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    Bird flu still a menace in Asia and beyond

    HANOI, Vietnam (AP) — Thought bird flu was gone? Recent human deaths in Asia and Egypt are a reminder that the H5N1 virus is still alive and dangerous, and Vietnam is grappling with a new strain that has outsmarted vaccines used to protect poultry flocks.

    Ten people have died in Cambodia, Indonesia, Egypt, China and Vietnam since December during the prime-time flu season when the virus typically flares in poultry.

    "We are worried, and we will be very cautious," said To Long Thanh, director of Vietnam's Center for Animal Health Diagnostics in Vietnam.

    The H5N1 virus has killed 345 people worldwide since 2003, when it rampaged across large swaths of Asia decimating poultry stocks before later surfacing in parts of Africa, the Middle East and Europe. The number of poultry outbreaks has greatly diminished since then, but the virus remains entrenched in several countries and continues to surface sporadically, resulting in 20 to 30 human deaths globally in recent years.

    Bird flu remains hard for people to catch, with most people sickened after being in close contact with infected poultry, but experts have long feared it could spark a pandemic if it mutates into a form that spreads easily among people.

    The fresh wave of cases comes amid a controversy involving scientists who created new lab-only versions of the virus that spread more easily among animals, hoping to better understand it. After a loud uproar over whether publishing the research would put the recipe for a bioweapon into the hands of terrorists, the researchers have agreed to temporarily halt their work.

    They are set to wrap up a two-day meeting on the issue Friday with international experts at the World Health Organization in Geneva.

    After the meeting, WHO spokesman Gregory Hartl told The Associated Press the work would not be published until a full discussion could be held about both the risks and benefits of the research and risks of the virus itself. He said the consensus among experts voiced by a lead researcher was that the work should be published eventually since there was only a small chance the virus could be used as a bioweapon.

    Vietnam has long struggled to control the virus, but it has made progress — going 21 months before reporting its two most recent deaths in the past month. It has also experienced a burst of poultry outbreaks in 11 provinces nationwide over the same period. Officials have issued fresh warnings for farmers to beef up surveillance, especially since they can no longer rely on the latest poultry vaccine in the north and central areas where it is weak or useless against a new strain that has emerged in the region.

    "We have to increase biosecurity," said Thanh, the animal diagnostics director.

    The new strain had earlier been identified in China and was also recently found in Bangladesh and Nepal, where it likely spread via wild birds, said Jan Slingenbergh, a senior animal health officer at the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization in Rome.

    Viruses are constantly mutating and require new vaccines to protect against infection — the same reason new human seasonal flu shots are developed each year. A new vaccine is in the works, and scientists have stressed that the new strain has not changed in any way that suggests the virus is becoming more dangerous.

    The U.N. agriculture agency warned of a possible resurgence in bird flu outbreaks after the new strain was identified, potentially increasing risk to humans. However, Vietnam's two recent deaths occurred in the southern Mekong Delta, where the vaccine remains effective. WHO stressed it is also normal to see a spike in cases and poultry outbreaks during this time of year.

    "WHO has always said that as long as the virus is entrenched in poultry, which it is, there continues to be the risk of bird-to-human transmission," spokesman Hartl said in Geneva. "That risk means that you cannot predict exactly if the transmission will happen and if it will be regular, but there is the risk so that's why it's not surprising to see cases."

    Vietnam buys most of its poultry vaccine from China, which has continued with its robust vaccination campaign of some 15 billion doses despite the emergence of the new strain. Researchers there have developed a new version that works against the strain, but it's unclear when it might be ready for distribution, said Keith Hamilton, an animal influenza expert at the Paris-based World Organization of Animal Health.

    "We emphasize that vaccination is a complementary tool," he said. "It has to be used in conjunction with other control measures — biosecurity on farms, early detection is essential, so is a rapid response to contain and eliminate sources of disease."

    But in Ha Nam province, on the outskirts of Vietnam's capital, Hanoi, animal health officials are desperate to contain a poultry outbreak that hit last week. They have ordered 1 million doses of vaccine, hoping it will provide at least some protection.

    "I wish to have an effective vaccine against bird flu as soon as possible, so I can go on raising ducks," said farmer Nguyen Van Duong, whose entire flock was slaughtered after the virus was detected.

    "I am devastated at losing my investment on the ducks, but we will do anything to work with the authorities to stop it from spreading. The last thing we want is an outbreak to happen again."

    ____

    Follow Asia-Pacific Medical Writer Margie Mason at www.twitter.com/margiemasonap

     

