[AI] Avian Flu news 03/05/05

LMonty911

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In rural Cambodia, dreaded avian influenza finds a weak spot

Saturday, March 05, 2005

By Jaems Hookway, The Wall Street Journal


PHNOM PENH, Cambodia -- On a recent afternoon, Ly Sovann sat perspiring in his stuffy office and wondered if he had an epidemic on his hands. Since word spread that a Cambodian woman in a remote village succumbed to avian influenza in January, Dr. Sovann's cellphone hasn't stopped ringing as health workers call in suspected cases of the disease.



The problem: Few here know what avian flu is or how to recognize it. That makes Dr. Sovann's job as Cambodia's chief flu-hunter at the cash-strapped Ministry of Health difficult. Worse, his emergency budget for educating this country's 13 million people about bird-flu dangers is just $2,500.



"A lot of the time the reports turn out to be diarrhea or measles," Dr. Sovann said as his phone buzzed to life again.



The long-term diagnosis may not be nearly as benign. Julie Gerberding, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, said last week that there was a real risk of Asia's bird-flu problem transforming into a global threat, comparing the danger to the 1918 flu that killed between 20 million and 40 million people. At a conference in Vietnam last week, World Health Organization regional director Shigeru Omi went further. He said: "The world is now in the gravest possible danger of a pandemic."



A close look at Cambodia suggests a worrying complication: a critical shortage here of even the most basic tools or diagnostic skills to identify the virus in the first place, much less control or treat it.



The bird-flu strain, known to scientists as H5N1, was first spotted in Hong Kong's poultry markets in 1997. Since then, the virus has become both more lethal to birds and more widespread. When the virus appeared in Vietnam, Laos and Thailand in late 2003 and early 2004, it caused around $10 billion in damage as officials ordered the destruction of millions of chickens, ducks and other domestic poultry.



Now the virus is resurging in rural Southeast Asia. Cambodia, Thailand and Vietnam have each reported outbreaks in poultry this year. Scientists say the virus has probably become entrenched here, spread by poultry traders and wandering duck populations.



Since 2003, bird flu has killed at least 46 people, with a fatality rate of about 72 percent. That compares with six people who died during the 1997 outbreak in Hong Kong. The virus still doesn't easily spread from birds to humans, nor from one human to another. But each time a person catches it, the avian flu has another chance to evolve into a more readily communicable form. That's the spark believed to have set off prior pandemics -- flu epidemics that spread and kill globally.



The risks are concrete enough that the U.S. plans to begin testing a trial vaccine manufactured by Sanofi-Aventis SA of France later this month. This week, the United Kingdom unveiled a plan to stockpile 14.6 million doses of the antiviral drug Tamiflu, which has proved effective in treating avian-flu cases.



Tracking human cases has now become a top priority for public-health officials. Any change in the virus's behavior could provide an early warning of an emerging pandemic. Catching cases early could buy critical days or weeks in which to prepare hospitals, deliver antiviral drugs and begin producing vaccines, says Klaus Stohr, head of the WHO's influenza program. In disease surveillance, he says, "every day matters."



The biggest holes in the surveillance net are in poor countries like Cambodia, where average life expectancy is 54 years. The nation has been afflicted by years of civil war and hesitant economic development. It was turned upside down by the murderous rule of the Khmer Rouge in the 1970s. Basic malnutrition and diarrhea are common, along with illnesses such as HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis.



Cambodia has struggled to join the mainstream of Asia's economy, largely on the strength of garment exports and tourism. Secluded beaches and ancient temple complexes surrounded by thick jungle attract around a million visitors a year. But an overwhelmingly rural economy and widespread corruption have hindered development.



Because of Cambodia's skeletal infrastructure, epidemiologists worry that avian flu may already be gaining unseen footholds here. Unlike outbreaks of bird-flu strains in the Netherlands and Hong Kong, which prompted massive culling of avian populations, the response in Cambodia has been far more tentative. Cambodia reported its first infected birds last month, only after the first human casualty was found.



