Wednesday, November 30, 2005

News - People's Daily Online -- Canadian company to produce H5N1 flu vaccine

The Canadian government and the country's flu vaccine manufacturer ID Biomedical have signed a deal that will see the company produce a prototype H5N1 flu vaccine for clinical testing.

In a statement released Monday, Health Minister Ujjal Dosanjh called the contract an important component of the country's pandemic readiness.

Under the contract, the Canadian government will pay ID Biomedical 21.2 million Canadian dollars (18 million US dollars) for a currently unspecified number of doses of H5N1 vaccine.

But the prototype vaccine will not be tested until late 2006. And the process of testing and licensing a prototype H5N1 vaccine will take another year on top of that, Dr. Theresa Tam of the Public Health Agency of Canada said Monday.

Under the deal, if a pandemic vaccine is rushed to market without undergoing the full testing and licensing process, the government will have to compensate the manufacturer for any claims that might arise if there are adverse reactions to the vaccine.

People's Daily Online -- Canadian company to produce H5N1 flu vaccine

Tuesday, November 29, 2005

News - Scientists look for H5N1 answers in yellow fever vaccine - myDNA

Rockefeller University's Charlie Rice thinks that scientists struggling to create a vaccine to protect against the widely predicted avian flu pandemic might learn a thing or two from yellow fever.

"The yellow fever 17D vaccine is one of the most successful vaccines ever created," says Rice, the Maurice R. and Corinne P. Greenberg Professor and head of the Laboratory for Virology and Infectious Disease. "Surprisingly, though, how it elicits such a robust immunity has never been addressed."

But by studying how the yellow fever vaccine creates a potent, lifelong immunity after a single shot, Rockefeller scientists say they could unlock secrets that would help design new vaccines to target not only the influenza virus, but perhaps other infectious diseases such as HIV or hepatitis C. In a new paper published this month in the Journal of Experimental Medicine, Rice and his colleagues demonstrate one mechanism by which the vaccine does its job: By infecting specific cells in the immune system, they say, the inoculation promotes an unexpectedly robust immune response.

Yellow fever is a deadly virus, most common in the tropical areas of Africa and South America, which causes hemorrhage and multiple organ failure, and is lethal in 20 to 50 percent of all cases.

"The characteristics of yellow fever make it tricky," says Randy Longman, co-first author and a biomedical fellow in Rice's lab. "With infectious diseases, you want to develop a mouse model of how the disease works. But yellow fever doesn't infect mice the same way it infects humans, so we have to gather data using humans to understand how the virus works."

News: Scientists look for H5N1 answers in yellow fever vaccine - myDNA

News - CIDRAP >> Two human H5N1 cases noted; poultry outbreaks expand

Nov 28, 2005 (CIDRAP News) ? Two more human cases of H5N1 avian influenza have been confirmed in recent days in Vietnam and Indonesia, while poultry outbreaks are spreading in China and Romania.

The World Health Organization (WHO) confirmed Nov 25 that a 15-year-old boy from Vietnam's Haiphong province has H5N1 infection, which Vietnamese authorities announced last week. The boy has been discharged from a hospital and is recovering, the WHO said. He is the 66th Vietnamese to contract avian flu.

A 16-year-old boy was confirmed today as having Indonesia's 12th avian flu case, according to a Nov 26 report by Agence France-Presse (AFP). He was hospitalized in good condition in the West Java capital of Bandung, said Hariadi Wibisono of the Indonesian health industry, as quoted by AFP.

"Tests [on blood] taken from the 16-year-old boy, both locally and by the World Health Organization, show that he is a bird flu patient," Wibisono said. The WHO hasn't updated its case count to reflect confirmation of the case.

The WHO said it would send a team to the eastern Chinese province of Anhui to investigate human deaths from H5N1, according to the English version of the China People's Daily Online. Two deaths have been confirmed in that province.

China wrestles with poultry outbreaks
China has reported seven new outbreaks in poultry in less than 10 days, according to the English version of the Chinese People's Daily Online on Nov 25. Outbreaks have led to the culling of about 17,000 birds in an Inner Mongolian village, according to a Nov 25 report China filed with the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE). Bloomberg News reported on Nov 26 that China has had 27 poultry outbreaks this year.

CIDRAP >> Two human H5N1 cases noted; poultry outbreaks expand

News - Reuters AlertNet - Hong Kong, Singapore stocking up for H5N1 testing

HONG KONG, Nov 28 (Reuters) - Health authorities in wealthier parts of Asia are stocking up on diagnostic kits and chemicals to detect the deadly H5N1 bird flu virus, which experts fear could mutate and trigger a pandemic that could kill millions.

In Hong Kong, government laboratories have bought more reagents, or chemicals used in testing for the virus, while private doctors in Singapore will soon be urged to stockpile rapid-test diagnostic kits, industry sources said.

Governments everywhere are scrambling to stock up on anti-viral drugs Tamiflu and Relenza. These are believed to reduce the symptoms and complications caused by the H5N1 virus, which is part of the influenza A type of viruses.

But both drugs are expensive and supplies are tight.

To prevent wastage and severe strain on healthcare systems, medical experts say it is crucial to quickly eliminate other forms of influenza, such as B and C, and narrow diagnoses down as far as possible to H5N1.

Reuters AlertNet - Hong Kong, Singapore stocking up for H5N1 testing

News - CANOE -- CNEWS - Canada: Feds sign H5N1 flu vaccine deal

TORONTO (CP) - The federal government and Canada's flu vaccine manufacturer have finally signed a deal that will see ID Biomedical produce a prototype H5N1 flu vaccine for clinical testing in this country - a year after company officials first pitched the idea to federal pandemic planners.

Protracted negotiations between the two parties over issues including the thorny question of vaccine liability leaves Canada, which had been one of the first countries to indicate it would make an H5N1 vaccine, now trailing a growing list of nations in this area of research.

Health Minister Ujjal Dosanjh called the contract an important component of the country's pandemic readiness.

CANOE -- CNEWS - Canada: Feds sign H5N1 flu vaccine deal

News - H5N1 strain mutates in human cases

STUDIES show the H5N1 strain of virus separated from China's human cases of bird flu has mutated, compared with the strain found in Vietnam's human cases, said the Ministry of Health yesterday.

Lab tests found the H5N1 strain of virus separated from recent human cases is highly homologous with that found in poultry samples from the bird flu in outbreak sites, said the ministry.

However, compared with the virus strain from the human cases in Vietnam, the genetic order of H5N1 in China's human cases has mutated "to a certain degree," the health ministry spokesman Mao Qun'an said.

"But the mutation cannot cause human-to-human transmission of the bird flu," he said.

The World Health Organization yesterday started investigating two bird flu deaths in Anhui Province. Both victims, women farmers, were in contact with sick and dead poultry.

H5N1 strain mutates in human cases

News - VOA News - Dutch Scientists Say Vaccinating Poultry Prevents Spread of Bird Flu

A team of Dutch researchers says vaccinating chickens against bird flu can prevent a major outbreak of the disease by preventing transmission from bird to bird.

The finding was published in the American scientific journal, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Scientist Jeanet Van der Goot said the study showed vaccination reduced the infectiousness of chickens with avian flu as well as reducing the susceptibility of healthy chickens.

The study concludes that vaccination can be an attractive tool to prevent outbreaks of bird flu in poultry, thereby eliminating a source of human infections.

The Dutch study was conducted using a strain of the virus different from the H5N1 strain that has caused human fatalities.

The study says it takes about two weeks from the date of inoculation for a vaccine to protect a flock.

VOA News - Dutch Scientists Say Vaccinating Poultry Prevents Spread of Bird Flu

News - Avian flu fears put to rest - News

The avian influenza or bird flu has recently surfaced in the media as a possible pandemic disease, resulting in a fear of global outbreak.
Originating in chicken production in southeast Asian countries such as China, Indonesia and Cambodia, the disease is a common virus in both domestic and migratory birds, which when passed on to humans acts similar to the common influenza virus, but more aggressively, sometimes resulting in death.
It was because of the transfer to humans in early 1997, 2003, and now in 2005 that the government has been taking precautions to prevent another Severe Accute Respitory Syndrome (SARS) or Mad Cow type of outbreak.

Thus far there have been no humans infected in North America, but because of the ever increasing number of trans-Pacific travellers, the disease has become a serious threat for Canada, the United States and the rest of the world.
The scare has caused many precautions to be set in place and has even alarmed the general public of possible infection. So far in southeast Asian countries there have been approximately 100 proven cases and over half of those people have died as a result of the disease.
Specializing in the patterns of infectious disease, Health Sciences Associate Professor Ana Sanchez said that, "The SARS outbreak has shown us a big lesson in staying complacent ? it was a real eye opener, but because of it we are stronger in that area. We still have work to do, but it was a start."
The Canadian government has taken extreme precaution in dealing with chicken production but some officials say that it has gone a little too far.
This can be argued by the fact that precautions are taken to prevent such outbreaks, like SARS, and that as Professor Sanchez stated, "We are trying to send an international message that we are doing what is required to protect the nation and the world."

