Avian flu page 2

Martin

Deceased
original avian flu thread


http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...highlight=avian




Avian flu updated page 1
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?t=155018&page=1&pp=40



Preparing for the Next Pandemic
By Michael T. Osterholm
From Foreign Affairs, July/August 2005



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summary: If an influenza pandemic struck today, borders would close, the global economy would shut down, international vaccine supplies and health-care systems would be overwhelmed, and panic would reign. To limit the fallout, the industrialized world must create a detailed response strategy involving the public and private sectors.
Michael T. Osterholm is Director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy, Associate Director of the Department of Homeland Security's National Center for Food Protection and Defense, and Professor at the University of Minnesota's School of Public Health.


FEAR ITSELF

Dating back to antiquity, influenza pandemics have posed the greatest threat of a worldwide calamity caused by infectious disease. Over the past 300 years, ten influenza pandemics have occurred among humans. The most recent came in 1957-58 and 1968-69, and although several tens of thousands of Americans died in each one, these were considered mild compared to others. The 1918-19 pandemic was not. According to recent analysis, it killed 50 to 100 million people globally. Today, with a population of 6.5 billion, more than three times that of 1918, even a "mild" pandemic could kill many millions of people.

A number of recent events and factors have significantly heightened concern that a specific near-term pandemic may be imminent. It could be caused by H5N1, the avian influenza strain currently circulating in Asia. At this juncture scientists cannot be certain. Nor can they know exactly when a pandemic will hit, or whether it will rival the experience of 1918-19 or be more muted like 1957-58 and 1968-69. The reality of a coming pandemic, however, cannot be avoided. Only its impact can be lessened. Some important preparatory efforts are under way, but much more needs to be done by institutions at many levels of society.


THE BACKDROP

Of the three types of influenza virus, influenza type A infects and kills the greatest number of people each year and is the only type that causes pandemics. It originates in wild aquatic birds. The virus does not cause illness in these birds, and although it is widely transmitted among them, it does not undergo any significant genetic change.

Direct transmission from the birds to humans has not been demonstrated, but when a virus is transmitted from wild birds to domesticated birds such as chickens, it undergoes changes that allow it to infect humans, pigs, and potentially other mammals. Once in the lung cells of a mammalian host, the virus can "reassort," or mix genes, with human influenza viruses that are also present. This process can lead to an entirely new viral strain, capable of sustained human-to-human transmission. If such a virus has not circulated in humans before, the entire population will be susceptible. If the virus has not circulated in the human population for a number of years, most people will lack residual immunity from previous infection.

Once the novel strain better adapts to humans and is easily transmitted from person to person, it is capable of causing a new pandemic. As the virus passes repeatedly from one human to the next, it eventually becomes less virulent and joins the other influenza viruses that circulate the globe each year. This cycle continues until another new influenza virus emerges from wild birds and the process begins again.

Some pandemics result in much higher rates of infection and death than others. Scientists now understand that this variation is a result of the genetic makeup of each specific virus and the presence of certain virulence factors. That is why the 1918-19 pandemic killed many more people than either the 1957-58 or the 1968-69 pandemic.


A CRITICAL DIFFERENCE

Infectious diseases remain the number one killer of humans worldwide. Currently, more than 39 million people live with HIV, and last year about 2.9 million people died of AIDS, bringing the cumulative total of deaths from AIDS to approximately 25 million. Tuberculosis (TB) and malaria also remain major causes of death. In 2003, about 8.8 million people became infected with TB, and the disease killed more than 2 million. Each year, malaria causes more than 1 million deaths and close to 5 billion episodes of clinical illness. In addition, newly emerging infections, diarrheal and other vector-borne diseases, and agents resistant to antibiotics pose a serious and growing public health concern.

Given so many other significant infectious diseases, why does another influenza pandemic merit unique and urgent attention? First, of the more than 1,500 microbes known to cause disease in humans, influenza continues to be the king in terms of overall mortality. Even in a year when only the garden-variety strains circulate, an estimated 1-1.5 million people worldwide die from influenza infections or related complications. In a pandemic lasting 12 to 36 months, the number of cases and deaths would rise dramatically.

Recent clinical, epidemiological, and laboratory evidence suggests that the impact of a pandemic caused by the current H5N1 strain would be similar to that of the 1918-19 pandemic. More than half of the people killed in that pandemic were 18 to 40 years old and largely healthy. If 1918-19 mortality data are extrapolated to the current U.S. population, 1.7 million people could die, half of them between the ages of 18 and 40. Globally, those same estimates yield 180-360 million deaths, more than five times the cumulative number of documented AIDS deaths. In 1918-19, most deaths were caused by a virus-induced response of the victim's immune system -- a cytokine storm -- which led to acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). In other words, in the process of fighting the disease, a person's immune system severely damaged the lungs, resulting in death. Victims of H5N1 have also suffered from cytokine storms, and the world is not much better prepared to treat millions of cases of ARDS today than it was 85 years ago. In the 1957-58 and 1968-69 pandemics, the primary cause of death was secondary bacterial pneumonias that infected lungs weakened by influenza. Although such bacterial infections can often be treated by antibiotics, these drugs would be either unavailable or in short supply for much of the global population during a pandemic.

The arrival of a pandemic influenza would trigger a reaction that would change the world overnight. A vaccine would not be available for a number of months after the pandemic started, and there are very limited stockpiles of antiviral drugs. Plus, only a few privileged areas of the world have access to vaccine-production facilities. Foreign trade and travel would be reduced or even ended in an attempt to stop the virus from entering new countries -- even though such efforts would probably fail given the infectiousness of influenza and the volume of illegal crossings that occur at most borders. It is likely that transportation would also be significantly curtailed domestically, as smaller communities sought to keep the disease contained. The world relies on the speedy distribution of products such as food and replacement parts for equipment. Global, regional, and national economies would come to an abrupt halt -- something that has never happened due to HIV, malaria, or TB despite their dramatic impact on the developing world.

The closest the world has come to this scenario in modern times was the SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome) crisis of 2003. Over a period of five months, about 8,000 people were infected by a novel human coronavirus. About ten percent of them died. The virus apparently spread to humans when infected animals were sold and slaughtered in unsanitary and crowded markets in China's Guangdong Province. Although the transmission rate of SARS paled in comparison to that of influenza, it demonstrated how quickly such an infectious agent can circle the globe, given the ease and frequency of international travel. Once SARS emerged in rural China, it spread to five countries within 24 hours and to 30 countries on six continents within several months.

The SARS experience teaches a critical lesson about the potential global response to a pandemic influenza. Even with the relatively low number of deaths it caused compared to other infectious diseases, SARS had a powerful negative psychological impact on the populations of many countries. In a recent analysis of the epidemic, the National Academy of Science's Institute of Medicine concluded: "The relatively high case-fatality rate, the identification of super-spreaders, the newness of the disease, the speed of its global spread, and public uncertainty about the ability to control its spread may have contributed to the public's alarm. This alarm, in turn, may have led to the behavior that exacerbated the economic blows to the travel and tourism industries of the countries with the highest number of cases."

