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Avian Flu Surveillance Project
Various ^ | May 9, 2005 | Vanity

Posted on 05/09/2005 10:18:08 AM PDT by Dog Gone

Some folks suggested that we begin a thread similar to the Marsburg Surveillance Project for monitoring developments regarding Avian Flu.

The purpose is to have an extended thread where those interested can post articles and comments as this story unfolds.

If we're lucky, the story and this thread will fade away.


TOPICS: Extended News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: ah5n1genotypez; avian; avianflu; avianflubirdflu; avianinfluenza; bird; birdflu; flu; h5n1; h5n1project; outbreak; reassortment; spanishflu; theskyisfalling
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
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To: little jeremiah
They are making a vaccine for the present mutation of the virus. It is not the same as a vaccine for the virus that could mutate into a pandemic. While the present vaccine may give you some immunity to the new strain there is no guarantee that it will because we do not know how much of a mutation the virus may undergo.
1,821 posted on 10/15/2005 4:17:57 PM PDT by unseen
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To: little jeremiah; Kelly_2000
"how can they make a vaccine when it's not done recombining yet..."

That's a good question but one I am not qualified to answer. Perhaps Mother Abigail can?

I do, however, remember this same question came up a few months ago and was answered by 'Kelly_2000' - who is apparently knowledgeable (BTW, I haven't seen her here for quite a while and this is her specialty so she is undoubtedly very busy). As I recall, she replied protection would not be perfect but might provide some protection, perhaps up to 70%.

Now, 70% is a long, long way to the good from the natural 'zero' immunity we now have. So, with a killer like this I will gladly take that any day as opposed to nothing at all while we await a newer vaccine based on the actual raging virus.

But as I say, perhaps somebody more knowledgeable than I can respond in greater detail?

1,822 posted on 10/15/2005 4:39:12 PM PDT by Gritty
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To: Iowa Granny

marking spot


1,823 posted on 10/16/2005 5:08:39 PM PDT by Iowa Granny (I am not the sharpest pin in the cushion but I can draw blood.)
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To: hummingbird; dd5339; teawithmisswilliams; DrGunsforHands; Judith Anne; 2ndreconmarine; ...

Daily Bird Flu News Updates:
http://www.thepoultrysite.com/LatestNews/?AREA=LatestNews&Display=6187

Reuters via SMH - 17th October 2005
Tackle bird flu at its source, vet urges
Building up South-East Asia's defences against bird flu could take 10 years, but fighting the virus at its source would be cheaper and a more effective way to stop a human pandemic, a top animal health official says.
Alejandro Thiermann, of the World Organisation for Animal Health, said too much attention was being paid to stockpiling scarce antiviral drugs and developing a vaccine, and "not enough on birds".



Agencies via Arab Times - 17th October 2005
Iran dead birds not bird flu; Kuwait bans poultry imports
KUWAIT - Kuwait said Saturday that it will ban the imports of all fresh, chilled and frozen poultry products, except those treated at 70 degrees centigrade from Russia, Mongolia and Kazakhstan. The Ministry of Commerce and Industry issued the ban as a precautionary measure against the rapidly-spreading bird flu disease which kills millions of birds all over the world every day. European Commission for healthcare and the consumer protection Marcos Kiprianu had urged European Union countries to prepare large quantities of anti-virus to face the bird flu pandemic. The Gulf Sultanate of Oman on Saturday banned the import of all types of live birds and their products from Romania, Turkey and Iran, as part of measures to prevent the spread of avian flu. The ban was announced in a statement by Agriculture and Fisheries Minister Salem bin Hilal bin Ali al-Khalili, the state news agency ONA said.


Euro news - 17th October 2005
Romania takes strict measures to contain bird flu
Officials in Romania says they are doing all they can to stop the spread of the deadly strain of bird flu that has been found in the Danube delta region. Poultry is being slaughtered, cleaning operations are underway and doctors are going door-to-door in the affected areas to work out how many people face the risk of becoming infected.


