Friday, April 28, 2006 

Onneksi sentään Venäjällä seurataan linturuttotilannetta jokseenkin julkisesti. Suomessa kun ei tyhmälle kansalle viitsitä julkistaa edes negatiivisia testituloksia...

"Russian official: country "epicenter" of bird flu
-------------------------------------------------
Russia's chief epidemiologist said the country is now the "epicenter" of
the bird flu virus and the nation was likely to see new cases this summer,
Russian news agencies reported on Tuesday [25 Apr 2006].
Gennady Onishchenko was quoted by Interfax and RIA-Novosti as saying
unusual winter weather patterns in southern Russia, Turkey, and Iran have
forced many migrating birds to nest in unlikely places, explaining early
outbreaks of the deadly H5N1 strain in the southern region of Dagestan and
other places. "The epicenter of the bird flu virus ... has shifted to
Russia," Onishchenko was quoted as saying by Interfax.
He also said that uninfected migrating birds would reach Siberia and the
Ural Mountains by the month's end [April 2006], and probably become
infected by the summer, RIA-Novosti reported.
Russia recorded its 1st cases of bird flu in Siberia in July 2005. The
virus, including the H5N1 stain, has since been found in birds in other
parts of the country. Russia has registered no cases of human infection.
Russian officials last month [March 2006] said more than 1.2 million wild
and domestic birds had been culled in February 2006 in an attempt to limit
the spread of the disease."

Tuesday, April 25, 2006 

H5N1 myös Etelä-Amerikassa?

"EDITORIAL: Bird flu: are we prepared or not?
Wednesday, March 01, 2006
The Daily News, Pakistan
--- Information about bird flu has been around for almost three years since it appeared in Southeast Asia. It has spread to Europe, Africa and even Latin America. ---"

 

Annoitko rahaa maanjäristyksen uhreille?

"Hätäapu: Pakistanin maanjäristys
Päivitetty 29.12.2005
8. lokakuuta tapahtunut maanjäristys on aiheuttanut Pakistanissa maan historian pahimman katastrofin. Voimakkuudeltaan 7,6 Richterin järistys ja sen seuraukset ovat tappaneet 73 000 ihmistä. Loukkaantuneita on 70 000 ja yli kolme miljoonaa on menettänyt kotinsa. Katastrofi koskettaa jopa 2 000 000 lasta.
UNICEF aloitti avustustoimet lasten pelastamiseksi heti järistyksen jälkeen. Koska UNICEF tekee työtä Pakistanissa ja sen naapurimaissa normaalioloissakin, henkilökuntaa saatiin siirrettyä katastrofialueelle välittömästi. Ensivaiheen hätäapuna UNICEF toimitti alueelle varastoistaan mm. huopia, vaatteita, telttoja, lääkkeitä, ensiaputarvikkeita, ruokaa ja vedenpuhdistustabletteja.

Lapset yhä hengenvaarassa

Mies, lapsi ja lääkkeetNoin puolet maanjäristysalueen asukkaista on alle 18-vuotiaita lapsia. Tuhansia loukkaantuneita lapsia on hoidettu ja hoidetaan alueen sairaaloissa. Lapset kärsivät mm. vaikeista luunmurtumista, päävammoista ja sisäelinvaurioista. ”Lapsilla on paitsi vaikeita fyysisiä vammoja, myös vakavia henkisiä traumoja,” UNICEFin työntekijä Omar Abdi kertoo.
Lukuisat lapset menettivät järistyksessä vanhempansa tai joutuivat heistä eroon. Kotinsa menettäneet joutuvat yöpymään taivasalla. Yöt ovat kylmiä ja ensilumi on jo satanut. Talviasuttavien telttojen tarve on nyt suurempi kuin koskaan. Lapsia uhkaa nälkä, kylmyys, sairaudet ja traumatisoituminen. He tarvitsevat välittömästi apua. ---"


"Pakistani capital shaken, stirred over bird flu
25 Apr 2006 14:52:08 GMT
Source: Reuters
By Kamran Haider and Zeeshan Haider
ISLAMABAD, April 25 (Reuters) - "Bird Flu Restricted Area" read the sign in a neighbourhood on the outskirts of Islamabad.
Shopkeeper Mohammad Afzul wasn't going beyond that point.
"I'm scared of virus. I have my small farm with a flock of about 4,000 birds just 15 km (nine miles) from here. The virus might be transmitted to them from me."
On Tuesday, Pakistani authorities confirmed that the number of poultry farms infected with the deadly H5N1 virus near the capital had risen to 11, and tests are pending on a handful of others.
They were all in Tarlai and Sihala, two neighbourhoods where there is a concentration of small farms supplying eggs and meat to Islamabad and adjacent Rawalpindi.
"The situation is worrisome. It has just started, it is just developing," said an international consultant, who requested anonymity. So far, no humans are known to have been infected in Pakistan.
Agriculture Ministry officials said every farm in the environs of Islamabad and Rawalpindi was being checked, flocks were being vaccinated and movement of birds from both cities had been banned by the Punjab provincial government.
"If we get any clinical clue, we just go for culling," said Ismail Qureshi, a permanent secretary at the ministry.
"We have so far culled around 60,000 birds."
Lines of parked trucks with empty wire cages on the roadside at Tarlai testified to the reduced movement in birds. Plummeting prices for chicken meat also showed Pakistanis were shunning one of their favourite foods.
But one dealer with a shop close to the restricted area said chickens were still being sold to buyers in neighbouring North West Frontier Province.
"Rates have been reduced, but we are still doing business and sending chickens to Peshawar, Mardan, Charsadda and so on," Malik Qamar told Reuters.
---"

 

H5N1 on muuttunut lähinnä entistä vaarallisemmaksi

"Pandemic influenza response: Dilemmas of preparedness and equity loom large
- Companies may be able to make 900 million doses of a pandemic influenza vaccine, but there are 6 billion people in the world.
April 2006
by Marie Rosenthal IDN Editor in Chief
ATLANTA — The avian influenza strain H5N1 has been spreading quickly in birds, and appears more pathogenic than when it first emerged in 1996, according to Keiji Fukuda, MD, who spoke here at the 2006 International Conference on Emerging Infectious Diseases.
“The current form of this virus remains highly pathogenic. If anything, it has become more pathogenic than it was when it first emerged in 1996 and 1997,” said Fukuda, acting director of the WHO global influenza program.
“H5N1 is not the only pandemic influenza threat out there, but it is by far the most visible threat, and because of that virus, there has been increased concern and action at the highest political level.” ---"

Monday, April 24, 2006 

Sensuuri hävisi sananvapaudelle!

Tämä blogi on taas vapaa! Hävetkää, matalamieliset paheksujat! Hah!

The cencorship lost its battle against the freedom of speech!
This blog is free again! Shame on you, you closed-minded self-righteous flaggers! Ha!

Sunday, April 23, 2006 

Brittitestit päin honkia

"Editorial: UK bird flu tests too good to be true?
15.4.2006
NewScientist.com
The UK found its first H5N1 case last week, but found no trace of any flu in the 4000 wild birds tested since late last year - odd, since 10% of ducks normally carry some sort of flu
A WEEK after the UK found its first case of H5N1 flu, in a swan in Scotland, the news seems good: no H5N1 has been found in any of the nearly 4000 wild birds tested since late last year. The trouble is, it is too good. Almost no avian flu of any form has been found, and normally 10 per cent of ducks have some sort of flu. Shouldn't this have rung alarm bells?
Accurate testing depends not only on high-tech equipment but on getting the fiddly details of procedures right. Sadly the instructions given by government scientists for storing samples taken in the field are regarded by international experts in animal viruses as plain wrong. As a result, it seems the UK has no real idea how much H5N1 is out there (see "UK's bird tests may be missing flu virus"). ---"

Friday, April 21, 2006 

What is your problem, people!?!

Someone had apparently flagged the blog Penumbra of Pandemia as objectionable?! And now it's locked, the editor can't publish. What's this about?! What is so wrong in our writings that has provoked such an arrogant aggression? This feels almost like Chinese kind of cencorship! ;/

Where on earth is the free world nowadays? In Wolfowitz's pocket? In the cages of Chinese poultry farms? In the fundamentalist mindset of pro-bureaucracists? The editorial board is profoundly disappointed in you who flagged this blog!

Viva the freedom of thought!

 

Hahaa! Mitäs minä sanoin ;D

"CAN £2.99 HANDWASH STOP BIRD FLU?
SPRAY 'WILL KILL VIRUS'
By Greig Box
20 April 2006
AN everyday handwash can kill the bird flu virus in under 30 seconds, experts claimed yesterday.
No-Germs, a £2.99 spray bought over the counter, has been in the shops for the past two years.
It was developed to combat the spread of MRSA but scientists tested it against the H5N1 avian flu bug and were astonished by the result.
Sean Campbell, managing director of British makers Advanced Formulations, claimed it kills 99.8 per cent of H5N1.
He said: "We are very excited by this discovery.
"We tested the product against H5N1 on the off-chance. We were confident it would work, as it kills most viruses including MRSA. Killing the H5N1 before it has a chance to enter the body is the key.
"Eighty per cent of all common illnesses are spread by hand-to-mouth, nose-and-eye contact.
"We can say with total confidence No-Germs will protect against H5N1. We will now work hard to get the product included in any H5N1 emergency pack.
"It will help everybody. It has sold very well so far without advertising."
Stores including Tesco, Waitrose, Boots and Superdrug stock the alcohol-free spray.
It was tested on H5N1 at Queen Mary's School of Medicine and Dentistry in the University of London. ---"

Thursday, April 20, 2006 

Kokonaista kaksi kanaa kuollut Kiinassa.

Ohhoh! Kokonaista kaksi kanaa kuollut Kiinassa. Kun Euroopassa kuolee kanoja lintuinfluenssaan, niitä on kerralla kaksisataa tai kaksi tuhatta. Kiinalaisilla kanoilla taitaa olla erityisen hyvä vastustuskyky! Mitähän tuo sitten tarkoittaa, jos on kuollut 17 ihmistä? Jos Euroopassa olisi kuollut vastaava määrä ihmisiä, olisiko se meidän käsitteistöllämme 170, 1700 vai kenties 17 000? Onhan Kiinassa kieltämättä niin paljon väkeä, että meidän mittapuullamme isotkin luvut saattavat mennä sikäläisessä ajattelussa vielä pyöristysvirheen nimiin, mutta mutta...

"New avian flu case fatal, 2 birds die in Liaoning
Ji Mi
2006-04-21
THE 17th person in China infected with bird flu has died in the central Hubei Province, and two dead birds in the northeastern Liaoning Province were confirmed killed by the H5N1 strain of virus, authorities announced yesterday.
In Hubei, a migrant worker died of the killer disease at the provincial capital Wuhan on Wednesday, raising to 12 the number of dead in China since last November. He was confirmed to be infected with bird flu on Tuesday.
The 21-year-old man, identified as Lai, was a security guard with a company in Wuhan.
Lai went back to attend a funeral for his uncle at his hometown in Shadi township of Hubei's Enshi City on March 18. He bought 20 kilograms of frozen chicken for the funeral party which he attended. The product reportedly was processed by a company in Liaoning Province. The manufacture date on its package was December 2005.
Other funeral party attenders who ate the chicken didn't show abnormal symptoms, the provincial Chutian Metropolis News said.
He returned to the Wuhan company on March 25.
Seven days later, Lai began coughing and running fever but didn't visit a doctor until April 7. A Wuhan hospital suggested he ought to be hospitalized two days later when his pneumonia symptoms didn't alleviate, but he didn't listen, according to the newspaper.
On April 11, he received inpatient treatment. Two days later, his condition deteriorated quickly and was transferred to the city's designated hospital for infectious diseases.
Yesterday afternoon, two epidemiologists sent by the Ministry of Agriculture arrived at Lai's hometown to probe after they investigated in Wuhan in the morning.
An investigation on poultry within 3 kilometers of Lai's home is expected to last two to three days.
Also yesterday, the Ministry of Health said the H5N1 strain of virus has been found in two dead birds in Liaoning Province.
Liaoning has been among the hardest-hit provinces, with four outbreaks confirmed in November."

 

Kuinkahan Suomen huoltovarmuus?

"Bird flu spreads to the enterprise -
MIT simulation shows the deadly H5N1 bird flu might cripple the supply chain, and the global economy
By Paul F. Roberts
April 14, 2006

At first, the reports from your supplier in China seem innocent enough: an assembly line worker has become very ill and is hospitalized with flu-like symptoms. Before you know it, workers are dying, the government has quarantined your factory and its contents, your supply chain is in ruins, and reporters are camped out at your company headquarters with a fleet of satellite news trucks.
What happened? H5N1, that's what. The deadly new strain of influenza isn't just fodder for epidemiologists -- it's a serious threat to enterprises and to the entire global economy, according to a recent avian flu "business disruption simulation" conducted by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's (MIT's) Center for Transportation and Logistics.
---"

Tuesday, April 18, 2006 

Pohjoismaiden ensimmäinen

"H5N1 Bird Flu Case in Denmark
Recombinomics Commentary
April 15, 2006
'A 25-year-old Dane has been transferred to Copenhagen's Royal hospital after testing positive for bird flu in a local clinic, the Danish news agency Ritzau reported today.
On the basis of blood tests in the local hospital of Nykoebing, southern Denmark, the man was diagnosed with bird flu, and late yesterday transferred urgently to the Royal hospital, one of two hospitals in Denmark authorised to treat bird flu. Ritzau said it was unknown where the man may have contracted the virus.'

The above comments indicate H5N1 continues to increase the number of versions that can infect humans. The full sequence of H5N1 from a buzzard in Denmark was released. It has many similarities with isolates from Astrakhan, which have North American and human sequences. Those isolates form two distinct clades, and the Denmark isolate was most like the smaller clade. However, those isolates have not previously been shown to cause human infections.
The first confirmed human case of H5N1 cause by the Qinghai strain was in Turkey. However, cases were soon reported in Iraq, Azerbaijan, and Egypt. Sequences from human cases in Iraq and Egypt did not contain HA S227N, which is a change in the receptor binding domain that increases affinity for human cells. However, the isolate from Iraq did have a change, N186S, near the receptor binding domain. H5N1 flying into Europe could combine with H1N1 in swine and produce G228S, another change associated with increased affinity.
More H5N1 is expected to migrate into western Europe and northeastern North America from Africa via the East Atlantic flyway. New sequences recombining with sequences that can cause H5N1 infections in humans, will likely create new problems."

 

Wolfowitz haluaa rahaa H5N1-ehkäisyyn

Irakin sodan arkkitehdin tarve saada rahaa lintuinfluenssan torjuntaan asettaa kieltämättä koko pandemian uhan epäuskottavaan valoon. Saapa nähdä, mitä kautta Wolfowitzin pyörittämät piirit laittavat rahat kiertämään.

