected Birds?

More than 23 million poultry birds have, reportedly, been culled across the US through anti-bird flu extermination programs since the late early 1980s. The options available used to be gassing the birds, or electrocuting them, breaking their necks by hand, or simply chopping them up.

There has been a lot of debate, particularly in countries where bird flu is now an epidemic, or quickly heading that way (Indonesia being the prime example), about which method of mass culling is the most effective and least cruel.

Since November last year, bird flu fighters in the United States have had a new weapon of mass extermination :

These soapy air bubbles, adapted from what firefighters use to smother blazes, can smother birds within several minutes, with minimal contact between workers and infection.

The problem is that some experts consider it less humane than gassing. They say carbon dioxide at least knocks birds unconscious before it poisons them.

The US Department of Agriculture approved foam for outbreaks in November. It got its first real-life test in April in West Virginia, when 26,000 turkeys were destroyed to end a flu outbreak in Pendleton County

Not everyone agrees the foam method is more effective, or less cruel to the poultry being 'depopulated' :
Foam simply fills their windpipes and strangles them.

“You might as well drop them in a bucket of water,” fumes Dr. Mohan Raj, a British veterinarian at the University of Bristol who specializes in animal welfare during disease control.
To animal-rights campaigner Karen Davis, who founded United Poultry Concerns, in Machipongo, Va., foam is like “burying them alive.”

However, to her, carbon dioxide is hardly better. Before knocking out birds, it irritates chemical receptors in the lungs and leaves the animals short of breath.

“There is no really satisfactory, humane method to depopulate a full houseful of birds,” says animal ethicist Bernard Rollin, at Colorado State University.

Whatever the shortcomings of current techniques, federal and industry officials insist they’re ready for a big outbreak. But they acknowledge they’d probably use foam and gas as needed — and some uglier methods too.

In the worst case, with people dying, the industry might be forced simply to close barns and let birds die of thirst or disease.

Posted by Darryl Mason at 11:06 AM No comments:
Labels: Bird Culls

Sunday, June 10, 2007

"Climate Of Fear" Expected To Smash Asian Economies When Bird Flu Pandemic Hits

Even a short pandemic, of only a few weeks duration, killing a few thousand people, is expected to absolutely devastate the economy of the country most unfortunate to suffer such a fate.

What makes economists so nervous about the dreaded H5N1 pandemic is that the idea of a "short pandemic" is fiction. The World Health Organisation, and most recently Australian health minister Tony Abbott, talk of pandemic 'waves' lasting a few months each, with perhaps as many as three or four subsequent 'waves' in the next two or so years.

The economic devastation comes from such a wide array of financial impacts it's almost impossible to sum them up briefly. But the short version is this : when people start dying of bird flu, and a pandemic level outbreak is announced, most people will stop going to work, and public gatherings and public transport systems will be shut down, to halt the spread of the infection.

People won't be going to the mall, but there won't be people to serve them or stock the shelves even if they did go. Now imagine that paradigm across every aspect of the social and business life of a city, or large town.

The "climate of fear" under discussion in the story below also includes the possibility of widespread panic, and subsequent extremely negative economic impacts that follow, even when the human death tolls are low, and the spread halted quickly.

Well, the World Health Organisation has spent three years now scaring the crap out of people about how dangerous and deadly H5N1 can be, and how careful people need to be around poultry birds that may be infected. Of course there is going to be a "climate of fear", the WHO helped to create this reality.

From Hindustan Times :
Asia-Pacific health ministers said on Friday that a "climate of fear" that accompanies the outbreak of infectious diseases such as bird flu could have a devastating impact on Asia's economies.

The APEC Health Ministers conference in Sydney ended on Friday with a commitment to share virus specimens and vaccines and to work to encourage investor and consumer confidence to help Asia-Pacific economies recover in the event of a pandemic.

"The climate of fear that disease outbreaks such as avian influenza bring can rapidly sap the confidence and enterprise that underpins the economic dynamism of our region," Australian Health Minister Tony Abbott told the conference.

The health ministers endorsed a plan called "APEC Functioning Economies in Times of Pandemic Guidelines" which aims to assist in managing economies during a pandemic. The guidelines cover communications, essential services, financial systems and movement between and within countries.

"We recognise that healthy populations contribute to economic growth and development. Conversely, any threat to the health of a population can have a devastating effect on prosperity," the ministers from the 21-member Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum said in a statement.

The ministers said that the Asia-Pacific needed to replicate the co-operation seen during the SARS respiratory crisis in 2003 to combat the threat of a bird flu pandemic.

"The global nature of pandemic influenza and other virulent disease demands international solidarity, co-operation and co-ordination of efforts...for the sharing of information and resources," said the ministers.

Posted by Darryl Mason at 2:21 PM No comments:
Labels: global pandemic, pandemic plans
IBM Offers Free Software To Track Pandemic Spread

From the San Jose Mercury :
IBM said Thursday that it is giving health authorities and others around the world expanded access to free software it partly developed in San Jose to help track bird flu and other infectious diseases.

The software - dubbed Spatiotemporal Epidemiological Modeler, or STEM - can create computer models of how diseases spread geographically. IBM said it would make the software available on the Web site of the Eclipse Foundation, which provides open-source software.

IBM last year announced that it was providing STEM to the World Health Organization, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and others as part of a global initiative to help stop the spread of bird flu.


Posted by Darryl Mason at 3:45 AM No comments:
Egypt : 10 Year Old Girl Dies From H5N1

H5N1 has claimed a 15th victim in Egypt. A ten year old girl, Mayada Garah Tohami, died on Saturday, shortly after testing positive for the virus. She was the 35th person in Egypt to test positive for H5N1 infection :

The girl was admitted to a hospital after developing flu-like symptoms, Shahin said. She died after testing positive for the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu.

She is from the upper Egyptian town of Naqada in the governorate of Qena, approximately 300 miles south of Cairo.

The ministry believes the young girl had come into contact with infected birds that were being raised at her home.

Egypt is the worst hit country outside East Asia, having documented 35 human cases. Of those infected, 14 have died and the other 20, not including the current case, have recovered, MENA reported.

Egypt first reported the H5N1 strain of bird flu in deceased poultry in February of last year and the first human case the following month.

Posted by Darryl Mason at 2:43 AM No comments:
Labels: Egypt
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