Avian flu fears put to rest - News: "The avian influenza or bird flu has recently surfaced in the media as a possible pandemic disease, resulting in a fear of global outbreak.
Originating in chicken production in southeast Asian countries such as China, Indonesia and Cambodia, the disease is a common virus in both domestic and migratory birds, which when passed on to humans acts similar to the common influenza virus, but more aggressively, sometimes resulting in death.
It was because of the transfer to humans in early 1997, 2003, and now in 2005 that the government has been taking precautions to prevent another Severe Accute Respitory Syndrome (SARS) or Mad Cow type of outbreak.
Thus far there have been no humans infected in North America, but because of the ever increasing number of trans-Pacific travellers, the disease has become a serious threat for Canada, the United States and the rest of the world.
The scare has caused many precautions to be set in place and has even alarmed the general public of possible infection. So far in southeast Asian countries there have been approximately 100 proven cases and over half of those people have died as a result of the disease.
Specializing in the patterns of infectious disease, Health Sciences Associate Professor Ana Sanchez said that, 'The SARS outbreak has shown us a big lesson in staying complacent ? it was a real eye opener, but because of it we are stronger in that area. We still have work to do, but it was a start.'
The Canadian government has taken extreme precaution in dealing with chicken production but some officials say that it has gone a little too far.
This can be argued by the fact that precautions are taken to prevent such outbreaks, like SARS, and that as Pro"

News - Vaccinating Birds Might Limit Avian Flu Spread, Research Contends

MONDAY, Nov. 28 (HealthDay News) -- Mass vaccination of poultry at risk for avian flu may be effective in preventing the infection from spreading in birds, Dutch researchers report.

In chickens vaccinated against the H7N7 strain of bird flu, two different vaccines were each able to block viral transmission and prevent an outbreak two weeks after immunization, the study found.

"We could also not show infection of a contact chicken that was not protected. These vaccines really work very well against spreading," said lead author Dr. J.A. van der Goot, a researcher at the Central Institute for Animal Disease Control in Lelystad, the Netherlands.

Her team concluded that vaccinating poultry may be effective in preventing the spread of highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses.

However, the flu strain they tested is not the H5N1 strain, which is currently thought to pose a risk to humans.

The report appears in the Nov. 28 early online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

According to van der Goot, "We wanted to look at the effectiveness of vaccines against avian influenza. We wanted not only to look at the effectiveness for the individual chicken, but we wanted to look at the effect of vaccination on the transmission of the virus."

Vaccinating chickens is a good strategy for containing the bird flu in Europe, where the vaccines are good, a U.S. poultry science expert contended.

But in the United States, "the whole thing with bird flu vaccines is they are not very good," added Joseph Giambrone, a professor of poultry science at Auburn University.

- Forbes.com

News - Baxter to Help Indonesia Develop Human Vaccine for Avian Flu

Nov. 28 (Bloomberg) -- Baxter International Inc., the world's biggest maker of blood-disease products, will help Indonesia develop a vaccine for the H5N1 avian influenza virus, the nation's President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said.

The government has asked PT Bio Farma to cooperate with Baxter to develop the vaccine, Yudhoyono told reporters in Jakarta today. The move is part of the government's plan to prevent an outbreak of avian influenza among humans.

If Indonesia is to develop a bird flu vaccine for humans it is best to produce it from the H5N1 virus found in infected people here,'' said Hariadi Wibisono, director of vector-borne disease control at Indonesia's Ministry of Health. ``That's because the sub type of the virus may be different here.''

Avian influenza, for which there is no vaccine yet, has killed at least seven people in the Southeast Asian nation, which has 200 million chickens in village backyards. The H5N1 bird-flu virus has infected at least 132 people in Asia since December 2003 and killed 68 of them.

Bloomberg.com: Asia

News - Fraser Valley farms cleared of avian flu virus

VANCOUVER - The U.S. government has whittled down its avian-flu trade restrictions on B.C. poultry to a small area within the Fraser Valley.

The change comes after the Canadian Food Inspection Agency moved quickly to cull 60,000 ducks on two farms.

The agency's Cornelius Kiley says they hope to lift restrictions on farms in the five-kilometre zone by December 10th.

Several other countries still have trading bans in place, including Japan and Taiwan.

CKNW News Talk 980 - CKNWAM - 3

News - County to initiate planning process for flu pandemic

Carol Borger will soon start going through the ?what if? scenario - the one which deals with the possibility of a flu pandemic.

Borger is administrator for the Butler County Health Department. Beginning in December and continuing into January, she said, she plans to initiate the planning process for avian flu, a strain of flu she said now appears likely to eventually make its way to the United States.

On Tuesday of last week, she said, she attended a presentation by the Kansas Department of Health and Environment at which the Kansas plan for pandemic flu - a plan first rolled out about two weeks ago - was discussed.

Already, Borger said, health officials in Wichita and Sedgwick County have started the pandemic flu planning process, in which monthly meetings with the people who will be their partners in the planning process are being held.

She said that process extends all the way to the elected officials who would be in positions of authority should the need for any kind of isolation or quarantine arise.

Borger said Butler County's planning process will be on a ?much smaller? scale than what takes place in Sedgwick County, since Butler's population is substantially smaller.

In this county, she said, it will be a matter of determining who the planning partners are going to be, what will need to be acquired and what things will need to get done.

She said the health department will be working with health care providers in the community, hospital personnel and even Butler County Emergency Medical Services and Butler County Emergency Management/Homeland Security - the people who would be affected should a flu pandemic arrive in the United States and make its way to Kansas and Butler County.

?We seem to blame a lot of things on ?the flu,' ? Borger said; however, she said, true influenza is caused by one of the various strains of the flu virus.

She said the avian flu is a particular strain of influenza which seems to be more virulent, has not been seen before around the world and one for which no kind of natural immunity has been built.

Avian flu could still mutate and change, Borger said, and because of the factors currently associated with it, everyone - not just the usual at-risk groups such as the very young and the infirm - is susceptible to it.

El Dorado Times

News - Avian Flu Spikes Concern Over Online Sales of Medications


Recent concerns over avian influenza have led to an increase in prescription medication sales on the Internet. Consumers making these purchases are often subject to fraudulent practices by online pharmacies. Resources for safely purchasing medications such as Tamiflu for avian influenza are available and should be relied upon for any online prescription drug purchase.

(PRWEB) November 29, 2005 -- For the past several months, avian influenza has dominated health headlines across the globe. A number of countries are reporting cases of avian influenza, commonly referred to as ?bird flu?, in their domestic and wild bird populations. In addition, there are confirmed cases of bird-to-human transmissions of avian influenza in the South East Asia region, many of which have resulted in death. Concerns over bird flu have caused a spike in online prescriptions from foreign pharmacies for medications such as Tamiflu. This boom is reinforced with each new report of an avian flu outbreak and resources to get these prescription medications from online foreign pharmacies are popping up across the Internet.

Avian Flu Spikes Concern Over Online Sales of Medications

News - Outcry over bird flu hit list | Business | Breaking News 24/7 - NEWS.com.au (30-11-2005)

One of the world's largest investment firms has developed a strategy for its Australian clients to profit if bird flu mutates and triggers a "virulent pandemic".

Citigroup advises clients to sell shares in companies that need people to go to public places - such as mall operator Westfield (wdc.ASX:Quote,News), airport owner MAp and casino controllers PBL (pbl.ASX:Quote,News) and Tabcorp.


They should also dump airlines (Qantas (qan.ASX:Quote,News) and tourism companies, which would include Flight Centre.


Advertisement:
Investors are told to substitute stocks of companies that would benefit if people were forced to stay in their houses.
These include phone companies -- for instance, Telstra -- and media businesses, such as Austar. Freight delivery firms are also favoured by the Citigroup strategists. The main players in Australia are Toll Holdings and Patrick Corp.

Business ethicist John Sweeney said the analysis had the hallmarks of Gordon Gekko, the character played by Michael Douglas in the film Wall Street. Gekko famously said: "Greed is good."

"This makes your blood go cold," said Mr Sweeney, leader of the Edmund Rice Business Ethics Initiative.

Mr Sweeney also said that market behaviour may need to be regulated in the event of a bird flu pandemic.

James Thier, who oversees a $380 million portfolio at Australian Ethical Investment, said Citigroup should have kept its advice to "positive stocks" like vaccine makers and pathology.

"These people are looking at avian flu and saying that these are potential winners for us.

"They are looking at the negative side," Mr Thier said. "But this needs to be approached from a positive perspective rather than saying, 'How can we profit from millions of deaths?'."

In research called Setting the Scene for Aussie Stocks 2006 (Part 2), Citigroup's Adrian Blundell-Wignall and Alison Tarditi present their "Avian Flu Thinking".

A sub-head follows: "Event Risk Scenarios for Possible Human Pandemic." Underneath is a flow-chart which contemplates both mild and "virulent" pandemics.

Under the virulent scenario, there would be "protracted [economic] weakness as fundamentals deteriorate", so clients should move to a "very defensive" investment strategy.

Outcry over bird flu hit list | Business | Breaking News 24/7 - NEWS.com.au (30-11-2005)

News - The Jakarta Post - SBY tells officials not to cover up bird flu cases

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has warned local administrations against presenting him with fabricated "good news" on bird flu as foreign and national media have continued running factual reports on the spread of the lethal disease in the country.

He also said on Monday the government was to launch a bird flu monitoring system, called "Village Preparedness", which would involve millions of people at village level.

Under the scheme, at least five personnel, including doctors, would monitor bird flu cases among both birds and humans in every village in order to speed up the reporting of any outbreak, Susilo added.

The President said several regional executive heads had failed to take measures to eradicate bird flu seriously, despite instruction from the central government.

