Dec 17, 2007 8:12 pm US/Eastern
WHO Urges Vigilance As Bird Flu Spreads
HANOI, Vietnam (AP) ―
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The cases were positive for H5N1 in initial government testing, but WHO will conduct further analysis to confirm the results.
WJZ
The World Health Organization warned Monday that countries should be
on alert for bird flu because it is again on the move, with Pakistan
reporting South Asia's first human infections and Myanmar logging its
first human case.
"The key to the public health response is surveillance," said Peter
Cordingley, spokesman for the WHO Western Pacific region in Manila,
noting that the H5N1 virus often flares when temperatures drop during
the winter months.
"If we do actually get to the cases with antivirals early on, the health outcome is a lot better," he said.
WHO experts traveled to Pakistan and were to visit a hospital and
affected areas Tuesday, said WHO country representative Khalif Bile in
Islamabad.
"They are here to get more information and to provide more support
in the case of any potential risk," he said, adding that the country's
health and agriculture ministries were now working closely with WHO
following a "communication gap" when the government did not immediately
report suspected cases to the U.N. health agency.
Four brothers and two cousins fell ill last month in Abbotabad,
north of Islamabad, while three others who slaughtered poultry in the
same area and a nearby town tested positive for the H5N1 bird flu virus
this month.
Two of the brothers died, but specimens were collected from only one.
The cases were positive for H5N1 in initial government testing, but WHO will conduct further analysis to confirm the results.
WHO spokesman Gregory Hartl in Geneva said human-to-human
transmission had not been ruled out, but added that poultry outbreaks
had earlier been reported in the area and it was unclear if all
patients had links to sick birds or infected surroundings.
A doctor who cared for the brothers also experienced mild flu-like
symptoms, but more testing was needed to determine if she was infected,
Hartl said.
Two poultry farms near Abbotabad have been closed and health workers
are taking the temperatures of those living in the affected area twice
a day, said Minhajul Haq, a district health officer.
"We are on high alert, though we still await any confirmation of human-to-human transmission," he said.
At least 208 people have died from the virus, which began plaguing
Asian poultry stocks in late 2003. It remains hard for people to catch,
but scientists worry it could mutate into a form that spreads easily
among people, potentially sparking a pandemic.
With fresh poultry outbreaks reported in a number of countries,
including Germany over the weekend, WHO urged nations to be vigilant in
identifying and reporting cases in both birds and humans.
Myanmar's first human case was reported Friday in a 7-year-old girl
who fell ill last month and survived, while Indonesia, the country
hardest hit by the virus, has announced its 93rd death from the virus.
Two human cases were also recently confirmed in China, one of whom died.
In some countries, like Indonesia, poultry outbreaks and human cases
of bird flu are reported year round, but many countries experience a
flurry of activity when temperatures drop.
"It starts to pop at this time of the year, not just in this region
where it's endemic, but it starts to appear in the West," Cordingley
said. "Between now and April is a very dangerous time of the year."
Most human bird flu cases have been linked to sick birds, but
experts suspect limited person-to-person transmission may have occurred
in a few cases involving blood relatives.
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