SARS provided a taste of the impact a killer influenza pandemic would have on the global economy. Jong-Wha Lee, of Korea University, and Warwick McKibbin, of the Australian National University, estimated the economic impact of the six-month SARS epidemic on the Asia-Pacific region at about $40 billion. In Canada, 438 people were infected and 43 died after an infected person traveled from Hong Kong to Toronto, and the Canadian Tourism Commission estimated that the epidemic cost the nation's economy $419 million. The Ontario health minister estimated that SARS cost the province's health-care system about $763 million, money that was spent, in part, on special SARS clinics and supplies to protect health-care workers. The SARS outbreak also had a substantial impact on the global airline industry. After the disease hit in 2003, flights in the Asia-Pacific area decreased by 45 percent from the year before. During the outbreak, the number of flights between Hong Kong and the United States fell 69 percent. And this impact would pale in comparison to that of a 12- to 36-month worldwide influenza pandemic.

The SARS epidemic also raises questions about how prepared governments are to address a prolonged infectious-disease crisis -- particularly governments that are already unstable. Seton Hall University's Yanzhong Huang concluded that the SARS epidemic created the most severe social or political crisis encountered by China's leadership since the 1989 Tiananmen crackdown. China's problems probably resulted less from SARS' public health impact than from the government's failed effort to allay panic by withholding information about the disease from the Chinese people. The effort backfired. During the crisis, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao pointed out in a cabinet meeting on the epidemic that "the health and security of the people, overall state of reform, development, and stability, and China's national interest and image are at stake." But Huang believes that "a fatal period of hesitation regarding information-sharing and action spawned anxiety, panic, and rumor-mongering across the country and undermined the government's efforts to create a milder image of itself in the international arena."

Widespread infection and economic collapse can destabilize a government; blame for failing to deal effectively with a pandemic can cripple a government. This holds even more for an influenza pandemic. In the event of a pandemic influenza, the level of panic witnessed during the SARS crisis could spiral out of control as illnesses and deaths continued to mount over months and months. Unfortunately, the public is often indifferent to initial warnings about impending infectious-disease crises -- as with HIV, for example. Indifference becomes fear only after the catastrophe hits, when it is already too late to implement preventive or control measures.


READY FOR THE WORST

What should the industrialized world be doing to prepare for the next pandemic? The simple answer: far more. So far, the World Health Organization and several countries have finalized or drafted useful but overly general plans. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has increased research on influenza-vaccine production and availability. These efforts are commendable, but what is needed is a detailed operational blueprint for how to get a population through one to three years of a pandemic. Such a plan must involve all the key components of society. In the private sector, the plan must coordinate the responses of the medical community, medical suppliers, food providers, and the transportation system. In the government sector, the plan should take into account officials from public health, law enforcement, and emergency management at the international, federal, state, and local levels.

At the same time, it must be acknowledged that such master blueprints may have their drawbacks, too. Berkeley's Aaron Wildavsky persuasively argued that resilience is the real key to crisis management -- overly rigid plans can do more harm than good. Still, planning is enormously useful. It gives government officials, private-sector partners, and the community the opportunity to meet, think through potential dilemmas, purchase necessary equipment, and set up organizational structures for a 12- to 36-month response. A blueprint forces leaders to rehearse their response to a crisis, preparing emotionally and intellectually so that when disaster strikes the community can face it.

Influenza-vaccine production deserves special attention. An initiative to provide vaccine for the entire world must be developed, with a well-defined schedule to ensure progress. It is laudable that countries such as the United States and Vietnam are pursuing programs with long-term goals to develop and produce H5N1 vaccine for their respective populations. But if the rest of the world lacks supplies, even the vaccinated will be devastated when the global economy comes to an abrupt halt. Pandemic-influenza preparedness is by nature an international issue. No one can truly be isolated from a pandemic.

The pandemic-related collapse of worldwide trade and its ripple effect throughout industrialized and developing countries would represent the first real test of the resiliency of the modern global delivery system. Given the extent to which modern commerce relies on the precise and readily available international trade of goods and services, a shutdown of the global economic system would dramatically harm the world's ability to meet the surging demand for essential commodities such as food and medicine during a crisis. The business community can no longer afford to play a minor role in planning the response to a pandemic. For the world to have critical goods and services during a pandemic, industry heads must stockpile raw materials for production and preplan distribution and transportation support. Every company's senior managers need to be ready to respond rapidly to changes in the availability, production, distribution, and inventory management of their products. There is no model for how to revive the current global economy were it to be devastated.

To truly be complete, all planning on international, regional, national, and local levels must consider three different scenarios: What if the pandemic begins tonight? What if it starts one year from now? What if the world is so fortunate as to have an entire decade to prepare? All are possible, but none is certain.


STARTING TONIGHT

What would happen today in the office of every nation's leader if several cities in Vietnam suffered from major outbreaks of H5N1 infection, with a five percent mortality rate? First, there would be an immediate effort to try to sort out disparate disease-surveillance data from a variety of government and public health sources to determine which countries might have pandemic-related cases. Then, the decision would likely be made to close most international and even some state or provincial borders -- without any predetermined criteria for how or when those borders might be reopened. Border security would be made a priority, especially to protect potential supplies of pandemic-specific vaccines from nearby desperate countries. Military leaders would have to develop strategies to defend the country and also protect against domestic insurgency with armed forces that would likely be compromised by the disease. Even in unaffected countries, fear, panic, and chaos would spread as international media reported the daily advance of the disease around the world.

In short order, the global economy would shut down. The commodities and services countries would need to "survive" the next 12 to 36 months would have to be identified. Currently, most businesses' continuity plans account for only a localized disruption -- a single plant closure, for instance -- and have not planned for extensive, long-term outages. The private and public sectors would have to develop emergency plans to sustain critical domestic supply chains and manufacturing and agricultural production and distribution. The labor force would be severely affected when it was most needed. Over the course of the year, up to 50 percent of affected populations could become ill; as many as five percent could die. The disease would hit senior management as hard as the rest of the work force. There would be major shortages in all countries of a wide range of commodities, including food, soap, paper, light bulbs, gasoline, parts for repairing military equipment and municipal water pumps, and medicines, including vaccines unrelated to the pandemic. Many industries not critical to survival -- electronics, automobile, and clothing, for example -- would suffer or even close. Activities that require close human contact -- school, seeing movies in theaters, or eating at restaurants -- would be avoided, maybe even banned.

Vaccine would have no impact on the course of the virus in the first months and would likely play an extremely limited role worldwide during the following 12 to 18 months of the pandemic. Despite major innovations in the production of most other vaccines, international production of influenza vaccine is based on a fragile and limited system that utilizes technology from the 1950s. Currently, annual production of influenza vaccine is limited to about 300 million trivalent doses -- which protect against three different influenza strains in one dose -- or less than one billion monovalent doses. To counter a new strain of pandemic influenza that has never circulated throughout the population, each person would likely need two doses for adequate protection. With today's limited production capacity, that means that less than 500 million people -- about 14 percent of the world's population -- would be vaccinated within a year of the pandemic. In addition, because the structure of the virus changes so rapidly, vaccine development could only start once the pandemic began, as manufacturers would have to obtain the new pandemic strain. It would then be at least another six months before mass production of the vaccine.

Even if the system functions to the best of its ability, influenza vaccine is produced commercially in just nine countries: Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and the United States. These countries contain only 12 percent of the world's population. In the event of an influenza pandemic, they would probably nationalize their domestic production facilities, as occurred in 1976, when the United States, anticipating a pandemic of swine influenza (H1N1), refused to share its vaccine.