"I have asked them to implement what we've instructed. I'd rather get honest and objective reports on bird flu cases in the regions than cover-ups for the sake of a good image," he told a news conference after a meeting with Minister of Health Siti Fadilah Supari and Minister of Agriculture Anton Apriyantono.

Susilo said covering up bird flu outbreaks to please him would only result in the situation worsening and more people falling victim to the virus.

The Jakarta Post - SBY tells officials not to cover up bird flu cases

News - IOL: Threat of bird flu hangs over Hong Kong

Hong Kong - Pedestrians are again donning face masks, handwash dispensers have sprung up in stores and offices, disinfecting carpets have been laid in hotels and notices tell citizens to observe personal hygiene.

Two years after an outbreak of SARS reduced Hong Kong to a frightened ghost town, fear and paranoia have returned to the streets once more as the arrival of winter raises concerns of a bird flu pandemic.

But as Hong Kongers batten down for an outbreak they have been told could claim millions of lives, experts warn authorities are overstating the risk and face, instead, a potentially damaging public panic.

IOL: Threat of bird flu hangs over Hong Kong

News - Reuters AlertNet - Aborigines on Australia's bird-flu frontline

CANBERRA, Nov 29 (Reuters) - Aborigines in Australia's remote north and authorities in Indonesia and East Timor have been drafted in to watch for signs of sick or dead migratory birds as Australia's frontline defence against bird flu.

Australian Agriculture Minister Peter McGauran, however, played down the chances of bird flu reaching Australia by migrating birds, as the water fowl most likely to carry the disease did not generally migrate to Australia from Asia.

"We've worked with indigenous communities spread throughout northern Australia to try and detect signs of sick birds," McGauran told reporters on Tuesday at the beginning of a national simulated bird-flu exercise.

Australia has not recorded any cases of the H5N1 strain of avian influenza, which has killed 68 people in Asia since late 2003. But Australia has recorded five cases of the H7 influenza subtype in poultry since 1975.

McGauran said the kinds of birds likely to migrate to Australia were shorebirds, or waders, which were less likely to be a bird-flu threat than migrating water fowl, such as geese, swans and ducks.

Reuters AlertNet - Aborigines on Australia's bird-flu frontline

News - Jakarta takes proactive stance over bird flu

JAKARTA, Nov. 29 (Xinhuanet) -- The Jakarta administration had started taking more active measures to contain the spread of bird flu by launching a random monitoring operation, aside from relying on tip-offs from people about its cases found in their neighborhoods, said the Jakarta Post Tuesday

"Besides receiving complaints from people over suspected bird flu cases, we also carry out random checks on birds in several areas to spot birds infected with avian influenza," Central Jakarta Mayor Muhayat told the paper on Monday.

Once the officers found any infected birds through a quick blood test, Muhayat said, they would immediately kill the birds without requiring laboratory tests to confirm the presence of the virus.

"Further tests mean higher costs and more time. We cannot afford that. That's why we have to react swiftly to prevent the spread of the virus to humans," he asserted.

Central Jakarta is a priority municipality in the capital sincecentral government offices, national and foreign companies and foreign embassies are located there.

The concern of the administration over the bird flu outbreak reached new heights after it discovered infected birds in seven of20 sub-districts tested for the virus, predicting that cases in many areas would be found as monitoring continued.

East Jakarta had the highest cases -- with five sub-districts, while North Jakarta and West Jakarta had one infected sub-district each.

"All five municipalities are told to conduct random monitoring as a standard operating procedure to contain the bird flu outbreak simultaneously here," Muhayat asserted.

The World Health Organization-sanctioned laboratory in Hong Kong has confirmed 12 human infections in Indonesia to date. Seven people have died from the virus. Enditem

Xinhua - English

News - China confirms 2 more bird flu outbreaks

China today confirmed two more deadly bird flu outbreaks in the country leading to mass culling of poultry in the affected areas.

The Ministry of Agriculture said 288 poultry died on November 22 in Shanshan County in north-western Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region. After a preliminary analysis, it was determined that the H5N1 strain of highly pathogenic bird flu could be cause of the outbreak.

A state avian flu lab confirmed the hypothesis yesterday, the ministry said in a statement. By last night, authorities in Xinjiang had culled 52,162 poultry within three km from the affected areas, it said.

The lab also confirmed another bird flu outbreak on November 18 that killed 390 chickens and 12 ducks in Laobutou village in Lingling district in central province of Hunan.

China confirms 2 more bird flu outbreaks

Monday, November 28, 2005

News - Call for creating awareness on bird flu

Bangalore, Nov. 27 (UNI): The recently concluded national seminar on bird ecology and conservation has recommended to the government to embark on a national awareness campaign about the imminent threat to humans, poultry and wild birds from the H5N1 strain of 'Bird Flu Virus.

It suggested sanitisation of various poultries to keep poultry birds segregated from the wild birds and to constantly monitor the migratory bird population for any tell tale symptoms of the disease. The experts, who had attended the two day deliberations on November 12 and 13 also suggested to initiate DNA bar coding for all species of birds in India as a reliable tool for species identification as well as a dependable forensic evidence material in wildlife jurisprudence. Awareness campaigns around the villages should be intensified and ritual hunting should be stopped forthwith, they exhorted.

The experts also called for launching of the National Bustard Project to save the great Indian Bustard which was on the verge of extinction along with other birds such as black breasted Parrot Bill, Nilgiri Pipit, Gyps Vultures and Flamingoes.

They also underscored the need to conserve and protect the grasslands along the western ghats and the adjoining buffer areas. Mangroves and coral reefs which could redouble as bio-shields and protect properties and natural resources should also be restored along with lakes. Tanks located in the city should be declared as 'avian hot spots' and protected areas, they added.

The Hindu News Update Service

News - Reuters AlertNet - Romania detects bird flu case outside Danube delta

BUCHAREST, Nov 26 (Reuters) - Romania has detected a new case of bird flu in a remote village outside the Danube delta where the deadly H5N1 strain was discovered in October, officials said on Saturday.

A turkey tested positive for the H5 type of avian flu in the small village of Scarlatesti in the Braila county, some 70 miles (113 km) from the delta, Agriculture Minister Gheorghe Flutur told private television station Realitatea TV.

He said quarantine was imposed on the village and culling domestic fowl should start soon as a precautionary move.

Reuters AlertNet - Romania detects bird flu case outside Danube delta

News - Bird Hit


THERE?S no bird flu in India, says the Centre. Yet the newspapers are full of it, news channels are devoting special bulletins to the subject, Western experts are attributing the 25 million deaths in six months in 1918 to bird-borne viruses. Should we be worried?

What is avian influenza?

Avian influenza or bird flu is a contagious disease caused by viruses that normally infect only birds and less commonly, pigs. Avian influenza viruses are highly species-specific, but have, on rare occasions, crossed the species barrier to infect humans. It spreads rapidly through poultry and kills birds within 48 hours of infection.

But it?s not a new phenomenon. So why the to-do now?
According to the WHO, the current outbreak of avian influenza?caused by the H5N1 virus, which was first detected in southeast Asia in mid 2003?is the largest and most severe on record. Never before has the disease killed so many birds and affected so many countries, including Indonesia, Vietnam, Cambodia, China and Thailand.

??Despite the death or culling of an estimated 150 million birds, the virus is spreading,?? says Dr CM Gulati, former WHO drug expert and editor, Monthly Index of Medical Sciences. The WHO says it will take years to control the disease among poultry.

Bird Hit

News - New bird flu outbreak reported in northern China

A new outbreak of H5N1 avian influenza has been confirmed in China's northern region of Inner Mongolia, the agriculture ministry said on Saturday.

The latest bird flu outbreak is the 23rd in China since October.

Experts confirmed H5N1 bird flu after 246 birds died in Inner Mongolia's Zalantun city last Sunday, the ministry said.

Local veterinary workers have culled 16,567 birds at poultry farms within 3 kilometres of the affected area, it said.

China has reported three confirmed human infections with bird flu.

World Health Organization experts plan to travel next week to the eastern province of Anhui, where two women died after contact with infected poultry.

Health ministry spokesman Mao Qun'an on Friday said China was making "timely reports" to WHO on the bird flu outbreaks and had "immediately released the information to the public".

Allegations that China may have hidden a much larger number of human infections were "absolutely groundless" rumours, the government's official Xinhua news agency quoted Mao as saying.

Chinese agriculture and health authorities have stepped up education campaigns with prime-time television and newspaper advertisements urging caution and proper hygiene in handling live and slaughtered poultry.

Health officials worldwide fear that a mutation that makes the virus highly infectious between people could lead to a global human pandemic, killing millions.

Bangkok Post - Breaking News

News - Indonesia Reports New Human Bird Flu Infection

Indonesia reported a new human bird flu infection on Saturday, and Taiwan joined other Asian governments in announcing it wanted to produce the anti-viral drug Tamiflu to treat human infections.

The Indonesia announcement came a day after the health minister said her country will begin producing and stockpiling Tamiflu because of fears of a human epidemic, the Associated Press reported.

On Friday, the country had also announced outbreaks of bird flu in poultry throughout the capital, Jakarta. And authorities destroyed 400 fowl in an area of Jakarta near the home of a young girl who died from the disease. So far, avian flu has been spotted in 23 of Indonesia's 30 provinces and has killed seven people.

ABC News: Health?Highlights: Nov.?26,?2005

News - TheStar.com - Fighting bird flu the Canadian way

Next spring, the U.S. government will equip a small army of bird catchers with nets and cotton swabs and send them by air and sea out into the Alaskan wilderness to monitor the area for the first migratory birds carrying the dreaded avian flu to North America's shores.

