Posted on 05/19/2005 1:15:49 PM PDT by Termite_Commander
Bird flu may be capable of human-to-human transmission, raising fears of a global pandemic, the World Health Organization said Thursday.
The H5N1 strain of bird flu in Southeast Asia has so far jumped from animals to humans, but not from person to person. It has killed 37 people in Vietnam, 12 in Thailand and four from Cambodia since late 2003, WHO said.
"We believe a pandemic will happen but we don't know when," said Guenael Rodier, head of communicable diseases surveillance and response at WHO.
Experts fear that if the virus mutates to allow easy transmission among humans, it could create a global pandemic, killing millions of people. The latest studies show it would take three months for a possible pandemic to spread around the world, said Dr. Klaus Stohr, WHO's influenza chief.
"We don't know whether the pandemic will occur next week or next year," Stohr said. "There is no evidence in any direction, but there are concerns.
"The little information that we have could possibly identify that the virus is changing and the way it interacts with humans is changing."
Investigations in Vietnam earlier this year concluded "the viruses are continuing to evolve and pose a continuing and potentially growing pandemic threat," the U.N. health agency said.
Monitoring of the virus should be stepped up and there should be increased control of the disease in poultry, WHO said in a report on its Web site.
But evolution of a pandemic strain of virus can happen in numerous small steps, none of which is sufficient to signal clearly that a pandemic is about to start, WHO cautioned.
"If public health authorities move too soon, then unnecessary and costly actions may be taken," WHO said.
But if action is delayed until there is unmistakable evidence the virus has become sufficiently transmissible among people, then it may be too late for an effective response.
"This poses a difficult public health dilemma," WHO said.
Associated Press reporter Bradley S. Klapper contributed to this report.
Only partially resistant means the stuff is still effective...probably, age is a factor..etc.
CDC is also worried about this...but...as the saying goes.."It's the end of the world...again?"
VIRUS SHOCK: Bird-flu mutates, adapts to humans
Published on May 20, 2005
Fears of pandemic grow; WHO says news is mixed; 800,000 to act as front line defense
Thailand is beefing up its pandemic preparedness in response to the latest WHO study showing that bird flu is becoming more capable of spreading between people.
The World Health Organization report was based on a recent study of the H5N1 avian-lu virus in northern Vietnam and other genetic evidence indicating that the deadly strains potential to infect people and generate a pandemic could be growing.
The changes in the epidemiological patterns are consistent with the possibility that recently emerging H5N1 viruses may be more infectious for humans, said the report, which emerged as the center of discussion at WHO meetings in Manila, Hanoi and Geneva over the past two weeks.
The Public Health Ministry plans to call in more than 800,000 village health volunteers from around the country in two weeks to instruct them on how to educate their communities about the threat of an influenza pandemic.
Late next month, the ministry will hold a meeting of Mr Bird Flu medical specialists from every province to update them and exchange information on the latest development in Vietnam.
Influenza pandemics will also be a hot topic of discussion at the annual meeting of the epidemiologists next week, said Dr Kamnuan Ungchusak, director of the epidemiology bureau.
Kamnuan said the study in Vietnam found an increase in family clusters this year, a decrease in the fatality rate from about 70 to 30 per cent, and detection of H5N1 in people who did not show symptoms normally associated with bird flu, such as pneumonia.
This new information give us good news and bad news, he said. Fewer deaths give us hope that there is a higher chance of success in treating patients. However, disease control will be much more difficult because there will be people walking around with normal cold symptoms and we wont know whether they have H5N1 until we test them.
Dr Prasert Thongcharoen, from Siriraj Hospital, the countrys leading microbiologist, said the WHO finding came as no surprise because the H5N1 strain has consistently changed its character since it was first detected in Hong Kong in 1997.
The reduction in the fatality rate was the natural evolution path of viruses, he said. By becoming less lethal the avian virus has possibly adapted to human hosts and can easily jump from people to people.
The lower fatality rate is, in fact, a bad sign because it makes people think the problem has become less serious and then the surveillance system will weaken, he said.
The virulent strain has killed 52 people in the region, claiming 36 lives in Vietnam, 12 in Thailand and four in Cambodia since late 2003. A second human case of bird flu was identified less than a week ago in Vietnam on Tuesday.
As the hardest-hit country, Vietnam last month invited a WHO team of experts to assess its current situation.
While the implications of these epidemiological and virological findings are not fully clear, they demonstrate that the viruses are continuing to evolve and pose a continuing and potentially growing pandemic threat, the WHO report said.
It is possible that avian-flu viruses are becoming more capable of human-to-human transmission.
Dr Somchai Peerapakorn, WHOs representative in Thailand, said the study confirmed that the influenza pandemic threat is mounting. As long as the virus is still in the environment, people are not safe.
As long as the kettle is on the fire, the water temperature will continue to rise until it reaches the boiling point, he said. The pandemic threat will not go away because we dont have a way to put out the fire yet.
The WHOs top influenza official, Klaus Stohr, told a WHO meeting in Geneva this week that conservative estimates indicate that up to 7.4 million people might die.
The objective of pandemic preparedness can only be damage control. There will be death and destruction. National pandemic response plans are the key, he said.
In January, Thailand put in place its national influenza pandemic preparedness plan, but a major premise that the fundamentals of preparedness be worked out by the various ministries and the provinces themselves has so far been slow in coming to fruition.
But thing are changing now, Kamnuan said. Were planning a tabletop exercise of the preparedness plan in every province as soon as possible.
The WHO report raised other interpretations for the trends observed in Vietnam, including transmission through contaminated water or food, or infection from poultry that carried the virus but did not show symptoms, or greater persistence of the virus in the environment.
Nantiya Tangwisutijit
Found at:
http://www.nationmultimedia.com/2005/05/20/headlines/index.php?news=headlines_17428567.html
WHO Worries About Bird Flu Transmission???????
I do.
WHO has a time machine?
Today is tomorrow in Thailand!!!!
I know, I'm just playing with everyone's minds. =P
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