"Wolfowitz: Bird Flu Will Hurt Economy
By JEANNINE AVERSA
WASHINGTON - World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz, working with poor countries on programs to thwart bird flu, said Tuesday that an outbreak of the disease would disrupt the global economy besides costing a devastating loss of life.
"If you had that kind of pandemic, I don't think there is any question it could happen, the costs both in human life and in disruption of world economic activity would be very high," Wolfowitz said in a wide-ranging interview with The Associated Press.
The worrisome strain of flu called H5N1 is spreading through wild birds and poultry in numerous countries _ and raising fears of a global epidemic if it mutates to become easily spread among people.
The World Bank, an international lending institution, has set up a $500 million pool to help poor countries combat the bird flu. Kyrgyzstan was the first nation to draw from the pool.
Wolfowitz's comments came as finance officials from the world's richest countries plan to meet in Washington on Friday to talk about pressing global economic matters, which probably will include lofty energy prices. Risks posed by the bird flu also could surface in those discussions, which will carry over into the weekend meetings of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.
Given the potential risks posed by a worldwide outbreak of the flu, "common sense would say it's worth a reasonable investment at the front end, if you can prevent that from happening," Wolfowitz said.
Rich countries are in a position to bankroll their own prevention plans, but poorer countries aren't, he noted.
"When you are in a poor country that is challenged just to meet kind of basic needs, compensating farmers adequately and having a framework for doing that gets to be an expensive proposition," Wolfowitz said.
President Bush is expected to soon approve a detailed action plan for how the United States would deal with any major spread of the disease in this country.
The World Bank is working with various world health groups the bird flu matter.
Wolfowtiz, the former No. 2 at the Defense Department and an architect of the Iraq war, took the helm of the World Bank last June. Its stated mission is to fight poverty and improve the living standards of people in developing countries, and it lends about $20 billion a year for various projects.
A service of the Associated Press(AP)"

 

Japani nimesi H5N1:n tarttuvaksi taudiksi

Eli ajatellaanko Japanissa, että tauti on tarttuva vasta, kun se tarttuu helposti ihmisestä toiseen? Onko siis tullut näyttöä siitä, että H5N1 on alkanut tarttua helposti ihmisestä toiseen? Vai tekeekö Japani nyt vain ison poikkeuksen normaalista politiikastaan?

"Enhanced H5N1 response planned
The Japan Times: Sunday, April 16, 2006

The health ministry has decided to designate the deadly H5N1 strain of avian influenza as an infectious disease, officials said.

The designation will enable authorities to force infected persons to be hospitalized for treatment and impose restrictions on their work activities, the officials of the Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry said.

The plan was approved at a meeting Friday of the ministry's Health Sciences Council and will be implemented this summer, the officials said.

The last time the ministry took such a step was in July 2003, when severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, was designated as an infectious disease.

The government had initially planned to designate the H5N1 strain of bird flu as an infectious disease once an outbreak was confirmed.

But it decided to proceed with the designation anyway in part because H5N1 has been spreading rapidly in various parts of the world, with about 190 cases of human infection confirmed since mid-2003 in nine countries in Asia and in the Middle East, the officials said.

The health ministry also considers it necessary to take preventive measures because H5N1 has the potential to mutate into a form that can be passed easily from person to person and because the World Health Organization has called for isolating a patient infected with H5N1. Currently, the H5N1 strain of bird flu falls in a category of diseases for which authorities are not allowed to isolate a patient."

Thursday, April 13, 2006 

Erittäin tarttuva pneumonia sulkenut kouluja Kiinassa

"Pneumonia kills one, sickens dozens
Ji Mi
2006-04-12
AUTHORITIES in northwestern China's Shaanxi Province are investigating the death of a high school boy and illnesses of nearly 40 of his schoolmates linked to a highly contagious pneumonia.
The sick children were hospitalized.
Separately, hundreds of children at a primary school developed fever after a mass vaccination.
The killer pneumonia in Qishan County has forced the Yidian Senior High School to suspend classes for one week since last Friday, Xi'an Evening News reported yesterday.
The one fatality was a third-year boy at the school, who died in the provincial capital Xi'an late last week after being treated at several hospitals.
Almost all the sickened students developed fever above 39 degrees Celsius, the report said.
Lu Huming, director of the county's Health Bureau, ruled out severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) or bird flu.
The report said provincial authorities were trying to find out what caused the outbreak.
Elsewhere in Xunyang County, 226 children at a primary school sickened after they received measles vaccines. They suffered fever, vomiting and dizziness, local media reports said.
The county's public health agency and the education bureau arranged the vaccination for children between 2-15 years old in the county, according to the local Sanqin Metropolis Newspaper.
However, only children at the downtown Chengguan No. 1 Primary School had the three complaints, the report said. The children were inoculated for measles last Wednesday and Thursday.
The county's disease control and prevention center said on Monday they would investigate."

Tuesday, April 11, 2006 

Mikä on pandemian aikana arvokasta?

"IMF: Bird flu could trigger global recession
By Hannah K. Strange
UPI UK Correspondent
Published April 11, 2006
LONDON -- A bird flu pandemic could trigger a "sharp and deep" global economic recession if national governments and financial institutions do not act to prepare themselves now, the International Monetary Fund warned Tuesday.
Launching the IMF's annual Global Financial Stability Report in London, Gerd Hausler, director of the institution's international capital markets department, said that a "real, fully-fledged" pandemic where an avian flu strain had mutated to pass from human to human could have a "serious impact" on international financial systems and for the global economy as a whole.
It could even trigger a disorderly unwinding of global financial imbalances, something that most analysts agreed would have devastating consequences for the world economy given their current unprecedented scale, he said.
The global financial system could be adversely affected by market disruptions and changes in capital flows stemming from an increase in risk aversion, he said. It would also suffer from operational disruptions caused by a sharp increase in worker absenteeism.
"A large part of the workforce would not show up for work, which would ultimately result in a sharp and deep recession," he said. "This is why we are encouraging our membership to do all it can to avoid and prepare for a situation where people panic and stay home from work."
He cautioned that while such an avian flu pandemic was relatively unlikely, the impact could be profound. "It is something the world doesn't talk so much about," he added.
The Global Financial Stability report says that the magnitude and duration of disruptions to financial systems and the world economy would depend not only on the severity of the pandemic but on the degree of preparedness.
While in recent years, financial institutions, central banks and regulators have developed business continuity plans to cope on an operational level with terrorist acts or disasters, planning for a bird flu pandemic has so far been "limited," it notes. The report acknowledges that a number of large financial institutions have extended their preparations, identifying non-essential services in the event of staff shortages, planning for working from home, for the transport of key personnel who could not work from home, and for heavy demand for cash by the public.
However the level of preparedness varies greatly across national authorities and financial institutions, it says.
The report warns that operational disruptions could prevent transactions from being completed and obligations from being met, and could spread from one jurisdiction to others even if they were unaffected by the virus, leading to disorderly changes in asset prices and capital flows.
It also cites potential threats to global financial markets, such as a sharp increase in risk aversion resulting in a rising demand for cash and liquid assets. This would in turn lead to a decline in equity values and an increase in lending premiums. As an avian flu pandemic is expected to spread rapidly across the globe, similar adjustments in asset prices could occur across entire regions, it says. These declines could put financial institutions under stress, it suggests. Market disruptions would become more severe should there be any breakdown in infrastructure leading to limited or intermittent trading.
A pandemic could also lead to significant reductions in capital flows to emerging markets, and some capital flight from residents seeking safe havens, the report says. Based on experience of the SARS threat, it assesses that foreign direct investment plans will change little, though some major investments may be postponed. Some countries, particularly those with high-priced equities or weak public services, or whose current accounts are highly dependent on commodity prices or export flows, may see investors remove portfolios in search of safer options.
In the worst case scenario, the shift in asset allocation caused by an outbreak of avian flu could trigger a disorderly unwinding of current global financial imbalances, the report warns. This phenomenon could be "very nasty," Hausler told Tuesday's press launch -- substantially worse than an unraveling caused by other factors such as a turning of the credit cycle -- with potentially very negative consequences for global financial stability.
To ensure minimal operational impact, the IMF report recommends that national authorities, including regulators, provide guidance on business continuity plans and review those established for adequacy and consistency. Banks and national authorities should test those plans to make certain that they can sustain essential functions over a prolonged period, and to ensure that back-up equipment, telecommunications and data centers are able to deal with the surge in online and remote access activities generated by a large number of people working from home.
Authorities and institutions must also ensure they can meet sharp increases in demands for cash and other liquid assets, and must be prepared to accommodate shock-related price increases, the IMF says.
To minimize market overreaction, countries should develop good internal and international communications strategies, the report suggests. To avoid panic or forced selling into falling markets and to contain asset price deflation, financial regulators should adopt a degree of prudential forbearance, perhaps temporarily easing restrictions and limits, it recommends.
The IMF emphasizes that a fully-fledged avian flu pandemic is by no means inevitable, or even probable, but given the potentially severe impact of such an event, national authorities and financial institutions must prepare now in order to minimize disruption."

 

400 opiskelijaa sairastunut tuntemattomaan tautiin

"The bird flu blackout in China
The entire world is concerned about the possible mutation of bird flu into a human contagion. Everyone must be vigilant in monitoring outbreaks, for the spread of epidemics accelerates with each day, once an outbreak begins.
Yet China is finding old habits of secrecy difficult to break. The entire world is put at greater risk because the Communist mandarins refuse to behave responsibly, Our contributor Brian Schwarz reports from Beijing in his website China Challenges:
With global threat of bird flu growing with each passing day, China’s determination to control the news media is only making the situation worse. Despite Beijing’s promise of “complete transparency” back in November, local media outlets were told not to cover bird flu cases, and to wait for a final and official statement from the government.
On Tuesday, the Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post reported ($link) that a suspected second human case of bird flu has emerged in nearby Guangzhou. They explain:
A source at the Guangzhou No1 People’s Hospital said a 41-year-old woman, identified as Ms Li, was admitted on March 25 with unexplained pneumonia. The source said experts confirmed two days later that Ms Li had the H5N1 virus but the case had yet to be reported by official media. The woman lived in the Xihua area of Guangzhou’s Yuexiu district.
Aphaluck Bhatiasevi, the World Health Organisation’s China spokeswoman, said the WHO was informed of the case by the Ministry of Health on March 30.
“Right now, she is not a confirmed case of H5N1. She is considered to have pneumonia of an unknown cause,” she said.
If officially confirmed, Ms Li would be the third human bird flu case in a major mainland city. In March, a female migrant worker died from the virus after buying live chickens at a Shanghai market.
And on February 2, another Guangzhou resident died from bird flu He was reportedly a frequent visitor to live poultry markets.
Sadly, when it comes to reporting serious health threats, China has consistently not been a responsible member of the global community. A few years ago it was SARS, today it is bird flu and tomorrow it maybe another mysterious health concern.
On April 3, AP reported some 400 students at the Henan University of Science and Technology in central China have come down with a mystery fever and the cause was under investigation.
With Scotland reporting its first case of bird flu a few days ago, it is probably only a matter of time before North America is hit with its own H5N1 outbreak.
Everyone has an interest in pressuring China to openly repudiate secrecy in reporting bird flu, and maintaining that pressure. We are all at risk. The totalitarian mindset must be broken.
Thomas Lifson 4 11 06"

 

H5N1 lensi Skåneen

"Bird flu in Skåne
Published: 11th April 2006 19:19 CET
A wild duck in Åhus in Skåne has been found contaminated with an aggressive strain of H5 bird flu.
The Swedish Board of Agriculture and the National Veterinary Institute confirmed in a joint press release on Tuesday that the area where the duck was found is relatively close to Sölvesborg, where the virus has been found previously.
No areas of Åhus have been closed to the public but zones of three to ten kilometres have been flagged as monitored and protected."

 

Sairastuneiden rykelmiä

"More H5N1 Bird Flu Clustering in Bekasi Indonesia
Recombinomics Commentary
April 10, 2006
'Rina Nurfatmarini (29 years) of Kali Abang Bahagia in the town of Bekasi died at 1.30 a.m. local time. She had been treated at Sulianti Saroso Hospital since Thursday after four days at Hermina Hospital, Bekasi.
Nine hours later, Tri Abadi Heri Wibawa (24 years) died. Tri, a resident of Perumnas I in the Jakasampurna subdistrict of Bekasi, had been treated at Sulianti Saroso Hospital since Wednesday after three days at Mitra Keluarga Hospital in Bekasi.'
The additional fatalities from Bekasi, Indonesia are cause for concern. Clustering of H5N1 cases in Bakasi has been clear since the fall of 2005, and the clusters have been clear in more recent reports. Although most reports report H5N1 infections in birds in the area, the large number of cases that cluster geographically and familially raises serious questions about control of H5N1 in Indonesia and transmission to humans, especially in the Bekasi area.
As noted above, patients are usually treated at primary facilities, and transferred to Sulianti Saroso after their conditions worsen. Thus, milder cases that recover are not tested for H5N1 and the case fatality rate for Indonesia is extremely high. 12 of the 13 official case reported by WHO this year, through April 6, have died. Thus, although it is not clear if the true rate is lower because milder cases are not tested, but the continuous reporting of H5N1 fatalities from the Bekasi region just east of Jakarta, is cause for concern."

Sunday, April 09, 2006 

Kiinan kielen taitoisia?

"Beijing - Bird flu or SARS?
(April 08, 2006) On April 7, Beijing announced to check people with fever. It did not say bird flu has been found in Beijing, but the article did say that bird flu (H5N1) is spreading among more animals (in addition to birds).
It is unusual for government to annouce checking fever who may contact animals frequently.
Ms. Zeng Jinyan - wife of a well-known rights activist - Hu Jia, said she received warning from friends who worked in hospital. The doctor told her not go to crowd, and read description about 'plague'.
More details in Chinese (boxun.com) "

 

"Ei varmaa näyttöä"...?

"School closure plan in case of bird flu
8.20AM, Sun Apr 9 2006
--- There is no firm evidence that the H5N1 strain of bird flu can pass easily from person to person. But there are fears it could mutate or mix with human flu viruses to create a new virus. ---"

Eli siis on jonkinlaista näyttöä, mutta ei varmaa?

 

Suomalaiskotkaa epäillään linturuton kuljettamisesta Nigeriassa

"Nigeria: Migrant Eagle Captured in Katsina
Daily Trust (Abuja)
April 6, 2006
Posted to the web April 6, 2006
A migrant eagle from Finland suspected to have avian influenza has been captured in Katsina state. The commissioner for Agriculture, Alhaji Ali Hussaini, said yesterday in Katsina that the bird was captured in Tsanni village, Batagawa l'ocal government area.
Hussaini made the announcement when he presented cheques totalling N1.07 million as federal government's compensation to four farmers whose birds were destroyed to avert bird flu infection.
He said the eagle migrated from one geological garden in Finland and was captured last month. The eagle had been sent to Vom, near Jos, for laboratory tests, he said.
The commissioner said only six cases of bird flu had been discovered in the state and commended the federal government for the prompt payment of compensation to the affected poultry farmers.
The leader of the federal government team, Alhaji Bashir Ruma, who gave out the cheques to the farmers, said plans were afoot to re-stock their birds to serve as an incentive."

...;)

 

Linturutto voi tarttua myös ruuansulatuskanavan kautta?