Currently, it's unclear how widespread the H5N1 virus may be inside the country. "There may be people dying of this disease right now and we simply wouldn't know," says Laurent Ponta, a veteran medical field worker with Health Unlimited, a British charity providing basic health care in one bird-flu-affected corner of Cambodia.



Poor countries aren't the only places where viruses can take hold. Toronto's bout with severe acute respiratory syndrome in 2002 showed that germs sometimes prefer modern cities over rural settings. But limited technical resources and desperate shortage of funds make countries like Cambodia potentially productive hosts for H5N1.



Cambodia's entire federal budget in 2003 was $644 million, about $500 million of it foreign aid. The aid helps address everything from malaria outbreaks to the establishment of a functional legal system. But it is mostly earmarked for specific purposes, making it difficult to free up for unforeseen emergencies like bird flu.



Most international interest in the country remains focused on bringing former leaders of the Khmer Rouge to justice, and the United Nations is planning a tribunal in Phnom Penh. Foreign donors are being asked to pony up the estimated $56 million needed to hold the trial. Last month, Japan contributed $18.5 million to that cause.



By contrast, several Asian countries have so far received a total of $18 million in international assistance since early 2004 for bird flu, about $1 million of it to Cambodia.



Most of that money was quickly exhausted monitoring the health of poultry flocks, culling birds or compensating farmers. Dr. Sovann, 37 years old, says he's had to scrape for funds, barely raising enough to print some pamphlets and put loudspeakers in affected villages to warn people about the dangers of handling dead birds.



A fast-talking technology enthusiast, Dr. Sovann first created a do-it-yourself monitoring system two years ago, when SARS first appeared in Asia. As chief of the Ministry of Health's Disease Surveillance Bureau, he organized a group of health workers scattered across the country in preparation for that disease's arrival in Cambodia. "This is one of the strengths of Cambodians," Dr. Sovann says. "We don't have many fixed lines, so we like to use our mobile phones. We're harnessing this trend to stop these diseases."



In the end, SARS never reached Cambodia. When bird flu appeared in neighboring Vietnam in early 2004, Dr. Sovann put his phone group into action. "He's very charismatic," says Megge Miller of the WHO's Phnom Penh office, where a handful of foreign experts are based. "You can easily imagine how he talked all these people into helping."



But Dr. Sovann's improvised surveillance system is woefully thin in places. It failed to pick up Cambodia's first confirmed human victim of bird flu, a 25-year-old mother of two named Tit Sokhan.



When Ms. Sokhan first fell ill with respiratory problems in the district of Kampong Trach in January, health workers there hadn't even heard of bird flu, despite the village's heavy dependence on poultry. "We had no idea what this disease was," says Deung Sokhom, who runs a nearby health clinic.



Raising chickens is a way of life in the village, just 2.5 miles from Vietnam. Poultry provides an important source of protein in the villagers' diet and a convenient substitute for the local riel currency. Throughout the rural region, people often use bundles of live chickens tied at the feet as barter payment for major purchases.



So when valuable chickens suddenly began dying at the beginning of January, it was natural that somebody would hurry to collect them. That person was Tit Chiang, Ms. Sokhan's 14-year-old brother.



Relatives say the teenager gathered birds that had dropped dead, plucked them and prepared them for the farming family's meal. Cooking would kill any germs, but handling carcasses is risky. Oi Chanda, a cousin, said that a few days later, the youth fell ill, developing a fever and coughing violently. He died 10 days after getting sick. "We were shocked that he died so quickly," Ms. Chanda says. "He was a very healthy boy."



It's not clear whether Tit Chiang contracted bird flu. His body was cremated soon after his death according to Buddhist custom. That means no tests could be conducted to determine whether he was infected by the virus. Cooked meat isn't considered a risk, but handling sick birds is.



