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  • #31
    Bird Flu Adds to Indonesia's Woes

    Bird Flu Adds to Indonesia's Woes
    Marwaan Macan-Markar

    BANGKOK, May 30 (IPS) - Fears that Indonesia may emerge as the epicentre of a global bird flu pandemic are adding to the woes of a country struggling to cope with the aftermath of Saturday's temblor that left more than 5,500 people dead in central Java.

    Reports of seven bird flu deaths in a single family, in northern Sumatra, have exacerbated the fears.

    Indonesia has witnessed 33 bird flu deaths so far, compared to 42 in Vietnam. But, while Vietnam has recorded no outbreaks in its poultry flocks since December last year, the archipelagic country is still struggling to contain the deadly H5N1 virus that has spread to 27 of its 33 provinces.

    Of all the countries that have been affected, Indonesia has suffered the highest number of human fatalities since the beginning of the year. The current global death toll stands at 124 in nine countries out of more than 220 infections in 10 countries.

    Most worrying to epidemiologists and public health experts is the recent confirmation of a large cluster of bird flu deaths in Simbelang, a remote village in Sumatra. ''This is unprecedented,'' Peter Cordingley, spokesman for the World Health Organisation's (WHO) Western Pacific regional office, told IPS.

    Over the weekend, international health experts decided to increase the number of Indonesians in Simbelang placed under quarantine in order to limit the possible spread of H5N1 virus through the human-to-human route. Fifty four villagers were confined to their homes, up from the initial 33 that WHO experts thought were vulnerable.

    According to the WHO, most of the family members had died from bird flu during the first two weeks of May. But the Geneva-based health body also confirmed, last week, that the seven members of this family who succumbed to the virus may have infected one another.

    As one Thai health expert explained, reports of such clusters are a cause for greater concern -- than reports of an isolated fatality --because of the possibility that the H5N1 virus could mutate into a strain that is capable of being passed among humans..

    ''For the moment we still have some good news from Indonesia,'' Dr Kamnuan Uengchusak, director of Thailand's communicable disease control office, said in an interview. ''There are no new reports of outbreaks in that community. We must wait for 10 days, because that is the maximum incubation period.''

    Thailand, which has sent a team of experts to assist tests being conducted in Indonesia, had its own scare of human-to-human transmission of the H5N1 virus in 2004, when three members of one family died of bird flu. ''What was clear then may also be the case with Indonesia now -- that transmission between humans happens after exposure to a patient over a long time,'' says Kamnuan.

    Officials from the U.S. Centres for Disease Control, currently in Indonesia, offer a similar view. ''It (the virus) does not appear, at least in the opinion of those who have been studying it, to be either efficient or sustained, in terms of transmission,'' Tony Snow, White House press secretary, was quoted as saying in a report on the U.S. state department website. ''(There is) no obvious significant mutations''.

    Fears of a pandemic that could kill millions of people if the H5N1 virus mutates have been rife ever since the current outbreak of bird flu began in South-east Asia in the winter of 2003. The WHO has drawn parallels to the 1918 influenza pandemic that killed an estimated 50 million people. It arose from a virus that jumped the species barrier -- from birds to humans.

    Human immune systems lack the capability to fight the H5N1 flu strain and the prospect of a potent vaccine remains a distant hope.

    The only remedy is the anti-viral 'Tamiflu' tablet that, the WHO confirms, is being given to Indonesians in Sumatra who are under quarantine.

    Right now international attention has been diverted to central Java where a massive humanitarian relief effort is underway to help shelterless quake survivors. The region is also threatened by a possible volcanic eruption of Mount Merapi which has been reported spewing more smoke and lava this week.

    Bird flu has been detected in over 50 countries, most of them Asian. Yet, as its spread in South-east Asia indicates, it is becoming clear to experts that the virus is spreading through human activity, such as the unsafe trading and transport of poultry, or poultry-rearing without regard for bio-security measures.

    According to the Food and Agriculture Organisation, the successes recorded by Vietnam and Thailand in containing the spread of the H5N1 virus within poultry flocks offer hope that it can be stopped in its tracks. Earlier in the year, the U.N. food agency singled out such measures as greater community involvement and sound compensation schemes for poultry farmers as initiatives that have worked.