If a pandemic struck the world today, there would be another possible weapon against influenza: antiviral medicine. When taken daily during the time of exposure to influenza, antivirals have prevented individuals from becoming ill. They have also reduced the severity of illness and subsequent complications when taken within 48 hours of onset. Although there is no data for H5N1, it is assumed antivirals would also prevent H5N1 infection if taken before exposure. There is no evidence, however, that current antiviral influenza drugs would help if the patient developed the kind of cytokine storm that has characterized recent H5N1 infections. But barring this complication, H5N1 should be treatable with Tamiflu (oseltamivir phosphate), which is manufactured by the Roche pharmaceuticals company in a single plant in Switzerland.

In responding to a pandemic, Tamiflu could have a measurable impact in the limited number of countries with sizable stockpiles, but for most of the world it would not be available. Although the company plans on opening another facility in the United States this year, annual production would still cover only a small percentage of the world's population. To date, at least 14 countries have ordered Tamiflu, but the amount of these orders is enough to treat only 40 million people. The orders take considerable time to be processed and delivered -- manufacturing can take up to a year -- and in an emergency the company's ability to produce more would be limited. As with vaccines, countries would probably nationalize their antiviral supplies during a pandemic. Even if the medicine were available, most countries could not afford to buy it. Critical antibiotics, for treatment of secondary bacterial infections, would also be in short supply during a pandemic. Even now, supplies of eight different anti-infective agents are limited in the United States due to manufacturing problems.

Aside from medication, many countries would not have the ability to meet the surge in the demand for health-care supplies and services that are normally taken for granted. In the United States, for example, there are 105,000 mechanical ventilators, 75,000 to 80,000 of which are in use at any given time for everyday medical care. During a routine influenza season, the number of ventilators being used shoots up to 100,000. In an influenza pandemic, the United States may need as many as several hundred thousand additional ventilators.

A similar situation exists in all developed countries. Virtually every piece of medical equipment or protective gear would be in short supply within days of the recognition of a pandemic. Throughout the crisis, many of these necessities would simply be unavailable for most health-care institutions. Currently, two U.S.-based companies supply most of the respiratory protection masks for health-care workers around the world. Neither company would be able to meet the jump in demand, in part because the component parts for the masks come from multiple suppliers in multiple countries. With travel and transportation restricted, masks may not even be produced at all.

Health-care providers and managed-care organizations are also unprepared for an outbreak of pandemic influenza today. There would be a tremendous demand for skilled health professionals. New "hospitals" in high school gymnasiums and community centers would have to be staffed for one to three years. Health-care workers would probably get sick and die at the same rate as the general public -- perhaps at an even higher rate, particularly if they lack access to protective equipment. If they lack such fundamental supplies, it is unclear how many professionals would continue to place themselves in high-risk situations by caring for the infected. Volunteers who are naturally immune as a result of having survived influenza infection would thus have to be found and employed. That means that the medical community's strong resistance to using lay volunteers, which is grounded in both liability concerns and professional hubris, would need to be addressed.

Other unpleasant issues would also need to be tackled. Who would have priority access to the extremely limited antiviral supplies? The public would consider any ad hoc prioritization unfair, creating further dissent and disruption during a pandemic. In addition, there would not even be detailed plans for handling the massive number of dead bodies that would soon outstrip the ability to process them. Clearly, an influenza pandemic that struck today would demand an unprecedented medical and nonmedical response. This requires planning well beyond anything devised thus far by any of the world's countries and organizations.


A YEAR FROM NOW

Even if an H5N1 pandemic is a year away, the world must plan for the same problems with the same fervor. Major campaigns must be initiated to prepare the nonmedical and medical sectors. Pandemic planning must be on the agenda of every school board, manufacturing plant, investment firm, mortuary, state legislature, and food distributor in the United States and beyond. There is an urgent need to reassess the vulnerability of the global economy to ensure that surges in demand can be met. Critical heath-care and consumer products and commodities must be stockpiled. Health professionals must learn how to better communicate risk and must be able to both provide the facts and acknowledge the unknowns to a frightened or panicked population.

If there is a year of lead-time before an H5N1 pandemic, vaccine could play a more central role in the global response. Although the world would still have a limited capacity to manufacture influenza vaccine, techniques that could allow scientists to get multiple doses from a current single dose may increase the supply. In addition to further research on this issue, efforts are needed to ensure the availability of syringes and equipment for delivering vaccine. There must also be an international plan for how the vaccine would be allocated. It is far better to struggle with the ethical issues involved in determining such priorities now, in a public forum, rather than to wait until the crisis occurs.

Prevention must also be improved. Priority should be placed on early intervention and risk assessment. And an aggressive and comprehensive research agenda must be launched immediately to study the ecology and biology of the influenza virus and the epidemiologic role of various animal and bird species.


TEN YEARS LATER

If developed countries begin to transform radically the current system of influenza-vaccine production, an influenza pandemic ten years from now could have a much less devastating outcome. The industrialized world must initiate an international project to develop the ability to produce a vaccine for the entire global population within several months of the start of a pandemic. The initiative must be a top priority of the group of seven industrialized nations plus Russia (G-8), because almost nothing could inflict more death and disruption than a pandemic influenza.

The current BioShield law and additional legislation recently submitted to Congress will act to enhance the availability of vaccines in the United States. This aim is laudable, but it does little to address international needs. The ultimate goal must be to develop a new cell-culture vaccine or comparable vaccine technology that works on all influenza subtypes and that can be made available on short notice to all the people of the world.


WHAT COURSE TO TAKE?

The world must form a better understanding of the potential for the emergence of a pandemic influenza strain. A pandemic is coming. It could be caused by H5N1 or by another novel strain. It could happen tonight, next year, or even ten years from now.

The signs are alarming: the number of human and animal H5N1 infections has been increasing; small clusters of cases have been documented, suggesting that the virus may have come close to sustained human-to-human transmission; and H5N1 continues to evolve in the virtual genetic reassortment laboratory provided by the unprecedented number of people, pigs, and poultry in Asia. The population explosion in China and other Asian countries has created an incredible mixing vessel for the virus. Consider this sobering information: the most recent influenza pandemic, of 1968-69, emerged in China, when its population was 790 million; today it is 1.3 billion. In 1968, the number of pigs in China was 5.2 million; today it is 508 million. The number of poultry in China in 1968 was 12.3 million; today it is 13 billion. Changes in other Asian countries are similar. Given these developments, as well as the exponential growth in foreign travel over the past 50 years, an influenza pandemic could be more devastating than ever before.

Can disaster be avoided? The answer is a qualified yes. Although a coming pandemic cannot be avoided, its impact can be considerably lessened. It depends on how the leaders of the world -- from the heads of the G-8 to local officials -- decide to respond. They must recognize the economic, security, and health threat that the next influenza pandemic poses and invest accordingly. Each leader must realize that even if a country has enough vaccine to protect its citizens, the economic impact of a worldwide pandemic will inflict substantial pain on everyone. The resources required to prepare adequately will be extensive. But they must be considered in light of the cost of failing to invest: a global world economy that remains in a shambles for several years.