"Carnivores, bird flu concern scientists
Lawrence K. Altman
New York Times
Apr. 9, 2006 12:00 AM
Five leading European scientists are criticizing officials involved in human and animal health in an article this week, saying that officials are not doing enough to monitor cats, dogs and other carnivores for their possible role in transmitting avian influenza.
Writing in the Thursday edition of the journal Nature, the scientists also urge people living in areas where the H5N1 virus has infected poultry and other birds to keep their cats indoors.
The scientists are from the Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, and the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations. They directed much of their criticism at the World Health Organization and the World Organization for Animal Health for emphasizing the lack of evidence that domestic cats play a role in transmitting the virus and contending that more research is needed.
Cats, tigers and leopards are known to have been infected with the virus in Asia and Europe. An author of the article, Albert Osterhaus, a virologist and veterinarian at Erasmus Medical Center, has performed experiments showing that cats can give the virus to other cats. Whether they do so in real life is unknown.
---
Osterhaus said his team was issuing a precaution and not trying to sound too loud an alarm. The team has found that cats can be infected through the respiratory tract. Cats also can be infected when they ingest the virus, which is a novel route for influenza transmission in mammals. Still, cats excrete only one-thousandth the amount of virus that chickens do, or less, he said.
---"

Saturday, April 08, 2006 

Kiinassa kuolleisuus infektioihin lähes kaksinkertaistui

"Infectious diseases killed more last year
www.chinaview.cn 2006-02-14 08:26:16
BEIJING, Feb. 14 -- Infectious diseases in 2005 killed almost double the number of the previous year, and authorities warned that the true figure might have been under-reported.
According to the Ministry of Health, contagious diseases killed 13,263 people across the country last year, a jump of 82 per cent from 2004.
HIV/AIDS has become the third deadliest communicable disease in China, even though tuberculosis (TB) still tops the list of the most fatal illnesses.
Rabies, hepatitis B and tetanus in new-born babies are also very dangerous and the five diseases accounted for 89 per cent of the figure that died last year.
More people contracted communicable diseases last year, about 4.4 million, mostly TB, hepatitis B, dysentery and sexually-transmitted diseases.
"The incidence of infectious diseases last year was higher because the reporting system has been strengthened at medical institutes and fewer cases were missed," Mao Qun'an, the ministry's spokesman told China Daily yesterday in a telephone interview.
"The reporting mechanism required by law and the adoption of the Internet for spreading information and other measures meant more cases were discovered," he said.
Under Chinese law, reports on the situation with 27 serious diseases, including HIV/AIDS, anthrax, rabies, TB and hepatitis, should be made public; and since 2004, the ministry has been updating the public monthly on its website."

 

Vähintään 300 kuollut Kiinassa linturuttoon?

"Claim: 300 people have died of bird flu in China

'A Japanese scientist is making the sensational claim that over 300 people have died of bird flu in China (rather than the two officially tallied).
A respected Japanese scientist, who works with the World Health Organization, says 300 people have died of H5N1 bird flu in China, including seven cases caused by human-to-human transmission.
He says he was given the information in confidence by Chinese colleagues who have been threatened with arrest if they disclosed the extent of the problem.
The allegations, which he revealed at a meeting in Germany, contrast sharply with China’s official position. It reports three confirmed cases of H5N1 in people: a boy in Hunan province who recovered, and two women who died in Anhui province, the latest of which was announced on Thursday. There may be another probable case in Hunan.'

Editor’s note: this scientist is not some crackpot looking to sell a book. He’s a respected scientist with the World Health Organization. China has a history of misleading the world about the status of internal issues (e.g. SARS). Many experts have been expressing surprise and skepticism at China’s low bird flu counts. Would it really surprise anyone if this report were true?"

Friday, April 07, 2006 

Tässä blogissa aiemmin on kerrottu, että viileissä kosteissa oloissa virus selviää ainakin kuukauden. Kuumuudessa, esim. saunassa ja suorassa auringonvalossa virus alkaa tuhoutua nopeammin.

Seuraavassa lainattu teksti saa muistamaan, että jo vuonna 2004 tiedettiin kertoa sairaudesta selviytyneiden lintujen voivan erittää virusta vähintään kymmenen päivää.

Bird flu: What you need to know
www.cnn.com Saturday, January 24, 2004
"- It mutates rapidly and seems to acquire genes from viruses infecting other animal species.
- Birds that survive infection excrete virus for at least 10 days, orally and in feces, helping spread the virus at live poultry markets and by migratory birds.
- The more birds that come down with bird flu, the greater the opportunity for direct infection of humans.
- The more humans get infected, the greater the likelihood people can become infected with both human and bird flu strains.
- Humans could then serve as a "mixing vessel" for a new type of virus that could easily be transmitted from person to person. Such an event would mark the start of an influenza pandemic."

 

Pitkä juttu, mutta kannattaa lukea.

 

Kaikki tunnetut pandemiat ovat alkaneet kevätkesällä

"Russian chief sanitary inspector: Bird flu poses threat to 50 million Russians
In case of bird flu pandemic in Russia about 45-50 million people will be infected by it. According to Russian Chief Sanitary Inspector Gennady Onishchenko, about 6 million people in case of pandemic will suffer from the illness in its severe form; 1 million of them will need hospitalization. “We will need 170,000 doctors for it,” Onishchenko is quoted as saying.
The most probable scenario, believes the chief inspector, will be evolution of the pandemic in spring-summer time. “All the pandemics of the last millennium started exactly at that period,” reminded Onishchenko.
Onishchenko called distressing prediction for 2006, reports newsru.com. “Actually, the whole our southern border will be more or less affected by epizootic demonstrations,” he noted stressing that far not all the regions have established agencies to fight bird flu and elaborated complex action plans.
The chief sanitary inspector also pointed out that since the end of 2003 bird flu among humans has been registered in 51 countries. Overall, 190 cases of the illness were registered, 107 of them resulting in a lethal outcome."

 

"Avian flu modeled on supercomputer, explores vaccine and isolation options for thwarting a pandemic.
---
The results show that advance preparation of a modestly effective vaccine in large quantities appears to be preferable to waiting for the development of a well-matched vaccine that may not become available until a pandemic has already reached the United States. ---"

Los Alamos National Laboratory is a Department of Energy (DOE) laboratory, managed by the University of California. The Laboratory is one of the largest multidisciplinary science institutions in the world.

 

Noin kahdessa kuukaudessa 54 % väestöstä sairastuisi

"Computer scenario paints grim picture of bird flu
The Associated Press
The Olympian Online
LOS ALAMOS, N.M. — Left unchecked, a global outbreak of bird flu could infect 54 percent of the U.S. population and peak in about two months, while a less-contagious strain could affect one-third of the population and peak after 117 days, a new report predicts.
Los Alamos National Laboratory and the University of Washington used supercomputers to show the rapid spread of a mutated form of bird flu — a strain that does not exist. The research also looked into how to slow the spread to give the vaccine industry more time to respond.
The World Health Organization has reported 190 human cases of bird flu around the world, 107 of them fatal.
Health officials are concerned that the virus that causes bird flu, H5N1, could mutate to the point it can be spread from person to person, moving rapidly around the globe in a pandemic.
The cases of the disease so far have involved people catching the virus from birds.
There is no vaccine for bird flu."

 

Edellä olevat tekstit on siirretty tähän Penumbra of Pandemia -blogiin Penumbra-nimisestä blogista. Penumbran toimitus toivoo lukukokemuksen muuttuvan uudelleenjärjestelyn seurauksena entistä selkeämmäksi ja nautittavammaksi.
Tervetuloa pandemian varjoon!

 

Hornankattilan kiehuminen alkaa Suomessakin?

Kansanterveyslaitoksen tilastotietokannan pikatauluista löytyy vuoden 2006 kohdasta "Ilmoitetut tapaukset kuukausittain 2006" tieto, että vuosittainen influenssaepidemia on puhjennut Suomessa maaliskuun aikana. Kun nyt linnut tuovat maahamme H5N1-kannan, tulee mielenkiintoiset ajat nähdä, sattuuko H5N1 tarttumaan johonkuhun ihmiseen, joka sairastaa samaan aikaan tavallista influenssaa.

 

Monet lajit sukupuuton vaarassa

"PanAfrica: Survival of Numerous Species At Risk
The East African (Nairobi)
March 28, 2006
Posted to the web March 28, 2006
John Mbaria, Special Correspondent
Nairobi
There is growing danger that the continued spread of bird flu will significantly diminish biological diversity in Africa. According to experts, this is likely to have a devastating effect on human health.
The experts, who are attending the ongoing Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) meeting in Brazil, say that 80 per cent of the known bird species as well as many rare and endangered mammal species are at risk.
They have also told of growing evidence that the H5N1 virus, which causes avian flu or bird flu, can actually infect 54 rare and endangered species such as leopards, tigers, civets, martens, weasels and badgers.
They also warn that the pandemic could trigger negative ecological effects, including explosion of such pests as mice and rats following the loss of predators from some habitats.
The experts have expressed worries that this could trigger a rise in other human and animal infections as well as damage the prospects for the survival of other wildlife.
"We are learning many hard lessons from the threatened pandemic. First, that the impact on biological diversity and on species may be far wider and more complex than might have been initially supposed," said Ahmed Djoghlaf, executive secretary of the CBD.
According to the experts attending the meeting, the wild species at greatest risk of contracting avian flu are 80 per cent of all bird species in the world, including storks, herons, parakeets, emus, owls, eagles, kites, vultures and crows. In addition, 54 threatened and near-threatened species and 80 per cent of sea and fish eagles are at risk.
Also at risk are mammals such as domestic rabbits, primates, viverrids (which include civets and genets), mustelids like polecats, stoats, weasels and wolves.
These findings will be raised with governments during the high-level ministerial segment of the 8th Conference of the Parties of the CBD that will be taking place between Sunday and Wednesday this week in Curitiba, Brazil. ---"

 

Kissat voivat tartuttaa H5N1:stä toisiinsa

"PanAfrica: Bird Flu Risk From Cats 'Overlooked', Warn Scientists
SciDev.Net (London)
April 6, 2006
Posted to the web April 6, 2006
Catherine Brahic
Leading flu researchers have warned that cats could be playing an unrecognised role in the spread of the H5N1 bird flu virus, and have criticised international organisations for ignoring this piece of the puzzle.
Writing today (6 April) in Nature, Thijs Kuiken, Albert Osterhaus and colleagues at the Erasmus Medical Centre in the Netherlands, and Peter Roeder of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization recommend ways to cut the chance of cats spreading H5N1 to people.
Domestic and wild cats used to be considered resistant to disease from influenza A type viruses, of which H5N1 is a subtype.
But since 2004, cats have increasingly been getting infected with H5N1 and falling ill (see Avian influenza: birds, pigs, now cats).
Recent reports suggest that H5N1 commonly infects domestic cats in countries such as Indonesia and Thailand, where the virus is well established in poultry.
But the researchers point out that cats died from H5N1 in Germany soon after the virus was found in wild birds there. This, they say, suggests that unusual cat deaths could be seen as an early warning that the virus has arrived in new areas.
They add that their own laboratory experiments show that cats can become infected with H5N1 after eating infected poultry or coming into close contact with other infected cats.
The researchers acknowledge that "major gaps in our knowledge remain," but conclude that, "the potential role of cats should be considered in official guidelines for controlling the spread of H5N1".
They criticise intergovernmental agencies for issuing "cautious statements" that overlook this possible role (see WHO and FAO issue advice on cats and bird flu).
In February, the World Health Organization stated that, "there is no present evidence that domestic cats play a role in the transmission cycle of H5N1 viruses".
And last month, the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) said that cases of H5N1 infection in cats "have not led to any change in the epidemiology of the disease".
The researchers say keeping domestic cats indoors could help control the spread of the virus, but admit that this would be difficult to enforce in developing countries.
They add that other domestic and wild carnivores, such as dogs and foxes, are likely to be vulnerable to H5N1 and to contribute to its spread, so should be monitored accordingly."

 

Skotlantikin testaa yksittäisiä kuolleita joutsenia

"H5N1 Bird Flu Confirmed in Scotland --- The spread of H5N1 to Scotland is not a surprise. H5N1 announcement throughout western Europe have been accumulating for the past few months and likely represent H5N1 migration last fall. Dead swans are easily noticed and they have recently been the assay of choice to demonstrate H5N1 in Europe, but H5N1 can infect many species, both asymptomatically and fatally. European countries have not detected H5N1 in healthy wild birds, but detection in dead wild birds have been widespread.
More infections are expected as H5N1 migrates into western Europe from Africa via the East Atlantic flyway. Those H5N1 sequence may recombine with H1N1 in European swine to produce G228S, which would increase efficiencies of transmission to humans. However, the number of humans cases in Egypt and Azerbaijan have increased steadily, suggesting that the ability of the H5N1 Qinghai strain to infect humans is also widespread and new cases in western Europe are expected.
---"

 

Azerbaidzanissa on oma H5-laboratorio

jossa saadaan selville, onko kyse H5:stä - ainoastaan jää selvittämättä, onko kyse H5N1:stä.

"Azerbaijan - 43 samples sent to the UK for testing
Date: Wed 5 Apr 2006
From: Mary Marshall
Source: Reuters Foundation AlertNet, Wed 5 Apr 2006 [edited]

Azerbaijan: 43 Tests Sent to British Lab for Testing
Azerbaijan has sent blood samples from 43 people to a British laboratory to
test for the H5N1 strain of avian influenza, the Health Ministry stated on
Wed 5 Apr 2006.
5 young people have died from H5N1 in Azerbaijan, which is located between
Turkey and Russia. The ministry did not say whether all 43 had been
classified as suspected avian influenza cases. It said they had cold-like
symptoms and not all had been hospitalized.
"The Health Ministry decided to send blood samples (of the 43 patients) to
London to test for the H5N1 virus, since we don't have the necessary
equipment for this in Azerbaijan," said Health Ministry spokeswoman Samaya
Mamedova. "These people came to us complaining of serious colds; they have
not been hospitalized."
Azerbaijan has a laboratory that can test for H5 avian influenza, but it
cannot identify whether someone is infected with the H5N1 virus, said the
spokeswoman. She did not say whether the 43 people had tested positive for
H5 avian influenza.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has said it believes the human bird flu
outbreak in Azerbaijan has stabilized. The British laboratory is
WHO-accredited.
Public health officials, citing local test results, said last week a
16-year-old girl had tested positive for bird flu. She is in hospital and
is responding to treatment, officials said. Her blood sample was among the
43 sent to Britain. She was the 1st case of human bird flu infection in
Azerbaijan since the 1st week in March 2006. ---"

 

WHO:n tiedotuspolitiikkaa

"Egyptian Human and Bird HA H5N1 Sequences Are Similar
Recombinomics Commentary
April 5, 2006
The HA sequence of a human H5N1 isolate from Egypt, A/Egypt/2782-NAMRU3/2006(H5N1), has been released. The description of a 30 year-old male from Qalubiya Governorate most closely matches the second patient reported to have H5N1 bird flu symptoms in Egypt. He has since recovered. The human H5N1 sequence is most closely related to a bird sequence from Egypt, A/chicken/Egypt/960N3-004/2006(H5N1). Both sequences are the Qinghai strain with HA cleavage site of GERRRKKR. Both also have a polymorphism, P239S, downstream from the receptor binding domain.
The number of suspect H5N1 patient in Egypt continue to rise and more human and poultry sequences are expected. These sequences create a database that allows tracking of the H5N1 via shares polymorphisms. Moreover, the sequences trace the evolution of the H5N1, which has a Qinghai genetic background and a number of regional polymorphisms acquired by recombination.
The diversity of the Qinghai sequences highlights the need for rapid release of the data. The first human sequences from the area, including A/Turkey/12/2006(H5N1), remain in a private WHO database and have not been released."

En ole vieläkään käsittänyt, miksi WHO ei julkista noita sekvenssejä. Olisi kiva tietää, kun asia sentään koskettaa aika isoa osaa maailman väestöstä - jos tämä nyt ihan oikeasti on muka todellinen uhka...