Reuters via Planet Ark - 17th October 2005
INTERVIEW - Bird Flu Fight in Asia Key to Defeating Virus
HANOI - Building up Southeast Asia's defences against bird flu could take a decade but fighting the virus at its source would be cheaper and more effective to stop a human pandemic, a top animal health official said.


icNetwork - 17th October 2005
UK team's flu fact-finding mission
UK - British infection experts are travelling to south-east Asia to investigate how a deadly bird flu pandemic could be tackled.
The fact-finding mission was announced after the Government's chief medical officer warned that 50,000 Britons could be killed if the disease takes hold among the human population.


Associated Press via Taipei Times - 17th October 2005
Villagers resist forced culling of fowl
TURKEY - Turkish authorities responded quickly to the confirmation of an outbreak of H5N1, but many locals are not concerned about birds that `escape' destruction.


The Associated Press - 17th October 2005
Is it OK to eat chicken? Americans worry about bird flu
US - Americans fearful of bird flu are peppering health officials with all sorts of questions: Is it safe to have a bird feeder in my yard? If I see a dead bird, should I report it? Is it still OK to have turkey at Thanksgiving?
The answers are yes, no, and yes.


The Mercury - 17th October 2005
Migratory birds to be tested for flu
SOUTH AFRICA - Although there are conflicting views on whether South Africans should fear bird flu, no chances are being taken. Scientists of the Centre for Scientific and Industrial Research will this week attempt to catch at least 50 birds, believed to have migrated from Siberia to South Africa which have settled at Durban Harbour.


The Herald (Letters Page) - 17th October 2005
Consider vaccinating all poultry flocks
UK - In anticipation of the possibility of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI), more commonly known as "bird flu", arriving in Scotland and affecting Scottish poultry flocks, we are requesting that the Scottish Executive consider the possibility of vaccinating all flocks in Scotland. According to the findings of a consultation run by the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO): "A number of efficacious vaccines are commercially available [which] provide excellent protection against clinical disease in chickens, reducing mortalities and the effect of the disease on production." The report added that the "vast majority of vaccinated birds exposed to field virus do not become infected. For the few vaccinated birds that might become infected, shedding of virus is markedly reduced (both in the duration of excretion and the quantity of virus)."


New York Times via IHT - 16th October 2005
China keeps secret its plans to fight bird flu
CHINA - The first known case of the A(H5N1) strain of avian influenza was found in 1996 in a goose in China.
While the Beijing authorities insist that no poultry in the country has the disease now, Hong Kong University scientists who have studied the genetic evolution of the virus wrote in Nature in July that infected migratory birds in western China appeared to have contracted the disease in southern China; the virus has since spread from western China to East Asia, Russia, Kazakhstan, Turkey and Romania.
The Chinese health authorities in Beijing have called repeatedly for vigilance against the disease. But they have refused to share virus samples from infected wild birds this year with international organizations and have quarreled with researchers who have suggested that the disease remains a problem.
The strain of A(H5N1) avian influenza, or bird flu, found in China is different from and older than the strain found in Thailand and Vietnam.


Reuters - 16th October 2005
Turkish vet says chicken tests do not show bird flu
TURKEY - A senior veterinarian was quoted on Sunday as saying that early tests on 1,000 chickens that died in Turkey did not point to bird flu, but officials stopped poultry transportation in the province where the chickens died.
Initial findings did not show the chickens in Agri province died from bird flu, the state Anatolian news agency reported head of a local veterinary institute, Ufuk Dinler, as saying. Final test results are expected in five or six days, he said.


AFX via Forbes - 16th October 2005
Bird flu strains in Turkey, Romania and Asia identical
BRUSSELS - The potentially deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu virus found in Romania is identical to those detected in both Turkey and Asia, European Health Commissioner Markos Kyprianou said Saturday.
'This morning, tests confirmed that the virus in Romania was an H5N1 strain but further tests were required to confirm the link with the strain found in Asia and Turkey,' he said. 'This link has now been confirmed.'