This is a critical point in history. Time is running out to prepare for the next pandemic. We must act now with decisiveness and purpose. Someday, after the next pandemic has come and gone, a commission much like the 9/11 Commission will be charged with determining how well government, business, and public health leaders prepared the world for the catastrophe when they had clear warning. What will be the verdict?



http://www.foreignaffairs.org/20050...eparing-for-the-next-pandemic.html?mode=print
 

Just Wondering

Southern Sloth
Why am I not surprised at this?

http://news.telegraph.co.uk/core/Co...BQWJVC?xml=/news/2005/06/19/wflu19.xml&site=5

China ruins best chance of beating bird flu epidemic
By Peter Goff in Beijing
(Filed: 19/06/2005)

China has been trying to suppress a bird flu outbreak by feeding poultry a human antiviral drug, threatening public safety in the event of a global pandemic.

China first reported an avian flu outbreak in February last year. Yet for more than eight years, according to drug company officials in Beijing quoted in the US media, the agriculture ministry has been urging farmers to use the drug, amantadine, on infected birds, in breach of international guidelines.

It explains why scientists discovered late last year that the virus had grown resistant to amantadine, which cannot now be used to fight it in humans.

Over the past 18 months bird flu has spread across East Asia, infecting more than 100 people in Vietnam, Cambodia and Thailand, killing at least 54 people and devastating poultry stocks.

Dick Thompson, a spokesman for the World Health Organisation in Geneva, said last night that the UN body had long suspected China of using amantadine on poultry.

"We will be asking the government in Beijing about it this week," he said.

Mr Thompson said that the drug, which is now ineffective against the H5N1 strain of the virus found in Asia, should have been a key part of the fight against a global outbreak.

"It would have been important in a pandemic and it is a disappointment that it may have been lost to us."

The first human cases of avian flu were recorded in Hong Kong in 1997, when the H5N1 variant mutated into a form lethal to humans, killing six people.

The WHO said the virus could easily mutate further, allowing it to jump from human to human in a lethal strain that could kill millions of people worldwide.

Amantadine is one of two drugs used to treat human influenza. The alternative, oseltamivir, is much more expensive to mass produce.

According to The Washington Post, animal health officials in China said that government bodies approved the production and sale of the drug for use in chickens, even though the practice is banned in many western countries because birds develop immunity.

Chinese farmers and officials from pharmaceutical companies confirmed that the drug had been used since the late 1990s to treat sickly chickens and prevent healthy birds from catching it.

"Amantadine is widely used in the entire country," Zhang Libin, from the Northeast General Pharmaceutical Factory, told the newspaper. "Many pharmaceutical factories around China produce amantadine, and farmers can buy it easily."

A farmer from Hebei province, near Beijing, confirmed that he had been giving his chickens the drug for several years. "Local government vets have always recommended it," he said.

Last week China confirmed an outbreak of bird flu in its northwestern Xinjiang province, where 460 geese died and more than 13,000 birds were slaughtered to try to control its spread.

The outbreak came only a few weeks after more than 1,000 migratory birds died of the virus in neighbouring Qinghai province, the first confirmed outbreak in China in almost 12 months.

Three years ago China was condemned internationally for trying to hide the extent of the SARS outbreak, which ultimately infected 8,000 people and killed about 800.
 

Martin

Deceased
Chinese farmers told to stop using antiviral on poultry



The Ministry of Agriculture (MOA) plans to dispatch inspection teams nationwide to stop the antiviral drug amantadine - meant for humans - being used on poultry.

An MOA official spoke out yesterday after reports, denied by the government, that some farmers are being encouraged to illegally use amantadine on their chickens to curb the spread of bird flu.

Researchers fear using the drug on animals and humans could lead to drug resistance.

Drug-resistant forms of H5N1 - a bird flu strain - have already been found in Thailand and Viet Nam, according to reports.

The government has never permitted farmers to use amantadine to treat bird flu, said Xu Shixin, MOA's division director of the veterinary bureau.

But he did not identify where the drug misuse had taken place.

"We'll take measures soon to curb the action," he said, without elaborating.

Xu refuted a report by the Washington Post on Saturday that the Chinese Government had encouraged farmers to use amantadine on their chickens to prevent bird flu. "The report was groundless," Xu said.

The World Health Organization (WHO) and the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) have both expressed concerns over the issue.

The WHO spokesman in China, Roy Wadia, said his organization will seek more information from the Chinese Government.

Zhang Zhongjun, an assistant representative of the China office of FAO, said his organization and the Chinese Government have already set up a channel to report developments on the fight against infectious diseases in animals.

"We haven't received any reports so far that the Chinese government has allowed the use of the drug on chickens," said Zhang.

China has made breakthroughs in vaccine research against H5N1 and H5N2, highly lethal strains of bird flu, and they work effectively in combating poultry disease, he said.

MOA's Xu said the government would supply farmers with cheaper and more effective vaccines to replace the use of amantadine by some farmers.

He also said that the bird flu outbreak in China has already been brought under control.

Health experts worry that bird flu might mutate into a form that can spread directly from person to person, setting off a pandemic that could claim millions of lives.

Source: China Daily


Chinese farmers told to stop using antiviral on poultry



The Ministry of Agriculture (MOA) plans to dispatch inspection teams nationwide to stop the antiviral drug amantadine - meant for humans - being used on poultry.

An MOA official spoke out yesterday after reports, denied by the government, that some farmers are being encouraged to illegally use amantadine on their chickens to curb the spread of bird flu.

Researchers fear using the drug on animals and humans could lead to drug resistance.

Drug-resistant forms of H5N1 - a bird flu strain - have already been found in Thailand and Viet Nam, according to reports.

The government has never permitted farmers to use amantadine to treat bird flu, said Xu Shixin, MOA's division director of the veterinary bureau.

But he did not identify where the drug misuse had taken place.

"We'll take measures soon to curb the action," he said, without elaborating.

Xu refuted a report by the Washington Post on Saturday that the Chinese Government had encouraged farmers to use amantadine on their chickens to prevent bird flu. "The report was groundless," Xu said.

The World Health Organization (WHO) and the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) have both expressed concerns over the issue.

The WHO spokesman in China, Roy Wadia, said his organization will seek more information from the Chinese Government.

Zhang Zhongjun, an assistant representative of the China office of FAO, said his organization and the Chinese Government have already set up a channel to report developments on the fight against infectious diseases in animals.

"We haven't received any reports so far that the Chinese government has allowed the use of the drug on chickens," said Zhang.

China has made breakthroughs in vaccine research against H5N1 and H5N2, highly lethal strains of bird flu, and they work effectively in combating poultry disease, he said.

MOA's Xu said the government would supply farmers with cheaper and more effective vaccines to replace the use of amantadine by some farmers.

He also said that the bird flu outbreak in China has already been brought under control.

Health experts worry that bird flu might mutate into a form that can spread directly from person to person, setting off a pandemic that could claim millions of lives.

Source: China Daily


Chinese farmers told to stop using antiviral on poultry



The Ministry of Agriculture (MOA) plans to dispatch inspection teams nationwide to stop the antiviral drug amantadine - meant for humans - being used on poultry.

An MOA official spoke out yesterday after reports, denied by the government, that some farmers are being encouraged to illegally use amantadine on their chickens to curb the spread of bird flu.

Researchers fear using the drug on animals and humans could lead to drug resistance.

Drug-resistant forms of H5N1 - a bird flu strain - have already been found in Thailand and Viet Nam, according to reports.