 

Britanniassa löydettiin H5N1:een kuollut joutsen

Onpahan melko itäblokkilaista, ettei Suomesta vieläkään ole muka löydetty tapauksia. Kas, kun ei ole viitsitty/haluttu etsiäkään... Entisten itäblokin maiden eduksi on sanottava, että suurin osa niistä on toiminut asiallisesti H5N1:n löytämiseksi - toisin kuin Suomi, johon on tunnetusti lottovoitto syntyä.

"Britain finds H5 bird flu in dead swan
By Peter Griffiths
LONDON, April 5 (Reuters) - Britain has found bird flu in a dead swan in Scotland, the government said on Wednesday.
---
Officials have set up a 3 km (1.8 mile) protection zone around where the swan was found in Fife, eastern Scotland. ---"

 

Kuolleisuus näyttää todella olevan korkea

"Mild H5N1 cases weren’t missed in Cambodian outbreak
Mar 27, 2006 (CIDRAP News) – Researchers who looked for mild or asymptomatic human cases of H5N1 avian influenza following an outbreak in Cambodia last year didn't find any, challenging the view that human cases have gone undetected, according to findings presented last week.
The research described Mar 20 at the International Conference on Emerging Infectious Diseases in Atlanta implies that surveillance for human cases might be more effective than some experts assumed, according to a story by the Canadian Press (CP). However, the findings also imply that the case-fatality rate for avian flu is higher than some experts thought.
Dr. Philippe Buchy and his colleagues at the Institut Pasteur in Phnom Penh last spring tested blood samples from 351 residents of a Cambodian village where poultry and one person had died of avian flu, the CP reported. No signs of antibodies to H5N1 were found in the samples, indicating the residents had not suffered even mild cases of avian flu.
Some of the people tested had "significant" exposure to poultry or infected people, the story said. For example, a doctor who inserted a tube down an H5N1 patient's windpipe without wearing any protective gear did not show any antibodies indicating infection. The same was true for other healthcare workers, including two veterinarians who had autopsied H5N1-infected birds. The healthcare workers did not know at the time they were dealing with avian flu cases.
"We didn't find any cases of H5N1, so nobody seems to have been asymptomatic or with mild symptoms during this outbreak in Cambodia," Buchy told the CP.
On the bright side, Buchy was quoted as saying the data indicate the virus still finds it difficult to jump from poultry to humans.
Dr. Nancy Cox, head of the influenza branch at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, concurred with Buchy, but added: "On the other side of the coin, it means that the case-fatality rate is still very high. And that is a negative thing."
Experts have suggested that the current case fatality rate for avian flu, about 56%, could be inaccurate because milder or asymptomatic cases have not been identified.
"The work in Cambodia is extremely important because it shows that we really aren't missing that much," Cox told the CP. However, she added that it is important to conduct research on a larger scale to determine whether mild or asymptomatic cases are occurring, and said such studies are planned."

 

Joukkohautoja pandemian varalle

"Bird flu plan for 'mass graves'
The use of anti-viral drugs may be one way to deal with an outbreak
Plans for mass burials are being considered as part of Home Office preparations for a possible bird flu pandemic, reports the Sunday Times.
It cites a confidential report that says a "prudent worst case" assessment suggested 320,000 could die if the H5N1 virus mutated into a human form. ---"

"Bird flu victims to be buried in plague pits
Sunday, 2nd April 2006, 18:21
--- Mass burials similar to the plague pits used when the Black Death swept through Britain in the 17th Century will be enforced should the H5N1 strain of the virus mutate and infect humans.
---
The report said that grieving relatives would have to wait four months before they would be able to bury their loved ones and mass burials would have to be enforced by the government to cope with the number of dead.
The draft report said emergency services may be forced to introduce mass plague pits to stop the spread of killer disease that has already killed 105 people around the world.
---
The report said: "Common burial stirs up images of the burial pits used in the great plague of 1665 - where in London 70,000 people died.
---
But it warned: "Even with ramping local management capacity by 100 peer cent, the prudent worst case of 320,000 deaths is projected to lead to a delay of some 17 weeks from death to burial or cremation.
---
The report added ministers would have to give the go ahead for mass graves and that vaccines against bird flu should not be seen as a "silver bullet" solution.
---"

 

Taas kaksi sukulaistyttöä sairastunut - ihmisestä toiseenko?

"Two more girls infected by bird flu in Baku
Another two persons in Azerbaijan hospitalized on suspicion of bird flu, as the press was informed by Azerbaijan Health Minister Abbas Velibekov. According to the ministry's information, infected are the Askerovs sisters, aged 15 and 16, who live in Saly region of Azerbaijan.

The minister said that clinical course of the sisters’ illness really looks like bird flu, but it will be specified after the tests in a British laboratory. The Askerovs sisters are relatives of three persons, who died of bird flu in the middle of March. According to the health minister, to the present moment, six human deaths have been registered in the country because of bird flu."

 

Afrikan tietoon tulleita ihmisten H5N1-infektioita

"Egypt reports two more human bird flu infections
CAIRO, April 2 (Reuters) - Two more Egyptians have been infected with the bird flu virus, Egyptian Health Minister Hatem el-Gabali said on Sunday, taking to eight the number of reported human cases in the country.---"

 

Nyt on Suomessa saatu aikaiseksi verkkopalvelu, johon voi ilmoittaa kuolleista linnuista ja muista eläimistä. Osoitteeseen http://www.hatikka.fi/raatoseuranta/ voi tiedottaa muutoin kuin ihmisen tappamina kuolleista eläimistä. Ehkä julkisuus pakottaa viranomaiset rehellisyyteen ja suoraselkäisyyteen?

 

Jos linnut olisivat löytyneet mantereelta, näytteet olisi otettu

"Saaristossa kuolleita kyhmyjoutsenia ei tutkita
22.3.2006 16:32

Turun ulkosaaristosta löytyi viime viikonlopun aikana parikymmentä kuollutta kyhmyjoutsenta.
Kuolleita kyhmyjoutsenia löydettiin kolmesta eri paikasta. Joutsenista ei kuitenkaan oteta lintuinfluenssanäytteitä, sillä kuolemat vaikuttavat luonnollisilta, kertoo Länsi-Suomen läänin läänineläinlääkäri Tapio Palmu.
---
Kuolleita kyhmyjoutsenia löydettiin kolmesta eri paikasta saariston yhteysalusten reiteiltä. ---
Näytteidenoton tarpeellisuudesta on Palmun mukaan keskusteltu ympäristöministeriön kanssa. Ratkaisuun vaikutti myös se, että merikotkat olivat syöneet kuolleita lintuja, joten näytteidenotto olisi ollut hyvin hankalaa. Löytöpaikkojen lähellä ei myöskään ole siipikarjatiloja.
--
- Jos linnut olisivat löytyneet mantereelta läheltä siipikarjatiloja näytteet olisi otettu, Palmu sanoo.
---
- Kun vedet aukeavat ja muuttolintujen määrä kasvaa, tautia löytyy väistämättä.
Osastopäällikkö Matti Aho maa- ja metsätalousministeriöstä sanoo, että lintuinfluenssanäytteiden ottamisessa jokainen tapaus arvioidaan erikseen. Hänen mukaansa Turun löydöt ovat tämänhetkisen tietojen perusteella "normaalin rajoissa".
---"
STT

Onkohan kuolleita lintuja löytynyt lisääkin?

 

Rokotekehityksen virhearvio?

Onko H5N1-rokotekehitys vailla tieteellistä pohjaa? Mitä jos Recombinomics onkin oikeassa?

"Random Mutation Explanation of Flu Genetics Is Fatally Flawed
Recombinomics Commentary
March 30, 2006
The “random mutation” explanation of pandemic or seasonal flu evolution is almost dead. The recent Canadian swine sequences leave little doubt that almost all rapid genetic change in influenza is driven by recombination.
Earlier comments described recombination in PB2 and PA genes of the swine isolates. However, the recombination is in all eight gene segments and in all seven swine isolates. Isolates from the mid-nineties or earlier with exact matches in the recent swine isolates include A/Fukushima/114/96(H3N2), A/Swine/Tennessee/24/77(H1N1), A/Swine/Tennessee/26/77(H1N1), A/Swine/St-Hyacinthe/106/91(H1N1), A/WI/4754/94(H1N1), A/WI/4755/94(H1N1), A/Swine/Wisconsin/3523/88(H1N1), A/Swine/Iowa/930/01(H1N2).
These data show that recombination is very common and the size of the earlier regions get smaller because of further recombinations within recombinants. The data leaves little room for random mutations.
Similarly, recent isolates of the Qinghai H5N1 bird flu strains show single nucleotide polymorphisms overlaid on the Qinghai background. Virtually all of these polymorphisms are well represented in the sequence database and can be found in other H5N1 on migratory bird pathways.
The data indicate the current explanations of influenza evolution are fatally flawed, yet they are the basis of repeated WHO press releases on the looming pandemic.
A full review of the misconceptions driving vaccine development is long overdue."

 

Linturuttoa löytynyt Etelä-Venäjältä

"H5N1 Found in Southern Russia
Created: 30.03.2006 14:50 MSK (GMT +3)
MosNews
The H5N1 strain of bird flu virus has been found in dozens of dead birds in Russia’s southern province of Volgograd, officials in the province told AFP.
“Today the provincial veterinary laboratory confirmed the presence of the H5N1 virus in the blood of dead birds” found at a farmyard at the village of Vesyoly, a statement from Volgograd provincial administration said.
Preventive work including disinfection is being carried out and two million doses of bird flu vaccine have been sent to the province from Moscow, the statement said.
---
Russia’s chief veterinarian warned last week that bird flu was posing a growing threat to the country.
“Last year the virus affected 62 towns in 10 Russian regions, while since the start of 2006, already 56 towns in nine regions have been affected,” Sergei Dankvert said at a veterinarians’ conference."

Volgogradin etäisyys Moskovasta on suunnilleen yhtä suuri kuin Moskovan etäisyys Helsingistä.



Map of Volgograd region

 

191 sairastunut, näistä 107 kuollut

"Egypt: avian influenza situation
---
Egypt and these 5 suspected cases have not yet been added to the WHO
cumulative list of laboratory-confirmed human cases of avian influenza
virus infection, which was last updated on 24 Mar 2006. If confirmed by
independent testing, the global total of human cases of avian influenza
virus will become 191, with 107 deaths."

 

Penumbra Effect

Tulipa vastaan tällainenkin :)

"The Penumbra Effect: Designing the Bird-Flu Crisis Experience
Posted by Bob Jacobson
---
Before a pandemic actually strikes, people may start acting differently when they think it's coming. Or not.

Some fortify themselves and their communities against the disease, undertake domestic public health initiatives (like those recommended by the World Health Organization), and give aid to already afflicted communities with the aim of curtailing the pandemic before it gains velocity.

Others run scared. Overcome by fear, they fold up emotionally: give up on the future, become increasingly insular and reclusive, and simply shut down, economically and socially.

The great majority of us do neither. We don't prepare and we don't despair. We acknowledge and move on. We do what we always have done. That's where most of us are at the moment, almost everywhere in the world. The popular experience of the bird flu is that it isn't yet a crisis; if and when it becomes one, we can deal with it. Life goes on, ooh-blah-dee....

This is the Penumbra Effect and it varies from culture to culture. We don't perceive the crisis per se: we perceive the social reaction. The Penumbra Effect is the result , in the face of a potential crisis, of interactions among sources of information and our perceptions, cognitions, and behavior. Synergetic, the Penumbra Effect can catalyze a successful response to a crisis; or it can transform a mild crisis into a major crisis, and a major crisis into a catastrophe.

How we experience a potential crisis, a condition that by definition we haven't experienced before (any of us, experts or laypersons), determines how we respond. This experience is designed through the cumulative interactions of speakers, writers, media professionals, politicians, health professionals, corporations, governments, NGOs, and the public. But no one is designing the interactions to produce positive, proactive results.

Our experience of the bird flu crisis is the ultimate in poorly designed experiences. The popular press sporadically highlights infestations in places seemingly out of sight and mind: rural Turkey, jungle Nigeria, the vast eastern spaces of China. It tells us just enough to make us think we know about the threat of pandemic, when of course we don't. (An exception is the BBC.) Politicians -- including President Bush in the U.S. -- assure us that everything's being taken care of, again providing partial information. (UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan is not so sure -- and Annan's been correct more often than Bush for the last six years, since Bush became President.)

On the other side of perception, public health professionals tell us that while the situation may not be critical, it needs tending, now. (But their megaphones tend to be smaller.) It's a confusing melange of opinions.---"

 

Sadoittain kanoja ja sikoja kuollut Intian Mizoramissa

ProMED-mail 25.3.2006:
"Hundreds of pigs have died in this city and surrounding in the past few
days due to a swine fever, severely affecting the sale of pork.
---
In another alarming incident, hundreds of chickens died in Mizoram-Myanmar
border Cherhlun village during the past 3 months, causing panic that it
might be caused by Avian Influenza.

 

Lvov: Yhden aminohapon muutoksen päässä

"Devastating bird flu pandemic one step away - expert
07/ 03/ 2006
MOSCOW, March 7 (RIA Novosti) - The world is one step away from a bird flu pandemic that cannot be averted by quarantine or vaccination, a Russian expert said Tuesday.
"One amino-acid replacement in the genome remains to make the virus transferable from human to human," said Dmitry Lvov, the director of a virology research institute at the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences.
Lvov said the pandemic virus could strike at any moment, and would most likely come from China, leading to tens of millions of human deaths, or one third of the global population. He added quarantine measures could delay the pandemic for a few days but not prevent it, and that vaccination would not stop people getting sick.
"A good vaccine will only save [people] from death and complications, but not from the illness itself," he said.
Lvov said any pandemic was based on a hybridization of the bird and human viruses.
Pigs are the most vulnerable animals in the face of both human and bird viruses, which makes them "an intermediary link between human and bird flu," he said.
Lvov said the bird flu pandemic was irreversible like any other natural cataclysm, and would not stop until the highly pathogenic strain mutates into a less dangerous one.
"When will it stop? When highly pathogenic strains localized in wild birds are once again transformed into a low-pathogenic one according to the law of nature," Lvov said.
He said all that could be done to deal with the pandemic was large amounts of vaccination, hundreds of thousands of beds in intensive care, and the necessary instruments and medicines.
Lvov also said that the bird flu virus would shortly sweep the south of central Russia, specifically the Astrakhan, Rostov-on-Don, and Volgograd Regions.
The Agriculture Ministry said Monday that bird flu had been registered in eight regions in the south of the country, a major stopover area for migrating birds.
The ministry said over 1.3 million birds had died or been slaughtered in three outbreaks of bird flu since July 2005."

 

H5N1 voi levitä kissasta toiseen

"Lintuinfluenssan esiintyminen kissoissa ja koirissa
Eläinlääkintä- ja elintarviketutkimuslaitos EELA:
Ei ole todisteita siitä, että koirat sairastuisivat lintuinfluenssaan tai erittäisivät virusta.
H5N1 lintuinfluenssa voi tarttua kissaeläimiin. Kokeellisesti kissoja tartuttamalla on havaittu, että ne voivat sairastua H5N1:n aiheuttamaan influenssaan. Yksittäisiä, luonnollisia kotikissojen H5N1 infektioita on raportoitu. Kokeellisesti on voitu osoittaa tartunnan leviävän myös kissasta toiseen. Virustartuntaa kissasta ihmiseen ei tiedetä tapahtuneen."

--> "Kissat saattavat levittää tautia"

 

Kaikki mahdollista nuhakuumeen ja kuolemantaudin väliltä.