1,824 posted on 10/17/2005 4:07:15 AM PDT by EBH (Never give-up, Never give-in, and Never Forget)
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To: EBH

China remains worrisome. Hmmm.


1,825 posted on 10/17/2005 4:09:49 AM PDT by EBH (Never give-up, Never give-in, and Never Forget)
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To: EBH

thanks for the update


1,826 posted on 10/17/2005 4:33:17 AM PDT by Iowa Granny (I am not the sharpest pin in the cushion but I can draw blood.)
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To: EBH

best posts award. did you ping the whole list?


1,827 posted on 10/17/2005 5:21:23 AM PDT by bitt (THE PRESIDENT: "Ask the pollsters. My job is to lead and to solve problems. ")
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To: bitt

Thanks bitt, yep I pinged the list you gave me.


1,828 posted on 10/17/2005 5:29:10 AM PDT by EBH (Never give-up, Never give-in, and Never Forget)
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To: unseen
I just want to reiterate that the recent PBS documentary shown in September and filmed as late as August (dates were given in the film) did clearly show human-to-human transmission.

Among other things, the film followed one family who had eaten a chicken that had died of illness. I believe this was in Viet Nam. The 22-year-old son was devastatingly ill. His little 10(?) year old sister fell ill also, but seemed to do better and recover quite well. The young man was near death for some time, and when he recovered he looked like a skeleton. They said he could have permanent weakened lungs. They tested the whole family for the virus, and the 80-year-old grandfather also tested positive but was completely symptom-free.

Next they showed a man who had been the constant nurse in the hospital for the young man above. He fell very ill with the virus, but he too recovered. They interviewed him, and he said that he lives in the city, not near any poultry, and never eats poultry or birds. But he cared for the sick man for weeks. That has to be human-to-human.

Near the end of the film, they showed a silhouette of a sick man lying in a private room and said that it was a physician who had been caring for patients with bird flu.

This virus is obviously transmittable human to human.

1,829 posted on 10/17/2005 2:24:32 PM PDT by Yaelle
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To: Yaelle
I agree. H2H transmission is happening but since no one can SCIENTIFICLY confirm this and the H2H transmission chains have seemed to reach dead ends the WHO and the Local South Eastern Asian governments have a "way out." This is one of the main reasons I am against only using scientific (lab confirmation) means to track this virus. In unfree countries the scientific information is too easily changed to confirm to the government line. That is where history, common sense, and dectective work comes in. If I only followed the press releases about this virus I would be in the camp that thinks this virus is not a threat.
1,830 posted on 10/17/2005 6:19:07 PM PDT by unseen
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To: Yaelle
This virus is obviously transmittable human to human.

Yes it is, just not easily transmissable, yet.

The story about the Vietnamese family is on the BBC site, btw. I read it the other day.

1,831 posted on 10/17/2005 9:27:16 PM PDT by MarMema
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To: MarMema; All

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1504369/posts

As Alarm Over Flu Grows, Agency Tries to Quiet Fears
nytimes ^ | 10/18/05 | LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN

Posted on 10/18/2005 1:01:51 AM EDT by bitt

Trying to calm worldwide alarm about the spread of an avian influenza virus to Europe from Asia, an official of the World Health Organization cautioned yesterday that there were still no signs of an influenza pandemic in humans.

But the A(H5N1) avian strain is expected to spread to additional countries, and the agency remains concerned about the longer-term potential for the virus to mutate or combine with a human influenza virus to create a new one that could cause a human pandemic, the official, Dr. Mike Ryan, said. A pandemic is an epidemic that is prevalent across a wide area.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1503902/posts

Litigation, regulation, price controls, and the avian flu. [This reminds me of Atlas Shrugged]
National Review ^ | October 17, 2005 | Sally Pipes


Posted on 10/17/2005 10:23:08 AM EDT by grundle


http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/pipes200510170828.asp

October 17, 2005, 8:28 a.m.

