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  #1  
Old June 3rd, 2008, 11:18 AM
rymich13 rymich13 is offline
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Default New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

News | 3 June, 2008

By Alistair Driver
A SUSPECTED new case of avian flu is being investigated at a farm in Oxfordshire.

It is understood that the strain of disease thought to have been found in laying hens at a farm near Banbury is H7, not the deadly H5N1 version that has been found twice in England in the past 12 months.

More information when we get it.

http://www.farmersguardian.com/story...code=19006&c=1
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  #2  
Old June 3rd, 2008, 12:59 PM
rymich13 rymich13 is offline
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Default Re: New case of bird flu suspected in Oxfordshire

Bird flu rumours in Banbury

THE Banbury Guardian is currently (5.30pm, Tuesday) investigating reports of an outbreak of bird flu in the Banbury area.
Early details suggest 25,000 birds face slaughter following an outbreak of the H7 strain of bird flu at a site ten kilometres from the town.

A spokesman for the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs would not confirm the report but said: "We have investigations ongoing throughout the year as a matter of routine."

The H7 family of flu viruses primarily affects birds. A deadly version of the H7N7 strain hit poultry in the Netherlands in 2003 and a less severe form, H7N2, broke out in the UK last year.

http://www.banburyguardian.co.uk/new...ury.4147225.jp
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  #3  
Old June 3rd, 2008, 01:16 PM
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Default Re: New case of bird flu suspected in Oxfordshire

Source: http://news.sky.com/skynews/article/...317966,00.html
Chickens Test Positive For Bird Flu

Updated:18:04, Tuesday June 03, 2008
Chickens on a farm in Oxfordshire have tested positive for the H7 strain of bird flu, according to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs.
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Old June 3rd, 2008, 01:20 PM
rymich13 rymich13 is offline
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Default Re: New case of bird flu suspected in Oxfordshire

Bird flu in Banbury

DEFRA has this evening (Tuesday) confirmed an outbreak of Bird Flu in the Banbury area.
Chief veterinary officer, Nigel Gibbens, has confirmed Avian Influenza in chickens on premises near Banbury after preliminary tests were positive for the H7 strain.

All birds on the premises will be slaughtered as a precautionary measure.

Early reports suggest 25,000 birds will be slaughtered on the unnamed premises ten kilometres from Banbury.

Laboratory testing continues and results which will allow confirmation of whether the strain is high or low pathogenicity will follow.

A detailed epidemiological investigation to better understand the origin and development of the disease is underway.

A Temporary Control Zone with a three-kilometre inner zone and a ten-kilometre outer zone is being established around the infected premises.

A number of measures apply.

- All birds must be housed or otherwise isolated from contact with wild birds in the inner zone.

- Bird gatherings are banned and all other movements of birds and some products are banned in the whole of the Temporary Control Zone.

Defra is urgently considering whether any wider measures may be needed.

Mr Gibbens said: "I would stress the need for poultry keepers to be extremely vigilant, practice the highest levels of biosecurity and report any suspicions of disease to their local Animal Health Office immediately."

The Health Protection Agency has advised that it is important to remember that H7 avian flu remains largely a disease of birds. The virus does not transmit easily to humans, as evidenced by the small number of confirmed infections worldwide to date.

Almost all human H7 infections documented so far have been associated with close contact with dead or dying poultry.

The risk to human health posed by H7 avian influenza viruses remains low.

Nonetheless, the local Health Protection Unit will be identifying and following up those who may have had contact with the infected poultry and provide guidance and advice, and preventative medication as appropriate.

Dr Judith Hilton, Food Standards Agency head of microbiological safety, said:"This case of bird flu on a premises in Banbury, Oxfordshire poses no safety implications for the human food chain.
"Properly cooked poultry and poultry products, including eggs, are safe to eat. The science shows that the virus isn't contracted by eating food – but usually by close contact with infected birds."

