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Bird Flu Claims Life in China
bird flu ChinaHONG KONG: A man has died of suspected bird flu in southern China, just over the border from HongKong, the territory’s Centre for Health Protection said.

The Health Department of Guangdong Province and Ministry of Health told the Hong Kong government that a 32-year-old Chinese man developed fever and pneumonia on February. 22 and died on March 2, the centre said in a statement late on Friday.

The risk of avian influenza appearing in people in Hong Kong was also increasing, the head of the Centre for Health Protection, Leung Pak-yin, was quoted as saying today in the English-language daily South China Morning Post. “We expect there could be human cases in Hong Kong and we all need to be well prepared for that.”  --courtesy Economic Times India

China expert urges better bird flu prevention
A Chinese medical expert said on Saturday he would urge China's parliament to strengthen measures to prevent bird flu, but added the country was much better prepared to handle a pandemic than it was at the time of SARS.

"The government's approach is more active," Zhong Nanshan, a SARS expert and President of the Chinese Medical Association told reporters on the sidelines of the annual parliament session.

"We have intensified the monitoring of seasonal birds, domestic poultry and humans," said Zhong, who is based in the southern province of Guangdong.

It was there that SARS first emerged in 2003, when China was widely criticised for initially covering up the virus, contributing to its spread around the world.

The same province is now a focal point for bird flu, a disease that affects mostly animals but which scientists fear could mutate into a form that can pass easily between people, sparking a pandemic.

China has reported more than 30 outbreaks of the H5N1 strain in birds across the country in the past year. None of those have been in Guangdong, but neighbouring Hong Kong has confirmed several cases, fuelling suspicions that authorities were not being truthful about the situation in the province.

On Saturday Hong Kong's Centre for Health Protection said a Guangdong man had died of suspected bird flu. If confirmed it would be China's 15th human case of bird flu.

But Zhong said he did not believe there was any cover-up in Guangdong, saying it was possible the man caught the virus directly from migratory birds.

"There could be some missing cases in the countryside as it is so big, but I do not believe they are hiding cases," he said. "Some cases are transferred by seasonal birds directly to humans, not necessarily from domestic poultry."

Nonetheless, Zhong said China's weakness was the vastness of its countryside and the need to better educate people in far-flung rural areas about preventing the disease.

He also warned that the threat of bird flu globally was becoming more serious as it spread from Asia around the world and began to affect other mammals. A cat in Germany was found to have the H5N1 strain, probably from eating infected birds.

At least 174 people have been confirmed to have the disease, 94 of whom have died.

"Bird flu will certainly be spreading this year and the dangers to humans are getting bigger," Zhong said. --Courtesy Reuters

Drawing SARS lessons, China warns of bird flu
"This year we are not going to serve too many poultry-related dishes on the deputies' dinner tables, and all poultry products we purchase will be strictly examined by the city health authorities," a staff with Beijing Continental Grand Hotel told Xinhua on Saturday.

The four-star hotel is one of a dozen local hotels designated to accommodate some 3,000 deputies to the 10th National People's Congress (NPC), China's national legislature which will start its annual full session here on Sunday.

"We also plan to give health lectures on bird flu to the NPC deputies staying in our hotel," the staff added.

On the eve of China's regular political high season, marked by the opening of the parliament session, the Chinese central and local authorities were continuously issuing warnings to the public against the possible spread of avian influenza, which to date had caused 14 human infections on the Chinese mainland and claimed eight lives.

Chinese Vice-Premier Hui Liangyu acknowledged Thursday that the country is faced with a "fairly grave situation" in the prevention and control of the bird flu epidemic, and the health authorities in South China's Guangdong Province on Friday reported a suspected case of human fatality from the bird flu.

This has constituted a sharp contrast with what happened exactly three years ago, when the country was hit by another deadly epidemic SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome). An information blackout about the new disease by the Ministry of Health and the Beijing municipal government left most people in the Chinese capital, including lawmakers from across the country participating in the NPC session, totally unaware of the SARS menace. --Courtesy Xinhua

China Confirms Woman's Bird Flu Death
BEIJING -- A woman who died in Shanghai tested positive for the H5N1 strain of bird flu, China announced Saturday. Indonesia awaited confirmation of tests showing that a dead 1-year-old girl in Jakarta had the virus.

In Hong Kong, the government said a dead peregrine falcon found in a housing complex tested positive for the H5N1 strain.

A dove flies through building of the center of city Friday March 24, 2006 in Shanghai, China. A 29-year-old female migrant worker in Shanghai has died from what appears to be bird flu, China's official Xinhua News Agency reported Friday. Preliminary tests indicated the woman probably died of pneumonia caused by the bird flu virus, it said. It did not give any specifics. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko) (Eugene Hoshiko - AP)

The woman who died in Shanghai was the Chinese mainland's 11th human death from bird flu and the first in Shanghai, the country's biggest city, according to the World Health Organization.

The migrant worker, identified only by the common surname Li, died Tuesday after being hospitalized with fever and cold symptoms.

Blood tests by China's national Center for Disease Control confirmed Li had bird flu, the Health Ministry said in a statement carried by the official Xinhua News Agency. It said the tests were conducted in line with WHO standards and results were reported to the agency.

Authorities haven't said how the woman might have contracted the virus. No bird flu outbreaks in poultry have been reported in Shanghai since 2004.

People who had close contact with Li were placed under observation but none has shown disease symptoms, Xinhua said.

Worldwide, the virus has killed more than 100 people in eight countries, mostly in Asia, according to WHO.

Tests on the Indonesian girl, who died Thursday, showed she had the H5N1 strain, said Hariadi Wibisono, a Health Ministry director. He said she fell ill after coming into contact with dead poultry.

A swab and blood sample have been sent to a WHO-sanctioned laboratory in Hong Kong for confirmation, Wibisono said.

The girl would be Indonesia's 23rd human death from bird flu, he said.

The falcon in Hong Kong was found Tuesday near the border with mainland China, and laboratory tests confirmed it had the H5N1 strain, according to the Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department.

Hong Kong hasn't reported a human case of bird flu since 2003.

More than 6,000 dead birds have been tested for bird flu in Hong Kong since late October, according to the government. Of those, two chickens and 14 wild birds were confirmed to have the H5N1 virus.

China has reported 16 human cases and dozens of outbreaks in chickens, ducks and other poultry in areas throughout the country. The government has destroyed millions of farm birds to contain outbreaks.

Most of China's human infections have been traced to contact with sick or dead birds. Experts say the virus might be spread by millions of migratory birds that cross China.
-courtesy Washington Post

 

 

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