Seuraavassa lainattu juttu kirjoitettiin jo puolitoista kuukautta sitten. Eilen WHO:n varmistamien H5N1-viruksen kuolonuhrien lukumäärä oli 105. Sairastuneita tiedetään varmasti olleen vähintään 186.

"Pandemia eristäisi varuskunnissa tuhannet
09.02.2006
Ruotuväki
Riku Roslund
Puolustusvoimat määrää varuskuntansa karanteeniin. Tuhannet varusmiehet ja työntekijät eristetään ja lomat perutaan. Liikkuminen rajoitetaan minimiin. Sairaalat ylikuormittuvat, lääkärit ja lääkkeet loppuvat kesken.
---
- Yksin emme pärjää, jos pahin skenaario toteutuu, puolustusvoimien ylilääkäri, prikaatikenraali Pentti Kuronen hahmottelee.
---
Jos lintuinfluenssa-aalto iskisi voimalla Suomeen, arvioidaan 1,8 miljoonan ihmisen sairastuvan. Jopa 10 000 voisi menehtyä. Kuronen ei halua spekuloida numeroilla.
- Tärkeintä on miettiä, mitä voimme tehdä ennen pandemiaa, jonka leviämistä pidetään todennäköisenä. Ajankohtaa voi vain arvailla. Ja tuhovolyymiä, näkee Kuronen.
Avainasia on, millaiseksi H5N1-virus kehittyy. Kaikki lievän influenssan ja kuolemantaudin väliltä on mahdollista.
WHO:n vahvistamia lintuinfluenssakuolemia on jo yli 80."

 

Linturutto yskittää vakuutusalaa

"Reinsurers to cough up for bird flu
Patrick Jenkins, Hanover
The Weekend Australian, March 25, 2006

THE global reinsurance industry, still reeling from last year's record hurricane season, might have to shoulder losses of up to E10 billion ($16.8 billion) if bird flu becomes a human pandemic, three times the tally of previous analyst estimates.
---
Wolf Becke, head of life reinsurance, the area most likely to be affected by the disease, said: "Medical experts agree that a pandemic is not a question of whether, just when."
---
Analysts said Hannover Re's impact assessment was more than three times higher than its own forecasts, based on a 10 per cent spike in mortality rates and a consequent hit to so-called embedded values.
---
Analysts at Fox-Pitt Kelton recently put the likely cost to Swiss Re at E300 million, but this could rise to nearly E1 billion if the extrapolated data from Hannover Re is right."

Edellä lainatussa jutussa huomiota kiinnittää erityisesti maininta siitä, että jälleenvakuutusyhtiö Hannover Ren arvio pandemian taloudellisista vaikutuksista on nyt yli kolme kertaa niin suuri kuin sen aiemmat ennusteet, jotka perustuivat 10 %:n kasvuun kuolleisuudessa ja ennusteisiin sisältyneisiin liitännäiskuluihin.

 

"Suomi ei ole uskottava" osa 2.

H5N1:n levinneisyyttä kuvaava kartta on lainattu MTV3:n ohjelman 45 minuuttia sivulta.

Ks. myös "Suomi ei ole uskottava" osa 1.

 

H5N1 kykenee tarttumaan sekä ihmisen ylä- että alahengitysteihin.

”Human-derived viruses that preferentially recognize SA2,6Gal bound extensively to epithelial cells in the bronchi and, to a lesser degree, to alveolar cells; by contrast, avian viruses that preferentially recognize SA2,3Gal bound extensively to alveolar cells but less widely to bronchial epithelial cells (see supplementary information). It is interesting that the A/Hong Kong/213/03 (H5N1) virus, which was isolated from a human and recognizes both SA2,3Gal and SA2,6Gal (Shinya, K. et al. J. Virol. 79, 9926–9932 (2005). ), bound extensively to both bronchial and alveolar cells.
---
Our findings indicate that although H5N1 viruses preferentially recognizing SA2,3Gal can be transmitted from birds to humans, they can replicate efficiently only in cells in the lower region of the respiratory tract, where the avian- virus receptor is prevalent. This restriction may contribute to the inefficient human-to-human transmission of H5N1 viruses seen so far, and indicates that unimpeded transmission of the virus might require acquisition of the ability to recognize SA2,6Gal. This change would enable the virus to replicate in the upper region of the respiratory tract, where it could be readily spread by sneezing and coughing. ”
Shinya K, Ebina M, Yamada S, et al. Avian flu: Influenza virus receptors in the human airway. Nature. 2006 Mar;440(7083): 435-436.

Vapaasti suomeksi selitettynä:
Ihmisestä toiseen tarttuvat influenssavirukset, jotka tunnistavat solun pinnan sokeriyhdisteen, SA2,6Gal:n (jatkossa 2,6), tarttuvat lähinnä keuhkoputkien soluihin ja vain vähäisessä määrin syvällä keuhkoissa olevien alveolien soluihin; Sitä vastoin lintujen virukset, jotka tunnistavat solun pinnalla olevan SA2,3Gal:n (jatkossa 2,3), tarttuvat lähinnä ihmisen alveolisoluihin, mutta vain vähäisessä määrin ylähengitysteiden kuten keuhkoputkien tai nenän soluihin. Tällaisen solujen pintamolekyylijakauman vuoksi lintujen virusten on vaikea tarttua ihmiseen, koska ne joutuvat hakeutumaan syvälle keuhkoihin ennen kuin voivat tartuttaa.
Edellä lainatun tutkimuksen tekijät kuitenkin kiinnittävät huomiota siihen, että eräs ihmisestä eristetty H5N1-kanta, A/Hong Kong/213/03, kykenee tunnistamaan sekä 2,3- että 2,6-molekyylejä ja kykenee tarttumaan niin ihmisen ylä- kuin alahengitysteidenkin soluihin.
Vaikka A/Hong Kong/213/03-kanta kykenee tarttumaan helposti myös ihmisen ylähengitysteihin, se kykenee nykyään replikoitumaan tehokkaasti vain alahengitysteissä, missä on 2,3 -soluja. Tutkijat huomauttavat artikkelissaan, että saavuttaakseen kyvyn aiheuttaa ihmisestä helposti toiseen tarttuva pandemia viruksen täytyy vielä muuntua siten, että se kykenee tehokkaasti replikoitumaan eli lisääntymään myös ihmisen ylähengitysteiden soluissa, jolloin se leviäisi helposti yskimisen ja niistämisen yhteydessä.

Ohessa kuva, jossa näkyy, kuinka A/Hong Kong/213/03 vaikuttaa syvällä ihmisen keuhkojen alveolisoluissa. Kuva on representaatio Naturessa julkaistusta kuvasta.

 

Lemmikin omistajat varpaillaan

Baku Sun, englanninkielinen azerbaidzanilaislehti kertoi 10.3.2006:

"Pet owners cautioned
PARIS (AP) — France’s food safety agency ordered residents in areas affected by bird flu to keep their cats indoors and dogs on leashes to avoid spreading the virus — but said there was no reason to abandon pets in panic.

France’s government had asked the food safety agency, AFSSA, for a study on the risks of cats getting bird flu even before a cat in Germany was found to have died of the flu earlier in the week — the first report of an infected mammal in continental Europe.

France has recorded 29 cases of H5N1 in wild birds and an outbreak at a turkey farm - the only case of commercial poultry infected in the European Union. All of France’s cases have been confined to the southeastern Ain region. The food safety agency ordered residents in the Dombes district of the Ain region to keep their cats indoors and dogs on leashes when outdoors. It said veterinary authorities should investigate any unusual cat deaths in the infected zones, and urged people not to touch dead animals, animal droppings or any detritus likely to attract carnivorous animals.

Some French cat owners panicked after the German announcement and bombarded the animal protection society with anxious calls. In some cases, owners abandoned their pets. The food safety agency urged calm. “These precautionary measures, which are temporary, should in no case lead to abandoning pets,” it said in a statement released by the Agriculture Ministry on Saturday."

 

H5N1 leviää entistä tehokkaammin ihmisten välillä?

"--- Like Turkey, in addition to the familial cluster there is a geographical cluster suggesting the transmission of H5N1 to people has become more efficient. The proximity of the Azerbaijan cases to the Dogubeyazit cluster in eastern Turkey raises the possibility that S227N may be involved. Donor sequences were identified in H9N2 isolates that are endemic to the region, so new recombinants could be generated. However, the S227N change only reduces affinity for avian receptors, so S227N detected in the index case in Turkey could have also been transmitted to the index case in Azerbaijan via infected birds.

Alternatively, the close proximity of Azerbaijan to Dogubeyazit may indicate more efficient human-to-human transmission via less intimate contact. The dates of death of family members and a close friend suggest human-to-human transmission may be more efficient.

Isolation of the H5N1 and release of the sequences from this cluster would be useful. Although one H5N1 sequences from the bird flu infection in western Turkey last October has been released, none of the sequences from human cases in Turkey have been made public. This delay appears to be linked directly to Weybridge, since they have already released the turkey H5N1 sequence from Turkey. Moreover, they have held a large number of H5N1 sequences from isolates throughout Europe. Other countries, such as Russia, Italy, France, Nigeria, Iraq, Iran, and Denmark have released sequences as soon as the accuracy of the sequence has been verified.

The growing cluster in Azerbaijan highlights the need for immediate release of the sequestered sequences as well as rapid release of the H5N1 in this new geographic and familial cluster."

 

Azerbaidzan: 19 ihmisellä H5N1 Daikyandin kylässä?

ProMED-mail:

"AVIAN INFLUENZA, HUMAN - WORLDWIDE (29): AZERBAIJAN:

It has been reported by the Interfax Agency on Monday [20 Mar 2006] that
experts from the World Health Organization suspect 14 more people in
Azerbaijan [have contracted] avian influenza, where 2 girls died of H5N1
virus infection earlier in March 2006. A group of WHO experts reported
their suspicions after visiting the Salyansky district of Azerbaijan, 150
km to the south of the capital Baku. Earlier 3 residents of the district
had been provisionally diagnosed with avian influenza.---"


"Azerbaijan: Avian Influenza Situation - WHO Update 2
----------------------------------------------------
As of Tue 11 Mar 2006, samples from 11 patients under investigation in
Azerbaijan for possible H5N1 infection have now been tested at a WHO
collaborating laboratory in the United Kingdom. Positive H5N1 results were
obtained for 7 of these patients. 5 cases were fatal.
---
Six of the cases occurred in Salyan Rayon in the south-eastern part of the country. All 6 cases resided in the small Daikyand settlement of around 800 homes.
A 17-year-old girl died on 23 Feb 2006. Her first cousin, a 20-year-old
woman, died on 3 Mar. The 16-year-old brother of this woman died on 10 Mar.
A 17-year-old girl, a close friend of the family, died on 8 Mar. All 4 of
these cases lived together or near each other. The source of their
infection is presently under investigation.
The additional 2 cases in Salyan involve a 10-year-old boy, who has
recovered, and a 15-year-old girl, who is hospitalized in critical condition.
The 7th case occurred in a 21-year-old woman from the western rayon of
Tarter. She died on 9 Mar 2006.
Two additional patients, from Salyan and the adjacent rayon of Neftchela,
have been hospitalized with symptoms of bilateral pneumonia. Testing of
these patients is presently under way.
Last week, WHO strengthened its field team in Azerbaijan to include experts
in clinical management and infection control and additional senior
epidemiologists.
---
the majority of cases have occurred in females between the ages of 15 and 20 years. Interviews
with surviving family members have failed to uncover a history of direct exposure to dead or diseased poultry for several of the cases.
---
On-site diagnostic capacity continues to be provided by the US Naval Medical Research Unit 3 (NAMRU-3). ---"

 

H5N1:n sadas virallinen uhri Azerbaidzanissa

Epäillyistä ihmisestä toiseen tarttuneista H5N1-tapauksista uutisoitiin jo muutama päivä sitten, mutta nämä H5N1-kuolemantapaukset on nyt virallisesti vahvistettu:

"Azerbaijan deaths push world H5N1 total over 100

21/03/2006 - 15:39:42

The bird flu deaths of five people in Azerbaijan has pushed the world total human deaths from H5N1 past 100, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said today.

WHO said seven of 11 patients from Azerbaijan had tested positive for the deadly strain of bird flu in samples checked at a major laboratory in Britain.

Five of the cases were fatal."

Toivottavasti WHO julkistaa virusten sekvenssitiedot, jotta voidaan selvittää, oliko todella kyse ihmisestä toiseen leviävästä tautimuodosta.

 

"Suomi ei ole uskottava" osa 1."

H5 Bird Flu Confirmed in Israel

Recombinomics Commentary
March 16, 2006

"I can confirm that preliminary tests showed the poultry died of H5 bird flu but we do not know yet exactly which strain," a ministry official told AFP.
Hundreds of dead poultry were found at the Ein Hashlosha kibbutz in the Negev desert east of the Gaza border and dozens more in nearby communities, prompting the agriculture ministry to seal off the area.
The above comments strongly suggest H5N1 bird flu has been detected in Israel. The number of dead birds indicates the H5 will type as H5N1 and it will be the Qinghai strain.
These results were not unexpected as more countries confirm the H5N1. Thus far no country in Europe, the Middle East, or Africa has detected H5N1 in live wild birds indicating surveillance is lacking. Many countries in Europe detected H5N1 in dead wild birds prior to detecting H5N1 in domestic poultry.
Other countries, like Israel did not report H5N1 until domestic poultry was reported. Additional countries however, continue to deny H5N1 infections.
Surveillance in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa is poor in countries reporting.
Countries in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa, which are still not reporting H5N1 have no credibility."

Ks. myös "Suomi ei ole uskottava" osa 2.

 

Erikoisen onnekkaitako?

Suomi alkaa olla yksi harvoista maista Euroopassa, jotka eivät ole löytäneet H5N1:stä. Mistä johtunee...?

Lista maista, joissa on testattu eläimiä tehokkaasti ja löydetty sairaustapauksia:

- Albania
- Bulgaria
- Hollanti
- Itävalta
- Kroatia
- Puola
- Ranska
- Romania
- Ruotsi
- Saksa
- Serbia
- Slovakia
- Slovenia
- Sveitsi
- Tanska
- Turkki
- Ukraina
- Venäjä

 

Pankkien pandemiavalmius?

USAssa kehotetaan pankkeja varautumaan pandemiaan. Miten Suomessa?

 

Yhä huolestuttavampaa

Alkaa kuulostaa jo pahalta. Kun geenisekvenssejä ei julkisteta tieteelliselle yhteisölle arvioitavaksi, on vaikeaa pysyä selvillä siitä, kuinka suuri pandemiavaara on ja millä aikavälillä. Nyt egyptiläisen tutkimusryhmän esimerkillisesti julkistamien tietojen mukaan H5N1 on tehnyt taas uuden hyppäyksen kohti helposti ihmisestä toiseen leviävää muotoa:

"Human H5N1 Iraq Sequence Includes N186S

Recombinomics Commentary
March 15, 2006

HA sequences from Irar have been released (A/human/Iraq/207-NAMRU3/2006(H5N1), A/domestic goose/Iraq/812/2006(H5N1), A/domestic cat/Iraq/820/2006(H5N1) by the US Naval Medical Research Unit in Cairo. As expected, all three have the HA cleavage site GERRRKKR, which is the signature sequence of the Qinghai strain of H5N1 bird flu. All three sequences are wild type at position 227 (serine).