All poultry keepers on the GB Poultry Register are being notified, and the EU Commission has been informed.

http://www.banburyguardian.co.uk/new...ury.4147225.jp
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  #5  
Old June 3rd, 2008, 01:37 PM
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Default Re: New case of bird flu suspected in Oxfordshire

Avian Influenza H7 confirmed in Oxfordshire
The Chief Veterinary Officer, Nigel Gibbens, has today confirmed Avian Influenza in chickens on premises near Banbury in Oxfordshire after preliminary tests were positive for the H7 strain. All birds on the premises will be slaughtered as a precautionary measure.
Laboratory testing continues and results which will allow confirmation of whether the strain is high or low pathogenicity will follow. A detailed epidemiological investigation to better understand the origin and development of the disease is underway.
A Temporary Control Zone with a 3km inner zone and a 10km outer zone is being established around the Infected Premises. A number of measures apply. All birds must be housed or otherwise isolated from contact with wild birds in the inner zone. Bird gatherings are banned and all other movements of birds and some products are banned in the whole of the Temporary Control Zone. Defra is urgently considering whether any wider measures may be needed.
Poultry keepers are urged to be extremely vigilant, practice the highest levels of biosecurity and report any suspicions of disease to their local Animal Health Office immediately.
The Health Protection Agency has advised that it is important to remember that H7 avian flu remains largely a disease of birds. The virus does not transmit easily to humans, as evidenced by the small number of confirmed infections worldwide to date. Almost all human H7 infections documented so far have been associated with close contact with dead or dying poultry. The risk to human health posed by H7 avian influenza viruses remains low. Nonetheless, the local Health Protection Unit will be identifying and following up those who may have had contact with the infected poultry and provide guidance and advice, and preventative medication as appropriate.
Dr Judith Hilton, Food Standards Agency head of microbiological safety, said:
“This case of bird flu on a premises in Banbury, Oxfordshire poses no safety implications for the human food chain. Properly cooked poultry and poultry products, including eggs, are safe to eat. The science shows that the virus isn't contracted by eating food – but usually by close contact with infected birds.”
All poultry keepers on the GB Poultry Register are being notified, and the EU Commission has been informed.
Further information:
Page last modified: 3 June 2008 18:25
Page published: 3 June 2008

http://www.defra.gov.uk/news/latest/...nimal-0603.htm
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  #6  
Old June 3rd, 2008, 01:44 PM
rymich13 rymich13 is offline
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Default Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

you know something when one news source get a new story then they all report on it is basically the same story they just edit it.

By the way I get all of my information through here:
http://www.newsnow.co.uk/h/Hot+Topics/Bird+Flu
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  #7  
Old June 3rd, 2008, 01:57 PM
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Default Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

Quote:
Originally Posted by rymich13 View Post
you know something when one news source get a new story then they all report on it is basically the same story they just edit it.

By the way I get all of my information through here:
http://www.newsnow.co.uk/h/Hot+Topics/Bird+Flu
The H7 outbreaks are like clockwork. Same problem almost exactly one year ago

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/05...icient_11.html
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Old June 3rd, 2008, 01:59 PM
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Default Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

Chickens test positive for bird flu

Jun 3 2008
Chickens on a farm in Oxfordshire have tested positive for the H7 strain of bird flu, according to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs.
All birds on the infected farm near Banbury will be slaughtered as a precautionary measure after the case of avian flu was confirmed by new chief veterinary officer Nigel Gibbens.
Testing is continuing to discover whether the strain of bird flu is a highly pathogenic one, Defra said.
Shadow environment secretary Peter Ainsworth said: "This is worrying news for the farming community. It is vital that Defra acts to contain the outbreak and to identify its source."

http://www.southportvisiter.co.uk/so...1022-21018705/
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  #9  
Old June 3rd, 2008, 02:10 PM
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Default Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

Quote:
Originally Posted by niman View Post
The H7 outbreaks are like clockwork. Same problem almost exactly one year ago

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/05...icient_11.html
H7N3 almost exactly 2 years ago

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/04...ch_Spread.html
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  #10  
Old June 3rd, 2008, 02:30 PM
rymich13 rymich13 is offline
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Default Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

well, if this follows the same pattern as last year then we should be seeing some human cases here shortly as well.
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  #11  
Old June 3rd, 2008, 02:51 PM
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Default Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

