Published
Due to circumstances beyond my control, computer glitch (?), the length
of the former thread (Thread 2), and the tremendous amount of new
information coming in at this time, it is probably necessary to start a new
thread on Avian Influenza Awareness.
I pulled out the following commentary from an earlier thread regarding
a rather chilling video (at least to me), given by Dr. Margaret Chan. The
information is not current as the video was shot in February 2007, but
what she has to say is still pertinent considering how much further the
spread of H5N1 has grown. It is now on three continents with a CFR (case
fatality rate) for human beings of over 60%. It is still however, primarily
a bird disease, but that may be changing.
From Margaret Chan MD, Director-General of the World Health Organization:
I did not attend the CIDRAP Conference in February, 2007 where this video
was shown. I almost got there, but changed my plans at the last minute.
Dr. Chan will appear in a screen to your right. You do not have to press
any buttons, just wait for the screen to appear, and for her presentation
to begin. You do not have to be a subscriber for the video to play.
Just be patient for a few seconds and view it.
I have to say that even though everything Dr. Chan is saying in this
presentation is well known to me, just hearing her speak so
clearly and honestly of what might occur, has shaken me. Though
many who research this information will say that her estimates
of the possible future cases may be too conservative, the numbers are
still hugh. This event will change the world, and challenge all of us.
The video will take 16 minutes of your time. I hope that the
very serious nature of Dr. Chan's message will cut thru the apathy and
disbelief about the possibility of H5N1 triggering the next pandemic,
and encourage some individual planning and family preparation.
Share it with people that you care about.
https://umconnect.umn.edu/chan
(hat tip crofsblog)
Update on Avian Influenza A (H5N1) Virus Infection in Humans - NEJM
There is a general update by the WHO Writing Committee on human influenza A (H5N1) current as of mid-January, 2008. The New England Journal of Medicine has made the complete article available without charge at:
Update on Avian Influenza A (H5N1) Virus Infection in Humans - NEJM
There is a general update by the WHO Writing Committee on human influenza A (H5N1) current as of mid-January, 2008. The New England Journal of Medicine has made the complete article available without charge at:
Excellent article. Copies made to my primary docs. ( Who probably get the journal, but are close friends). Thanks Al.
Sharona
Another suspected human bird flu case in China.
http://www.terradaily.com/reports/Woman_seriously_ill_with_suspected_bird_flu_in_China_999.html
Woman seriously ill with suspected bird flu in China
by Staff Writers
Hong Kong (AFP) Feb 25, 2008
A middle-aged woman is in serious condition in southern China with suspected bird flu, the Hong Kong Centre for Health Protection (CHP) said in a statement early Monday.
The 44-year-old woman in Guangdong Province developed symptoms on February 16 consistent with the deadly H5N1 strain of the virus, the CHP said.
The case has yet to be confirmed by the health ministry and the CHP is in close contact with health authorities in Guangdong, the statement said.
A 41-year-old man died of bird flu in the Guangxi autonomous region in southern China on February 20, while a 22-year-old man in the central Hunan Province died of the disease on January 24. . . . .
Egypt
A 4 yr old girl has tested positive for H5N1:
http://africa.reuters.com/wire/news/usnL25644939.html
The girl is suffering from a high fever and is having trouble breathing because she has inflammation of one of her lungs.
Around 5 million households in Egypt depend on poultry as a main source of food and income, and the government has said this makes it unlikely the disease can be eradicated despite a large-scale poultry vaccination programme.
WHO officials have said the bird flu virus was now considered endemic in Egypt.
Vietnam
http://afludiary.blogspot.com/2008/02/bird-flu-claims-another-vietnamese-life.html
Bird flu has killed a woman teacher in northern Vietnam, the fourth death from the H5N1 virus this year, state-run Voice of Vietnam radio reported on Tuesday.
The woman's death is the fourth out of five people infected by bird flu so far this year in Vietnam after an extended cold spell in northern provinces. The virus is usually most active in colder weather.
A 7-year-old child from the northern province of Hai Duong who has been confirmed as infected by the H5N1 virus remained under treatment at a pediatric hospital in Hanoi, doctors said.