Dr. Sovann and WHO investigators have since concluded that Chiang's sister, Ms. Sokhan, was in close contact with his body. Several days after the teen was cremated, Ms. Sokhan also fell ill. "One theory is that she caught the virus while crying over her brother's body and preparing it for cremation," says Dr. Miller at the WHO. "But we don't really know because we couldn't test her brother."



As Ms. Sokhan's sickness worsened, her relatives took her to a nearby medical clinic. But staff there didn't know anything about bird flu and sent her home with instructions to perform a ceremony to appease the angry spirits of her ancestors.



"She performed the ceremony, but it didn't seem to make any difference. She was still sick," says Kheam Phon, Ms. Sokhan's aunt.



She decided to take her niece to a hospital in Vietnam, in the hope of getting better treatment. But it was too late. On Jan. 30, 12 days after her brother died, Ms. Sokhan also died. Tests performed by Vietnamese authorities revealed she had the H5N1 virus.



When Vietnamese doctors tipped off Dr. Sovann and his team, he drove to the village along with WHO officials to see if anybody else was ill. A cluster of several cases could be a warning sign the virus has acquired the ability to move more easily between people.



No more infections in the village were found. But the episode helped underscore for experts abroad the sizable gaps in Cambodia's surveillance network. "We only heard about it because the patient made it into Vietnam," says Dr. Stohr, the WHO influenza expert in Geneva.



If a new flu strain does emerge, theoretical models prepared by the WHO suggest it could be stopped -- but only if it's caught within the first 21 days. "A massive antiviral effort, under optimal circumstances, could extinguish the fire," Dr. Stohr says.



Dr. Sovann now plans to widen his surveillance group to include contacts at all the private health clinics and pharmacies dotting the Cambodian countryside. "These are the people on the front line," he says. "We need to educate them about bird flu so they can detect it and report it back to my office."



Dr. Sovann is also doing his best to alert local populations to the virus's dangers. He has organized the distribution of cartoon pamphlets illustrating the risks of handling dead birds in a form that illiterate farmers can understand. He is also sending volunteers around villages on motorcycles, with battered loudspeakers tied to the pillion seats warning people to keep away from dead birds. "Word of mouth seems to work best," says Dr. Sovann.



An international conference on bird flu in Vietnam's Ho Chi Minh City ended on Feb. 25 with an appeal for the international community to provide vastly increased aid to countries affected by bird flu such as Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. In their final communique, delegates said $100 million was needed to improve health-care services, and several hundred million more to restock culled poultry flocks.



Back in Kampong Trach, Dr. Sovann's efforts to publicize the dangers of bird flu are beginning to sink in. Ms. Chanda, one of Ms. Sokhan's cousins, say her family now knows not to collect and prepare dead birds for the cooking pot. "We will only eat chickens we kill ourselves," she says.



Some of her neighbors, however, are unwittingly taking other risks. Worried about the threat from dead chickens, some have switched to raising ducks instead, unaware that waterfowl can spread H5N1 in their droppings without showing any signs of illness.

"How can people avoid exposure to the virus when they don't know which ducks are infected and which ones are not?" says Dr. Omi, the WHO's western Pacific director.

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/05064/466994.stm
 

LMonty911

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http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?storyID=7815718&type=worldNews
UK scientist calls for Asian feather import ban
Sat Mar 5, 2005 07:34 AM ET

LONDON (Reuters) - Britain should ban imports of poultry feathers from Asia to safeguard against the spread of bird flu, a microbiology expert said on Saturday.
In January the European Union extended a ban on poultry imports from eight Asian nations until the end of September.

"I think there is a case for looking very seriously at feather imports and saying, well, is it wise to be bringing in feathers from countries where this bird flu virus is now pretty well out of control?" Aberdeen University's Professor Hugh Pennington told BBC Radio.

"I think the safest way is to stop it for the time being, or have a moratorium at the very least. The risk is a real one that we might be importing the avian flu virus along with the feathers."

Britain bans imports of unprocessed feathers, but allows feathers to enter the country providing the exporting country has cleaned them.

However, Pennington questioned the effectiveness of treatment procedures in Asia. "Cleansing the feathers is one thing, getting rid of the virus is another thing.