Source: http://www.pr-inside.com/uk-governme...in-r622988.htm

UK government: chickens on farm in southern England have H7 subtype of bird flu

© AP
2008-06-03 20:19:25 -

LONDON (AP) - The British government says it has detected the presence of the H7 subtype of bird flu among chickens at a farm near Banbury. The town is about 80 miles (130 kilometers) northwest of London.
The government said Tuesday it is too soon to know whether the virus is a particularly lethal strain.
The H7 subtype of bird flu has previously hit birds in Britain and elsewhere.
It has also occasionally infected humans although it generally causes milder illness than the H5N1 subtype. A large outbreak in the Netherlands in 2003 caused one death.
Last year at least four Britons were infected with H7N2 when the strain broke out in Wales.


Health experts monitor bird flu strains including H7 very closely since they have the potential to spark a flu pandemic.
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  #12  
Old June 3rd, 2008, 03:04 PM
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Default Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

Commentary at

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/06...and_Again.html
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  #13  
Old June 3rd, 2008, 04:11 PM
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Default Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

Source: http://www.oxfordmail.net/display.va...d_flu_farm.php

Vets slaughter chickens on bird flu farm
By Ellie Simmonds

Vets have been ordered to slaughter 25,000 chickens after an outbreak of bird flu was confirmed in Oxfordshire.

The outbreak - the first in the county - was discovered at Eastwood Farm between Shenington and Shutford, about 10 miles west of Banbury.

The farmer contacted the Department for Food and Rural Affairs yesterday after noticing his birds were showing suspicious symptoms.


Nigel Gibbens, the Government's chief veterinary officer, tonight confirmed the chickens had tested positive for the H7 strain of Avian Influenza - one of two strains which can be highly contagious - but not the deadly H5N1 strain.

He said the virus did not transmit easily to humans and almost all human H7 infections so far had been associated with close contact with dead or dying poultry.

A control zone has been put in place.


A neighbouring farmer, who did not wish to be named, said: "I am just terribly sad for the farmer. Luckily I don't have poultry here but I feel very sad - they are good people who work hard."

Another farmer added: "I am surprised, because there haven't been cases of bird flu for a while.

"These things are generally spread by wild birds, I presume that is what has happened here."

Police cordoned off part of Epwell Road, while Defra officials set up a temporary control area in which all birds must be kept inside.

The department is urgently considering whether any wider measures were needed.

Mr Gibbens said: "I would stress the need for poultry keepers to be extremely vigilant, practice the highest levels of biosecurity and report any suspicions of disease to their local animal health office immediately."

Oxfordshire County Council's chief emergency planning officer John Kelly said the issue was being dealt with by the county's trading standards department.

He added: "It is not an emergency planning matter - I would certainly say to people they should not worry."

Linda Ayres, owner of Hangland Farm Ostriches in nearby Upper Wardington, said: "My birds are out to grass right now. We will certainly have to look at getting them in.

"Before there has certainly been nothing close enough to us to worry us. It will be the first time we have had it to worry about."

Dr Judith Hilton, head of microbiological safety for the Food Standards Agency, said: "This case of bird flu poses no safety implications for the human food chain."

8:56pm today
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  #14  
Old June 3rd, 2008, 04:49 PM
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Post Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

Chickens confirmed with bird flu [BBC]

A control zone has been set up around the infected premises

Chickens on a farm in Oxfordshire have tested positive for bird flu, Chief Veterinary Officer Nigel Gibbens says.

All birds on the premises, near Banbury, are being slaughtered.

The birds have been confirmed with the H7 strain of the disease, rather than highly virulent H5N1 strain, regarded as a potential threat to human health.

Tests are being conducted to determine the virulence of the H7 strain and a temporary control zone is being set up around the farm.

Human risk 'low'
Mr Gibbens said: "I would stress the need for poultry keepers to be extremely vigilant, practice the highest levels of biosecurity and report any suspicions of disease to their local animal health office immediately."