Red Tape Choking Us

Litigation, regulation, price controls, and the avian flu.

By Sally Pipes

"We are not prepared for a pandemic,” Health and Human Services Secretary Michael Leavitt said earlier this month. We do, however, face a significant risk of being hit by one. A new strain of the avian flu, known as H5N1, has killed at least 60 people in Asia since 2003. So far, humans cannot pass it to one another — virtually everyone infected caught the virus from a diseased bird.

The risk to people is nevertheless grave. The 1918 Spanish flu epidemic, blamed for 50 million deaths, also started among birds, but it mutated and spread to humans. Scientists fear the same thing could happen now. As an expert epidemiologist recently told the Wall Street Journal, “It’s not a question of if, but when.” The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) estimates that an avian-flu pandemic could kill between 89,000 and 207,000 Americans. There is no publicly available vaccine for the new strain.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

http://theedge.bostonherald.com/healthNews/view.bg?articleid=107564

Flu shots no help against avian strain
By Jessica Heslam
Tuesday, October 18, 2005

As avian flu fears continue to heighten, some confused Bay Staters have been asking their doctors whether this season's flu shot would protect them against the deadly bird flu.

It won't.

``This flu shot will not protect against avian flu. There's no vaccine available to protect people against avian flu,'' said Dr. Alfred DeMaria of the state Department of Public Health. ``People are confused about a pandemic flu, avian flu and ordinary flu.''

Nearly 430,000 doses of flu vaccine were delivered to state health officials Friday, part of the 728,000 that are expected.

People who are most vulnerable, such as those older than 65 or who have chronic health conditions, are being urged to get a flu shot. After Oct. 24, anyone can get a flu shot, officials said.

Last year at this time, the Bay State had a shortage of flu vaccine after a supplier was shut down because of contamination concerns. Half the U.S. supply was lost.

``We were very uncertain at this time last year,'' DeMaria said. ``Things look pretty good now.''

So far, 117 people in Asia – mostly poultry farmers – have caught the H5N1 strain, also known as avian flu. Nearly all infections have been traced to direct contact with infected birds.

Officials fear avian flu will eventually spread from human to human. A worldwide flu outbreak occurs every 20 to 50 years, experts say, and the last one occurred in 1968.

The World Health Organization said yesterday that avian flu can be expected to spread to other countries, but the biggest threat of it mutating into a human virus remains in Asia. The disease was recently found in Romania and Turkey. No cases have been reported in the United States.


1,832 posted on 10/17/2005 10:23:21 PM PDT by bitt (THE PRESIDENT: "Ask the pollsters. My job is to lead and to solve problems. ")
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To: All

Study shows 15 clusters of avian flu cases; some likely human-to-human spread
10-18-05 | Helen Branswell

Posted on 10/18/2005 8:04:21 AM EDT by Mother Abigail

Study shows 15 clusters of avian flu cases; some likely human-to-human spread

Helen BranswellCanadian Press

Tuesday, October 18, 2005

Clustering of human cases of H5N1 avian flu infections has occurred on at least 15 occasions since late 2003 and limited human-to-human transmission of the virus may have occurred in several of these groupings, researchers will report in an upcoming issue of the scientific journal Emerging Infectious Diseases.

But key information on several of the clusters - the most recent documented in the paper occurred in early July - is still outstanding, illustrating some of the problems international health authorities will likely face if they try to put into action a plan to extinguish an emerging pandemic at source.

The lead author admitted that the rate at which information about human cases has emerged from affected countries raises worries about how clear a picture international authorities have when such events occur.

"Part of the reason to highlight this is to suggest any cluster should be viewed as a worrisome event and should be thoroughly worked up so that we can ascertain if it's person-to-person (spread) or rule it out," said Sonja Olsen, acting director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control's International Emerging Infections Program, which is based in Bangkok.