"Unless you subject them to heat and radiation you cannot be certain the virus has been killed off. I don't think you can trust the procedures in the Far East."

Despite Pennington's concerns, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) told Reuters it had no plans to implement a feather import ban.

"All imported batches from countries with disease outbreaks or restrictions are checked by border vets," said a DEFRA spokeswoman. "We do not plan to alter our requirements because we believe they are proportionate to the risk."

Earlier this week Britain said it was buying 14.6 million courses of the antiviral drug Tamiflu as part of a contingency plan against a human pandemic sparked by bird flu.

Health experts fear that the H5N1 bird flu virus that has killed 47 people in Asia could mutate into a strain easily transmitted in humans that could trigger a pandemic similar to the Spanish Flu in 1918 that killed between 20 million to 40 million people worldwide. So far, though, there is no evidence of sustained person-to-person transmission of the H5N1 virus. Medical experts suggest that around one in four people in Britain could be affected by a flu pandemic.

Without counter-measures, they estimate it could kill 50,000 or more people. Seasonal flu kills about 12,000 people each year.
 

LMonty911

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WHO backs vaccine trial in Thailand

Global community could benefit from human tests held here, it says

By Apiradee Treerutkuarkul

Experts from the World Health Organisation and the Disease Control Department want Thailand to hold joint trials of a human vaccine against the H5N1 strain of avian influenza.

Somchai Peerapakorn, a WHO health expert in Thailand, said experiments on humans were necessary to give the global community a preventive vaccine against bird flu.

``The government's desire to participate in developing a vaccine against avian flu with the United States could bring us another step closer to getting a vaccine for preventing the deadly virus,'' he said.

On Friday Public Health Minister Sudarat Keyuraphan decided in principle to hold bird flu vaccine trials on humans after an offer from the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (USCDC).

Ministry officials had told the WHO several times that the government wanted to get involved in developing a vaccine.

The Government Pharmaceutical Organisation and the National Centre for Genetic Engineering and Technology took part in a conference between the WHO and private drug companies during the ministerial meeting on bird flu last November, Dr Somchai said.

The Medical Sciences Department overseeing the vaccine study project had already discussed the safety of the vaccine and its possible clinical effectiveness with the Atlanta-based USCDC which is responsible for testing the avian flu vaccine on humans.

Any vaccine trial on humans was meant for commercial use, he said.

The process was costly and time-consuming because researchers needed to go through several steps to ensure vaccine safety and effectiveness, before and during the trial. At least two years would be needed, he added.

The WHO keeps a prototype of the H5N1 strain and would distribute it to pharmaceutical companies for developing vaccines for animal and human use. Conventional flu vaccines provide no protection against H5N1.

Thawat Sundarachan, the Disease Control Department director-general, said the bird flu vaccine trial would also help public health academics get access to scientific know-how for research and development.

The ongoing prime-boost HIV/Aids vaccine trial on humans in Chon Buri and Rayong was a good example of how academics had benefited from overseas expertise.

Thailand could become principal investigator together with the US agency and pharmaceutical companies, and gain benefits from planning HIV/Aids prevention strategy in the country.

The only part that concerned the authorities was ensuring the safety of the vaccine during trials on volunteers, said Dr Thawat.

The Disease Control Department will discuss the issue with the public health minister and the Medical Sciences Department tomorrow.
http://www.bangkokpost.com/News/06Mar2005_news19.php
 

LMonty911

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http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/500868

Hanoi Says First Preclinical Tests of Avian Influenza Vaccine Successful

By Ho Binh Minh

HANOI (Reuters) Mar 04 - Initial tests of a bird flu vaccine in monkeys in Vietnam have been successful, medical officials said on Friday, and tests in humans could be only months away.

Vietnam is the country hardest hit by an epidemic that has killed 47 people in Asia and wiped out many millions of poultry.