The control zone has a 3km (1.8-mile) inner zone and a 10km (6.2-mile) outer zone, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs says.

Within the inner zone, all kept birds must be isolated from contact with wild birds. Bird gatherings and movements are banned within the whole zone, as is the movement of some products.

All the birds on the farm, nearby Banbury, are being slaughtered

The Health Protection Agency said it would be following up those who might have been in contact with the infected birds to offer them guidance and preventative medication.

However, it stressed the risk to human health from H7 avian influenza was low and said it did not transmit easily to humans.

The Food Standards Agency said the outbreak "poses no safety implications for the human food chain".

Dr Judith Hilton, the FSA's head of microbiological safety, said: "Properly cooked poultry and poultry products are safe to eat.

"The science shows that the virus isn't contracted by eating food, but usually by close contact with infected birds."

There have been several outbreaks of bird flu in the UK.

The most recent, in January this year, saw the H5N1 strain confirmed in 11 wild birds near Chesil Beach in Dorset.

In 2006, a farm worker contracted the H7 strain after coming into close contact with infected birds in North Tuddenham, Norfolk.

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http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/7434400.stm
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  #15  
Old June 4th, 2008, 08:33 AM
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Default Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

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Update on Avian Influenza in Oxfordshire: H7 strain confirmed as Highly Pathogenic

Following further laboratory results, the Chief Veterinary Officer has confirmed that the strain of H7 Avian Influenza present in laying hens at the farm in Banbury is highly pathogenic.
Further laboratory tests are in progress to identify the N type and possible relationships with previously identified viruses. A detailed epidemiological investigation to better understand the origin and development of the disease is also underway.
The 3km inner and 10km outer Temporary Control Zone was established on 3 June with measures appropriate to a highly pathogenic strain. These measures remain in place and existing restrictions continue to apply.
These restrictions include the housing or otherwise isolation from contact with wild birds in the inner 3km zone. All bird gatherings in the Temporary Control Zone are banned. Other movements of birds and some products are also banned in the whole of the Temporary Control Zone. Defra is urgently considering whether any wider measures may be needed. Please see the Defra website for detailed information on the restrictions.
The Health Protection Agency has confirmed that the risk to public health remains low. The Food Standards Agency has also confirmed that there are no safety implications for the human food chain.
Poultry keepers are urged to be extremely vigilant, practice the highest levels of biosecurity and report any suspicions of disease to their local Animal Health Office immediately.
Notes to editors

1. AI viruses are categorized according to the ability to cause severe disease (pathogenicity) in avian species as either highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses (HPAI) or low pathogenic (LPAI).
2. Further information can be found on the Defra website www.defra.gov.uk

http://www.defra.gov.uk/news/2008/080604c.htm
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Old June 4th, 2008, 08:38 AM
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Default Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

Deadly strain of bird flu found on UK farm

04/06/2008 - 1:16:13 PM

The strain of H7 bird flu found in chickens at a farm in Oxfordshire is the highly pathogenic type, British officials said today.

The avian flu virus was found yesterday in laying hens at the farm in Banbury, England, and all birds on the site were slaughtered.

Further tests are in progress to identify the exact type of the virus, while an investigation is under way to find where the disease came from.

http://www.eecho.ie/news/story/?trs=mhgbeyqleyql
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Old June 4th, 2008, 08:42 AM
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Default Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

Bird flu strain is deadly

04 June 2008 | 13:26


EAST Anglian farmers face worrying times after it emerged today that the strain of bird flu found in chickens on an Oxfordshire farm is “highly pathogenic” - the first time it has been identified as such in Britain.

The H7 avian flu virus was discovered yesterday in hens at the farm in Banbury.

All birds on the site were slaughtered.

While the H7 strain has been found in Britain on several occasions before this is the first time it has been identified in the highly pathogenic, or deadly, form.