The Alaska project is a public health version of the 1950s DEW line; instead of early warning for incoming Soviet missiles, the sentries are watching for an incoming pandemic.

Canada has no such elaborate (and expensive) plans. But before you start worrying that we're all going to fall ill next spring from the bird flu, you should understand why we're taking a different approach: Canada's experts maintain that our low-key surveillance plan is by design.

"The concern about wild birds bringing the virus in is probably quite exaggerated," says Dr. Ted Leighton of the Canadian Cooperative Wildlife Health Centre in Saskatoon.

"Overwhelmingly, it's poultry and poultry products and people carrying things ? human transportation of agricultural products, particularly wild birds, that is the main way the virus gets around."

TheStar.com - Fighting bird flu the Canadian way

News - Officials to be briefed at hospital on avian flu - The Boston Globe

Marlborough Hospital will become one of the first hospitals in the Boston area to hold a session for community leaders to discuss preparedness for a possible avian flu outbreak.

With worries mounting around the country about the deadly virus, the hospital hopes to increase public awareness by teaching town officials, fire chiefs, and school nurses about the disease.

''We don't know if [a pandemic] is going to happen tomorrow or five years from now, but we have to be prepared," said Dr. Vibha Sharma, an infectious disease specialist at the hospital who says she has been flooded with questions from patients anxious about the disease.

Officials to be briefed at hospital on avian flu - The Boston Globe

News - Professors sound-off on bird flu - News

Though it has recently received more attention, the bird flu isn't new. There are more than a dozen strains of avian influenza that frequently sicken birds around the globe. They do not, however, frequently spread to humans and kill them within days.

The current threat is known as H5N1, a highly contagious and rapidly fatal strain of the bird flu. Once contracted, rapid deterioration of the lungs is common, with pneumonia and multi-organ failure usually following. The World Health Organization attributes nearly 70 deaths to H5N1, and, based on the current mortality rate, almost half of everyone infected will die.

In the case of a pandemic, WHO gives a conservative estimate of 7.4 million deaths, but it warns the toll could be much higher. Many wonder: if the avian flu has always been such a common bird illness, why are people suddenly becoming infected?

The avian flu is an RNA virus, much like AIDS, which means it is prone to frequent and rapid mutations, according to Debopam Chakrabarti, assistant professor of molecular and microbiology at UCF. After innumerable useless copies, the virus randomly replicated itself into a version humans are susceptible to.

This is the version that has infected about 130 people, according to WHO - but it's not the one scientists are dreading.

Now that H5N1 has mutated into a form humans are susceptible to, the next step toward a pandemic would be the last step: to have a person already infected with the human flu also contract the bird flu. In a process known as "reassortment," the two viruses would recombine inside the victim's body, producing a deadly hybrid.

Professors sound-off on bird flu - News

New - It?s not a case of bird flu: Man, 61, is free of virus


The man warded recently at the Penang Hospital with symptoms of lung infection does not have the deadly H5N1 strain of avian influenza.
Initial tests on the 61-year-old man showed he was free from the virus.

Parliamentary Secretary to the Health Ministry, Datuk Lee Kah Choon, said today: "Hospital authorities have, however, advised him to stay for a few more days so that they can continue to observe his condition.

"All I can say is that he does not have the deadly virus but the health authorities need to conduct more tests to determine what he is suffering from," Lee told reporters during a gotong royong in Jalan Perak.

"There are no bird flu cases in Penang or other parts of the country," he added.

The New Straits Times reported yesterday that the man was warded on Friday, five days after returning from China with his family. They were there on a social visit.

He felt ill soon after his return and began to show flu-like symptoms three days later.

According to the man, he did not have any close encounter with live or dead birds in China and did not visit any poultry farm.

Lee said the ministry had identified 21 hospitals nationwide in anticipation of bird flu in the country.

"The Government is also looking at providing Tamiflu as and when there is a need.

"We have a very comprehensive plan in place to protect everyone, be it patients, our medical staff and the people at large," he said.

He also said the Agriculture and Agro-based Industries Ministry as well as the Customs and Immigration departments had an equally important role in the fight against avian flu.

On dengue, Lee reminded the people not to be complacent although the number of cases had dropped significantly in the last two to three weeks.

New Straits Times - Malaysia News Online

News - Shanghai to check international travelers for bird flu, state media says

Shanghai on Monday began screening international passengers for fevers, a precaution aimed at preventing the spread of bird flu, the city government said.

All passengers leaving or entering the country via the city?s Pudong International Airport have to complete a health declaration form saying if they have had close contact with poultry, birds, bird flu patients or suspected cases over the past week and whether they have symptoms such as fever, coughing and being short of breath, the government said in a notice posted on its Web site.

Any passenger whose temperature measures over 38 Celsius (100.4 Fahrenheit) will be further examined, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

Khaleej Times Online

News - Vietnamese boy infected with bird flu

A three-year-old boy from Vietnam's southern Tien Giang province has been contracted with bird flu, local newspaper Youth reported Monday.

Initial test showed that the boy from Cai Lay district has been infected with the disease, the paper said, adding he is now in need of respiratory assistance.

The boy was admitted to a hospital in Ho Chi Minh City on Nov. 26, after having fever, cough and respiratory illness.

Vietnam's Health Ministry on Sunday announced that the country has detected 66 human cases of H5N1 infections, including 22 fatalities, in 25 cities and provinces since December 2004, bringing the total infection cases and death tolls since December 2003 to 93 and 42 respectively.

To deal with bird flu, Vietnamese Deputy Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung, at a meeting with localities and ministries last weekend, proposed relevant agencies to consider the possibility of culling the country's all flocks of poultry.

A total of 22 localities nationwide have detected poultry deaths since Oct. 1. Recent tests have showed that fowls in southern Dong Thap province have not been infected with bird flu virus, according to the Department of Animal Health under the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development. Meanwhile, capital Hanoi and southern Bac Lieu province have met criteria for announcing an end to bird flu outbreaks (detecting no new affectedspot for at least three weeks).

Xinhua - English

News - USATODAY.com - Pet bird buyers asking sellers about avian flu


Pet bird lovers are still buying their feathered friends, but fears about avian flu have risen as it continues to spread, largely in Asia.

Bird buyers and owners are wary, though avian flu hasn't surfaced in the USA.

Pet store chain PetSmart recently put fact sheets in U.S. stores explaining that the deadly H5N1 avian flu virus has not surfaced in the USA ? in birds or humans. Simbad's Bird House in Miami has done the same. And the Pet Industry Joint Advisory Council, a trade association, is crafting a checklist of what bird owners should do if the virus makes it to North America.

"There's a lot of fear," says Alfredo Ona, owner of Simbad's. "There's a lot of people asking about it."

USATODAY.com - Pet bird buyers asking sellers about avian flu

News - Romania quarantines village and kills birds - Europe - International Herald Tribune

The authorities began on Sunday to cull thousands of domestic birds in this eastern Romanian village, which was quarantined after a turkey tested positive for the H5 subtype of avian flu.

Further tests to be carried out in Britain will determine whether the turkey was infected with the deadly H5N1 strain of avian flu, which has devastated poultry stocks and killed at least 68 people in parts of Asia since 2003, said Ion Predoi, who heads the National Agency for Animal Health.

All domestic birds in Scarlatesti, which are estimated to number 15,000, will be killed, Predoi said.

"We have eight teams led by vets culling the birds, and we hope to finish by tomorrow night," he said on Sunday. The area will then be disinfected, and restrictions will be lifted if no other infections are detected within 21 days, he said.

The Health Ministry has dispatched medical personnel to vaccinate residents against human influenza, a measure meant to avoid the occurrence of a human flu epidemic at the same time as the bird flu outbreak, which could lead to a dangerous mutation of the H5N1 virus.

The authorities suspect that the turkey, from a farm that belonged to the mayor of Scarlatesti, was infected when it came into contact with migratory birds from the Danube Delta.

Romania has confirmed the H5N1 strain of avian flu in three villages in the Danube Delta. The virus also has been confirmed in a dead heron in an uninhabited area near the border with Moldova, about 50 kilometers, or 30 miles, north of Scarlatesti.

Pandemic drill in Vietnam

Vietnam, the country hardest hit by bird flu, held a large-scale drill on Sunday to test its preparedness for a pandemic, and Australia planned a similar exercise later this week, The Associated Press reported.

India's leading drug manufacturer said Sunday it was making progress in talks with Roche Holding of Switzerland on manufacturing a generic version of the anti-viral drug Tamiflu.

The drug is in short supply as countries around the world try to stockpile it in case there is a human pandemic, which specialists fear could happen if the deadly H5N1 bird flu virus mutated.

The exercise in Vietnam involved about 900 people, including military personnel and police, health and agricultural officials.

SCARLATESTI, Romania The authorities began on Sunday to cull thousands of domestic birds in this eastern Romanian village, which was quarantined after a turkey tested positive for the H5 subtype of avian flu.

Further tests to be carried out in Britain will determine whether the turkey was infected with the deadly H5N1 strain of avian flu, which has devastated poultry stocks and killed at least 68 people in parts of Asia since 2003, said Ion Predoi, who heads the National Agency for Animal Health.

All domestic birds in Scarlatesti, which are estimated to number 15,000, will be killed, Predoi said.