The sequences are most closely related to the Kurgan isolate, A/chicken/Kurgan/3/2005(H5N1), which shares some polymorphisms with the Nigerian sequence, A/chicken/Nigeria/641/2006(H5N1). There are some polymorphisms that are specific to Iraq, including R565K.

The most intriguing change however is the change that is only in the human sequence, A609G, which creates N186S. This change could alter the affinity of receptor binding domain, which includes position 190, for human receptors. Donor sequences for this change were not identified in a search of the Los Alamos flu database, highlighting the need for a more complete database and release of the sequestered sequences.

The human sequence from Iraq is the first Qinghai related human sequence made public, and the cat sequence is the second mammalian Qinghai related sequence to be made public. Kudos goes to the Cairo research group for timely and transparent release of critical sequence information.

The above data provides more compelling reasons for the release of the H5N1 sequences sequestered by WHO, including human sequences from Turkey and Indonesia. The sequences each have unique features that are critical in mapping the paths of H5N1 spread as well as changes that will impact vaccine development. Release of the sequestered sequences is long overdue."

 

Suomen suunnitelma

Kansallinen suunnitelma pandemiaan varautumiseksi
Recombinomicsin uutinen ihmisestä toiseen tarttuvaksi epäillystä H5N1-ryvästymästä:
Fatal H5N1 Bird Flu Cases in Azerbaijan Expand

 

Huomenna liian myöhäistä?

Toivottavasti Suomessa ei olla "säästetty" kansalaisia tiedolta...

"Bird flu in Azerbaijan: Tomorrow it will be too late

Permanent news address: www.regnum.ru/english/605966.html 19:49 03/14/2006

WHO supplied Azerbaijan with facilities and reagents for a laboratory for testing bird flu, informed Health Minister of Azerbaijan Ogtay Shiraliyev. First results of the tests of recently died residents of Sali region, possibly caused by bird flu, were published on March 13. They demonstrated, that three of four dead people were infected by bird flu. All the three are residents of the village of Daikend (Sali region), and are relatives.

Speaking about prophylactic measures, conducted by his ministry, Shiraliyev said that specialists are sent to the provinces of the country to conduct trainings with doctors, explain the symptoms of bird flu. Head of local hospitals every day present reports on all bird flu suspicions to the ministry. The minister said that more than 100 people, who addressed infection hospital #7 with bird flu symptoms, were not infected with the disease.

Head of medical commission of the Azerbaijan department of Helsinki Civil Assembly Tamila Kerimova, commenting the developments to a REGNUM correspondent, said citizens’ right for information was violated. She said that first case of bird death, caused by bird flu, has been registered in Azerbaijan on February 9. First human casualties appeared on February 28, but were reported only on March 14. Kerimova thinks that current anti-bird flu measures are insufficient, because there is no real output from $4 million sent for bird flu prevention, because prophylactic works are carried out for appearance, as are posters, several programs on AzTV and OTA. Vaccination is not conducted. In several regions, dead birds are simply thrown out, so wild animals eat them.

Death of the four teenagers, according to Kerimova, is a terrible reminder on necessity of serious work in bird flu prevention. She said, that full scale fight against bird flu should be started, or 'tomorrow it will be too late.'"

 

Minkälaisia testejä Suomessa käytetään?

Seuraavissa uutisissa huomiota kiinnittää, että paikallisissa testeissä ei näkynyt jälkeäkään H5N1:sta. Lienevätkö paikalliset testit useinkin epäherkempiä, vai onko kyse poliittisesta herkyydestä. Mahdettaisiinko Suomessa pyytää WHO:lta lisävarusteita, jos omissa testeissä ei näkyisi H5N1:stä...?

-----------------------------

"Azerbaijan comfirms 3 human deaths from H5N1 virus
[ www.chinaview.cn 2006-03-14 10:16:10 ]


MOSCOW, March 14 (Xinhuanet) -- Azerbaijan's Health Ministry has confirmed that three people have died of the H5N1 strain of the bird flu virus, Russia's Itar-Tass news agency reported Tuesday.

The H5NI strain was detected in the victims after using equipment provided by the World Health Organization (WHO), the ministry's spokesperson Samaya Mamedove was quoted by Itar-Tass as saying.

All three victims, who died earlier this month, came from the Salyan region in southern Azerbaijan, the report said.

Azerbaijan first reported the detection of the H5N1 strain last month in wild birds on the Caspian Sea coast, and a team of WHO experts have been sent to the country to provide technical supportin fighting the outbreak.

Although H5N1 has remained primarily a disease affecting birds,scientists fear the deadly virus could mutate into a form that could easily spread among humans."

-----------------------------

"Four die of bird flu in Azerbaijan
[ Tuesday, March 14, 2006 10:28:09 amIANS ]

BAKU: Four people were suspected of having died from the avian flu virus in Azerbaijan, the country's health minister said.

Blood from the victims was to be analysed with the help of western laboratory techniques, after local tests failed to detect any sign of the strain, the minister said on Monday.

In Azerbaijan, the H5N1 strain of the virus was first detected in February in migratory birds that turned up dead.

Azerbaijan lies to the east of Turkey, where four children died of the virus in January."

 

Terveisiä Kongosta

Anjan Sundaram kirjoittaa Kinshasasta:

"--- 'When is this bird flu coming?' asks Marie Biloke, who sells pre-paid mobile phone cards on Kinshasa's streets. 'One thing is for sure, our government will not help.'

'Our politicians are busy putting money into their pockets,' she adds. 'When have they ever thought about us?'

Nearby, a ragged, six-year-old boy gathers his red football from a gutter beside Kinshasa's Puissant clinic û and throws the filthy toy back into his school's playground across the street. Hundreds of people rush by, barely noticing, seemingly habituated to the surrounding decay.

'If some rich white people help us, maybe we will be protected,' Biloke says, bending over her stall. 'But even if we die, will anyone care? I don't think so.'"

 

Azerbaidzanissa kuollut joukko ihmisiä linturuttoon

"Azerbaijan investigating possible family cluster of bird flu cases, WHO says

Canadian Press
Published: Saturday, March 11, 2006
GENEVA (CP) - Health authorities in Azerbaijan are investigating a worrisome cluster of possible human cases of H5N1 avian influenza, the World Health Organization said Thursday.
A total of 11 suspected cases, including eight members of the same family, are being assessed, WHO spokeswoman Maria Cheng said.

Of the 11 suspect cases, three people have died and one is listed in serious condition in hospital.

'Currently there are signs that suggest this could be a human H5N1 cluster,' Cheng said. 'But we don't know that right now. We still need to do more thorough epidemiological investigation and wait for the lab results.'

'It certainly looks a bit suspicious, but we don't have enough information to draw conclusions.'---"

 

Kymmeniä ihmisiä ja sikoja kuollut Kongossa

Toivottavasti länsimailta riittää rahaa tällaisten tapausten varmistamiseen. Varsinkin, kun osa Eurooppaankin kevään aikana muuttavista linnuista tulee samoilta alueilta.

"Deaths from unidentified infection in DR Congo
-----------------------------------------------------
A Congolese friend forwarded me the following message (concise translation
from the French): "More than eighty (80) people died recently in villages
situated in the sectors of Lueta and Kabelekese, territory of Lwiza, in the
Congolese province of west-Kasai, after eating meat from contaminated pigs.
The lack of veterinary products makes it virtually impossible for the local
competent authorities to intervene. The contaminated pigs seem to have high
fever and diarrea and die within a few hours.
I hope someone can confirm the correctness of this message.
Fernand Lambein
----
[Could anybody confirm the above information on the human and/or animal
mortality (which might not necessarily be interelated)?
In case affirmative -- any available diagnostic data, or at least
description of the clinical symptoms and observed gross-pathological
changes, will be appreciated. - Mod.AS]
[see also:
2003
African swine fever - Congo DR: OIE 20030428.1041]
----------------------dk"

 

Kissat saattavat levittää tautia oireettomina?

"Roundup: HK scientists urge checks on sick cats for bird flu
---
Paul Chan, a professor of microbiology from the Chinese University of
Hong Kong, said people should not ignore the occurrence of the virus
in felines.

"The infection of cats is not a brand new finding, but there is some
data to suggest that birds can be infected without symptoms. So if
these cats are infected without symptoms, and if they can spread the
virus, this can lead to a very different situation," Chan said.

"We are not sure if (the virus) can spread between cats, but we
better assume it can," he added."

 

Jyrsijöissäkin linturuttoa

Jos hiiret ja rotat alkavat levittää linturuttoa, ei ole enää yhtään kivaa - ainakaan rivitalo- ja omakotitaloasujilla eikä mökkiläisillä.

"BIRD FLU - With the infection of a weasel by H5N1 of the bird flu in Germany, and several cases brought back by cats infected by the same virus in Germany and in Austria, is it necessary to fear even more H5N1 which touches certain mammals?

The infection of a new kind of mammal, the weasel, by the virus H5N1 of the bird flu was officially confirmed this week in Germany. This observation is the first infection researched by this kind by a virus of the bird flu. It had before been confirmed at domestic cats in Germany and in Austria.

This weasel was found living, but very ill, on March 2nd on the island of Rügen, in the Baltic Sea. It was euthanasiée. Tests performed in the German Institute of animal health Friedrich Loeffler confirmed the infection by the virus H5N1 of the bird flu.

Bird flu H5N1 infects a weasel after the cats

The ill weasel been discovered in the same very affected zone by the bird flu of the island of Rügen. It is in this zone where three domestic cats had been found died, near Schaprode. Tests performed in the Institute Friedrich Loeffler confirmed later that these three cats had been infected by the very pathogenic virus H5N1. The weasel is a nocturnal predator with the same food habits as with the domestic cat. They assume that following the example of the cats of Rügen, the weasel contracted the infection by feeding on a body of bird infected by H5N1.

Since February 16th, German authorities confirmed the infection to H5N1 on 125 swans, ducks, wild gooses and predatory birds on the island of Rügen, what points out important possibilities of exhibition of the small mammals which feed on bodies of birds. As for the man, the infection of other animal kinds than birds is a rare event. This day, alone the domestic fowl played a role proved to be in the transmission of the virus to the man.

In July, 2005, tests performed on three chives cabbage palms of Owston died in captivity in the Vietnam allowed to disclose an infection in the virus H5N1 of the bird flu, what marked the first case known by infection in this rare kind. The big feline, notably the tigers and panthères, kept in captivity and nourished on carcasses of chickens, were also infected and developed in serious forms of illness. They also know that ferrets and other kinds of mammals are sensitive to this illness.

For the WHO, it will be necessary to make new studies to know if the pollution of a new kind of mammal by the virus H5N1 has an impact on risk as the man to contract the infection or on the potential of adaptation of the virus to mammals, of which the man. In effect, Mr for the Institute Pastor, « the spread of the infection to birds augments the likelihood of the appearance of a new influenzal virus in the human population. As all influenzal viruses of type A, the subcategory H5N1 has a big capacity to be transferred in the course of time, but also to exchange its genes with influenzal viruses belonging to other infectious subcategories of other kinds », nothing is less sure since it is other animal kinds which meet holders of the virus H5N1 of the bird flu."

Kaupunkilaisrotta

 

Pulurutto muistuttaa kaupallista projektia

www.regnum.ru -sivuilla kirjoitetaan osuvasti:

"Russian Academician: bird flu resembles commercial project

Director of State Research Flu Institute of Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, RAMS academician, Professor Oleg Kiselyov believes, that “bird flu somehow resembles commercial project.” According to a REGNUM correspondent, Kiselyov stated it on March 2 at Russian-Italian conference of infection decease doctors in Veliky Novgorod.

“Panic, in many respects artificially caused by mass-media, resulted in spending within shortest time huge resources for vaccine. But in addition to general vaccination it is necessary to determine reasons of bird flu appearance, as well as similar virus infections,” stated Kiselyov. He pointed out, that researches determined several causes of virus appearance: huge overpopulation of country — nidus of infection (in China density of population totals to 50,000 persons per square kilometer) and immediate vicinity of domestic animals with migrant birds.

“An illustrative example for this is situation, when contacts of poultry with nesting migrant birds in natural reservoirs of China’s provinces resulted in nidus of bird flu infection,” told Kiselyov. He stressed, that specialists continue to struggle with the infection and to research virus quality to change and to overcome inter-species barriers.

It should be reminded, that on March 2, 2nd Russian-Italian Conference on Actual Questions of Socially Important Virus Infections began, organized by Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, North-West Department of RAMS, Representative Office of Russian Ministry of Health and Social Development in North-West Federal District, Committee of Populations’ Health Protection of Novgorod Region, Russian-Italian Society of Infectiologists."

 

"Suspect Fatal Familial Clusters of H5N1 in Azerbaijan Grow"

 

Linturuton epäillään levinneen ihmisestä toiseen

Kokonainen perhe sairastunut:
Recombinomics Commentary
March 4, 2006:
A Fatal Familial Cluster of H5N1 Bird Flu in Azerbaijan Is Likely

 

Suomessa ei tutkita alle viittä kuollutta lintua H5N1:n varalta

Eläinlääkintä- ja elintarviketutkimuslaitoksen (EELA) 7.2.2006 virkaeläinlääkäreille antamia ohjeita villilintujen näytteenotosta lintuinfluenssaa epäiltäessä:

"Yksittäisiä kuolleita tai sairastuneita luonnonvaraisia lintuja ei nykytilanteessa katsota tarpeelliseksi tutkia lintuinfluenssan varalta. Muita luonnonlintujen kuolinsyytutkimuksia tehdään edelleen EELAn Oulun alueyksikössä. Luonnonvaraisten lintujen joukkokuolemista on kehotettu ottamaan yhteyttä alueen virkaeläinlääkäriin, joka arvioi tilanteen. Joukkokuolemaksi voidaan katsoa esim. viiden joutsenen tai yli kymmenen muun kuolleen linnun löytyminen samalta alueelta. Jos kunnaneläinlääkäri katsoo, että linnut on syytä tutkia lintuinfluenssan varalta, tulee ottaa yhteyttä läänineläinlääkäriin."

 

Teille vai meille?

"Det är oklart varifrån de döda viggarna har kommit till Sverige. -Antagligen från västra Ryssland, säger fågelinfluensaforskaren Björn Olsen." www.svt.se, 1 mars 2006.

Sama vapaasti suomennettuna:
"On epäselvää, mistä kuolleet tukkasotkat ovat tulleet Ruotsiin. -Luultavasti Länsi-Venäjältä, sanoo lintuinfluenssatutkija Björn Olsen."
________

Kuulemma Suomessa on jo lintuinfluenssaa, mutta emme vain ole löytäneet sitä.
"Vigg" on suomeksi tukkasotka. Tukkasotkat kuuluvat sorsalintuihin.

Tukkasotkapariskunta

 

Polttaa, polttaa...

On varsin erikoista, ettei Suomesta ole vieläkään löydetty yhtään H5N1-tapausta, vaikka Suomi alkaa olla saarrettuna sen suhteen sekä idästä että lännestä. Luulisi, että meillä on edes sen verran asialliset kontrollointitavat, että havaitsemme taudin varhaisessa vaiheessa sen saapuessa.

Toisaalta diagnoosia ei nopeuttane se, ettei kuolleita lintuja edes tutkita, ellei kyse ole yli kymmenen linnun joukkokuolemasta.