    Comment


    • #32
      Facing bird flu without a mask

      Facing bird flu without a mask
      Few precautions for sick survivor
      Ignorance, denial fuel disease risk

      MEDAN, Indonesia?The sole survivor in a cluster of Indonesian relatives infected with bird flu lies in an open-air hospital room, chickens pecking outside his door and visitors shuffling in and out without masks or protective gear. The patient, Johannes Ginting, is still very weak but seems unconcerned. He even fled the hospital when he first fell ill with the H5N1 virus, and has since resisted treatment, balking at the bird flu drug Tamiflu and other medicine. "We had actually given masks and gloves to the family, and we informed them how dangerous this disease is, but they didn't co-operate with us," said Nurrasyid Lubis, deputy director of Adam Malik Hospital. "We also informed him how dangerous it is, but he didn't believe us.''At least six of Ginting's relatives from tiny Kubu Simbelang village in North Sumatra have died of the virus. A seventh was buried before samples could be taken, but the World Health Organization considers her part of the cluster ? the largest ever reported.A quarter of the 124 confirmed human bird flu deaths have been in Indonesia, which has been accused of acting slowly to stop the disease's spread. Lack of public awareness is part of the problem, health experts say, noting that many people in the sprawling countryside have never heard of bird flu. Others, like 25-year-old Ginting, deny it is a problem.Nurses and doctors in Ginting's room did wear protective gear, but no one interfered with the unprotected visitors.Ginting's mother, who declines to reveal her name, said she is not afraid to care for her son, who must be fed and is too weak to sit unaided since falling ill May 4. "I'm not afraid. I don't even wear a mask or anything," she said. "If it spreads, I will be the first one to die.''Lubis said the hospital has done the best it can to isolate Ginting. "For the room, we've done the maximum effort we can do," he said. "We don't know what more we can do beyond that.''

      Comment


      • #33
        Re: Indonesia BF - 5/28-30



        Common Source for Confirmed H5N1 Bird Flu Cluster in Bandung

        Recombinomics Commentary

        May 30, 2006

        Two additional cases occurred in a 10-year-old girl and her 18-year-old brother from Bandung, West Java. Both children developed symptoms on 16 May, were hospitalized on 22 May, and died on 23 May. Both children had a history of close contact with sick and dying chickens at their home in the week before symptom onset. The identical onset dates strongly suggest that they acquired their infection following a shared exposure to poultry, and not from each other. Follow-up of contacts has not identified further cases of influenza-like illness.

        The above description from the WHO update accurately indicates that the same disease onset date strongly suggests a common source for the infection of the siblings. However, most of the human cases in West Java have a novel HA cleavage site, RESRRKKR, yet that cleavage site has not been described in birds from West Java (see map). Therefore, sequence analysis of H5N1 from the siblings, as well as poultry in the area would be useful.

        Recent local reports describe another suspect familial cluster in an adjacent village in Bandung and three earlier clusters in the area have been described. Each cluster had at least one member H5N1 confirmed by Hong Kong. There is also a geographical cluster in Bekasi, also in West Java.

        The sequences from these earlier clusters shopuld be released immediately.

        Comment


        • #34
          Pigeon Source for Confirmed H5N1 Bird Flu Case in Jakarta?



          Pigeon Source for Confirmed H5N1 Bird Flu Case in Jakarta?

          Recombinomics Commentary

          May 30, 2006

          An additional case occurred in a 39-year-old man from West Jakarta. He developed symptoms on 9 May, was hospitalized on 16 May, and died on 19 May. The investigation determined that the man cleaned pigeon faeces from blocked roof gutters at his home shortly before symptom onset. No further potential source of exposure was identified.

          The above WHO update leaves source of H5N1 bird flu in human infections in the Jakarta area unclear. Most of the reported cases in Indonesia are from Jakarta area or nearby locations in West Java (see map). The sequence from all but one of the human isolates has a novel cleavage site, which has not been reported for bird isolates in the area. Although there have been a large number of poultry isolates from various regions in Indonesia, there are no public sequences from wild birds, such as pigeons.

          More detailed surveillance of H5N1 in the area would be useful. Thus far the only non-human isolate from the area with the novel cleavage site is from a cat. H5N1 from poultry and wild birds in the area should be isolated and sequenced along with mammalian sources such as swine.