"We have eight teams led by vets culling the birds, and we hope to finish by tomorrow night," he said on Sunday. The area will then be disinfected, and restrictions will be lifted if no other infections are detected within 21 days, he said.

Romania quarantines village and kills birds - Europe - International Herald Tribune

News - Reuters AlertNet - FEATURE-Epidemic survivors stress need for mental care

Joey Lee began suffering severe mood swings, depression and would sob every day for no apparent reason soon after she survived a SARS infection while working as a nurse in a public hospital in Hong Kong in 2003.

Lee and her 8-year-old son, who was not infected, have been seeing a psychologist since. "He would cry all the time and at night, he is terrified that my husband and I will die," she said.

Lee and her friends who are coping with the after effects of SARS shudder to think what will happen when a feared bird flu pandemic actually strikes, a catastrophe that will make the SARS epidemic of 2003 seem like a drop in the ocean.

Health experts have warned for months that the H5N1 bird flu virus might trigger this disaster if it mutates and becomes easily transmissible among people. Millions could die.

It was in Hong Kong that H5N1 made its first known jump to humans in 1997, infecting 18 people and killing six of them. About 1.5 million chickens were culled to end the outbreak.

Reuters AlertNet - FEATURE-Epidemic survivors stress need for mental care

News - The Jakarta Post - Govt confirms new human bird flu case in Bandung

A 16-year-old boy has been confirmed as the country's 12th human bird flu case, as the government said Indonesia was ready to start producing the antiviral drug Tamiflu within three to five months to help fight the disease.

Health ministry official Hariadi Wibisono was quoted by AFP as saying that the condition of the boy, who was admitted to the state hospital in West Java's provincial capital Bandung on Nov. 15, was good but he was infected.

"Tests (on blood) taken from the 16-year-old boy, both locally and by the World Health Organization (WHO), show that he is a bird flu patient," he said.

"We have received news that his condition is quite good and it is hoped that he can survive," he added.

Seven fatalities from the H5N1 strain of avian influenza have been confirmed in Indonesia by the WHO, but more than a dozen suspected bird flu deaths have been reported.

Health officials are waiting for WHO confirmation of local tests which showed that a 35-year-old man who died Nov. 19 was the country's eighth fatality.

Four other Indonesians have been confirmed as carrying the virus but have either recovered or are still receiving treatment.

Meanwhile, health minister Siti Fadilah Supari said on Saturday that the mass production of Tamiflu in the country would start in three to five months.

The minister said the government would appoint state
The Jakarta Post - Govt confirms new human bird flu case in Bandung

Sunday, November 27, 2005

News - China confirmed three new bird flu outbreaks


Ministry of Agriculture yesterday confirmed bird flu outbreaks in Northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, Northwest China's Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, and Southwest China's Yunnan Province.

It said in a statement that 38 fowls died last Wednesday in the Dabancheng District of Urumqi in Xinjiang. A State avian flu lab confirmed that they were highly pathogenic bird flu cases.

A health worker sprays disinfectant at a village in Xiaoyi, North China's Shanxi Province November 20, 2005. The region reported a bird flu outbreak last week.

Meanwhile, the same kind of bird flu killed 2,500 poultry in Chuxiong of Yunnan on Thursday.

The disease also killed 230 poultry on Thursday in Yinchuan, capital of Ningxia.

The Ministry of Agriculture has sent teams of experts to help control the disease, and local veterinary departments have culled the poultry within 3 kilometres of the affected area. They have culled 8,388 fowls in Xinjiang, 99,400 in Yunnan, and 66,800 in Ningxia, according to the statement.

China confirmed three new bird flu outbreaks

News - UK's Hewitt blames doctors, bird flu fears for shortfall of flu vaccines - Forbes.com

Health Secretary Patricia Hewitt said under-ordering of influenza vaccines by doctors was partly to blames for a current shortfall of stocks.

In a statement to parliament, Hewitt added that fears of a bird flu pandemic had also contributed to the shortage along with an increase in demand from so-called 'worried well' patients.

The Department of Health has issued 400,000 extra doses of vaccine from emergency stocks, while a further contingency stock of 200,000 doses will be delivered in late January, Hewitt said.

'The current problems may be due to a combination of factors, such as the under-ordering of vaccine on the one hand, and possibly vaccination of 'worried well' on the other,' Hewitt said.

'Awareness may also be higher this year due in part to the very high level of media interest in the threat of avian flu in birds and of pandemic flu.'

'We do not expect seasonal flu vaccine to protect against avian influenza or against pandemic influenza.'

UK's Hewitt blames doctors, bird flu fears for shortfall of flu vaccines - Forbes.com

News - Vietnam confirms new case of H5N1 bird flu in humans

A Vietnamese teenager has been confirmed as having the H5N1 bird flu virus, health officials in the northern port city of Haiphong said yesterday.
Doctors from the health department in Haiphong said laboratory tests showed 15-year-old Vu Van Hoa, who is being treated at a local hospital, had contracted the strain.

"His condition is stable and slowly recovering," said a doctor from Haiphong's Viet-Tiep hospital, adding that Hoa had been transferred to another hospital in Hanoi for treatment.

Taipei Times - archives

News - CBC News: China confirms new bird flu outbreaks


China has confirmed three new outbreaks of bird flu, bringing the total number of outbreaks in the country to 24 this year.

State media says the new outbreaks are in the northwestern regions of Xinjiang and Ningxia, while a third has hit Yunnan province in the southwest. Officials have ordered that all poultry be destroyed within a radius of three kilometres of each outbreak.

The news comes a day after China announced the bird flu crisis in the country is "severe" and set to worsen in the winter months.

CBC News: China confirms new bird flu outbreaks

Saturday, November 26, 2005

News - Indonesia confirms 12th human case of bird flu

A 16-year-old boy has been confirmed as Indonesia's 12th bird flu case, a health official said yesterday, as the world's fourth most populous country readied to mass-produce the anti-flu drug Tamiflu.

Health ministry official Hariadi Wibisono said that the condition of the boy, who was admitted to the state hospital in West Java's provincial capital Bandung on November 15, was good but he was infected.

"Tests taken from the 16-year-old boy, both locally and by the World Health Organisation (WHO), show that he is a bird flu patient," he said.

The Peninsula On-line: Qatar's leading English Daily

News - Romania Spots First Flu Case in Domestic Bird Outside Delta

Romanian authorities quarantined the first village outside the River Danube delta area and plan to slaughter as many as 15,000 domestic birds there after a turkey hen was reported infected with the H5 bird flu virus.

Health workers will start giving flu shots tomorrow to hundreds of residents in as many as 400 households in the eastern village of Scarlatesti in Braila county, the Agriculture Ministry said today in an e-mailed statement.

``The killing and incineration of all domestic birds in the village will also start tomorrow,'' the statement said. Measures against the flu are limited to the village as it's three kilometers (about two miles) from any other settlement.

The case in Scarlatesti is the first discovered in a domestic bird outside of the Danube delta through random testing of poultry. Health authorities couldn't immediately confirm whether the case is the H5N1 strain that can infect humans, pending additional laboratory testing.

Bloomberg.com: Europe

News - New bird flu outbreak reported in northern China

A new outbreak of H5N1 avian influenza has been confirmed in China's northern region of Inner Mongolia, the agriculture ministry said on Saturday.

The latest bird flu outbreak is the 23rd in China since October.

Experts confirmed H5N1 bird flu after 246 birds died in Inner Mongolia's Zalantun city last Sunday, the ministry said.

Local veterinary workers have culled 16,567 birds at poultry farms within 3 kilometres of the affected area, it said.

China has reported three confirmed human infections with bird flu.

World Health Organization experts plan to travel next week to the eastern province of Anhui, where two women died after contact with infected poultry.

Health ministry spokesman Mao Qun'an on Friday said China was making "timely reports" to WHO on the bird flu outbreaks and had "immediately released the information to the public".

Allegations that China may have hidden a much larger number of human infections were "absolutely groundless" rumours, the government's official Xinhua news agency quoted Mao as saying.

Bangkok Post - Breaking News

News - Indonesia reports 12th case of bird flu - Breaking News - World - Breaking News

A 16-year-old Indonesian boy has tested positive for the H5N1 avian flu virus, making him the 12th confirmed case among humans in the country, a health official says.

"We have received a laboratory test from Hong Kong and the results were positive," said Hariadi Wibisono, a seniorofficial at the Health Ministry, adding the patient was being treated at a hospital in Bandung in West Java province.

Indonesia has had seven confirmed deaths from bird flu and now five cases where sufferers have survived.

Indonesia plans to begin making the anti-viral drug Tamiflu in three to five months, the government said.

Preparing for a possible upsurge in cases, Health Minister Siti Fadillah Supari said the government would likely appoint state-owned drugs firms PT Kimia Farma and PT Indofarma to make Tamiflu, which can be used to treat the disease.

"In three to five months production will start," Supari told a news conference.

"Our decision for us to produce ... is to meet the needs of the government in facing the avian flu outbreak."

The distributor of Tamiflu, Swiss giant Roche AG, said on Friday it did not have a patent for the medication in Indonesia, adding the country was free to make it for the local market.

Supari said the world's fourth most populous nation would soon obtain raw materials from China, India and South Korea.

Indonesia reports 12th case of bird flu - Breaking News - World - Breaking News

The Globe and Mail: Flu halted on B.C. duck farms, officials say

One week after a duck at a Chilliwack farm tested positive for avian flu, health officials say they are cautiously optimistic that the virus has stopped spreading.