Chief Veterinary Officer Nigel Gibbens said: “I would stress the need for poultry keepers to be extremely vigilant, practise the highest levels of biosecurity and report any suspicions of disease to their local Animal Health Office immediately.”

http://www.eadt.co.uk/content/eadt/n...A23%3A45%3A543
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Old June 4th, 2008, 09:12 AM
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Default Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

Bird flu: Tests reveal 'highly contagious' strain

LABORATORY results on dead chickens from an Oxfordshire farm show the H7 strain of bird flu is highly contagious.
Further tests will now take place to try to establish the exact type and any links with previously identified Avian flu viruses.
Up to 25,000 laying hens at Eastwood Farm, between Shenington and Shutford, about 10 miles west of Banbury, will be slaughtered this afternoon in a bid to stop the disease spreading.
A detailed epidemiological investigation is also under way to try to establish the origin of the disease.
A three-kilometre protection zone around the farm and a 10-kilometre surveillance zone remain in place.
The movement of birds and bird products has been banned in the whole of the temporary zone and restrictions have been imposed on people housing or having contact with wild birds. All bird gatherings have been banned.
Defra is urgently considering whether any wider measures may be needed.
The Health Protection Agency has confirmed that the risk to public health remains low.
The Food Standards Agency has also confirmed that there are no safety implications for the human food chain.
Poultry keepers are urged to be extremely vigilant, practise the highest levels of bio-security and report any suspicions of disease to their local Animal Health Office immediately.
For more information see the Defra website www.defra.gov.uk
1:19pm today


By Sam McGregor

http://www.witneygazette.net/misc/pr...?artid=2318453
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Old June 4th, 2008, 09:21 AM
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LONDON (Thomson Financial) - An outbreak of the H7 strain of bird flu at a farm in central England is "highly pathogenic", officials said on Wednesday.
All the chickens on the farm have been slaughtered following detection of the virus, which does not pose a high risk to humans, at the farm in Banbury, Oxfordshire late on Tuesday.
"The Chief Veterinary Officer has confirmed that the strain of H7 avian influenza present in laying hens at the farm in Banbury is highly pathogenic," the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs said in statement.
Highly pathogenic means that the virus has a relatively high ability to produce disease.
Japan announced that it was suspending imports of poultry from Britain following the outbreak.
Officials near the affected farm have introduced measures meaning poultry within three kilometres (1.9 miles) of the farm must be isolated from wild birds and bird gatherings and movement of birds are banned within ten kilometres.
Britain's Health Protection Agency said the H7 strain of avian flu is largely a disease of birds and does not easily transmit to humans.
The Food Standards Agency said the case of bird flu "poses no safety implications for the human food chain". The H5N1 virus can cause human deaths and was most recently detected in Dorset, southern England in January. tf.TFN-Europe_newsdesk@thomson.com afop/ejp/slj

http://www.iii.co.uk/news/?type=afxn...action=article
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Old June 4th, 2008, 09:36 AM
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Defra confirms H7 bird flu case in Oxfordshire

Chickens in Oxfordshire have tested positive for the highly pathogenic H7 strain of bird flu, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs confirmed today.
It is the first time a deadly form of the H7 virus has been identified in the UK, but Defra said the risk to humans was low.
All birds on the farm, near Banbury, are being slaughtered as a precautionary measure. An investigation into the origin of the outbreak is under way.
A temporary control zone was established around the premises when suspected bird flu was first identified yesterday.
The Food Standards Agency said there were no safety implications for the human food chain.
Defra said the H7 strain was "largely a disease of birds" and did not transmit easily to humans.
One vet died in the Netherlands when a deadly version of the H7N7 strain hit poultry in 2003. About 80 people suffered conjunctivitis, a non-life threatening eye infection.
An outbreak of the less severe H7N2 strain in the UK last year also led to cases of conjunctivitis as well as some mild respiratory infections.
There are other variants of the H7 strain, but Defra has yet to identify which form of the virus was present in the Oxfordshire chickens.
"I would stress the need for poultry keepers to be extremely vigilant, practice the highest levels of biosecurity and report any suspicions of disease to their local animal health office immediately," the chief vet, Nigel Gibbens, said.
The HN51 form of the virus is believed to be the variant most likely to jump from birds to humans in a form that is highly infectious and could trigger a potentially devastating flu pandemic.
However, a US study published last month found that H7N2 could possibly be passed from human to human and have "pandemic potential".