Canada
Apparently the govt in Alberta takes the threat of avian flu seriously and
has warned farmers in that area to take precautions. Bird migrations will
be coming soon with the return of the warmer weather:
http://www.flutrackers.com/forum/showpost.php?p=136710&postcount=1
I am reminded of a prior post on bird flu and North America, and that we are
told that highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) specifically, H5N1 has not been
detected yet. But, I think that it does not necessarily mean that it has not
ever paid us a visit.
CanadaApparently the govt in Alberta takes the threat of avian flu seriously and
has warned farmers in that area to take precautions. Bird migrations will
be coming soon with the return of the warmer weather:
http://www.flutrackers.com/forum/showpost.php?p=136710&postcount=1
I am reminded of a prior post on bird flu and North America, and that we are
told that highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) specifically, H5N1 has not been
detected yet. But, I think that it does not necessarily mean that it has not
ever paid us a visit.
I pray they take this seriously.
Thanks, IG.
Miss ya,
Sharona
Another suspected human bird flu case in China.http://www.terradaily.com/reports/Woman_seriously_ill_with_suspected_bird_flu_in_China_999.html
Woman seriously ill with suspected bird flu in China
by Staff Writers
Hong Kong (AFP) Feb 25, 2008
A middle-aged woman is in serious condition in southern China with suspected bird flu, the Hong Kong Centre for Health Protection (CHP) said in a statement early Monday.
The 44-year-old woman in Guangdong Province developed symptoms on February 16 consistent with the deadly H5N1 strain of the virus, the CHP said.
The case has yet to be confirmed by the health ministry and the CHP is in close contact with health authorities in Guangdong, the statement said.
A 41-year-old man died of bird flu in the Guangxi autonomous region in southern China on February 20, while a 22-year-old man in the central Hunan Province died of the disease on January 24. . . . .
This woman has now been confirmed by WHO on Feb 26th, along with another 23 year old woman from Vietnam who died yesterday, Feb 25th.
http://www.who.int/csr/disease/avian_influenza/en/index.html
Meanwhile two other individuals from Vietnam are being reported as suspected human cases in Chinese news reports. All of the recent human cases from Vietnam, as well as these two suspected cases, are from different provinces and do not yet represent human clusters.
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-02/27/content_7677650.htm
Egypt
Case #45, positive for H5N1 influenza is a 25 year old woman from Fayoum province, and is already on a vent:
http://afludiary.blogspot.com/2008/03/egypt-reports-45th-case-of-bird-flu.html
SARS in Canada - Second Wave of Infection in HCW
http://crofsblogs.typepad.com/h5n1/2008/03/branswell-staff.html
A staff appreciation breakfast staged to thank health-care workers for their valiant efforts during Toronto's SARS outbreak helped spread the disease in a devastating second wave of illness in May and June of 2003, an investigation into what was called SARS 2 reveals.
Indonesia - Two Bird Flu Victims Survive
Given that the Case Fatality Rate (CFR) in Indonesia is some 80% or more,
whenever anybody survives this flu, it is news. But, look at how long
this mother and daughter were hospitalized, and they both required intensive
care.
This reminded me that I remember reading somewhere in some state's
pandemic flu plan, that they planned for using groups of staff that had
recovered from the flu as if it was like recovery from a seasonal flu. You
know, out a week or two then back to work... Somehow, I just do not see
this happening very often, at least not enough to make a difference.
http://afludiary.blogspot.com/2008/03/indonesia-two-bird-flu-patients-go-home.html
reports of increased survival in bird flu patients taking tamiflu
3 mars 2008 (paris)
basel, switzerland, march 3 /prnewswire/-physicians from countries worst-affected by the deadly bird flu (h5n1 influenza virus) have reported an increased survival rate in patients treated with the oral antiviral tamiflu (oseltamivir). these data reinforce the world health organization (who) advisory that tamiflu is the only antiviral strongly recommended for the treatment of humans infected with the h5n1 virus. the physicians' report was revealed this week at the international symposium on respiratory viral infections (isrvi) in singapore.(1) according to the who the h5n1 virus has already killed 234 people in 12 countries.(2)
tamiflu is the only antiviral reported to have been used against h5n1 in humans outside the laboratory and actually in the field. . . . .
http://www.boursonews.com/increased_survival_118493_news-bourse.html
credits to shiloh
From Effect Measure with permission, slight reformat in the paragraph quoting
the study for ease in reading:
Another H5N1 seroprevalence study. Same story.