          These and prior H5N1 sequences, including human sequences should be released immediately.

          Comment


          • #35
            Re: Indonesia BF - 5/28-30

            Six More Human Bird Flu Cases In Indonesia, Three Fatal

            <table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="145"> <tbody><tr> <td class="newsbuttontable" style="padding-bottom: 2px;">
            </td> </tr> <tr> <td class="newsbuttontable"></td> </tr> <tr> <td class="newsbuttontable"></td> </tr> <tr> <td class="newsbuttontable"></td> </tr> <tr> <td class="newsbuttontable"></td> </tr> </tbody></table>
            Main Category: Bird Flu / Avian Flu News
            Article Date: 30 May 2006 - 7:00am (PDT)

            According to the World Health Organization, six more humans have become infected with the H5N1 bird flu virus strain in Indonesia, of which three have died. 21% of all confirmed human cases of bird flu infection so far have happened in Indonesia - 48 out of 224.

            Indonesian authorities can confirm that four of these six cases had been exposed to sick chickens and pigeon droppings. Reports on the sources for other two are still pending. Authorities added that it is highly unlikely any of these six infected humans caught bird flu from another human - all but two of them are from different parts of the country. Two of them, a brother and sister, both got ill at the same time - an indication that one did not infect the other. The brother and sister have died.

            There is absolutely no connection between these six human infections and the cluster of seven family members from Kubu Sembelang. There may have been human-to-human transmission among this cluster of seven family members as they shared a small room. H5N1 can transmit from human-to-human if there is continuous, close physical contact.

            Laboratory tests indicate there is no evidence that H5N1 has mutated.

            After being criticised for their lack of urgency, Indonesian authorities have announced a series of measures aimed at combating the spread of animal and human infection. People who refuse to undergo tests will now face a prison sentence, as will those who refuse to allow their animals to be tested.

            Scientists fear that when the H5N1 bird flu virus strain mutates, it will acquire the ability to become human transmissible. The most likely way it may do this is to infect a person who already has the normal human flu. The H5N1 would have the opportunity to exchange genetic information with the human flu virus and pick up its ability to jump from human-to-human. If this happens we could be facing a flu pandemic. How serious a flu pandemic may be for global human health will depend on how virulent the mutated virus is.

            H5N1 needs to get embedded deep down into the human lung to make a person sick. This is one of the reasons humans do not catch bird flu easily, even from birds. A sick person cannot easily infect another human because his/her coughs and sneezes expel tiny quantities of the virus - as it is so deep down in the lung. A mutated virus that acquires the ability to become human transmissible most likely will start to infect the upper respiratory tract. If it did this humans would catch it and become ill much more easily, and sick people would expel a larger quantity of virus after each cough and sneeze. Fortunately, upper-respiratory tract infections are easier to treat than lower-respiratory tract infections. If this theory happens, it could mean that a human flu pandemic would occur with a less virulent virus than the present H5N1.

            In other words: Currently, H5N1 only infects humans deep down in the lung. That is why it has a high death rate. That is also why humans cannot catch it easily. That is also why humans cannot pass it on easily.

            (Bird flu = Avian flu)
            (Flu = Influenza)
            (Virulent = Potent, powerful. In this text it also means deadly.)
            (Human transmissible = A disease that can easily be passed from human-to-human.)

            Written by: Christian Nordqvist
            Editor: Medical News Today


            Comment


            • #36
              Re: Indonesia BF - 5/28-30

              H5N1 needs to get embedded deep down into the human lung to make a person sick. This is one of the reasons humans do not catch bird flu easily, even from birds. A sick person cannot easily infect another human because his/her coughs and sneezes expel tiny quantities of the virus - as it is so deep down in the lung. A mutated virus that acquires the ability to become human transmissible most likely will start to infect the upper respiratory tract. If it did this humans would catch it and become ill much more easily, and sick people would expel a larger quantity of virus after each cough and sneeze. Fortunately, upper-respiratory tract infections are easier to treat than lower-respiratory tract infections. If this theory happens, it could mean that a human flu pandemic would occur with a less virulent virus than the present H5N1.
              This bolded statement does not logically follow the information given, or am I missing something?