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/jun/04/birdflu
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Old June 4th, 2008, 09:40 AM
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Default Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

June 4, 2008


New bird flu outbreak near Banbury 'went undetected for three weeks'



Valerie Elliott, Countryside Editor


Free-range chickens on the farm at the centre of the latest avian flu alert have been infected with the disease for three weeks, The Times has learnt.
A local veterinary surgeon was called to Eastwood Farm in the village of Shenington, near Banbury, Oxfordshire, after an increase of mortality in hens in one 3,000-bird shed.
The birds were treated with antibiotics. The owner however raised the alarm on Monday when 10 per cent of his 25,000 flock were found dead. Only then was avian flu suspected.
Government vets are now urgently checking poultry in the neighbourbhood to ascertain whether the disease has already spread to other farms.
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Veterinary epidemiologists are also tracing all movements of vehicles, people, eggs and birds on and off the farm in the past month to identify the source of the disease.
The most likely theory, owever is that the avian flu virus, identified today as the highly pathogenic H7 strain, was brought on to the farm by an infected wild bird.
The cull of the rest of the birds is now under way.
The risks of H7 to human health are low, unlike the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu virus. However there have been cases in Britain where farm workers have suffered conjunctivitis and flu-like symptoms.
A 3km protection zone and 10km surveillance zone is in place around the infected premises. Checks are being made on all other poultry farms in the area and keepers have been asked to remain vigilant.
All bird movements and bird gatherings such as markets are banned.
There have been three other cases of H7 avian flu in the UK, on farms in St Helens on Merseyside and near Corwen, north Wales early last summer and in Dereham, Norfolk in May 2006.
The last outbreak of H5N1 in the UK was in wild swans at the Abbotsbury nature reserve in Dorset in the New Year. This popular tourist attraction near Chesil Beach is now open for visitors once more.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/new...cle4066462.ece
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  #22  
Old June 4th, 2008, 09:50 AM
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Default Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

I know this is all covered elsewhere on the site but as a reminder and for newcomers.

HP & LP technically refers to genetic structure but for our purposes denotes virulence in poultry.
It says little about either ease of transmission or virulence in humans.
Seasonal human flus are LP.
H5N1 comes in both types (as do H7Nx). The H5N1 that has been causing human deaths is HP. In humans H7Nx (inc. the HP form) is normally associated with fairly mild eye infections but has caused more typical ‘flu like illness’ and one death. H7s have generally also shown more human-to-human transmission ability than H5N1 (thankfully).

PS Many of the journalists (especially those working for local papers) know very little about this area and will make errors (please bear with them). Some in authority - who should know better - are making re-assuring statements which often fall in the wishful thinking catagory and are being quoted by the journalists.

Last edited by JJackson; June 4th, 2008 at 10:02 AM. Reason: added the PS
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Old June 4th, 2008, 09:54 AM
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Default Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

Quote:
Originally Posted by JJackson View Post
I know this is all covered elsewhere on the site but as a reminder and for newcomers.

HP & LP technically refers to genetic structure but for our purposes denotes virulence in poultry.
It says little about either ease of transmission or virulence in humans.
Seasonal human flus are LP.
H5N1 comes in both types (as do H7Nx). The H5N1 that has been causing human deaths is HP. In humans H7Nx (inc. the HP form) is normally associated with fairly mild eye infections but has caused more typical ‘flu like illness’ and one death. H7s have generally also show more human-to-human transmission ability than H5N1 (thankfully).
H7N7 was VERY efficiently transmitted H2H