 

Lintuinfluenssan liikkeet

"Lintuinfluenssan leviäminen Kaakkois-Aasian ulkopuolelle tapahtui näennäisen nopeasti vuoden 2005 aikana. Tämä näkyy mm. BBC Newsin lintujen päämuuttosuuntia ja taudin leviämistä kuvaavista kartoista. Mitään suoraa länsi-itä -suuntaista luonnonvaraisten lintujen liikettä, joka sopisi yhteen taudin leviämisen kanssa ei ole", kirjoitetaan Turun yliopiston verkkosivuilla.

Kun BBC:n karttoja vertaa Transsiberian-junareittiin ja siitä Etelä-Aasiaan suuntautuvien pääjunaratojen reitteihin, voi tulla mieleen, että ehkä lintuinfluenssa ei levinnytkään alkujaan muuttolintujen mukana läheskään niin voimakkaasti kuin junalla kulkevien ihmisten mukana. Transsiberian-rata on merkittävä kauppareitti Venäjän, Mongolian, Kiinan ja Kazakhstanin välillä.

Kuvan Kiinaan suuntaavilla kauppamatkalaisilla ei liene mitään tekemistä H5N1:n kanssa. Kuva on otettu Moskovasta noin 200 km sijaitsevalla Vladimirin asemalla.

Kuvat on lainattu Way to Russian verkkosivuilta.

 

WHO:n arvio nykyisten H5N1-mutaatioiden merkityksestä

"Avian influenza: significance of mutations in the H5N1 virus

20 February 2006

Several recent media reports have included speculations about the significance of mutations in H5N1 avian influenza viruses. Some reports have suggested that the likelihood of another pandemic may have increased as a result of changes in the virus.
Since 1997, when the first human infections with the H5N1 avian influenza virus were documented, the virus has undergone a number of changes.
These changes have affected patterns of virus transmission and spread among domestic and wild birds. They have not, however, had any discernible impact on the disease in humans, including its modes of transmission. Human infections remain a rare event. The virus does not spread easily from birds to humans or readily from person to person.
Influenza viruses are inherently unstable. As these viruses lack a genetic proof-reading mechanism, small errors that occur when the virus copies itself go undetected and uncorrected. Specific mutations and evolution in influenza viruses cannot be predicted, making it difficult if not impossible to know if or when a virus such as H5N1 might acquire the properties needed to spread easily and sustainably among humans. This difficulty is increased by the present lack of understanding concerning which specific mutations would lead to increased transmissibility of the virus among humans.

Animal viruses

Virtually all the known subtypes of influenza A viruses circulate in some wild birds, most notably wild waterfowl. In these birds, different viruses constantly mingle with each other and frequently exchange genetic material, resulting in a huge pool of constantly changing viruses. Mutations and reassortment events are commonly observed in the affected bird populations.
In animals, some recent evolutionary changes in the H5N1 virus appear to have made control efforts more difficult and further international spread of the virus in birds more likely. Such changes are fully understandable, particularly in view of the exceptionally large number of birds that have been infected with the H5N1 virus and the frequent interactions between infected free-ranging poultry and wild waterfowl.
Studies have shown that H5N1 viruses from the current outbreaks, when compared with viruses from 1997 and 2003, have become progressively more lethal in experimentally infected chickens and mice, and are also hardier, surviving several days longer in the environment. Other studies have shown that the virus is not yet fully adapted to poultry and is continuing to evolve.
Domestic ducks have acquired an ability to resist the disease caused by some strains, and are now capable of excreting large quantities of highly pathogenic virus without showing the warning signs of illness. In endemic countries, this altered role of domestic ducks is now thought to contribute to perpetuation of the transmission cycle. Research conducted in South-east Asia has recently shown that multiple distinct lineages of H5N1 virus have become established in poultry in different geographical regions, indicating the long-term endemicity of the virus in parts of Asia. That research also detected highly pathogenic H5N1 virus in apparently healthy migratory birds.
In birds, one important recent finding has been the remarkable similarity of viruses from recent outbreaks to those isolated from migratory birds that began dying at the Qinghai Lake nature reserve in central China in late April 2005. Evidence is mounting that this event, which resulted in the deaths of more than 6,000 wild birds, signalled an important change in the way the virus interacts with its natural reservoir host.
Unlike the case with mutations of human viruses (some of which have been transient), it appears that some changes have become fixed in viruses circulating in at least some species of wild birds.
Prior to the Qinghai Lake event, the highly pathogenic H5N1 virus was known to cause occasional sporadic deaths in migratory waterfowl, but not to kill them in large numbers or be carried by them over long distances.
Viruses from Qinghai Lake showed a distinctive mutation at one site experimentally associated with greater lethality in birds and mice. Viruses from the most recent outbreaks, in Nigeria, Iraq, and Turkey, as well as from earlier outbreaks in Russia, Kazakhstan, and Mongolia, are virtually identical to Qinghai Lake viruses.
It is considered unusual for an avian influenza virus causing outbreaks in birds to remain this genetically stable over so many months. This finding raises the possibility that the virus – in its highly pathogenic form – has now adapted to at least some species of migratory waterfowl and is co-existing with these birds in evolutionary equilibrium, causing no apparent harm, and travelling with these birds along their migratory routes.
If further research verifies this hypothesis, re-introduction of the virus or spread to new geographical areas can be anticipated when migratory birds begin returning to their breeding areas.
The recent appearance of the virus in birds in a rapidly growing number of countries is of public health concern, as it expands opportunities for human exposures and infections to occur. These opportunities increase when the virus spreads from wild to domestic birds, especially when these birds are kept as backyard flocks in close proximity to humans..
To date, no human cases have been linked to exposure to wild birds. Close contact with infected poultry and other domestic birds remains the most important source of human infections.


Human viruses


Some mutations have been detected in human viruses isolated in 2005 and, most recently, in one virus isolated from a fatal case in the January 2006 outbreak in Turkey. Although these mutations were found at the receptor-binding site and involved the substitution of more mammalian-like amino acids, the effect of these changes on transmissibility of the virus, either from birds to humans or from one person to another, is not fully understood. Moreover, recent studies show that these mutations were transient and did not become fixed in the circulating viruses.
Scientists do not presently know which specific mutations are needed to make the H5N1 virus easily and sustainably transmissible among humans. For example, it is not known whether the absence of a specific receptor in humans for this purely avian virus is responsible for the present lack of efficient human-to-human transmission. For this reason, virological evidence of mutational changes must be assessed together with epidemiological information about transmission patterns actually occurring in human populations. This necessity further underscores the importance of close surveillance and thorough investigation during every outbreak involving human cases.
Assessments of the outbreak in Turkey, conducted by WHO investigative teams, have produced no convincing evidence that mutations have altered the epidemiology of the disease in humans, which was similar to the pattern consistently seen in affected parts of Asia. There is no evidence, at present, from any outbreak site that the virus has increased its ability to spread easily from one person to another."

 

300 metrin läheisyys

Tässä hyvin kirjoitettu H5N1-kommentti.

Kannattaa lukea myös tämä:
"Malaysia
Date: Sat 25 Feb 2006
From: Mary Marshall
Source: MediaCprp News, Agence France Presse (AFP) report, Sat 25 Feb 2006
---[edited]---
5 people have been quarantined in Malaysia with suspected avian influenza
as chicken sales plunged 30 per cent following a new outbreak of the deadly
H5N1 virus, officials said on Saturday [25 Feb 2006]. Ramlee Rahmat,
director of the health ministry's disease control division, said 5 people
were admitted to hospital for observation late Friday [24 Feb 2006]. "5
people with symptoms -- high temperature and respiratory infection -- were
taken in for observation late Friday. The results will be known Sunday," he
told AFP.
Ramlee said the 5 -- 3 children and 2 adults -- were aged between 4 and 44
years. "They live some 300 metres from one of the outbreak areas," he said.
No human cases have so far been reported in Malaysia, which last reported
the H5N1 virus in a chicken in the northern state of Kelantan in 2004.
Lee Chong Meng, adviser to the Selangor and Federal Territory Poultry
Traders Association, told AFP that at a meeting 2 days ago, that chicken
dealers said sales had plunged 30 per cent in West Malaysia. Lee said
commercial farms in West Malaysia produce some 35 million chickens a month
for domestic demand and the usual daily consumption is 1.2 million
chickens. "Following the outbreak, people are avoiding chicken. There are
about 300 000 chickens in surplus supply daily now," he said. Lee said the
fall in demand was a concern to the country's poultry industry which
employs thousands of workers. "If the situation continues it will cause
heavy losses to commercial farm owners," he said.
On Monday, Malaysia confirmed its 1st outbreak of avian influenza in more
than a year after 40 free range chickens died in 4 villages near Kuala
Lumpur. An initial group of 10 people from the affected villages who were
hospitalised late Tuesday complaining of flu symptoms and respiratory
problems have all tested negative for the virus [see: Avian influenza,
human - worldwide (15): S.Korea, Malaysia 20060224.0603].
Mary Marshall"

__________________________

Eli jos joku vielä väittää, että pitäisi laittaa linnunsulkia suuhun ennen kuin tauti tarttuu, kehotan lukemaan oheisen tekstin tarkemmin. Näille sairastuneille ei riittänyt turvaksi 300 metrin välimatka.

 

Eurooppa ei ole kunnolla valmistautunut H5N1:n tuloon

Lyhyesti suomeksi:
Itävaltalainen virkailija varoitti Euroopan läiskittäisestä valmistautumisesta lintuinfluenssaan. Itävallan terveysministeri Maria Rauch-Kallat sanoi torstaina 23.2.06, että eurooppalaisten hallitusten valmius toimia H5N1-pandemian aikana on epätasaista, ja että on toimittava näiden valmiuksien saattamisessa asiallisten standardien mukaisiksi. H5N1 on jo levinnyt yhteentoista (25.2.2006) Euroopan maahan.

France hints at 1st case of H5N1 bird flu
Published February 24, 2006

France said Thursday that it may have found its first case of the virulent H5N1 bird flu virus in domestic birds while an Austrian official warned of spotty European preparation for a possible outbreak.
European Union prepared for urgent talks Friday on how to battle the disease, which has spread over the past year from Asia to Africa and Europe.
Austrian Health Minister Maria Rauch-Kallat said Thursday that governments' readiness to deal with a bird flu pandemic in Europe was uneven and that steps must be taken to bring them to appropriate standards.
The H5N1 flu strain has already spread to 10 European countries.

___________

Ranskan hallitus määräsi viime viikolla kaiken siipikarjan pidettäväksi sisätiloissa ja osan rokotettavaksi. Määräysten rikkomisesta voi saada 750 euron sakon:

Last week, the French government ordered all domestic birds indoors or, in a few regions, vaccinated in a bid to halt bird flu. Violators could face fines of up to 750 euros ($895).

 

Tuodaanko Suomeen yhä lintutuotteita Ranskasta?

Suomeksi lyhyesti: Noin 9000 kalkkunaa kuollut ranskalaistilalla. Nykyiset turvatoimet turvallisuusvyöhykkeiden (3 km ja 7 km) sisällä eivät riitä. Ranska aikoo ottaa riskin lisämutaatioiden aiheuttamisesta virukseen ja rokottaa osan kasvatetuista linnuistaan.

"France confirms H5N1 bird flu found at turkey farm
Sat Feb 25, 2006 1:41 AM GMT6

By David Evans

PARIS (Reuters) - France on Saturday confirmed the presence of the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu at a farm in the east of the country where thousands of turkeys had died. It was the first case of the virus in domestic farm birds in the European Union and threatened to deal a severe blow to France's struggling poultry industry, worth 6 billion euros ($7 billion) a year and the biggest in the bloc.
The outbreak was discovered on Thursday at the farm with 11,000 turkeys in the Ain department, where two cases of H5N1 had already been confirmed in wild ducks. Laboratory tests by Afssa, France's national agency for nutritional safety, showed the virus found at the turkey farm was 99 percent homologous with that found in one of the ducks, the Agriculture Ministry said in a statement. An investigation was under way to establish how the farm became contaminated with the virus, the ministry added.
"What worries us, and this is why we have reacted immediately, is that the farm is within the protection zone that we set up for the first duck," Farm Minister Dominique Bussereau told French television on Friday, when the authorities were testing for the virus.
Poultry sales in France are already down by about 30 percent. The industry received another blow on Friday when Japan's embassy in Paris said Tokyo had imposed a temporary ban on imports of French poultry products after bird flu was found at the turkey farm. "In France they have found a farm-raised fowl contaminated with the virus. It's Japan's policy to ban poultry imports" from countries hit by bird flu, an embassy spokesman said, adding that the ban was temporary and would take effect immediately.
The deadly virus is highly contagious among poultry and can spread through an entire flock within hours. It remains difficult for humans to catch but has killed more than 90 people worldwide. Experts say cooked poultry meat is safe to eat. The virus has spread from Asia to Africa, and experts fear poultry in more regions around the world could soon be infected.

SECURITY ZONE

Local sources said about 80 percent of the turkeys at the French farm, in a region famous for the quality of its chickens, had died. The remaining birds were culled.
A security zone of three km (two miles) and a surveillance zone of seven km (five miles) had been set up around the farm as is usual under EU emergency measures, officials said. Under EU rules, poultry meat, eggs and products from the zones set up around a bird flu infection site are blocked from the market, except for certain products that meet stringent conditions, such as heat-treated meat.However, trade in these products may continue from other non-affected parts of the country.
French Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin has announced an aid package for the sector worth 52 million euros. He travelled to Lyon on Friday, where authorities held a bird flu simulation exercise focussed on the potential arrival of infected people on a plane from a bird flu-hit region.
France has permission from the EU for a limited vaccination programme in geese and ducks in three departments in the west of the country believed to be at risk from migratory birds. Bussereau said two of the departments had decided to opt for the confinement of fowl rather than vaccination."

__________________________________

BBC:n uutinen tapahtumista:

"France confirms bird flu strain

France has confirmed the deadly bird flu virus H5N1 has been found on a turkey farm in the east of the country.

It is the first time a European Union farm has been infected. France has already had cases in two wild ducks. About 80% of more than 11,000 birds at the farm have died in the past week, and the rest have been culled.
Despite assurances that cooked poultry is safe, sales in France have fallen by 30%, and Japan has announced an import ban with immediate effect.
France, Europe's largest poultry producer, is to start vaccinating millions of birds against bird flu to try to protect its 7bn euros ($6bn) a year poultry industry.

In other developments:
* A 27-year-old woman becomes Indonesia's 20th human to die from bird flu, the health ministry there reports
* Chickens at a poultry farm in Gujarat, India, develop bird flu but officials say it is not clear if they are carrying the H5N1 virus.
* Slovakia confirms its first cases of H5N1 in a wild falcon and a grebe. --"

__________________________________
CNN:n uutinen tapahtumista:

France tests turkeys for H5N1 flu

"-- A veterinarian who suspected bird flu at the turkey farm raised the alarm Thursday morning after a high death rate was observed, the ministry said in a statement. A local official said up to 90 percent of the turkeys died. The official, not allowed to speak publicly on the issue, asked not to be identified by name.

The farm's residents were forbidden to leave unless necessary. A system to disinfect vehicles was being set up and protective equipment furnished to the farmer and officials working in the zone, the ministry said. --"

 

H5N1-rokote ollut tehokas hiiritutkimuksissa.

Lancet. 2006 Feb 11;367(9509):475-81.

Development of adenoviral-vector-based pandemic influenza vaccine against antigenically distinct human H5N1 strains in mice.