              Comment


              • #37
                Re: Indonesia BF - 5/28-30

                You are right - it does not make sense in context.

                Comment


                • #38
                  Re: Indonesia BF - 5/28-30

                  Originally posted by Mellie
                  This bolded statement does not logically follow the information given, or am I missing something?
                  "...If this theory happens, it could mean that a human flu pandemic would occur with a less virulent virus than the present H5N1. "
                  It could also mean that it maintains it's virulence or it could also mean that it will become more virulent.

                  There is no written rule that says the virus MUST do X to accomplish Y.

                  There is only our hope that it will.

                  In essence Christian Nordqvist is making a leap of faith.

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Re: Indonesia BF - 5/28-30

                    http://www.pikiran-rakyat.com/cetak/...06/31/0102.htm

                    The patient of Origin Bird Flu Tasik died
                    Bandung, (HOMEWORK). -
                    Another the patient Suspect Bird flu died in the Handsome Sadikin Hospital (RSHS) Bandung. M. (15) the patient from Tasikmalaya that entered RSHS, on Monday (29/5), died , on Tuesday (30/5), struck 21.20 WIB.
                    The chairman Tim the Control of RSHS Bird Flu, Dr. Hadi Jusuf that was contacted ?PR? overnight said, when entering, the condition for the patient indeed already Shock . His blood pressure provided and he experienced failed the breath so as to have to be installed the ventilator.
                    ?M only was treated not more than 24 hours here. When coming then, his condition has been critical. But, until at this time we still could not confirm he was positive bird flu or not. The big possibility of results of his laboratory just outside tomorrow, (Wednesday-red. ) ,? he said.
                    The body M., according to him, could have been brought came home by his family. But, the method treated him of course continue to have to as treating the positive body was affected by the bird flu virus, to prevent the possibility of the spread to the other person.
                    M. (15), villagers Cikukulu Kec. Karangnunggal, was the patient Suspect First bird flu from Kab. Tasikmalaya. The "patient was reconciled from RS Al Islam Tasikmalaya after being treated one night with the hot and breathless sign." Because since entering his condition has been ugly, direct we rose of the ventilator, said the Chairman Tim the Control of the Bird Flu Illness of RSHS Bandung, Dr. Hadi Jusuf, on Tuesday (30/5).
                    Results of the photograph inspection toraks also pointed out the existence Pneumonia Heavy to his two lungs. Clinically laboratoris, at first with the existence of the story of contact with the poultry died, Dr. Hadi said, the big possibility M. was infected by the bird flu virus.
                    The patient's father, T (49) said, his six property chickens died suddenly last week, before the son of his youngest child experienced hot and crowded. According to him, apart from his property chicken, thousands of nonpedigreed chickens in two RW around his residence also had died suddenly since early May.
                    The similar matter was raised by the patient's grandfather, T (78). According to him, was different to the normal newcastle disease was found, the nonpedigreed chicken that died this apparently lebam kebiruan. The "chicken died that immediately was buried, burnt or thrown to the pond," he said.
                    M, yang baru duduk di kelas II SMP, mengalami demam sejak Rabu (24/5) dan langsung dibawa ke puskesmas setempat. Puskesmas kemudian merujuknya ke RS Al Islam Tasikmalaya.
                    Sampai Selasa (30/5), RSHS sudah merawat 42 suspect flu burung yang berasal dari berbagai wilayah Kota Bandung, Kab. Bandung, Subang, Garut, Sumedang, Bogor, dan Indramayu.
                    Sementara itu, Dinas Peternakan Kab. Tasikmalaya belum merencanakan pemusnahan ternak unggas di Desa Cikukulu, Kec. Karangnunggal. "Karena petugas kita masih di lapangan, untuk meneliti kesehatan unggas di daerah itu," kata Kepala Dinas Peternakan Tasikmalaya, Budi Utarma.
                    Menurut dia, camat, petugas dari peternakan, dan puskesmas, sudah turun ke lokasi kediaman warga yang sedang dirawat. Termasuk, telah melakukan penyemprotan terhadap ternak-ternak yang ada di daerah itu. (A-97/A-131/A-154)***