The government has never permitted farmers to use amantadine to treat bird flu, said Xu Shixin, MOA's division director of the veterinary bureau.

But he did not identify where the drug misuse had taken place.

"We'll take measures soon to curb the action," he said, without elaborating.

Xu refuted a report by the Washington Post on Saturday that the Chinese Government had encouraged farmers to use amantadine on their chickens to prevent bird flu. "The report was groundless," Xu said.

The World Health Organization (WHO) and the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) have both expressed concerns over the issue.

The WHO spokesman in China, Roy Wadia, said his organization will seek more information from the Chinese Government.

Zhang Zhongjun, an assistant representative of the China office of FAO, said his organization and the Chinese Government have already set up a channel to report developments on the fight against infectious diseases in animals.

"We haven't received any reports so far that the Chinese government has allowed the use of the drug on chickens," said Zhang.

China has made breakthroughs in vaccine research against H5N1 and H5N2, highly lethal strains of bird flu, and they work effectively in combating poultry disease, he said.

MOA's Xu said the government would supply farmers with cheaper and more effective vaccines to replace the use of amantadine by some farmers.

He also said that the bird flu outbreak in China has already been brought under control.

Health experts worry that bird flu might mutate into a form that can spread directly from person to person, setting off a pandemic that could claim millions of lives.

Source: China Daily


http://english.people.com.cn/200506/21/eng20050621_191460.html
 

Kim99

Veteran Member
Interesting timing.....



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Army launches medical, logistic support exercise

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2005-06/17/content_3095359.htm


BEIJING, June 16 (Xinhuanet) -- China Thursday successfully conducted a joint medical and logistic support exercise between its army and air force, the first of its kind in the history of the People's Liberation Army (PLA).

The subjects involved in the exercise included medical aid in battles against nuclear, biological and chemical weapons, on-the-spot treatment, field hygiene and epidemic prevention, transporting the injured to the rear by air and searching for and saving pilots.

Armymen from 10 departments of the PLA including medicine, epidemic prevention and control and air unit personnel participated in the exercise, jointly organized by the Logistics Department of the Air Force and the No. 4 Medical College of the PLA.

The exercise was the biggest of its kind in the history of the Chinese Air Force in terms of scale and number of participants. Enditem
 

Martin

Deceased
WHO in Qinghai But Denied Permission to Visit Xinjiang

Recombinomics Commentary
June 21, 2005

>> Nearly three weeks after the World Health Organization and the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization sought permission to visit the site of an outbreak among migratory geese and other wild birds, Beijing gave its approval late last week, allowing a small group of representatives from the two international bodies to fly to the site yesterday.

WHO officials had asked to combine the trip to Qinghai with one to Xinjiang, where a second outbreak of the disease -- with the potential for a human pandemic -- had been detected. That request was denied, although health officials say they still hope to win approval to visit Xinjiang..<<


Permission for WHO and FAO to visit Qingahi is a welcome development although the three week delay is cause for concern. China has acknowledged over 1000 bird flu deaths involving at least 5 species of migratory birds, but third party reports indicated over 8000 bird had died as well as several mammalian species including humans.

Similarly, recent reports have describe a pneumonia outbreak in Tacheng in Xinjiang. The location coincides with another H5N1 outbreak in geese. The affected population was domestic geese, which is unusual since H5N1 usually does not cause illness in waterfowl like ducks ad geese.

The report on the pneumonia cases was quite specific and the infections involved both patients and health care workers. A timely visit could have eliminated speculation that these pneumonia cases are caused by H5N1. The denial of permission to WHO at this time increases speculation that he human cases in Xinghai and Xinjiang are being hidden from WHO and the rest of the world.

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/06210501/WHO_Qinghai_Not_Xinjiang.html
 

gappedout

Veteran Member
thanks for keeping us updated Martin... it is appreciated...

this virus is going to hit fast and hit hard... it's not going to go over well for us sheeple...
 

Kim99

Veteran Member
Tests make avian flu fight tougher

Use of human antiviral drug on Chinese poultry has created resistant strain
By Alex Dominguez
The Associated Press
Originally published June 20, 2005, 5:35 PM EDT

The use of a human antiviral drug on Chinese poultry is making preparations for a possible avian flu outbreak even more difficult, an infectious disease expert said today.

Beginning in the late 1990s, Chinese farmers used the anti-viral drug, amantadine, to treat bird flu in chickens, encouraged by government officials, The Washington Post reported Saturday.

The use of the antiviral has created a resistant strain and eliminated its usefulness for treating human cases of the deadly disease, said Dr. Michael Osterholm of the University of Minnesota, speaking in Baltimore at a weeklong convention of Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology.

Another antiviral, Tamiflu, can still be used, but it is made at a single plant in Switzerland by Roche. At least 14 countries have ordered Tamiflu, enough to treat about 40 million people, Osterholm said.

Assuring a generic or counterfeit version of Tamiflu is not used on poultry in the future is "going to be very hard," he said.

"There's no evidence it is being used in China right now, but we could have said the same six months ago" about amantadine, he said.
The use of the antiviral is the latest in a combination of factors that could lead to a strain that could jump from human to human, the University of Minnesota researcher said.

China's populations, for example, has increased from about 790 million in 1968 to 1.3 billion today, while its chicken population has gone from 12.3 million to 13 billion, providing the virus more hosts and more opportunity to evolve, making it increasingly likely a mutation will occur allowing it to spread from person to person.

"We are offering this virus every opportunity," Osterholm said. "Every day is an evolutionary experiment going on in Asia, every minute, every second."
Since January 2004, an estimated 69 people, primarily in Vietnam, have contracted the disease. Vietnam has had 38 of Asia's 54 human deaths. China has not reported any human cases of bird flu.

Earlier this month, a World Health Organization official warned that the virus is evolving quickly, noting the strain in China appears to have increased in virulence.

An outbreak of avian flu could be as deadly as the 1918 influenza outbreak that killed as many as 50 million, Osterholm said, noting the two strains are similar in many ways.

Population increases and the ease of travel would speed the spread of the avian flu, which could kill hundreds of millions worldwide, he said.

Replacement of the current time-intensive vaccine production method, in which the virus is cultured in chicken eggs, is needed. Almost all vaccine is produced in nine countries, which account for 12 percent of the world's population, raising concern the rest of the world would not receive vaccines in the event of an outbreak.

More research is needed to develop additional antiviral drugs and plans are needed to ensure resources are available to deal with an outbreak lasting as long as 18 months, he said.

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/he...ack=2&cset=true
__________________
 

Kim99

Veteran Member
This is the same region where the human pneumonia outbreak was reported and where WHO is not allowed to go.


China has reported a new outbreak of deadly bird flu.

http://www.abc.net.au/ra/news/stories/s1397453.htm

The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) says the latest outbreak has infected 128 geese and ducks in the northwestern Xinjiang region, killing 63 of them.

It is the third outbreak reported by the Chinese government within two months.


The FAO's representative in China, Noureddin Mona says authorities have culled 1,490 birds, including the infected geese and ducks and those raised in nearby farms.

"The Ministry of Agriculture said it's under control," Mona said.

"No human cases were reported," he said.

Earlier this month, 1,042 geese were infected with H5N1 at a farm in Tacheng city in northwestern Xinjiang, with 460 of them dying, according to state media.

Authorities ordered all poultry markets in Tacheng to close down and 17,014 birds, mostly chickens and geese, were killed to prevent the disease from spreading.