Vietnamese researchers injected a vaccine based on weakened H5N1 bird flu virus in three monkeys early last month and three weeks later found the monkeys were healthy and had produced antibodies.

"Researchers have repeated the injections in the monkeys and we expect results in the next two weeks," Nguyen Tran Hien, director of the National Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology, told Reuters.

Vietnam, where 14 people have died of the bird flu virus in the latest outbreak that began in December, hopes to have a vaccine ready for testing in humans later this year.

"Hopefully, in September tests will start for the vaccine on a small group of volunteers," Hoang Thuy Nguyen, head of the vaccine research group, was quoted by the state-run Tuoi Tre newspaper as saying.

Nguyen told Reuters that after the results of the repeated injection were known, researchers would need to go through several steps to ensure the safety of the vaccine before testing it on humans, most likely on the members of his group.

The Thai government said it was considering an American request that a U.S.-developed vaccine be tested on people in Thailand, which is also suffering new bird flu outbreaks although it has not reported any human infections since October.

"The study of pros and cons of testing a bird flu vaccine on humans will be submitted to the Public Health Minister for consideration on Monday," said Paijit Warachit, director-general of the Public Health Ministry's Medical Science Department.

Nguyen, asked if the next tests would include the exposure of the vaccinated monkeys to bird-flu infected chickens, said: "We are not able to conduct that type of test yet as Vietnam does not have a laboratory that is designed for such tests on animals."

Nguyen said Vietnam had only a safe laboratory designed for tests on humans and that only close cooperation with the World Health Organization would help local researchers challenge the vaccination by exposing the monkeys to infected poultry.

The poultry virus has killed one man and infected three - including a man and his younger sister - in northern Vietnam this month, although fewer outbreaks have been detected in poultry.

"All these infection cases have clinical factors related to slaughtering and eating poultry," Health Minister Tran Thi Trung Chien said in a report published on the ministry's Web site ( www.moh.gov.vn ).

"There is not yet any evidence of human-to-human transmission."

The report did not mention a Cambodian woman who died in southern Vietnam in January. Some media reports have suggested she might have caught it from her younger brother, whose body was cremated before it could be tested for the virus.

Almost all the Asian victims - 34 Vietnamese, 12 Thais and the Cambodian - have caught it from infected poultry. Bird flu kills more than 70 percent of those known to have been infected, but doctors say victims can be saved if they are diagnosed early.


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LMonty911

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http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidrap/content/influenza/avianflu/news/mar0405viet.html

Questions raised about Vietnam's avian flu reports and testing
Amy L. Becker Staff Writer


Mar 4, 2005 (CIDRAP News) – Vietnam, the country at the center of this year's avian influenza activity, may have two problems with its data on human cases: transparency in reporting and accuracy in testing.

The country has lapsed in its reporting of cases to the World Health Organization (WHO). More than a month passed without official reporting of cases, despite widespread media reports of several new cases, according to a story by the Canadian Press (CP) on Mar 1.

Ongoing monitoring by CIDRAP News also shows substantial discrepancies between official and unofficial numbers (see Case Count tables).

Because the WHO relies on official reports for its case counts and as the basis for advice to member countries, the lack of reporting has an impact, Dr. Klaus Stohr, director of the WHO's global influenza program, told the CP.

"The situation is that WHO has a request by its member states to provide proper risk assessment, to help other member states of WHO . . . in assessing what's going on in Asia and provide advice to other member states. And without this information, this is very difficult," Stohr said.

WHO officials had requested reports in person and in writing, the CP story noted. Those efforts appeared to be paying off on Mar 2, when Dick Thompson, communications officer in the Communicable Diseases Section of WHO in Geneva, told CIDRAP News by e-mail, "We understand that there is some movement and we will have an update shortly."

Vietnam is not the only country with reporting shortcomings. Indonesian farmers tallied more than 33,000 poultry deaths from avian flu during the past 2 months, the Jakarta Post reported today. Indonesia has not reported any new outbreaks to the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE) in several months.