"I'm sure some of these are just clear that there was no person to person and some to me seem less clear from the data that we have. But I think it raises the issue of: Do we have enough data on each of these?" Mathematical modelling work published in August suggests an emerging pandemic strain could be snuffed out at source.

But success was predicated on rapid identification of clustering of cases and likely human-to-human spread so that contacts of infected people could be quickly placed on antiviral drugs. Measures would also have to be taken to cordon off an affected area to ensure infected people didn't flee and spread the disease.

The authors combed published reports and consulted regional contacts looking for clusters of cases within families that occurred from January 2004 to July 2005. Since their report was submitted another family cluster occurred in Indonesia involving a woman and her young nephew, both of whom tested positive for H5N1 virus.

Their report will appear in the November issue of the journal, which is published by the CDC.

A cluster was considered two or more cases, where at least one member tested positive for the virus and other members of the cluster experienced severe pneumonia or death from respiratory disease.

Olsen said where human-to-human transmission may have taken place, the dates of onset of illness suggest transmission stopping after one generation. In other words, if a person passed the disease on to someone else, the newly infected individual did not appear to have spread it further.

"It's not to say there weren't tertiary cases, but we're not clearly seeing that in these data," she said from Bangkok.


1,833 posted on 10/18/2005 5:35:44 AM PDT by bitt (THE PRESIDENT: "Ask the pollsters. My job is to lead and to solve problems. ")
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To: bitt; hummingbird; dd5339; teawithmisswilliams; DrGunsforHands; Judith Anne; 2ndreconmarine; ...

Daily Bird Flu News Updates:
http://www.thepoultrysite.com/LatestNews/?AREA=LatestNews&Display=6187

KAZINFORM - 18th October 2005
Russia confirms bird flu in two eastern regions
MOSCOW - Bird flu cases have been confirmed in two more districts in the eastern Russian province of Kurgan and 22 others are suspected to be outbreak sites, the Russian Agriculture Ministry said in a press release Monday. "Quarantine was lifted from two previously suspected districts in the Novosibirsk region (Siberia) and 17 districts remain under suspicion. In the Altai Region (Siberia), two districts are under suspicion," the ministry reported, Kazinform refers to RIA Novosti.



The Times - 18th October 2005
Greece confirms first case of bird flu in EU
GREECE - Bird flu was confirmed inside the borders of the European Union today when Greece said that at least one case had been detected on an island in the Aegean.
The Agriculture Ministry said the H5 virus had been detected on a turkey on the island of Chios. It was not yet clear whether the bird was infected by the H5N1 sub-strain, which has claimed at least 60 human lives in Asia.


Reuters - 18th October 2005
Greece finds strain of bird flu in a turkey
ATHENS - Greece said on Monday it had detected one turkey with bird flu on a remote island in the Aegean Sea and was conducting tests to see if it was a deadly strain of the virus.
The H5N1 strain of avian influenza has been detected in neighbouring Turkey and in Romania and both countries have killed thousands of poultry.


The Independent - 18th October 2005
Bird flu enters EU as Greece finds disease on island farm
ATHENA - European ministers will hold emergency talks today on bird flu in the wake of the confirmation of an outbreak of the disease within the EU's borders.
Authorities in Greece identified the virus at a turkey farm on the island of Oinouses, near the Turkish coast. Tests are underway to determine whether it is the H5NI variety that has caused the deaths of 60 people in the Far East. If the potentially lethal strain is identified, it would be the first time the disease had entered EU territory.


AFX via Forbes - 18th October 2005
Thailand says bird flu found in wild sparrows
BANGKOK - Thailand has found another outbreak of the deadly bird flu virus, this time in wild sparrows, a provincial official said. Ratchaburi province livestock director Samreung Krutdam said one of 300 samples taken from birds in the province last week tested positive for the H5N1 strain of the virus. 'We have followed our safety measures after we found a sample taken from the sparrow had H5N1,' he told Agence France-Presse.