    20 comments

    • b  •  3 months ago
      There is little chance that bird flu and similar diseases will cease to be a threat until we reform the industrial-food complex to damper the spread of diseases.
      • oilfieldworker 3 months ago
        Sorry, wild birds are not invading and eating at Kroger's or Albertson's or Walmart.
      • b 3 months ago
        #$%$ are you talking about? you have no idea what the bird flu is, or how it spreads, do you? It spreads when animals are crated and put in close confinement, the same way diseases spread through housing tenements...... seriously ppl like you make me wonder....... go study, wiki prolly has excellent articles on this subject.
      • First 3 months ago
        reform the industrial-food complex? like all over the world? not a chance. I can understant the merit in that statement, but if you're going to make a statement that's meant to help, be realistic about it. either way the spread is going to happen because we can't police every chicken coop in the world. if anything, wiping the slate clean would be better for all. but we would still need to supply them with food, since poultry is a major food source everywhere. it's a two-fold arguement though because we're broke and we don't want to get sick. mmmhhhh tough one.
    • Carley  •  Shreveport, United States  •  3 months ago
      Over-crowded farms? I wonder what kind of diet these birds are fed. Monsanto food, or are they free-roaming? Are they located close to other animals, like the pig farm that was located close to the bats? That is the way swine flu was supposed to originated. Is this the same bird flu that the experimenting scientists are prohibited from publishing their research about? Are these birds fed antibiotics? Is anyone looking into all this? I was looking at an incident map last night, and Russia is experiencing "out of control" cow virus, which it seems is also occurring in India. How did it get up there, or did it start there?
    • Marcus Aurelius  •  3 months ago
      Bird flu might mutate and become contagious to and amongst other farm animals. If this occurs, it should be assumed that the next mutation will result in Bird Flu becoming contagious amongst humans. Assuming the high metabolic rate and limited immune system amongst birds, the next farm animals, in this context, that bird flu might become contagious with are pigs or goats. Epidemics of bird flu amongst these farm animals might lead to mutations leading to mutations in the bird flu virus leading to contagiousness between humans. Watch for sudden epidemics amongst pigs and goats as a bell weather of this hypothesis developing. However, this stepwise scenario of bird flu contagiousness might not develop resulting in a sudden and unexpected epidemic of bird flu amongst humans.
      • Carley 3 months ago
        Go look up Incident Map site. Check out diseases. click on the icons on map.
      • Avid Reader 3 months ago
        Marcus, bird flu has already been genetically engineered for contagion to humans. It wasn't a natural process, and it took place in a lab in the Netherlands, not on a farm.
    • Juan  •  3 months ago
      What worries me is people with organ transplants that take interferon or some such drug. Because the drugs suppress the body's immune system to avoid rejection of the transplant, the people become walking incubators for all types of viruses that would normally be destroyed by the immune system. Eventually, a virus in one of these people will replicate and mutate to survive and thrive in the human body-then look out.
    • marine  •  Jersey Shore, United States  •  3 months ago
      We give them all our outsourced work , they give us the asian flu.
    • jcw  •  Seattle, United States  •  3 months ago
      A human population of 7 billion people and in a little under 10 years, only 350 or so confirmed deaths attributable to this bird flu. I'd say these vaccines are doing a remarkable job! More people die from infections every month worldwide than die of bird flu in a decade!? Good for China for doing a good job at keeping a lid on this thing.
    • Brian  •  3 months ago
      Everyone should research the Guidestones in Georgia and read what it states.
    • Wharton  •  3 months ago
      So, what are the symptoms in poultry that can provide early detection?
    • Robert Retka  •  3 months ago
      Disease spreads because it is warm and moist.
    • Larry Curly & Moe  •  3 months ago
      By 2016 Bird Flu will have killed 2 billion people
      • Avid Reader 3 months ago
        Do you mean the type of bird flu that was genetically engineered by scientists in the Netherlands and funded by the US?
    • Sf Tparty  •  Pleasanton, United States  •  3 months ago
      hmm will those people feeding all those pidgeons at bus stops and other public places be the first too go?
    • Lakelife  •  Boston, United States  •  3 months ago
      The Hell with the Bird Flu. Lyme Disease and it's Co-Infections are Crippling 100's of Thousands all over the Country and a majority of Doctors scoff at you. The tests are worthles and little is being done other than Medical Politics. It eats away your Joints, Cartelege and Nerveous System until you cannot function or tolerate the Pain, and Md's are little Educated or afraid to treat. The Tick owns new England and many other States. Do something NOW. The Guidelines are outdated and wrong.
    • lor  •  3 months ago
      any people coming from those countries, do not let them come in USA. why should we all get sick..
      • JAMES 3 months ago
        Yeah, well, we can't quarantine entire countries.

        The vector is still poultry, and that can be kept out.

        Temporarily.

        When the virus mutates to be transmissible by humans, there will be vaccines available.
      • LoisLane5518 3 months ago
        @James, I wouldn't hold out that a vaccine could be produced in time. If and when the virus mutates it will take time for the scientists to break it down to create the vaccine. They are still learning how the virus works and because of the fear that research is being halted. It can take months to years to create a vaccine when the virus strain is unknown. The flu pandemic of 1918 (which no one truly knows how it started but one theory is a strain of bird flu) wiped out millions of people. Scientists are still researching that flu strain and have no idea how it works or where it really came from.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Burlington, United States  •  3 months ago
      Boycott all products Made in China even if done by our own Corporations.
    • rj117  •  Cleveland, United States  •  3 months ago
      they just want some more of Americas chickens
    • engnr  •  King George, United States  •  3 months ago
      Why does Asia breed so many germs? I suppose the WHO will issue a pandemic warning again.
    • FB  •  3 months ago
      Filthy conditions in Asia breed the crap.
      • Robert Retka 3 months ago
        The stuff can live in dirt, want to remove all the dirt off the planet?
    • ABCD  •  Charlotte, United States  •  3 months ago
      aw, the poor little birdie has the flu, got any tylenol ?? !!
    • Beachy C  •  3 months ago
      I smell a huge Payday for the Pharma companies when they make yet another pandemic flu vaccine and insist that we rush out and get it. Gosh - 345 dead in 9 years WORLDWIDE, that averages 38 deaths a YEAR on ENTIRE EARTH. But then we'll soon after learn that the shot was ineffective or even toxic for us. Maybe they can just cut to the chase by calling all those Swine Flu Shot recipients and inviting them for the Bird Flu shot.
    • Andres  •  3 months ago
      BULLSH7T