Reporting can trigger difficult consequences. "Many countries find it difficult to report outbreaks of contagious diseases. These can impact trade and tourism, or it can injure their international standing or self-image," Thompson wrote.

The pattern of cases in Vietnam has not changed recently. Thompson commented, "The press reports suggest that the missing cases are sporadic. This would be a serious public health issue if there were a cluster of cases—that is not 15 isolated cases ranging over several weeks, but a single cluster of 15 cases, from one area, among casual contacts and health care workers. That doesn't seem to be the case in Viet Nam."

He criticized developed nations: "These are nations which can afford to help countries like Viet Nam. Right now, these Asian countries are sustaining enormous hits to their economies in the effort to fight [avian] flu. If they are successful, every nation will benefit by not having to confront a pandemic. Therefore, we believe that those nations which share the benefits of this fight should . . . help [poorer] countries which are largely managing on their own."

Reporting issues aside, Vietnam may face another hurdle in coping with avian flu: re-analysis of samples showed that some Vietnamese who had flulike symptoms but tested negative for H5N1 in Vietnam actually had the virus. The findings, which cast doubt on the sensitivity of Vietnam's H5N1 test, were described in a Feb 24 news story in Nature.

According to the story, samples from 11 recent avian flu case-patients in Vietnam, as well as samples from 90 patients who had suspected cases but tested negative for H5N1, were sent to the National Institute of Infectious Diseases in Tokyo. About a third of the samples had been tested there so far. Of those, seven that had tested negative in Vietnam were found to be positive, said Phan Van Tu, head of the microbiology and immunology department at the Pasteur Institute in Ho Chi Minh City.

Retesting in Vietnam then confirmed four of the seven positive results.

Tu said one reason for the discrepancy was that reagents in the original tests weren't mixed well and yielded unclear results. He added that the institute would use the more sensitive test that was used in Tokyo and improve technician training, according to the story.
 

LMonty911

Deceased
http://www.bangkokpost.com/News/05Mar2005_news02.php
Ministers at odds on flu vaccine test

Sudarat insists human trials to proceed here

APIRADEE TREERUTKUARKUL & WADEE TUNYASIRI

Thailand is pressing ahead with a plan to conduct joint trials of a human vaccine against avian flu in Thailand with the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Public Health Minister Sudarat Keyuraphan insisted yesterday.

But other ministers were much more cautious about the contentious issue.

Mrs Sudarat yesterday approved in principle the holding of bird flu vaccine tests on humans in the country.

Other ministers and health officials cautioned for due process to be carried out, but health ministry officials insisted that it was within Mrs Sudarat's power to unilaterally approve the US request.

``The testing of a bird flu vaccine on humans is essential as long as Thailand and countries in the region are still at risk of a bird flu outbreak and a global influenza pandemic,'' Mrs Sudarat said.

She said the ministry had enough samples of the lethal H5N1 strain of the avian flu to conduct vaccine tests on humans.

But Deputy Prime Minister Chaturon Chaisaeng gave a very cool reception to the idea of human tests saying the proposal had only been made via an e-mail from the CDC in Atlanta.

The Thai Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the National Vaccine Supervisory Committee were duty bound to consider it through normal procedures which would take at least two months.

``We need to know a lot of details. Will the [test] process be of the same standard as in developed nations? How safe will it be?'' he said, adding human safety was of paramount importance.

He said testing would have to wait, in any case, until a new cabinet was formed to take charge of events.

But Mrs Sudarat said she would push ahead and discuss the joint plan and framework for vaccine tests with the Medical Sciences Department on Monday.

In Thailand, 12 people have died so far from bird flu. An index case of probable human-to-human transmission between an 11-year-old girl, Sakuntala Prempasee, and her mother, Pranee Thongchan, has also been identified in the northern province of Kamphaeng Phet.

Health and scientific experts from the Medical Sciences Department, the Disease Control Department, the Government Pharmaceutical Organisation, Siriraj Hospital and the National Centre for Genetic Engineering and Technology also agreed with preparations for vaccine studies on both human influenza and bird flu, said Prasit Palittapongarnpim, deputy director of the National Centre of Genetic Engineering and Technology.