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Re: Indonesia BF - 5/28-30

                      http://www.pikiran-rakyat.com/cetak/...06/31/0102.htm

                      The patient of Origin Bird Flu Tasik died
                      Bandung, (HOMEWORK). -
                      Another the patient Suspect Bird flu died in the Handsome Sadikin Hospital (RSHS) Bandung. M. (15) the patient from Tasikmalaya that entered RSHS, on Monday (29/5), died , on Tuesday (30/5), struck 21.20 WIB.
                      The chairman Tim the Control of RSHS Bird Flu, Dr. Hadi Jusuf that was contacted “PR” overnight said, when entering, the condition for the patient indeed already Shock . His blood pressure provided and he experienced failed the breath so as to have to be installed the ventilator.
                      “M only was treated not more than 24 hours here. When coming then, his condition has been critical. But, until at this time we still could not confirm he was positive bird flu or not. The big possibility of results of his laboratory just outside tomorrow, (Wednesday-red. ) ,” he said.
                      The body M., according to him, could have been brought came home by his family. But, the method treated him of course continue to have to as treating the positive body was affected by the bird flu virus, to prevent the possibility of the spread to the other person.
                      M. (15), villagers Cikukulu Kec. Karangnunggal, was the patient Suspect First bird flu from Kab. Tasikmalaya. The "patient was reconciled from RS Al Islam Tasikmalaya after being treated one night with the hot and breathless sign." Because since entering his condition has been ugly, direct we rose of the ventilator, said the Chairman Tim the Control of the Bird Flu Illness of RSHS Bandung, Dr. Hadi Jusuf, on Tuesday (30/5).
                      Results of the photograph inspection toraks also pointed out the existence Pneumonia Heavy to his two lungs. Clinically laboratoris, at first with the existence of the story of contact with the poultry died, Dr. Hadi said, the big possibility M. was infected by the bird flu virus.
                      The patient's father, T (49) said, his six property chickens died suddenly last week, before the son of his youngest child experienced hot and crowded. According to him, apart from his property chicken, thousands of nonpedigreed chickens in two RW around his residence also had died suddenly since early May.
                      The similar matter was raised by the patient's grandfather, T (78). According to him, was different to the normal newcastle disease was found, the nonpedigreed chicken that died this apparently lebam kebiruan. The "chicken died that immediately was buried, burnt or thrown to the pond," he said.


                      M., that just sat in the class of Ii SMP, experienced the fever since Wednesday (24/5) and immediately was brought to the local community health centre.The community health centre afterwards reconciled him to RS Al Islam Tasikmalaya.Up until Tuesday (30/5), RSHS has treated 42 suspect bird flu that came from various Bandung City territories, Kab.Bandung, Subang, Garut, Sumedang, Bogor, and Indramayu.In the meantime, the Kab Livestock Breeding Service.Tasikmalaya did not yet plan the extermination of the poultry in the Cikukulu Village, Kec.Karangnunggal."Because of our official still in the field, to research the health of the poultry in the area, the" Tasikmalaya" headword of the Livestock Breeding Service, Budi Utarma.According to him, the sub-district head, the official from livestock breeding, and the community health centre, has descended to the location of the citizen's residence that was treated.Including, did spraying against available livestock in the area.(A-97/A-131/A-154</PRE>

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Re: Indonesia BF - 5/28-30

                        Bandung: Mastur, the assumption patient of bird flu that was reconciled to the Handsome Sadikin Hospital, Bandung, West Java in the critical condition.He must make use of respiratory aids.Beforehand the citizen Cangkuang, Nunggal Coral, Tasikmalaya this once contact with the chicken that died suddenly.Mastur could be also treated overnight in RS Islam, Tasikmalaya.</PRE>
                        http://www.liputan6.com/view/12,1236...149042447.html</PRE>
                        </PRE>

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          Re: Indonesia BF - 5/28-30

                          Metrotvnews.com, Bandung: A patient suspect bird flu that was treated in the Handsome Sadikin Hospital, Bandung, West Java, died.
                          Casualties who it was known were named Mastur died after undergoing the maintenance in the hospital for one day.
                          Casualties were the citizen of the Cangkuang Village, the Cikululu Village, of the Tasikmalaya Regency.
                          Beforehand, casualties could be treated in the Hospital Islam Tasikmalaya for one day.
                          However, because the condition for casualties continued to worsen, he was afterwards reconciled to the Handsome Sadikin Hospital, Bandung.
                          Casualties's body on Tuesday night (27/5) langung was brought to Tasikmalaya by the family.
                          With the Mastur death, at this time still was gotten by one patient suspect bird flu again that still was treated in the Handsome Sadikin Hospital namely Iwan, the citizen Cibiru Wetan, the Bandung Regency.
                          (AMR