Canadian Food Inspection Agency veterinarian Con Kiley said yesterday that 4,500 birds from nearly 90 per cent of all farms in the surrounding area have been tested since last week.

?One week after the initial detection, we are cautiously optimistic,? he said. ?It remains contained and not extended to the more susceptible chicken and turkey populations.?

After the duck was found to be infected on Nov. 18, the CFIA ordered the immediate quarantine of the Chilliwack farm and started monitoring other properties within a five-kilometre zone.

The Globe and Mail: Flu halted on B.C. duck farms, officials say

News - The China Post - Bird watchers in Taiwan not at risk of avian flu

Bird watchers in Taiwan are not in danger of contracting deadly avian flu from nomadic and migratory birds, according to ornithologists and conservationists attending an international waterbirds conference.

Liao Shih-chin, vice chairman of the symposium, said it is the general consensus of the scientists and bird watchers that Taiwan is not affected by the bird flu.

He said participants at the gathering also agreed that Taiwan offers a superb environment for eco-tours in view of the wide variety of wildlife resources, convenient transportation services, public safety and friendliness of the people.

The China Post

Ottawa advises travellers to see a doctor about flu precautions

Canadians planning to travel to countries affected by avian flu, including parts of Asia and eastern Europe, should consider seeing their doctor to discuss precautions, says the Public Health Agency of Canada.

There is no available vaccine for avian flu H5N1, but the anti-viral drug Tamiflu may be effective in treating the virus, the agency says in an online travel advisory.

The agency adds that since Tamiflu may not be readily available overseas, Canadians interested in getting the drug should see their doctor before travelling.

As to whether someone should begin taking the drug before departure, the advisory says: "The risk of exposure to the virus and the decision to take a drug such as Tamiflu that has not been proven to prevent human H5N1 infections must be determined on a case-by-case basis. Only you and your health care provider can determine that risk and the most appropriate precautions."

Vancouver Sun

News - TheStar.com - Atlantic wild birds have H5 avian flu

Officials confirmed yesterday that 35 wild birds sampled in the Maritimes tested positive for H5 avian influenza viruses, but said they did not believe any were carrying the virulent H5N1 strain decimating poultry flocks in Asia and entering in Europe.

The infected birds, mostly black ducks and mallards, were found in an area around the Tantramar marshes near the Nova Scotia-New Brunswick border. One positive case was found in Prince Edward Island.

All the Atlantic birds were said to be in good health, leading scientists to believe they were not carrying the strain that has killed at least 68 people overseas and led governments to cull millions of domestic chickens and ducks.

"I don't call it a concern whatsoever," Dr. Pierre-Yves Daoust of the Atlantic Veterinary College in Charlottetown said yesterday.

"These are still preliminary results but 35 of them were positive."TheStar.com - Atlantic wild birds have H5 avian flu

News - Flu strain found in Canadian wild ducks

The virus does not appear to be the deadly H5N1 strain that has killed millions of birds and more than 60 people in Southeast Asia. The Canadian Broadcasting Corp. reported 710 birds were tested, with the H5 strain found in 35 of them and the H7 strain in one.

Jim Goltz of New Brunswick's veterinary lab told the CBC there is little to no risk to humans. He said there have been no known cases of influenza transmitted from wild ducks to hunters and no one else is likely to get close to the birds.

A strain of avian influenza was recently found in domestic birds in British Columbia.

Flu strain found in Canadian wild ducks

News - Bloomberg.com: Asia - China Reports New Bird Flu Outbreak, Bringing Total to 27

China reported a new outbreak of H5N1 avian influenza in poultry, bringing the number of cases to 27 in the country this year.

Zhalandun city in the northwestern province of Inner Mongolia reported 246 poultry died Nov. 20, the Ministry of Agriculture said in a statement on its Web site late yesterday. China's National Avian Flu Reference Laboratory confirmed the birds were infected with the H5N1 strain of the virus, the ministry said.

Authorities in Inner Mongolia culled 16,567 birds within a three-kilometer (1.9-mile) radius of the infection site, the statement said.

The virus has infected about 130 people in Cambodia, Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam and China and killed 67 of them, the World Health Organization said Nov. 17. Bird flu outbreaks in poultry increase the risk of the virus mutating into a strain that's more easily transmissible between humans, leading to a pandemic that may kill millions.

China's government, which on Nov. 21 ordered local governments to report cases of avian influenza and other animal diseases within four hours of discovery to China's cabinet, the State Council, has reported three human cases and two deaths from the virus as of Nov. 23.

Bloomberg.com: Asia

News - CBC News: 36 ducks in the Maritimes test positive for avian flu virus

Thirty-six wild migratory ducks in the Maritimes have tested positive for an avian flu virus, but researchers say the finding does not indicate a threat to human health.

Researchers made the discovery after testing 710 wild migratory ducks. Thirty-five were found to be carrying H5 viruses and one carried the H7 virus.

Many of the ducks were found in the Tantramar marshes near the Nova Scotia-New Brunswick border.

Health officials say it is unlikely the viruses are the same as the deadly H5N1 strain found among birds in Southeast Asia. That strain has been blamed for at least 68 human deaths.

Jim Goltz, manager of New Brunswick's veterinary lab, said the risk to humans is low to non-existent.

CBC News: 36 ducks in the Maritimes test positive for avian flu virus

News - Health | canada.com - Officials cautiously optimistic after no further detection of avian flu

Officials are keeping a close watch on birds at poultry farms in the Fraser Valley after containing a low-pathogenic variety of H5 avian flu among ducks at two area farms, a veterinarian with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency said Friday.

"Low-pathogenic viruses have been known to mutate into more concerning, highly pathogenic versions if introduced into chicken and turkey populations," Dr. Con Kiley told a news conference.

Over 4,500 birds have been harvested from area farms but the low-pathogenic virus has not spread from the two infected farms, Kiley said.

He stressed that the low-path virus is different from the virulent outbreak among birds in Southeast Asia, which has led to the deaths of more than 60 people.

Over 62,000 ducks and geese have now been culled from the two farms where the virus was discovered in the last week. They are being composted on site before authorities begin to disinfect the area.

Health | canada.com

Friday, November 25, 2005

SITREP - WHO | Avian influenza ? situation in Viet Nam ? update 43

Avian influenza ? situation in Viet Nam ? update 43

25 November 2005

The Ministry of Health in Viet Nam has confirmed a further case of human infection with H5N1 avian influenza. The case is a 15-year-old boy from Hai Phong Province. He developed symptoms on 14 November and was hospitalized on 16 November. He has been discharged from hospital and is recovering.

Since mid-December 2004, Viet Nam has reported 66 cases, of which 22 died.

WHO | Avian influenza ? situation in Viet Nam ? update 43

Reference - CBC News Indepth: Avian Flu


The next pandemic?

CBC News Online Updated Nov. 24, 2005


H5N1. A string of numbers and letters that has the World Health Organization deeply concerned.

PREVENTING THE FLU: WHAT YOU CAN DO

Get a flu shot. There is no vaccine for avian flu but it may boost your overall immunity, health officials say.
Wash your hands to wash away the flu virus
Cover your mouth when you sneeze or cough
Stay home if you are sick.

More on what you can do here It's one of 16 varieties of avian influenza - bird flu. So far, it's the only one that's shown any ability to directly pass from one human to another. It has spread from Southeast Asia to China, Russia and now Europe.

Hong Kong, 1997. Eighteen people are stricken with severe respiratory disease. Six of them die. The cause ? the H5N1 strain of avian influenza. The infection of humans coincides with an epidemic of a particularly nasty bout of avian influenza in Hong Kong's poultry population, caused by the same strain.

Health officials determine that close contact with live infected poultry was the source of human infection. It's the first time that evidence can be found that the virus had jumped directly from birds to humans.

Health officials order the destruction of Hong Kong's poultry population. More than 1.5 million birds are killed in three days. There are no more cases of direct transmission of the disease from birds to humans. Some health experts say the action may have averted a pandemic.

ANTIVIRAL DRUGS

Antiviral drugs like Tamiflu and Relenza block the flu virus from escaping an infected cell and spreading further. But the drugs have to be taken within 48 hours of getting the flu. Canada has purchased 23 million doses of Tamiflu.

More Vietnam, 2004. Eight new cases of avian influenza in people. Six people die. Health officials order the culling of millions of birds to try to minimize the threat to people.

But killing millions of birds has not eliminated the threat to people from avian flu. By Feb. 2, 2005, 55 people in Vietnam, Cambodia and Thailand had come down with the disease ? 42 died.

Indonesia, 2005. A man and his two daughters die of H5N1, although none of them worked around poultry. The WHO says it cannot rule out the possibility of human-to-human transmission of avian flu in these cases.

And in October 2005, H5N1 was confirmed to have spread to fowl in Romania and Turkey. Days later, a bird on the Greek island Oinousses was found to have avian flu, although officials hadn't immediately identified the strain.

In November 2005, the H5 strain hit Canada. Two wild ducks tested positive for H5N1 virus, but not the dangerous strain of the flu hitting Southeast Asia. The virus was also found in a commercial duck on a farm in Chilliwack, B.C. The food inspection agency maintained the virus does not pose a risk to humans, but ordered the slaughter of all birds on the farm as a caution. Every farm in a five-km radius was placed under quarantine. Agency officials said they've also isolated an H5N3 subtype in two birds from Quebec.