The Nation - 18th October 2005
Lab tests reveal virus in local sparrows, pigeons
THAILAND - Officials order high-risk poultry farms to be sprayed as migration season nears. In an alarming development amid frenzied attempts by the Department of Livestock Development (DLD) to control the spread of the deadly H5N1 strain of avian influenza, laboratory tests have revealed the virus has already spread to such migratory birds as sparrows, pigeons and mynas.


Ireland Online - 18th October 2005
'No new cases' of bird flu in Romania
ROMANIA - Romania’s agriculture minister said today that no new cases of bird flu were discovered in tests on 400 more birds from the country’s Danube Delta region. Authorities were waiting, however, for results from a British laboratory, expected tonight, on other samples from a swan and a chicken found dead in the village of Maliuc. Both birds were positive for bird flu in preliminary tests, but the British lab must confirm those results.


Santiago Times - 18th October 2005
Chile braces for potential avian flu outbreak
CHILE - Chile’s Ministry of Health took precautions this past weekend to prevent a Latin American outbreak of avian flu, following concerns that chickens in Tolima, Colombia had been infected with H5N1, an avian virus that is potentially lethal to humans.
Even though the Colombian case proved to be a false alarm – the bird died from a H9 type virus, which cannot be transmitted to people – Chile is tightening its border security to prevent contaminated poultry products from entering the country. Last week, cases of H5N1 were confirmed in birds in Turkey and Romania, and this week in Greece.


Daily Telegraph - 18th October 2005
British scientists head for China to join the fight against bird flu
UK - A team of British scientists will fly to China and Vietnam on Sunday to learn more about the bird flu epidemic and see how it can help to prevent its spread.
The Medical Research Council (MRC) scientists said yesterday that the number of cases in Asia may be much higher than has been officially reported.


New Scientist - 18th October 2005
Bird flu outbreaks expected in more countries
The deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu is likely to spread to more and more countries, a World Health Organization official warned on Monday.
The strain, which has killed over 60 people in southeast Asia, appears to have travelled extensively in the latter half of 2005. It has affected birds in China, Mongolia, Russia, Kazakhstan and most recently reached Europe.


Reuters - 18th October 2005
No sign bird flu mutating towards humans - scientists
LONDON - There is no evidence that the killer H5N1 bird flu virus is progressively mutating to leap the species barrier into humans, but that is no cause for complacency, British scientists said on Monday.
If it does make the leap in large numbers it could spread like wildfire, they added. They were speaking as experts from the Medical Research Council (MRC) prepared to fly to China and Vietnam for visits aimed at boosting global cooperation.


Medical net - 18th October 2005
Greece and Croatia test for bird flu, while Europe gets more jittery
While authorities in Greece anxiously await test results on eight dead birds found in the northeastern Evros River delta, in another main migratory route, Croatia had also started testing dead birds found by citizens. Many European countries are struggling to test for outbreaks of deadly bird flu while simultaneously trying to reassure and calm people to avoid widespread panic after the disease was found in Turkey and Romania.


1,834 posted on 10/18/2005 6:15:09 AM PDT by EBH (Never give-up, Never give-in, and Never Forget)
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To: bitt
Thanks for copying the new article from Mother Abigail to this thread. Pretty much anything from her is useful info.

She had additional comments expanding on the article. The actual thread is here:

Mother Abigail thread on Avian Flu clusters

In my view, the H5N1 Surveillance Project thread (i.e., THIS one) is the best single source for archived news on H5N1. Personally, I would like to see it kept continually up to date.

So... Many thanks to ALL who have been keeping this thread current.