                          http://www.metrotvnews.com/berita.asp?id=17650

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            Re: Indonesia BF - 5/28-30

                            FluWrap: Avian flu causes havoc in Indonesia
                            By Kate Walker
                            UPI Correspondent
                            Published May 30, 2006

                            OXFORD, England -- Indonesia this weekend saw further deaths from avian influenza among increased reports of suspicion and poor health practices in the North Sumatran village that has seen the largest infection cluster confirmed thus far.

                            Thirty-seven deaths in Indonesia have now been attributed to avian-influenza infection.

                            A brother and sister from Bandung both died from the disease on May 23, marking the seventh family cluster found in the country. The World Health Organization confirmed that their deaths were the result of the H5N1 strain of avian influenza on Monday.

                            A 14-year-old girl from Solok, in West Sumatra, has been infected with the disease, an Indonesian Health Ministry official announced. There have been no reports of her condition.

                            Johannes Ginting, the sole survivor of Indonesia's largest infection cluster, is still in hospital but is refusing all manner of treatment for avian flu, officials from Adam Malik Hospital have said.

                            Nurrasyid Lubis, deputy director of the hospital, was quoted by the Charlotte Observer as saying: "Johannes doesn't want to be injected, doesn't want to take Tamiflu or other antibiotics. ... We had actually given masks and gloves to the family, and we informed them how dangerous this disease is, but they didn't cooperate with us. We also informed (Johannes) how dangerous it is, but he didn't believe us."

                            The situation in Indonesia -- which has seen half of all deaths from bird flu worldwide -- is further complicated by suspicion on the part of local villagers. This column reported last week that villagers outraged by their loss of income following bird culls had taken to public ceremonies in which they kill birds with their bare hands and drink the blood.

                            Now villagers in Kubu Sembilang, site of the aforementioned largest cluster, refuse to believe that the deaths were a result of avian influenza, instead blaming black magic.

                            The villagers are wary of the fact that seven members of the same family fell ill, apparently as a result of being in close contact with each other, yet none of the villagers who cared for the family has shown any signs of illness. The issue is further complicated by the fact that the WHO has so far been unable to identify how the first family member to be infected initially contracted the disease, as none of the animals in the vicinity of the village has tested positive for H5N1 antibodies.

                            In previous clusters, however, only blood relatives have been affected -- spouses and in-laws have remained disease-free as grandparents and cousins have fallen ill.

                            But the suspicious villagers have taken to avoiding the house, which they say has been cursed and is haunted by the ghosts of the dead family, for fear of falling under the curse themselves. Instead, they have been cutting the necks of chickens and drinking the blood, proving themselves free of the curse.

                            Meanwhile:

                            -- The Cambodian government is struggling to spread awareness of avian influenza in the face of limited resources.

                            Cheoun Uork, whose 3-year-old daughter recently died from bird flu, had not heard of the virus until several days after his daughter died, ContraCostaTimes.com reported.

                            "Had I known about such a warning, I would have taken better precautions to protect my daughter," he said. "She was my only child, and now I have to live with regret over her death."

                            Due to budgetary constraints, the Cambodian government was forced to focus its bird-flu awareness resources on the five provinces deemed to be at greatest risk of infections and outbreaks. The remaining 19 provinces have seen little in the way of information and methods of disease prevention.

                            But even in those five provinces where the efforts have been focused -- those bordering Thailand and Vietnam, both of which have seen a number of outbreaks -- there is a sense that the message is not getting across.

                            Ly Sovann, head of disease surveillance control at the Cambodian Health Ministry, told ContraCostaTimes.com: "Sometimes, people are enjoying music on the radio, and if a commercial or education spot pops up after the song, they will switch to another channel for more music. That is why face-to-face communication with villagers is more crucial for training and encouraging them to take part in prevention of the disease."