They believed Thailand would not be able to stockpile sufficient vaccine quantities to protect people if the study was carried out elsewhere, putting the country at risk in the event of a human pandemic occurring in the region, he said.

Bird flu has cost the country about 4.3 billion baht in economic damage in addition to the 2.2 billion baht compensation the government paid to farmers for the mass chicken cull in January 2003.

Paijit Warachit, the Medical Sciences Department director-general, earlier said he had talked to the US CDC in Atlanta about the safety of the vaccine and its possible clinical effectiveness.

But he said details about the benefits the country would receive from the study on a preventive bird flu vaccine for humans had yet to be discussed.

Prasert Thongcharoen, chairman of Thailand Influenza Foundation, believed approving trials of a preventive bird flu vaccine would give the country a head start in terms of having an effective tool to control the spread of the virus.

However, he said it was necessary for the government to pin down what Thailand would get in return before the experiments took place.

He said the right to use the vaccine at cheap prices if the trials proved to be successful was crucial.

The country should also gain scientific know-how to develop research and development technology rather than allowing private sector companies to exploit the benefits of the studies, he said.

Malinee Sukvejworakit, adviser to the Senate committee on public health, also warned that the government should learn lessons from previous HIV/Aids studies on humans to protect the safety of the Thai people before undertaking any human trials of bird flu vaccines.

The Senate would also be monitoring government movements on vaccine testing very closely to protect the welfare of test volunteers, she said.

Scott Dowell, director of the Thailand MOPH-US CDC Collaboration, insisted Thailand should also stockpile the anti-viral drug oseltamivir.

He said this was so that there would be an agent to work against the deadly virus strain before the vaccine was ready.

Thawat Sundarachan, the Disease Control Department director-general, said yesterday Deputy Public Health Minister Suchai Charoenrattanakul had received only one e-mail from the CDC in Atlanta, the issue was still being coordinated and there had been no government-to-government agreement so far.

He said the FDA would register the vaccine only for experimentation, then a human test committee of the director-general of the Medical Services Department would decide on the test process and finally approval from the national vaccine committee under the prime minister would be needed.
 

LMonty911

Deceased
An end to bird flu expected soon

(04-03-2005)


Veterinary inspectors examine a chicken farm in Song Phan Commune in the southern central province of Binh Thuan’s Ham Tan District. — VNA/VNS Photo Huu Thanh
HA NOI — A World Health Organisation official said on Wednesday that he believes the current outbreak of avian influenza in Viet Nam is likely to end soon, as the outbreak pattern has shown similarities to the one experienced last year.

"New H5N1 cases in the country are not signs of a worsening situation in Viet Nam," said Hans Troedson, the country’s representative for the WHO.

Hans said there hadn’t been any new cases for three weeks until the recent discoveries in the northern province of Thai Binh, and these might simply be a few isolated cases.

"It’s expected that more cases of H5N1 will be diagnosed, since it is likely a reflection of the continued presence of the virus in animals as well as of the sensitivity of the country’s surveillance system, which was enhanced following identification of the first human cases of infection in early 2004," said Hans.

He added that four international experts visited the National Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology last week to provide technical advice on further development of a safe and effective vaccine against avian influenza for use in humans.

"Aside from technical advice, the WHO can provide prototype vaccine strains and the materials needed to standardise vaccine formulations," said Hans.

Based on the success of laboratory tests on monkeys, Doctor Nguyen Thu Van from the Viet Nam National Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology reported that the first doses of a H5N1 vaccine made domestically are expected to come out later this year.

The tests, conducted by the institute over three weeks, show that the vaccine effectively immunised the monkeys against bird flu.

Van, who has studied and produced vaccines for polio and hepatitis B, said her group will inject two more trial doses on the monkeys before studying and testing the vaccine on a group of volunteers.