"Hoelscher MA, Garg S, Bangari DS, Belser JA, Lu X, Stephenson I, Bright RA, Katz JM, Mittal SK, Sambhara S.

Influenza Branch, Division of Rickettsial and Viral Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA 30333, USA.

INTRODUCTION: Avian H5N1 influenza viruses currently circulating in southeast Asia could potentially cause the next pandemic. However, currently licensed human vaccines are subtype-specific and do not protect against these H5N1 viruses. We aimed to develop an influenza vaccine and assessed its immunogenicity and efficacy to confer protection in BALB/c mice. METHODS: We developed an egg-independent strategy to combat the avian influenza virus, because the virus is highly lethal to chickens and the maintenance of a constant supply of embryonated eggs would be difficult in a pandemic. We used a replication-incompetent, human adenoviral-vector-based, haemagglutinin subtype 5 influenza vaccine (HAd-H5HA), which induces both humoral and cell-mediated immune responses against avian H5N1 influenza viruses isolated from people. FINDINGS: Immunisation of mice with HAd-H5HA provided effective protection from H5N1 disease, death, and primary viral replication (p<0.0001) against antigenically distinct strains of H5N1 influenza viruses. Unlike the recombinant H5HA vaccine, which is based on a traditional subunit vaccine approach, HAd-H5HA vaccine induced a three-fold to eight-fold increase in HA-518-epitope-specific interferon-gamma-secreting CD8 T cells (p=0.01). INTERPRETATION: Our findings highlight the potential of an Ad-vector-based delivery system, which is both egg-independent and adjuvant-independent and offers stockpiling options for the development of a pandemic influenza vaccine."

Meaning that at least a part of the world's mouse population can be protected with this vaccination... :)
Hopefully it's effective also when immuinizing humans.

Eli ainakin osa maailman hiiristä saadaan haluttaessa suojattua H5N1:ltä... :)
Toivottavasti rokote sopii myös ihmisille.

 

Linturuttoa Pohjois-Saksan kasvatetuissa ankkaparvissa.

www.chinaview.cn kirjoittaa:

"BERLIN, Feb. 23 (Xinhuanet) -- Germany has for the first time detected the highly pathogenic H5N1 strain of bird flu in domestic flocks in the northern state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, a state spokeswoman said Thursday.

A duck has initially tested positive for the deadly H5N1 bird flu virus and the final results are expected Thursday afternoon.

More than 100 wild birds have already been confirmed to have had the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu in the state."

 

Flu pandemic 'two mutations away'

H5N1 on vain kahden mutaation päässä sellaisesta muodosta, jossa se on yhtä tappava kuin nykyään, mutta tarttuu ihmisestä toiseen helposti kuten tavalliset influenssat:

"Saturday 11 February 2006, 16:
The bird flu virus is only two mutations away from a form that can spread easily between people, sparking a pandemic in which millions could die.
Dr David Nabarro, who heads the UN drive to contain the virus, told weekly Portuguese newspaper Expresso that 'only two mutations are needed for it to become easily transmissible among humans'.
---
'I wake up every morning thinking that today could be the day that I will see a report about a strange case of bird flu among humans,' he said in the interview published on Saturday.
---
The H5N1 bird flu virus has killed tens of millions of birds since 2003, and there have been at least 165 confirmed cases of the strain spreading to humans, causing about 90 deaths, mostly in Asia.
---
Nabarro said he had told governments around the world to prepare for the arrival of a human-to-human strain of the virus 'as if this will happen tomorrow'."

 



H5N1-tapaukset eläimillä 17.2.2006
Kuva lainattu CDC:n verkkosivuilta.

 

Intiassa H5N1-virusta ihmisillä?

Khaleej Times Online

"India to begin testing humans for H5N1
(AP)
19 February 2006

BOMBAY - Scientists in India were planning on Sunday to test an unspecified number of people who have reported flu-like symptoms in an area where the country recently reported its first outbreak of bird flu among poultry, an official said.
At least 30,000 chickens have died in Navapur, a major poultry-farming region in western Maharashtra state, over the past two weeks, Anees Ahmed, the state minister for animal husbandry said on Saturday.
Lab tests had confirmed that at least some of those chickens were infected with the H5N1 strain, he said. The viral strain has killed 91 people since 2003, most of them in Asia.
---
Poultry farmers were distraught. “Most farmers still can’t believe the news and are hoping the lab tests confirming bird flu are wrong,” said Ghulam Vhora, member of a Navapur poultry farmers’ association.
“We are looking at a very difficult future. All of us will have to start again from scratch, and I don’t know how many of us will survive,” Vhora said.
Meanwhile, a scientist said an unknown number of people in the area were reported to be suffering from flu and fever, though there was no immediate indication they had contracted bird flu.
Milind Gore, the deputy director of the National Institute of Virology in Pune, which is approved by the World Health Organization, said scientists there would begin testing samples Sunday given by people suffering from flu-like symptoms.
---"

 

Pandemiasta podcasteissa

MARINA's Pandemic Podcastissa haastatellaan asiantuntijoita lintuinfluenssasta.

 

Jos lentäisin joutsenten lailla...

Lintuinfluenssa.com -sivulla kerrottua 16.2.2006:
"Myötäisellä tuulella toistakymmenkiloinen joutsen voi lentää hyvinkin nopeasti. Historiallinen tapaus vuodelta 1967 osoittaa joutsenparven lentäneen yli kahdeksan kilometrin korkeudessa myötätuulessa 200km/h nopeudella Islannista Irlantiin seitsemässä tunnissa! Normaalisti joutsenet lentävät kuitenkin hitaammin ja lyhyempinä kertamatkoina, mutta esimerkiksi Keskisuomalaisen tämänpäiväinen arvio siitä, että tautialueilta voisi tulla lintuja Keski-Suomeen jo ensi viikolla ei liene ainakaan käytännössä mahdotonta."



Kyhmyjoutsen (Cygnus olor)

Tämä kauneus on lainattu sivulta: www.jtenovuo.com

 

Köyhän miehen kanaa II

Tuleekohan näitä Suomeenkin?

Linkin teksti erittäin vapaasti suomennettuna:

"Influenssan pelästyttämät kanat täyttävät brittimarkkinat
- Valerie Elliot, Kuluttajatoimitus
www.timesonline.co.uk

HALPAA kanaa saapuu valtavin määrin Brittein saarille Manner-Euroopasta, missä villilintuihin levinnyt tappava lintuinfluenssavirus on aiheuttanut pudotuksen myynnissä.

Ylimääräistä lihaa tulee pääasiassa Italiasta, missä myynti on pienentynyt 70 %, sekä Saksasta ja Ranskasta, joissa molemmissa myynti on notkahtanut 20 %. Sitä myydään brittiläisille tukkukauppiaille, jotka myyvät lihan eteenpäin pubeihin, ravintoloihin, pikaruokaloihin, kahviloihin ja voileipäbaareihin. Jotkut kokonaiset kanat ja kanankoivet päätyvät supermarkettien alennustiskeille.

Tätä halpaa kanaa ei ole myytävänä johtavissa kauppaketjuissa eikä ravintolaketjuissa kuten KFC:ssä tai McDonald´sissa, jotka tekevät tavarantoimittajien kanssa pitkäaikaisia sopimuksia. Osa halvasta kanasta päätyy piirakka- ja einesteollisuuden raaka-aineeksi.

Halpa tuontiliha on isku Britannian 2500 kanankasvattajalle. Myyjät kertoivat eilen, että osa kokonaisena myytävistä kanoista, joiden viimeinen käyttöpäivä lähestyy, on myyty 37 pencellä tai 38 pencellä paunalta. Britanniassa tuottajan täytyy myydä kanansa vähintään 54,5 p:llä paunalta saadakseen omansa takaisin, vaikka jo nyt monet hyväksyvät niinkin pienen hinnan kuin 49,5 p:ä paunalta. Tuontikanan hinta Britanniassa putosi alle 40 p:a paunalta 24 tunnissa.

Italialaiset vaikuttavat olevan eniten huolissaan siitä, että saisivat H5N1:n kanoista. Italialaisen maanviljelijöiden yhdistyksen, Coldirettin teettämän kyselytutkimuksen mukaan 83 % italialaisista on varuillaan viruksen vuoksi; muissa EU-maissa vastaava luku on noin 67 %.

Italian linnunlihanjalostusala on menettänyt noin 480 miljoonaa puntaa sen jälkeen, kun H5N1 varmistettiin viime perjantaina sisilialaisesta linnusta, ja 30 000 työntekijää 180 000:sta on menettänyt työpaikkansa.

Paolo Bruni, Italian maatalousalan liiton johtaja sanoi: "Olemme lähellä romahdusta." Brittiläisiä kuluttajia neuvotaan ostamaan sellaista siipikarjan lihaa, jonka kotimaisuus on varmistettu Union Jack- tai brittiläistilan punainen traktori -merkillä.

Charles Bourns, Kansallisen maatalousunionin siipikarjaosaston puheenjohtaja, sanoi: "Jo nyt on pulaa kotimaisesta kananlihasta, ja markkinoille mahtuisi lisää ulkomaisia tuotteita muualta Euroopasta. Mutta meidän ei pidä suostua tämän halvan lihan kaatopaikaksi."

Peter Bradnock, Brittiläisen siipikarjaviraston toiminnanjohtaja, sanoi: "Jo nyt on siipikarjan lihaa suurille supermarketeille myyvillä tuottajilla vaikeaa, kun ostajat pitävät hintoja alhaalla. Osa tuottajista joutunee vähentämään tuotantoaan."

Siipikarja-alan ihmiset uskovat, että brittiläisenkin kananlihan hinnat saattavat pudota jo ensi viikolla."

 

Nigerian terveisiä

"Panic selling spreading H5N1
15/02/2006 13:47 - (SA)
Aminu Abubakar

Kano - Nigeria's chief veterinary expert on Tuesday warned that panic selling of chickens was fuelling a growing epidemic of bird flu as fresh outbreaks were reported in Africa's most populous country.
---
Dr Lami Lombin, director of the National Veterinary Research Institute, said distress sales by poultry farmers were exacerbating the situation in the sprawling nation, where the disease has thus far been confined to the north.
---
When asked if there could already have been some undetected cases among humans, Mohammed Belhocine, the Nigeria country chief for the World Health Organisation said it could be a possibility as Nigeria "is a country of 130 million people, with zones difficult to access and with varying cultures, like Islam, whose followers bury their dead the same day."
---
Officials in Jigawa and Borno states in the north of the country, where there have been as yet no confirmed cases, said that farmers were dumping chickens on the market
---"

 

Suomi reagoi aika hitaasti

Minkähän takia kaupungeista ei ole hävitetty toripuluja. Se olisi olosuhteisiin nähden helppo tapa estää H5N1:n leviäminen kaupunkeihin. Mutta jos odotetaan, kunnes tauti on Suomessa, on liian myöhäistä hävittää lintuja, koska kaikkia tartunnan saaneita ei kuitenkaan enää saada kiinni. On aina helpompi ennaltaehkäistä kuin kerätä kaikkia maailman tuuliin pöllähtäneitä höyheniä.

Pidän linnuista, eikä tällainen toimintatapa kuulosta mukavalta, mutta eipä vaihtoehtokaan kovin mukava ole.



Toripulu
(Columba livia)

 

Köyhän miehen kanaa I


BBC:n sivuilta lainattua:

"Nigerian bird farmer warns of health risks

A Nigerian poultry farmer Auwalu Haruna, 45, from the state of Kano tells the BBC News website his fears following news that the deadly strain of bird flu, H5N1, has been found in the neighbouring northern state of Kaduna.
Poultry in northern Nigeria were confirmed to be carrying the bird flu virus on Wednesday (Feb 8, 2006).
---
About 14 days ago the problems began.
Signs appeared on different farms - there was a general sickness among birds.
---
In my country we have lots of farms, I am very worried that this will spread Fsiplene Mnarpe, Swaziland.
First it was noticed among birds in Kaduna state. Then it started showing in our state, Kano. At least 20 farmers here have been affected. So far, more than 60,000 birds have died. Maybe now it is more than that, maybe 70,000 or even 80,000.
---
As farmers we are worried because we are in an area of the world where our government is very slow to respond. In fact they can be irresponsible. We are not impressed - we are still waiting for the affected farms round here to be quarantined. We deserve that action at least. The area deserves it. The nation deserves it.
What would happen in the UK if it was discovered there?
---
Here, the farmers have been killing their sick birds.

The dead birds are being sent to market to be sold as meat.

It is because people are not sure if the government will assist them, compensate them, and so as they cannot make money from selling the eggs anymore they are selling the chicken meat to make up their losses.
I think that there is a 70% chance that the government will not assist us.
If bird flu reaches my farm and if my chickens die I do not know how I will move forwards.
It will destroy my whole investment. I will not meet my financial responsibilities meaning economic failure.
I will fail my family."

 

Kustannustehokkuudesta

Suomi on KTL:n mukaan hankkinut pandemian varalle 1,3 miljoonaa hoitokuuria neuramidinaasilääke oseltamiviiriä (Tamiflu) valtion varmuusvarastoon.
Toistaiseksi ei tiedetä, tehoaako lääke H5N1-viruksen aiheuttamaan tautiin yhtä hyvin kuin tavanomaiseen influenssaan. Lääke voi osalla potilaista lieventää tavanomaisen influenssan oireita ja lyhentää taudin kestoa 1-2 päivällä, mikäli hoito aloitetaan kahden vuorokauden kuluessa taudin alusta. Kaakkois-Aasiassa tehdyt H5N1:een sairastuneiden hoitokokeilut tähän mennessä eivät ole antaneet viitteitä hyvästä tehosta.

Suomessa 12.1.2006 yhden Tamiflu-kuurin hinta oli 33,30 E, eli 1,3 miljoonan kuurin hinta olisi yhteensä noin 43,3 miljoonaa euroa.

Neuramidinaasien käyttö ei estä tartunnan saamista, vaan ainoastaan mahdollisesti osalla potilaita lieventää hieman saadun taudin vaikeutta.

Toistuvasti on todistettu, että käsihygienia vähentää infektioiden leviämistä sairaalassa jopa 40 %:lla. Influenssa leviää pääosin paitsi hengitysilman kautta, myös käsien välityksellä; esimerkiksi kun ei käytetä nenäliinoja yskittäessä ja jos käsihygienia niistettäessä on heikkoa.

Jos samansuuruinen summa kuin mikä käytetään Tamiflun ostamiseen käytettäisiin käsien desinfektioaineisiin (tiettävästi noin 43.3 milj. euroa), saataisiin jokaiselle 1,3 milj. ihmiselle ostettua käsien desinfektioainetta 33,3 eurolla, millä saataisiin hyvinkin vuoden tai parinkin tarve katettua, iso osa infektioista estettyä kokonaan ja vieläpä mahdollisesti kotimaisen desinfektioaineiden tuotannon avulla. Jos käsihuuhteita ostettaisiin kaikille kansalaisille eikä vain 1,3 miljoonalle, hyödyt olisivat vielä suuremmat. Kun tuotanto on suurelta osin kotimaista, rahavirrat eivät tämän takia ohjautuisi edes pois maastamme.

 

Tiedotuksesta




Birdlife on nykyään järkevin tiedottaja, kun puhutaan linnuista ja niiden aiheuttamista vaaroista.


 

Paniikkilinkkejä



Pieni paniikki piristää päivää.

Bird influenza. Linturutto. H5N1. LI.

Mikä olisikaan ihanampaa kuin saada vapaasti hengittää.

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