The outbreak followed the deaths from H5N1 of more than 1,000 migratory birds last month in Qinghai province, which borders Xinjiang, the first confirmed outbreak in China in nearly a year.
 

Martin

Deceased
Posted on Tue, Jun. 21, 2005





A new approach to fighting flu

BY MARIAN UHLMAN

Knight Ridder Newspapers


PHILADELPHIA - (KRT) - Walter Gerhard labors far from Southeast Asia, where a virulent flu strain is killing birds and threatens to start a flu pandemic.

But his work in an orderly laboratory at the Wistar Institute in Philadelphia still puts him on influenza's front line.

Gerhard is testing a prototype vaccine that could play a critical role in protecting people from the flu - especially against a lethal pandemic strain. Some experts believe it could lead to a long-lasting shot that might make annual flu clinics a thing of the past.

Though the research is still in its earliest stages, "It has the potential of providing much broader protection," Gerhard said.

A typical flu season leads to an estimated 35,000 deaths in the United States alone. But a new strain of flu could kill hundreds of thousands more because virtually no one would have immunity against it.

Drugs, medical equipment and hospital beds would all be in short supply, experts predict. Many businesses likely would grind to a halt because so many workers would be ill and products would be hard to move. The existing vaccine supply would protect only a fraction of the population.

While his preliminary research is confined to mice, Gerhard's prototype vaccine is attracting attention. It mimics a tiny but relatively stable viral protein called matrix 2, or M2. Rodents mount a strong antibody response when inoculated with the prototype M2 vaccine, and the vaccine significantly curbed the spread of the virus in the infected animals.

Gerhard said the encouraging results might not be replicated in people.

"I hope what we see in humans is better than in mice," said Gerhard, 63, a Swiss-born immunology professor. "It is hard to predict. It could go either way."

With help from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Gerhard said he plans to test his vaccine in ferrets. He said it might be ready to test in people in two to five years.

Gerhard runs one of several research groups that see the M2 protein as a tantalizing target in the fight against the flu. Merck & Co., for instance, has data suggesting that its vaccine sparked an immune response in mice, ferrets and rhesus monkeys.

Andrew Pekosz, a Washington University assistant professor, said his team also had positive results in mice, and he hoped their vaccine would be ready for human trials in a year.

"All of us are at various stages of development," said Pekosz, who collaborates with the nonprofit Vaccine Research Institute in San Diego. "It is not redundant. All of us have our own take" on how to do it.

"Clearly the animal data so far suggests that this is so far worthwhile," said Robert Belshe, who runs St. Louis University School of Medicine's vaccine center.

While it is unlikely that the M2 vaccine would be administered only once in a person's life, it may protect people for a number of years, said Linda Lambert, respiratory diseases branch chief at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

Developing a long-lasting flu vaccine would be a scientific coup. As it is now inconvenient and costly to get a yearly shot, many people - even those most vulnerable to the disease - don't.

Lambert, whose agency helps fund Gerhard and Pekosz, said that of the new experimental approaches, the M2 strategy holds the most promise for lengthening the period of protection. Other new vaccine approaches also are being tried, such as targeting a protein inside the virus.

Paul Offit, chief of infectious diseases at Children's Hospital in Philadelphia, said he doesn't think the M2 effort will pan out.

"The flu is too smart," he said.

He said the virus has "survived for centuries" by transforming itself and will best be cowed by a comprehensive vaccination program.

Lambert said the National Institutes of Health has increased funding for flu vaccine research since 1997, when the first cases of avian flu - caused by the H5N1 virus - were reported to have spread from birds to people.

Since then, the strain has become rife in bird populations in Southeast Asia. In the last 18 months, about 100 human cases have been reported, resulting in about 50 deaths, according to the Center for Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota.

Some public-health officials worry that the H5N1 flu could develop into a pandemic if it mutated into a strain that could spread easily among people.

The protection afforded by today's flu vaccine largely comes from antibodies generated to a large and plentiful protein situated on the viral coat: hemagglutinin (HA) protein. The vaccine also triggers a response to another protein - neuraminidase (NA) - that also resides on the viral coat.

M2 resides there, too, but it is much smaller and less plentiful, and the immune system by itself doesn't mount much of a response against it.

But M2 has a virtue that HA lacks: It remains pretty much the same from year to year. HA - and to a lesser extent NA - slyly mutate, requiring the vaccine to be tweaked some years and overhauled others.

In developing a new vaccine, researchers hope to prompt the body to mount an attack against the relatively stable M2 viral protein.

Gerhard's prototype is a synthetic-engineered peptide designed by Laszlo Otvos, an associate professor in Wistar's immunology program. He said it would be relatively easy to make such a vaccine in large quantities with high levels of purity. Such a vaccine would also be a major advance over the current chicken-egg manufacturing process.

If the M2 vaccine overcomes the hurdles ahead, Gerhard said, it is possible that it would provide enough protection against disease symptoms to be used instead of existing vaccines.

If it falls a step short, he said, it still could be useful as a complement. The added protection "could prevent major disease resulting from a new pandemic virus."

The take-home message for Lambert is that the current vaccines are not adequate, and M2 is a good avenue to pursue.

"Until the studies are done in humans, the jury is still out whether it will work," she said.

http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/news/nation/11946852.htm
 

Kim99

Veteran Member
Pres. Bush just met with the Vietnamese Prime Minister. I wonder if they discussed bird flu? It's frustrating to me that we're not hearing more about this.
I can't get anyone around me to care. I printed out one article, ONE!
It was from WebMD, not exactly a fringe website. My husband wouldn't even read it. He has no interest at all. :sht:
 

Martin

Deceased
June 21, 2005


Richard Feldman
Let's arm ourselves for possibility of flu pandemic


Her name was Gussie. She died in Salt Lake City of influenza at the age of 32. She was the grandmother I never knew. She was typical of the victims of the great influenza pandemic of 1918. Unlike the usual influenza that is a killer of the very young and elderly, the 1918 pandemic was most deadly for people between the ages of 20 to 40. It killed nearly 700,000 Americans and nearly 40 million worldwide.

More soldiers died of the flu than in combat during World War I. It has been described as the worst epidemic in history, even worse than the Black Death bubonic plague of the 14th century. Also known as the Spanish flu, in the two years that it ravaged the Earth, a fifth of the world's population was infected.

This influenza was much more virulent than any other the world has seen. Some people died quickly. Many succumbed to a vicious, suffocating viral pneumonia, unable to breath through the blood-tinged froth that blocked their airways.

Because of the massive numbers of sick, hospitals were overwhelmed and there was a serious shortage of doctors and nurses to care for so many victims. With the massive numbers of dead, bodies literally piled up because of a shortage of coffins and morticians.

The strains of influenza virus causing a pandemic are much different from the types that cause our normal yearly epidemics. Although epidemic viruses genetically change necessitating the development of a new flu vaccine each year, these viruses are generally variants of the common subtypes that are already in existence. Pandemic influenza, on the other hand, results when a new subtype appears that has never circulated in humans.

Different subtypes of flu viruses infect animals, birds and humans. Non-human subtypes of influenza virus will only rarely infect people, and they do not ordinarily result in sustained person-to-person transmission. However, most if not all pandemics have occurred when both an avian influenza virus and a human influenza virus infect a person or another animal at the same time. The genetic material from each virus mixes and creates a new virus that may easily infect humans and be passed among people.