AVIAN FLU VACCINE

Flu viruses mutate often ? their characteristics change rapidly and permanently. It takes at least four months to develop new vaccines to combat strains of the flu that emerge. Although a vaccine against the H5N1 virus is under development in several countries, no vaccine is ready for commercial production and no vaccines are expected to be widely available until several months after the start of a pandemic.

The WHO says influenza pandemics can be expected to occur three or four times each century, when new virus subtypes emerge and are readily transmitted from person to person. The last great pandemic occurred in 1918-19, when Spanish flu swept the world, killing 40-50 million people, including more than 50,000 in Canada.

Experts agree that another pandemic is inevitable and possibly imminent.

The WHO is paying particular attention to H5N1 for several reasons:

It mutates rapidly and now has a history of being able to acquire genes from viruses infecting other animal species.


It has caused severe disease in humans.


Laboratory studies have demonstrated that isolates from this virus have a high pathogenicity and can cause severe disease in humans.


Birds that survive infection excrete virus for at least 10 days making it easier to spread the virus at live poultry markets and by migratory birds.

SYMPTOMS OF AVIAN FLU

The symptoms of avian flu in humans are similar to other strains of the flu and include:
Fever
Fatigue
Cough
Sore throat
Eye infections
Muscle aches.

The WHO also says the epidemic in birds caused by H5N1, which started in December 2003 in Korea, has spread to other countries. More infected birds increases the opportunities for direct infection of humans. If more humans become infected, the WHO says the odds also increase that humans ? if they're infected with human and avian influenza strains at the same time ? could serve as a "mixing vessel" for a mutated virus that spreads easily from person to person. That would mark the start of a flu pandemic.

Alberta's health minister ? Iris Evans ? says most people don't understand how overwhelmed the health-care system would become if there were a flu pandemic.

"What worries me most is the ignorance of people in the public who assume that if they get sick there'll be something there for them, and they don't realize the devastation this could be."

Flu would hit health-care workers as well. As many as a third of Canadians could fall ill at the same time.

Virologist Dr. Todd Hatchette is concerned about H5N1. "The virus has gained the ability to infect a large number of hosts ? not only the chickens that it normally infects but tigers, cats and transmitted to humans, and there's some evidence that it's refining its genes, if you will. I'll suggest that it's pretty good evidence that this will probably be the next one."

ADVICE FOR TRAVELERS:

If you are traveling to a country infected with bird flu, avoid unneccesary contact with domestic poultry and wild birds. Evidence suggests that the risk of infection is greatest in persons having direct contact with live and/or dead poultry including surfaces contaminated with their feces or secretions.

More advice for travellers In February 2004, another strain of avian influenza ? H7N3 ? swept through B.C.'s poultry industry. The province ordered more than 17 million birds killed. It took about six months for the province to be declared free of avian flu. The outbreak was devastating to the poultry industry. There were also two documented cases in people, who showed mild influenza illness and eye infections.

The former medical officer of health for Ontario ? Dr. Richard Schabas ? is not convinced that H5N1 is a pandemic-in-waiting. "Our science just isn't strong enough for us to know that and it's not strong enough for us to be making these kinds of alarmist predictions that we're hearing from the WHO and others," Schabas told CBC News. "This is the third time the WHO has told us were on the brink of an avian influenza pandemic. They said it in 1997 and they were wrong. They said it a year ago and they were wrong."

There are few warning signs before a pandemic strikes ? except a large and rapidly growing number of new and unrelated cases every day. The WHO says in the best-case scenario, two to seven million people will die in the next pandemic and tens of millions will need medical attention. But if the virus is particularly virulent, the number of deaths could be dramatically higher.

The organization warns that the global spread of a pandemic can't be stopped ? but preparing properly will reduce its impact.

The WHO says Canada's preparations appear to be on the right track.

CBC News Indepth: Avian Flu

News - CBC News: China confirms new bird flu outbreaks


China has confirmed three new outbreaks of bird flu, bringing the total number of outbreaks in the country to 24 this year.

State media says the new outbreaks are in the northwestern regions of Xinjiang and Ningxia, while a third has hit Yunnan province in the southwest. Officials have ordered that all poultry be destroyed within a radius of three kilometres of each outbreak.

The news comes a day after China announced the bird flu crisis in the country is "severe" and set to worsen in the winter months.

In China's eastern Anhui province, authorities have ordered all domestic poultry to be raised in pens or cages after the death of a poultry worker from bird flu earlier this month.

CBC News: China confirms new bird flu outbreaks

News - CNN.com - China reports 2nd?bird flu death - Nov 23, 2005


A second Chinese woman is reported to have died from bird flu in the eastern Anhui province, the third confirmed human case in the country.

The 35-year-old female farmer with the surname Xu died Tuesday after falling ill on November 11, the Ministry of Health announced Wednesday according to the state-run Xinhua news agency.

She had contact with sick and dead poultry, according to the report.

The World Health Organization has confirmed the woman died from H5N1 avian influenza, according to spokesman Dick Thompson.

"It was not unexpected," Thompson said. "There will be sporadic human cases as long as the virus is circulating in animals."

The case "doesn't change our pandemic level or risk assessment," he added.

A 24-year-old female poultry worker in Anhui died from the virus on November 10, and a 9-year-old boy who fell ill with the virus last month in Hunan Province is still alive.

China's Ministry of Health has reported a fourth human case of bird flu -- the boy's 12-year-old sister, who died on October 17 -- but the World Health Organization said there were no samples to test if she had the virus because she was cremated.

Avian influenza has spread rapidly among birds, first in Southeast Asia and more recently in Europe, but human cases have been reported only in Asia.

CNN.com - China reports 2nd?bird flu death - Nov 23, 2005

News - BBC NEWS | UK | Doubts over bird flu tests raised


Doubts over testing in quarantine for bird flu have been raised after it emerged Taiwanese finches, not a parrot, brought the disease to the UK.

A government report said the mixing of tissue samples led officials to wrongly assume a South American blue-headed pionus was the source of the virus.

Opposition politicians said the report exposed confusion in the system and raised more questions than it answered.

But ministers argued it showed quarantine procedures were working.

The probe for the Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) said it was more likely the virus was brought to an unnamed quarantine centre in Essex by 50 finches from Taiwan rather than by the parrot as previously thought.

BBC NEWS UK Doubts over bird flu tests raised

News - Bird flu a surprise boon for some firms

For Asian drug and sanitary companies, escalating worries over bird flu have been an unexpected boon as demand for their products boom.

Vaccine producers such as CSL (CSL.AX: Quote, Profile, Research) of Australia, cleaning product makers including Kao Corp. (4452.T: Quote, Profile, Research) and home entertainment providers such as Nintendo (7974.OS: Quote, Profile, Research) are likely winners should a human pandemic of the deadly bird flu emerge.

"We would expect pharmaceutical companies, hospital chains and sanitary companies to benefit by fighting the pandemic," said Markus Rosgen, Citigroup head of regional strategy.

Already, Chugai Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd. (4519.T: Quote, Profile, Research) and its Swiss partner Roche AG (ROG.VX: Quote, Profile, Research) have seen global demand for their anti-viral drug, Tamiflu, soar. Chugai shares have jumped nearly 70 percent this year.

Reuters Business Channel | Reuters.com

News - ABC News: Bird Flu Reported in Far Western China


China on Thursday announced the spread of bird flu to a far western region, while Indonesia reported its first outbreak of the virus in the tsunami-ravaged Aceh province where hundreds of chickens have died from the disease.

The Nov. 17 outbreak in Turpan, a city in China's Xinjiang region, killed 11 birds and prompted the destruction of 5,180 more, the official Xinhua News Agency reported, citing the Agriculture Ministry.

News of the outbreak China's 21st in recent weeks came a day after the country confirmed its second human death from bird flu.

ABC News: Bird Flu Reported in Far Western China

News - China Reports New Bird Flu Outbreak, Bringing Total to 26

China reported one new outbreak of H5N1 avian influenza in poultry, bringing the number of cases to 26 in the country this year.

Turpan city in the western province of Xinjiang reported 11 poultry died on Nov. 17, the Ministry of Agriculture said in a statement on its Web site late yesterday. China's National Avian Flu Reference Laboratory confirmed the birds were infected with the H5N1 strain of the virus, the ministry said.

Authorities in Xinjiang killed 5,180 birds within a three- kilometer (1.9-mile) radius of the infection site, the statement said.

The virus has infected about 130 people in Cambodia, Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam and China and killed 67 of them, the World Health Organization said on Nov. 17. Bird flu outbreaks in poultry increase the risk of the virus mutating into a strain that's more easily transmissible between humans, leading to a pandemic that may kill millions.

China's government, which on Nov. 21 ordered local governments to report cases of avian influenza and other animal diseases within four hours of discovery to China's cabinet, the State Council, has reported three human cases and two deaths from the virus as of Nov. 23.

Bloomberg.com: Top Worldwide

News - More bird flu cases appear around Asia

China confirmed its second human death from bird flu and Vietnam reported an infection in a 15-year-old boy yesterday, as Japan's Health Ministry warned that local governments had stockpiled only a fraction of the antiviral Tamiflu necessary to fight an outbreak in its citizens.

The latest Chinese fatality was a 35-year-old farmer identified only by her surname, Xu, who died on Tuesday after developing a fever and pneumonia-like symptoms following contact with sick and dead poultry, the official Xinhua news agency said, citing the Health Ministry.