1,835 posted on 10/18/2005 8:56:27 AM PDT by EternalHope (Boycott everything French forever. Including their vassal nations.)
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To: EternalHope

TechCentralStation has posted a few good articles recently about this issue. Here's the most recent:

http://www.techcentralstation.com/101705B.html
Preparing for the Pandemic
Henry I. Miller, MD

I have a long and intimate relationship with influenza virus. More than 30 years ago, I was the co-discoverer of one of the viral enzymes that are essential for the virus to duplicate and proliferate. Later, my medical training taught me respect for this pathogen. Real influenza -- as opposed to a garden-variety cold -- is a serious illness. Its victims don't soon forget the fever, headache, muscle aches and profound weakness, and in an average year -- in spite of vaccines that are usually at least moderately effective -- it kills tens of thousands in this country.


Now it appears that the flu virus is poised to repeat its several-times-a-century metamorphosis into something much worse.



First, some background. The exterior of the flu virus consists of a lipid envelope from which project two surface proteins, hemagglutinin (H) and neuraminidase (N). The virus constantly mutates, which may cause significant alterations in either or both of these, enabling the virus to elude detection and neutralization by humans' immune system. A minor change is called genetic drift; a major one, genetic shift. The former is the reason that flu vaccines need to be updated from year to year; an example of the latter was the change in subtype from H1N1 to H2N2 that gave rise to the 1957 pandemic. This new variant was sufficiently distinct that people had little immunity to it: The rate of infection of symptomatic flu that year exceeded 50 percent in urban populations, and 70,000 died from it in the United States alone.



In the 1957 outbreak the mortality rate (the fraction of infected persons who die) was low, but we appear to be on the verge of another, much worse pandemic.



During the past several years, an especially virulent strain of avian flu, designated H5N1, has ravaged flocks of domesticated poultry in Asia and spread to migratory birds and (rarely) to humans. Now found from Russia and Japan to Indonesia, it is moving inexorably toward Europe. Since 2003, more than 60 human deaths have been attributed to H5N1. Public health experts and virologists are concerned about the potential of this strain because it already has two of the three characteristics needed to cause a pandemic: It can jump from birds to human, and can produce a severe and often fatal illness. If additional genetic evolution makes H5N1 highly transmissible among humans -- the third characteristic of a pandemic strain -- a devastating world-wide outbreak could become a reality.



Moreover, this is an extraordinarily deadly variant: The mortality rate for persons infected with the existing H5N1 appears to be around 50 percent, whereas the usual annual flu bug kills fewer than one percent.



We are ill-prepared for a flu pandemic. Reserve capacity is grossly inadequate for vaccines, drugs and hospital beds. The best and most cost-effective intervention -- prevention with a vaccine -- presents many obstacles, technological, economic and logistical.



Anti-flu drugs exist but are not a panacea. Unlike vaccines, which confer long-term immunity after one or two doses, drugs need to be taken for long periods. The only drug that has been shown to prevent the flu is Tamiflu, the prophylactic dose of which is one tablet a day, the effect lasting only as long as one takes the drug. (The other major anti-flu medicine, Relenza, has only been shown to be effective to treat, but not prevent, flu.)



Historically, flu pandemics have come in two or three waves, lasting a total of 13-23 months. In other words, the need to take Tamiflu -- by first responders, health care workers and ordinary citizens -- could go on for months and months, or even years. U.S. public health officials have said they plan to buy 20 million doses of Tamiflu, but that would be enough to treat only 200,000 people (fewer than the number who would attend a seven-game World Series) for 100 days. And the retail price per pill is around $8, so the expense to treat that small number of people for that amount of time would be $160 million.



According to various models, in the absence of sufficient amounts of an effective vaccine -- which is not yet within reach -- to blunt a pandemic we would need to treat perhaps a third to a half of the population with Tamiflu. Do the math: 100 million people for 100 days equals 10 billion doses, at a retail cost of $80 billion, in order to blunt the pandemic's first wave.



Although President Bush and HHS Secretary Leavitt are saying some of the right things about the need to prepare for the pandemic, if they or their staffs have done this sort of calculation, they give no sign of it.