                            Megge Miller, a WHO epidemiologist in Cambodia, was quoted as saying: "There's obviously a lack of awareness in this community (about) what bird flu is. When we went into the field, families were asking questions, 'What is avian influenza? What is this about?'"

                            -- Russia is beginning the clinical trials of an avian-influenza vaccine produced by Mikrorentgen on 240 human volunteers, MosNews.com reported.

                            The volunteers, all of whom are over 18, have been selected form groups identified as being at high risk of contracting avian influenza, including those who work at poultry farms.

                            Over the course of the trial, which is to last five weeks, the volunteers will be injected with the vaccine before returning to their normal lives, periodically monitoring and recording their body temperature.

                            Comment


                            • #44
                              Re: Indonesia BF - 5/28-30

                              Local tests find bird flu kills 15-year-old boy in Indonesia at 1:39 on May 31, 2006, EST.
                              JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) - Bird flu killed a 15-year-old boy in Indonesia, a health official said Wednesday citing local tests, as the country struggled to get a grip on a spike in cases.
                              The latest victim was rushed to a hospital Monday in the city of Bandung and died a day later, said Hariyadi Wibisono, director of communicable disease control at the Ministry of Health. Local tests came back positive for the H5N1 bird flu virus, but still need to be confirmed by a World Health Organization reference laboratory in Hong Kong, he said.
                              The boy, from the West Java town of Tasikmalaya, had a history of contact with poultry, he said.
                              He is the third recent victim from the province. Last week, a 10-year-old girl and her 18-year-old brother who lived in another village died of the disease. Sick and dead birds were reported near their home.
                              Bird flu has killed 127 people worldwide since the virus began ravaging Asian poultry stocks in late 2003. Nearly a quarter of the human deaths have been in Indonesia, which has an official tally of 36, including at least a dozen in May alone.
                              A family cluster in North Sumatra has attracted international attention.
                              That case involves six of seven relatives from the tiny farming village of Kubu Simbelang who died after being infected with the H5N1 virus.
                              An eighth family member was buried before samples were collected, but WHO considers her part of the cluster - the largest ever reported.
                              Experts have not been able to link contact between the relatives and infected birds, which has led them to suspect limited human-to-human transmission may have occurred.
                              However, no one outside the family of blood relatives - including spouses - has fallen ill and experts have said the virus has not mutated in any way.
                              Scientists believe human-to-human transmission has occurred in a handful of other smaller family clusters, all involving blood relatives. Experts theorize that may mean some people have a genetic susceptibility to the disease, but there is no evidence to support that.
                              The lone survivor of the family cluster is recovering in a hospital in Medan. The disease remains hard for people to catch and most human cases so far have been traced to contact with infected birds. But experts fear the virus will mutate into a highly contagious form that passes easily among people, possible sparking a pandemic. The experts stress, however, that has not happened in Kubu Simbelang.

                              http://www.940news.com/nouvelles.php?cat=24&id=5319

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                Re: Indonesia BF - 5/28-30

                                New bird flu suspect in Bandung A 15-year-old boy from Tasikmalaya town was rushed to Bandung's Hasan Sadikin hospital late Monday after showing symptoms of avian influenza commonly known as bird flu.

                                The boy, a resident of Cangkuang Karangninggal hamlet in Tasikmalaya, some 100 kilometers east of Bandung, arrived at the hospital with serious breathing problems and a high fever.
                                Doctors said the boy was likely infected with bird flu, because he had history of direct contact with dead chickens.
                                The suspect's father said the second year junior high school student fell ill last Wednesday, a week after six of their chickens died suddenly.
                                "Hundreds of chickens have died since May, with bluish marks on their bodies and fluid coming out of their beaks," the suspect's father said at the hospital Tuesday.
                                Head of the hospital's bird flu monitoring team, Hadi Yusuf, said the suspect's blood sample had been sent to Health Ministry's lab in Jakarta. Two siblings from Bandung regency died last week and lab tests confirmed they had bird flu. Their neighbor, a 24-year-old man, who was admitted to the hospital Saturday is currently receiving treatment for bird flu-like symptoms. (JP/Yuli Tri Suwarni)


                                http://www.thejakartapost.com/detail...531.G03&irec=4

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