The institute is awaiting Government approval for a project to install an H5N1 vaccine production chain worth US$6.7 million, to be funded by the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), in order to mass-produce the vaccine.

Hans also said the WHO has worked with donor organisations to mobilise funds to support the Government’s fight against avian influenza. In the last 12 months the WHO has managed funds donated for avian influenza control by the European Commission (EC), Italy, Luxembourg and the Netherlands, AusAID and others. Recently, the EC donated 600,000 Euro (US$796,800) for an emergency response to avian influenza.

"The WHO provides technical support through staff members in the offices in Ha Noi and HCM City, and also through international consultants. Recently, the international consultants have provided technical advice on laboratory diagnosis, hospital infection control and vaccine development," said Hans.

In an effort to end the outbreak, the Ministry of Public Health has called upon bird flu-affected provinces and cities nation-wide to intensify measures to stamp out the disease. Fifteen of the 35 affected provinces and cities in the country have reported no new cases of bird flu in the last 21 days.

It asked provincial and municipal agriculture and rural development departments to co-ordinate with health care services to strictly supervise and control bird flu outbreaks and prevent the transmission of the H5N1 virus among humans.

The ministry itself will maintain its ‘round-the-clock surveillance of the situation. The Department for Preventive Medicine and HIV/AIDS Control has implemented disinfection procedures in localities affected by the virus.

Only four bird flu patients have been discovered in the past 40 days, ending March 1. One has died and the three others are being treated at the Bach Mai Hospital’s Institute of Clinical Research for Tropical Diseases.

HCM City doing well

In the past three months the city has effectively controlled the bird flu epidemic, and no new human cases of the virus, known as H5N1, were reported in the city during the latest outbreak, according to a city official.

Nguyen Thien Nhan, deputy chairman of the city People’s Committee, attributed the success to the concerted efforts of relevant agencies and local people in fighting the epidemic.

However, Nhan warned of a high risk of a bird flu reoccurrence late this year. He urged the city’s Agricultural Department and Veterinary Department to take drastic measures to curb the return of bird flu.

The Veterinary Department has required all poultry farmers to register with local officials before they recommence poultry production. Failing to register a poultry farm will carry heavy punishments, officials said. Poultry farmers will be banned from duck breeding for the remainder of the year. Poultry farming in the inner city is also prohibited. Other policies to ensure safety include close inspections at every stage of production: breeding, slaughtering, transporting and trading poultry products. — VNS
http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/showarticle.php?num=01HEA040305
 

LMonty911

Deceased
Uh-Oh-this doesnt sound good at all-CSue, have you seen these details?

Bird flu threat may be worse than officials previously warned, British researcher concludes
Some British doctors say a deadly bird flu outbreak in Asia may be more of a threat than world health officials previously suspected. The researchers say a Vietnam boy probably caught the flu from his sister -- making this among the first instances in which the virus has spread between humans. But, more significantly, the virus attacked the boy's entire body, not just the lungs, which doctors had previously thought were the only vulnerable organs.


Overview:



BIRD flu could be far more prevalent and humans more susceptible than previously thought, according to new research by British scientists.
A team at Oxford University, who studied a number of deaths in Vietnam, concluded that avian influenza, as it is formally known, is "progressively adapting to mammals".
In the case of a four-year-old Vietnamese boy, the child died from a bird flu-related disease despite not displaying breathing problems or other obvious symptoms, the Oxford University researchers said.
This finding has prompted fears that the spread and impact of avian influenza has been underestimated.
The study, led by Menno de Jong, an Oxford University virologist based at the Hospital for Tropical Diseases in Ho Chi Minh, found that the boy was heavily infected with the H5N1 avian flu virus.
Samples taken after his death showed bird flu not only in his lungs but in his blood, nose, faeces and in the fluid surrounding his brain.
These cases suggest the spectrum of influenza H5N1 is wider than previously thought."
In 2004, 45 cases of avian influenza were reported in humans, 33 of which were fatal.

Source: http://news.scotsman.com/health.cfm?id=184922005
 
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