And because avian flu viruses do not commonly infect humans, there is little or no pre-existing immune protection against them. This is why there has been great concern about the recent outbreaks in Asia of avian influenza in poultry that crossed over to humans and caused a number of deaths.

There have been two milder pandemics since 1918, the Asian flu in 1957 and the Hong Kong flu in 1968. But authorities believe we are overdue for another severe influenza pandemic. A "medium-level" pandemic could cause sickness in an estimated 47 million people and more than 200,000 deaths in America.

We are unprepared to adequately respond to a serious pandemic. There would be no vaccine immediately available, and it would take at least six months to produce. Technology for producing flu vaccine is 60 years old. Recent new initiatives to create a pandemic avian influenza vaccine and new technologies to produce vaccine more rapidly should be elevated to a top priority. Oral antiviral medication that may prevent or treat influenza is available but has not been stockpiled to treat the numbers of people that would be affected.

Further, our health-care and public health systems may lack the capacity to handle such a prolonged disaster of this magnitude despite improvements made because of bio-terrorism preparedness planning and surveillance, which generally are suited for smaller outbreaks.

Federal and state governments are developing pandemic influenza preparedness and response plans. They represent good, necessary and basic traditional public health interventions, but the plans must also offer more tangible solutions. Considering the monumental challenges of a pandemic and recurrent failures in adequately addressing annual influenza outbreaks, anxious concern is justified. The sickness, death, and social and economic disruption that a pandemic would cause is difficult for us to even imagine.

Feldman, M.D., is director of medical education and family medicine residency at St. Francis Hospitals and Health Centers and a former state health commissioner. Contact him at richard.feldman@ssfhs.org.



http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050621/OPINION/5062
 

Kim99

Veteran Member
http://english.chinamil.com.cn/site2/news-channels/2005-06/21/content_233577.htm

China issues regulations on army's participation in disaster relief

PLA Daily 2005-06-21

BEIJING, June 20 (Xinhuanet) -- China recently issued a set of regulations on army's participation in dealing with emergencies and disaster relief, which spell out the responsibilities of the army in these affairs.

According to the regulations, jointly endorsed by Premier Wen Jiabao and Chairman of China's Central Military Commission Hu Jintao, major tasks of the army in such affairs include rescue, transport, road repair, epidemic control and medical treatment operations as well as protecting important targets, removing dangers and aiding reconstruction in the disaster areas.
The army will engage in the relief activities upon the request of the central or local governments. The central and local finances are to fund these operations of the army, according to the regulations.
The regulations will take effect as of July 1, 2005.
The Chinese army has long played an important role in dealing with emergencies and disaster relief, especially in major floods and earthquakes.


note the epidemic control statement again...and also how soon these new regulations come into effect. July 1st!!

Are they gearing up for Martial Law?.
 

Martin

Deceased
Why the bird flu virus is less deadly but more dangerous

Why the bird flu virus is less deadly but more dangerous

Posted Jun 21, 2005 PT by the Health Ranger (Mike Adams)


People are rather confused over news that the bird flu virus has now mutated to a less lethal, but far more dangerous, form. It seems like a contradiction: If it's less lethal, shouldn't it be less dangerous?
No. The mainstream press isn't explaining this very well, so let me cover the basics. It has to do with evolutionary biology, or what you might call microbiological Darwinism, which basically involves how these viruses survive, thrive and get passed on from one person to the next.

If you're a really deadly virus -- like Ebola, which kills 90 percent of the people infected -- then you're actually not very good at spreading from one person to the next. Why? You kill your host too quickly. You're so deadly that your host dies before you get a chance to be infectious.

In order to be a pandemic, a virus must be highly infectious; it must be able to spread from one person to another in an undetectable way. When a virus becomes less-immediately lethal, it is able to survive in the host in an undetectable state, for a longer period of time. This is what makes viruses really, really dangerous: A dangerous virus is not lethal to one individual; rather, it can exist in a hidden state and be passed from one person to the next. It's the contagiousness of a virus that makes it dangerous.

Let's say you're a virus and you consider "success" to be wiping people out. Obviously, viruses don't have that sort of thought process, this is just a way to explain their strategies. If you're a virus and you're trying to infect and kill people, you're going to be far more "successful" if you have a low kill rate but infect a billion people, rather than having a very high kill rate and only infecting 10 or 20 people. If you are a very deadly virus in the Congo, for example, and you manage to wipe out a small village, even though you were rather horrifying to the village and fatal to those people, you as a virus haven't been very successful. Why? You wiped out the village; there's nobody left to spread it. Now, again, of course viruses don't think this way: They don't have plans, they don't have strategies -- this is just evolutionary biology in play.

On the other hand, let's say you are a virus with a very small kill rate -- you only kill one or two percent of your hosts -- but you're highly infectious. You, as this type of virus, can easily spread from one person to the next. Since 98 or 99 percent of the people who are infected with you won't die from it, they can walk around cities, airports and football stadiums and spread you to all the other hosts out there. If you are that kind of virus, you're going to be a lot more "successful" in spreading.

In the history of infectious disease, the most deadly viruses, in terms of the total number of people killed worldwide, were highly infectious, not necessarily highly lethal. If you look at the 1918 so-called "Spanish" flu (which really wasn't from Spain, but that's another story), the virus did not have a kill rate anywhere near 90 percent, or even 70 percent. I believe it was well under 20 percent. But this virus was good at spreading from one host to another, which is what made it extremely dangerous.

Hospitals are breeding grounds for infectious disease

Viruses also like to spread in hospitals. Medical staff personnel are right there touching the patient, trying to help him or her. At that point, a patient can be convulsing and literally flinging body fluids around the room: blood, mucous, phlegm, saliva, etc. This is actually a very "successful" way for a virus to spread. This is precisely how some of these viruses do spread. They spread by putting the patient into a hospital and then infecting the hospital staff.
In the history of infectious disease, especially in Africa, we've seen a trend: At some point, the hospital staff says, "Forget this -- I'm outta here!" Then they flee the hospitals, often taking the virus with them (because they've been infected). They flee into the forest. This is actually, from a bigger-picture point of view, a good strategy to protect human life. When they're off in isolation, those infected people cannot infect other hospital staff or other patients.

Even in modern times, infectious diseases spread rapidly in hospitals. In modern, Western hospitals, you see MRSA (superbugs) that are resistant to every known antibiotic. They spread in hospitals, from one patient to the next and sometimes to the medical staff who have close contact with those patients. Viruses and infectious diseases really love the type of environment hospitals provide: a successful, concentrated battery of new hosts they can infect.


The bird flu gets more dangerous, but less lethal
Now, given all of this, let's go back to the very beginning and talk about the World Health Organization's announcement about the bird flu virus. Experts of infectious disease say that the bird flu virus is now mutating to a less lethal strain and it has them very worried. Hopefully, this now makes perfect sense: instead of killing 90 percent of people, the bird flu virus is lowering its kill rate to an estimated 50 percent. This virus is mutating into a form that can survive inside a person's body without being detected and without killing that person, so of course it will be far more infectious.
This is what concerns the WHO and the CDC. These are the people who are experts in infectious disease and who know the history of pandemics. If this virus kill rate drops even further, down to about 25 percent, it will become even more deadly in a global sense. It will become more of a pandemic threat because the virus will easily slip out of the country -- out of China, Korea, and Thailand or wherever it happens to be at the moment. It will slip out, infect some tourists or business travelers, get onto airplanes and into airports and then move very rapidly from one country to another.