The woman, from Xiuning County in the eastern province of Anhui, tested positive for the H5N1 virus, Xinhua said.

The area is about 100km northwest of Zongyang County, where the country's first human bird flu death was reported.

Taipei Times - archives

News - IT-Analysis.com - What effect would an Avian Flu pandemic ha

Recent research by Citicorp focused on the impact of an Avian ?Flu pandemic on world markets. The research concluded in somewhat whimsical tone ?that the uncertainty is extreme; uncertainty over the likelihood of a pandemic; over the timing of a pandemic; and over the virulence of a pandemic.? In more helpful mode, the research did indicate that on the basis that the outbreak of Avian Flu did emerge as a pandemic, it would have an impact on world output and productivity. Consumers would avoid personal contact, and illness and death would cut the workforce. If, in the very likely event that Avian ?Flu became a pandemic ?flu in Asia initially, the research concluded?based on factors such as healthcare, spending, tourism and governance?that the countries in Asia most at risk were Indonesia, Vietnam and India.

IT-Analysis.com - What effect would an Avian Flu pandemic ha

News - Tracking avian flu | www.azstarnet.com ?

INFECTED birds WORLDWIDE

Bird flu has killed more than 100 million birds in Asia since 2003, and has jumped to humans, killing at least 67 people in the region, according to the World Health Organization. The WHO figures did not include the latest death in China.

On Thursday, China announced the spread of bird flu to a far western region. The Nov. 17 outbreak in Turpan, a city in China's Xinjiang region, killed 11 birds and prompted the destruction of 5,180 more, the official Xinhua News Agency reported, citing the Agriculture Ministry.

Indonesia's Agriculture Ministry said chickens have been infected with H5N1 in at least three districts in Aceh, where tens of thousands of survivors of the Dec. 26 tsunami still live in crowded refugee camps. Sjamsul Bahri, the ministry's director of animal health, said bird flu has been found in 23 of Indonesia's 30 provinces.

In Vietnam, a 15-year-old boy from the northern port city of Haiphong tested positive for H5N1. He was hospitalized and expected to recover, said health official Nguyen Van Binh.

Tracking avian flu | www.azstarnet.com ?

News - Singapore steps up efforts to keep bird flu out

SINGAPORE, Nov. 25 (Xinhuanet) -- As increasing bird flu outbreaks have been reported across the world with a majority of the human infection and death cases occurring in Southeast Asia, Singapore is stepping up efforts to keep the H5N1 virus out of its door.

The Asian Development Bank (ADB) warned early this month that Singapore is likely to be one of the worst-hit countries if a bird flu pandemic breaks out.

Fortunately enough, no such case has been found here so far.

Since birds, especially migratory species, are to blame for transmitting the disease, Singapore has doubled the avian flu tests on wild and migratory birds from once every two weeks to once a week since mid-November.

Xinhua - English

News - TheStar.com - Avian flu scare closes 74 B.C. farms ? CBC

Seventy-four area farms around Chilliwack, B.C., have been quarantined as a precaution to protect against avian flu, CBC's The National reported Thursday.

The farms are all within a few kilometres of where a duck tested positive for the H5 strain of avian flu last week.

Tests in dictate that more birds have been infected than originally thought, CBC reported.

Avian flu has been confirmed on two B.C. farms but the Canadian Food Inspection Agency has stressed that doesn't mean the situation is worsening.

The Canadian infections are different from the virulent outbreak among birds in Southeast Asia, which has been blamed for more than 60 deaths.

The H5 virus in British Columbia is a low pathogenic North American strain.

TheStar.com - Avian flu scare closes 74 B.C. farms ? CBC

News - HK holds exercise "Poplar" to review preparedness for avian flu

The Hong Kong Special Administrative Region's government here on Thursday held an inter- departmental communication exercise to review its response to a situation of a human case of avian flu.

According to Hong Kong Director of Health Dr. P.Y. Lam, the drill, with a particular focus on communication, was aimed at reviewing contingency plans for managing issues relating to an outbreak of avian influenza when the World Health Organization ( WHO) announced efficient human-to-human transmission.

The adequacy of contingency operational protocols formulated by the departments and organizations concerned will be reviewed after the exercise, said Lam.

The exercise, code-named Poplar, was organized by the CHP in view of the global threat of flu pandemic and human cases of avian flu in neighboring countries. More than 220 players from about 30 government departments and organizations took part in the drill.

The exercise simulated a Hong Kong resident who developed flu symptoms after visiting a country where 41 people were confirmed to have been infected with avian flu and human-to-human transmission was efficient.

People's Daily Online -- HK holds exercise "Poplar" to review preparedness for avian flu

News - The Daily Telegraph | Bird flu shot may take 2yrs

THE development of an effective vaccine against bird flu could take up to two years, blood products and vaccines developer CSL Ltd said today.

CSL (csl.ASX:Quote,News) is currently conducting tests on a prototype vaccine for bird flu.

Market analysts have estimated the market for a bird flu vaccine is potentially worth $US3.5 billion ($4.75 billion).

CSL chief executive Brian McNamee said he hoped a vaccine could be developed faster, but there were still crucial factors to be determined.

"I think it likely that there will be a prototype vaccine that stimulates the immune response," Dr McNamee said.

"What we don't know is what the dose is and whether we need an adjuvant (an ingredient or treatment that enhances the immune response) – they're the two questions.

"I think those questions will be answered in the next two years. It could be faster than that, but if you need an adjuvant it may take that long. We need to be realistic."

The Daily Telegraph | Bird flu shot may take 2yrs

News - CTV.ca | Tamiflu sales temporarily on hold in Canada


A higher-than-normal increase in demand has forced the Canadian drug maker of Tamiflu to temporarily pull it off the market, amid growing concerns over an imminent flu pandemic.

Oseltamivir, sold as Tamiflu, is an antiviral medication that is widely considered to be the best defence against the spread of a bird flu pandemic.

Under the heading of "Urgent," Roche Canada sent a letter to Canadian pharmacies informing them that shipments will end immediately until December, when flu season begins, The Globe and Mail reports.

When flu season begins, nursing homes and other institutions will get priority, the letter says.

"Roche Canada has decided to proactively manage the Tamiflu inventory," it says in the letter obtained by The Globe.

CTV.ca Tamiflu sales temporarily on hold in Canada

News - Reduction of H5N1 toxicity in Vietnam


H5N1 virus has changed slightly in terms of heredity and pathogenesis since appearing in Vietnam.

Research of the Central Hygiene and Epidemiology shows that over the past year, the virus’s toxicity genes have reduced from 99.1% to 98.2%.

Dr. Nguyen Thuy Hoa, Head of the institute’s Epidemiology Department, said that such a mutation means the virus can better adapt itself to the human body, leading to an increase of infection, especially for patients without symptoms, but also a lower fatality rate.

VietNamNet Bridge

News - 15-year-old Hai Phong boy affected by H5N1 virus

A 15-year-old boy, Vu Van Hoa, in Tien Hung commune, Tien Lang district of the northern Hai Phong province has tested positive for the H5N1virus, according to the province’s health department.

To date, Hai Phong has had five cases suspected of being the H5N1 virus and three of them are under treatment at the Viet-Tiep hospital. The two others have been tested negative for the H5N1 virus and are still undergoing treatment in the Ha Noi clinical tropical hospital.

Bird flu has so far hit 23 communes of Hai Phong.

VietNamNet Bridge

News - Sick teacher in Hunan negative for H5N1: WHO


Blood tests on a schoolteacher who fell ill in Hunan Province that suffered a bird flu outbreak show he doesn't have the virulent H5N1 strain of the virus, a World Health Organization official said Wednesday.

The teacher lived in the same central county as a 9-year-old boy who was one of China's first human cases. The boy's 12-year-old sister, who died, was a suspected case.

"Based on an extensive range of blood tests, he's been excluded as a case of H5N1," the virulent strain of the disease, said Dr. Julie Hall, an infectious diseases specialist for the WHO's Beijing office.

A woman who died in eastern China was the country's first confirmed bird flu fatality.

The 36-year-old teacher fell ill after chopping raw chicken, according to the government. He lived in a county in Hunan province that suffered one of China's first bird flu outbreaks in the recent series of cases.

Sick teacher in Hunan negative for H5N1: WHO

News - Commerce and Avian Flu-Native American interests

Native American tribes and their commercial enterprises such as gambling casinos and associated resort complexes as well as other businesses need to pay attention to a significant and quite possible (if not probable) impending health disaster: An Avian Flu world wide epidemic known technically as a pandemic.

You are wrong if you are ignoring this and "sticking your head in the sand" since health experts and government representatives the world over are trying to take action to prepare. There already has been sickness and death from avian flu elsewhere in the world and the virus appears to be spreading. This problem is top priority for the World Health Organization.

While the U.S. government has been slow in its response to prepare it has recently committed billions of dollars towards this effort since this type of disaster could bring with it (in the U.S. alone) hundreds of thousands of casualties and in the worst case scenario close to 2 million deaths. Economic loss would be monumental.

Social institutions-schools, political and governing structures will to some degree be disabled. Hospitals and clinics and mortuaries will be overwhelmed. Police, fire and emergency medical responders will be impaired. The scenario of the Louisiana coast after hurricane Katrina serves as an example and a warning as to the limitations of government disaster planning and effectiveness. Therefore individual and group planning and planning by commercial enterprises is prudent.

Native American Times - America's Largest Independent, Native American News Source