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/01...ient_H7N7.html

Efficient Human to Human Transmission of H7N7 Bird Flu

Recombinomics Commentary
January 6, 2005

>>As at least 50 percent of the people exposed to infected poultry had H7 antibodies detectable with the modified assay, it was estimated that avian influenza A/H7N7 virus infection occurred in at least 1000, and perhaps as many as 2000 people. The seroprevalence of H7 antibodies in people without contact with infected poultry, but with close household contact to an infected poultry worker, was 59 percent. This suggests that the population at risk for avian influenza was not limited to those with direct contact to infected poultry, and that person-to-person transmission may have occurred on a large scale.<<
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  #24  
Old June 4th, 2008, 10:14 AM
JJackson JJackson is offline
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Default Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

Quote:
H7N7 was VERY efficiently transmitted H2H
Yes I agree but I was trying to keep it general for H7s and as your post shows these were mainly mild but the same outbreak was responsible for the fatality (a Vet.)

Quote:
Free-range chickens on the farm at the centre of the latest avian flu alert have been infected with the disease for three weeks, The Times has learnt.
A local veterinary surgeon was called to Eastwood Farm in the village of Shenington, near Banbury, Oxfordshire, after an increase of mortality in hens in one 3,000-bird shed.
The birds were treated with antibiotics. The owner however raised the alarm on Monday when 10 per cent of his 25,000 flock were found dead.
What do you make of this? Looks like BC again with an LP infection acquiring mutations to the cleavage site to go HP. I would love to see the before and after sequences (but shall not be holding my breath).
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  #25  
Old June 4th, 2008, 10:15 AM
cartski cartski is offline
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Default Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

So the worrisome situations are:

H5 acquiring the ease of transmission capabilities of H7;

H7 acquirng the mortality capability of H5 (although I believe there was some discussion that showed that this is impossible).

And the questions is how easily, genetically, could either of these situations arise.

J.
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  #26  
Old June 4th, 2008, 11:06 AM
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Opinion Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

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Originally Posted by JJackson View Post
Yes I agree but I was trying to keep it general for H7s and as your post shows these were mainly mild but the same outbreak was responsible for the fatality (a Vet.)


What do you make of this? Looks like BC again with an LP infection acquiring mutations to the cleavage site to go HP. I would love to see the before and after sequences (but shall not be holding my breath).
It is widely circulation of these viruses that may be alarming: I posted updates for Italy at several times, and A/H7 (N1 or N3) were always involved. The last situation update from IZSVE (OIE Reference Laboratory in Padua) told about an epizootic by A/H7N3 in a poultry seller, earlier this year. Notably, no media coverage for these events.
Clearly, a chain of transmission is maintaned either via fomites or migratory birds, or movement of animals across EU.
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  #27  
Old June 4th, 2008, 11:13 AM
HenryN HenryN is offline
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Default Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

Commentary

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/06...nsmission.html
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  #28  
Old June 4th, 2008, 11:21 AM
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Opinion Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

One should remember that these event AREN'T ISOLATE ONE.

Persistence of A/H7 in animal population across European countries cannot be discounted, thus human exposure to H7 subtype may be wider than expected but no major outbreaks happened so far.

I think that spotted focused attention paid by agricultural watchdogs to these issues do not preclude a better human epidemiological evaluation, including the lack of H7 isolation during seasonal human influenza surveillance.
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  #29  
Old June 4th, 2008, 11:29 AM
HenryN HenryN is offline
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Default Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

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Originally Posted by ironorehopper View Post
One should remember that these event AREN'T ISOLATE ONE.

Persistence of A/H7 in animal population across European countries cannot be discounted, thus human exposure to H7 subtype may be wider than expected but no major outbreaks happened so far.

I think that spotted focused attention paid by agricultural watchdogs to these issues do not preclude a better human epidemiological evaluation, including the lack of H7 isolation during seasonal human influenza surveillance.
Most of the human H7 has been linked to eye infections, which are not tested for influenza.
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  #30  
Old June 4th, 2008, 11:29 AM
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Default Re: New case of H7 bird flu in Oxfordshire

no pandemic/epidemic despite much exposure - that's good news.
See H5N1.
The virus might not be capable of sustained h2h.

H7 in poultry was reported back to the 1870s, but no human H7-epidemic
ever.
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