Highly pathogenic variant of avian influenza A of the subtype H5N1 is here to stay, at least in the world's poultry population. While it's around it continues to cause sporadic but deadly human infections, some 369 of them of whom 234 have died (official WHO figures as of 28 February 2008). So this virus can infect humans and make them seriously or fatally ill. There is truly massive exposure because people live in close contact with infected domestic poultry in many countries. And the human population has not seen this subtype of virus before so there is little natural immunity. All that's necessary for a really catastrophic pandemic is for this virulent virus to move easily from poultry to humans and then from human to human. These may require different changes in the virus but since it can already move into humans on rare occasions, the human to human feature is the crucial one.
However if it does acquire the ability to move into humans more easily from birds, we could have a lot of bird to human cases, given the exposure, and each of those cases presents the opportunity for the emergence of a human to human transmissible agent because the virus mutates quickly, even in the short span of time it infects a single person. After some days of infection the virus the patient has often changed genetically. So the question of bird to human transmission is of real importance. Lots of poultry workers and cullers of infected poultry flocks are in close contact with diseased birds. Maybe they do get infected only mildly so transmission from birds to humans has been overlooked. As we have noted often here, this would mean the observed case fatality ratio (CFR) is lower than the current dismal 60% plus. Now a new study has been published looking for evidence of infection in poultry farmers in five provinces in Thailand that had large H5N1 outbreaks in late 2003 and 2004. The news is good and bad.
First the good news:
During late 2003 and 2004, highly pathogenic avian influenza virus (H5N1) caused extensive outbreaks and die-offs in poultry flocks in Thailand and several other countries in Southeast Asia. From January through March 2004, 12 cases, 8 fatal, in humans resulted from infection with influenza virus (H5N1) in Thailand. In response, the Thailand Department of Livestock Development enlisted government employees to conduct a large-scale cull of poultry in the affected provinces
. This effort began on January 23, 2004, and resulted in the slaughter of >21 million birds.. Poultry farmers and persons involved in culling are at increased risk for infection. In May 2004, we conducted a seroepidemiologic investigation of Thai poultry farmers to determine the frequency of avian influenza (H5N1) transmission to humans. (Soawapak Hinjoy et al., Emerging Infectious Diseases [cites omitted]The study involved taking blood from 322 farmers and cullers (92% response rate) and testing to see if there was evidence of past infection with H5N1. The test was to look for specific antibodies to the H5N1 virus. This was definitely an exposed and at risk population (age 5 to 50 years old). 58% of the subjects reported handling sick or dying birds, 33% worked in culling of well birds in outbreak areas while 9% had contact with apparently well birds during routine farming. The level of antibody titer for presumptive infection is set at 80 and no subject had anti-H5N1 antibody levels that high. Seven had antibody levels that were detectable but much lower. They could have been the result of cross-reactivity with other flu viruses, the failure of mild infection to produce high enough levels, the disappearance of antibody levels soon after infection, or an insufficiently sensitive antibody test. In any event, the good news seems to be that there was no evidence of bird to human transmission in a clearly at risk occupationally exposed population.
That's also the bad news. It means that the hope against hope that there is a lot of mild and inapparent infection with this virus that would mitigate the extraordinary case fatality ratio once again does not seem to have panned out, similar to studies in Cambodia and Nigeria.
As far as we can tell, infection with this virus is unusually virulent. Unlike many infectious diseases, really serious cases are not the tip of the iceberg. They are the whole iceberg. So far it is a small one. If it gets really big, spaceship Earth is going to look more like Titanic Earth.
The Editors of Effect Measure are senior public health scientists and practitioners. Paul Revere was a member of the first local Board of Health in the United States (Boston, 1799). The Editors sign their posts "Revere" to recognize the public service of a professional forerunner better known for other things.
Laidback Al
266 Posts
recent china and vietnam human cases of h5n1
this individual is now confirmed by who
http://www.who.int/csr/don/2008_02_22/en/index.html
a vietnamese news report is stating that this individual is negative for h5n1.
credits to helblindi at pfi . . .