We need push-pull incentives to forming public-private partnerships. Public policy must reward both inputs on R&D (via grants, tax credits and the waiver of regulatory registration fees) and outputs of products (with guaranteed purchases, payments for the regulatory approval of new drugs or vaccines, and indemnification from liability claims). Part of this effort should be R&D on various new technologies and approaches to making flu vaccine, to boosting the immune response to vaccines, and to creating greater reserve capacity for the production of drugs like Tamiflu and Relenza.



Preparation for pandemic flu involves many thorny issues of science, technology and medicine, but also much more. It requires contingency plans for the "social" aspects of a deadly pandemic -- when to shut our borders to travelers from infected regions, close schools, restrict public gatherings, and enforce quarantines, as well as a designated chain of command to implement those decisions.



Like the WWII Manhattan Project to develop the atomic bomb, preparation for a flu pandemic involves scientific uncertainties, strategic decisions that span many specialties and government departments, and prodigious resources. To oversee all this, we'll need a Flu-Pandemic Czar -- someone analogous to Army General Leslie Groves, who headed the Manhattan Project: a plenipotentiary with broad powers and discretion.



There is no time to waste.



Henry I. Miller, a physician and fellow at the Hoover Institution, was the founding director of the Office of Biotechnology at the FDA, 1989-1993. Barron's selected his latest book, "The Frankenfood Myth..." as one of the 25 Best Books of 2004.


1,836 posted on 10/18/2005 11:42:15 AM PDT by EarthStomper
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To: EarthStomper; Judith Anne; bitt; EBH; unseen; APZ; Mother Abigail; 2ndreconmarine

Thanks for an outstanding post.

I know a lot of people are following this that I did not ping. Sorry if I left someone off (I don't have a ping list).


1,837 posted on 10/18/2005 12:08:53 PM PDT by EternalHope (Boycott everything French forever. Including their vassal nations.)
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To: EternalHope

Concise, informative, scary. Thanks for posting.

I do not think that there will be an H5N1 Manhattan project. I'm not very hopeful about a benign outcome of antigenic shift with the virus, either.

I find I have less and less to say about this...guess I've said everything a hundred times already.


1,838 posted on 10/18/2005 3:29:44 PM PDT by Judith Anne (Thank you St. Jude for favors granted.)
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To: Iowa Granny

bump


1,839 posted on 10/18/2005 3:56:32 PM PDT by Iowa Granny (I am not the sharpest pin in the cushion but I can draw blood.)
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To: All

China Reports 2,600 Birds Dead of Bird Flu in North, EU Suspects Disease in Macedonia

http://ap.tbo.com/ap/breaking/MGBWW36HZEE.html

Published: Oct 19, 2005


BEIJING (AP) - Some 2,600 birds have been found dead of bird flu in northern China's grasslands, the government said Wednesday.

In Brussels, a European Union official said there is a suspicion of bird flu in Macedonia. The disease has already affected birds in at least two other European countries; Romania and Greece.

In Russia, hundreds of birds have died suddenly in a region south of Moscow, local media reported on Wednesday, raising fears of a new outbreak of bird flu there. If confirmed, the discovery in the Tula region, about 125 miles south of Moscow, would mark the first time that the deadly virus has appeared in European Russia, west of the Ural Mountains.

The dead birds in China were found in a breeding facility in Tengjiaying, a village near Hohhot, the capital of the Inner Mongolia region, the official Xinhua news agency reported. They were infected by the deadly H5N1 strain of the virus, Xinhua said. It did not give any further details.

"The epidemic is under control," Xinhua said.

European Union officials said they were preparing to extend a ban on imports of pet birds and feathers from Siberia because of the bird flu.

EU spokesman Philip Tod also said the EU executive would send experts to Greece to help identify bird the bird flu strain there. Health officials said they will also hold a simulation exercise of a flu pandemic by end of year to improve preparedness.

AP-ES-10-19-05 0639EDT


1,840 posted on 10/19/2005 4:06:46 AM PDT by Jet Jaguar
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