A few years ago, we saw the beginnings of this with SARS. Thankfully, SARS was controlled, but it was by no means a sure thing. SARS almost got completely out of control; it almost became the next global pandemic. If it wasn't for some outstanding work by the CDC, the WHO and by countries like Canada, that disease would have become a global killer. It would have produced an extremely high body count.



SARS, revisited

Right now, the H5N1 bird flu virus is poised to follow in the footsteps of SARS. Hopefully, we've learned some lessons from SARS around the world. The statements we're hearing from the CDC and the WHO indicate we have learned these lessons the hard way. People on the inside know that we almost got nailed by SARS. If it had infected the US population, it could have easily killed millions of people. They don't want that to happen with bird flu, so they're being more cautious and raising the alarm, rather than getting caught with their pants down, so to speak, and trying to play catch up with a virus that's already become a pandemic.
History judges people more cautiously if they put out a warning first. People at the WHO and the CDC do not want to be the groups in history who failed to warn the public. In terms of infectious disease, it's better to warn people about something that isn't coming, than to say nothing and have it wipe out a whole nation. At least, that's what most of these experts believe and I think they're correct. It's better to be cautious than to be wrong.

What does all this mean to you as an individual who values your own health and life? Is the bird flu virus something you need to be worried about? Should you be concerned about it, just because all of these other people are warning you about it? Well, yes and no.

In the very short term, the answer is no. It's not on U.S. soil, if you happen to be reading this in the States. If you're in Australia, it's not anywhere on that continent. If you're in the U.K., New Zealand, South America or Japan, it hasn't been detected in any of these locations. In the short term, if you're not in a region where bird flu has been detected, then you're relatively safe for the moment. The issue comes out in the long term, and the long term could be actually a fairly short time scale -- 6, 12 or 18 months. In the long term, if this thing gets out of control, we're all in trouble. Here's why:


Inadequate medical facilities
First off, there are not enough hospital facilities in any country, not even developed countries, to handle the massive influx of patients expected from a bird flu pandemic. If this thing gets out and starts infecting a percentage of the population, health authorities are basically going to start turning away patients at medical facilities. They will have to.
They'll say, "Go home -- we cannot treat you here. We can only treat the most critical patients." If you're critical with the bird flu, your chances are very, very slim of surviving it. Medical facilities are not sufficient, as the WHO has widely acknowledged. The CDC has spoken out about this, warning us here in the US as well. Everybody knows this to be the case. There just flat out aren't enough facilities.

Frankly, from an economic standpoint, it's probably not even worth building those facilities just on the off chance of a virus every 100 years. I'm not saying that's my economic decision, but society has decided not to overbuild hospitals in case there might be a huge pandemic suddenly requiring a lot of hospital beds.


The false hope of bird flu vaccines

Secondly, nobody's going to save you with a vaccine. The governments of the world say they are stockpiling vaccines for the bird flu virus, yet I've been reading that these vaccines are just in testing. They're not even approved as drugs. They're not even being manufactured in any kind of large scale. Why? It's an economic issue. The pharmaceutical companies that manufacture these vaccines don't want to get burned by holding a bunch of inventory for a vaccine nobody needs. Of course, there's a chance the bird flu virus might be a big dud. If you're a vaccine manufacturer, you don't want to manufacture 100 million dollars worth of product just on the off-chance that some nation might need it and buy it from you.
You have to manufacture this stuff ahead of time, too. You can't just turn it around in 48 hours. These private companies are not going to take the financial risk needed to stockpile these vaccines. The industry won't do it -- forget it.

What about governments? Shouldn't governments stockpile these vaccines? Well, some governments say they are doing so, or are planning on doing so, but nobody's really doing it right now. They certainly aren't stockpiling enough of these vaccines to treat the entire population.


Forget about antiviral prescription drugs

If there is a bird flu pandemic, there are some antiviral prescription drugs that might help, such as Tamiflu. Tamiflu definitely has antiviral properties, although I would argue that many medicinal herbs and antiviral nutritional supplements are far more powerful. However, governments say they're going to have some Tamiflu sitting around, just in case there's a pandemic.
Does that make you any safer? Again, no, it does not. Why? The virus has already mutated into a form resistant to Tamiflu, according to some infectious disease experts. Now, of course, this may not be relevant in the long term. The virus could again mutate into a form susceptible to Tamiflu, making it effective. But even if it is effective, how many doses are available, versus how many people might be infected? You see, Tamiflu is something that you have to take daily, so they need one dose per day for each person in the country. Do the math for about 300 million people in the U.S., for example, taking Tamiflu for just 10 days. You would need three billion doses of Tamiflu stockpiled, just to cover the entire U.S. population for a period of 10 days.

Now of course, 10 days isn't long enough, this virus could be around for 10 months. The U.S. isn't stockpiling anywhere near 3 billion doses of Tamiflu -- not even anything close to that. This antiviral prescription drug will be rationed. It will be held back from everyone but senior citizens, people lucky enough to have the right doctor or those who have the right amount of money to buy it on the underground market. Basically, it will be available to certain selected people. We have no idea how those people are going to be selected, but it's not going to be available for everybody who needs it, if anybody needs it. If there's a pandemic, you can just line up at the end of the line because there's going to be a whole nation of people lining up in front of you, trying to get their hands on some of this Tamiflu.

Right now, in the summer of 2005, the big picture is that the bird flu virus is not yet a huge threat, but it could become a very big threat, a very real threat. If and when it does, you can bet that hospital facilities will not be available in sufficient quantities, and antiviral drugs and bird flu vaccines will not be available.

Legal kidnapping: quarantine

What's the nation going to do? Not too long ago, here in the United States, President Bush signed an executive order stating that health authorities and military personnel can quarantine individuals who they suspect are infected with bird flu.

Quarantine is an interesting concept. If one individual or one group of people is infected with bird flu, they obviously need to be quarantined for the good of everyone else in the community. What if there's an outbreak in a town? Would the US military quarantine that entire town? Probably, yes. What if there was an outbreak in a school? Could they quarantine that entire school? Yes, absolutely. They not only could; they will do so justifiably. I actually agree with that policy. It basically means you are a prisoner, a medical prisoner, for as long as they decide to keep you and run tests on you to find out if you are infected.

In other words, if you value your freedom, don't get sick. Have a healthy immune system, okay? Don't show signs and symptoms of being infected with bird flu virus, or any kind of upper respiratory disease. You don't even want to have a cold; you don't even want to cough, if this thing becomes a pandemic. You will be arrested and quarantined against your will, to protect the population. Frankly, if you ran the country, you would probably make the exact same decision, and I'm not arguing with it. I'm just saying that this is the harsh reality you may have to deal with if this becomes a pandemic.


Fending off the bird flu virus

What can you do? What are the real solutions? How do you make yourself virtually immune to the bird flu virus? I've literally written an entire book on that. I didn't mean for this whole thing to be one giant infomercial, by the way. I hope you got a lot of value from the other information here. I just wanted to explain evolutionary biology and why a less-fatal virus becomes more dangerous. However, if you are looking for real solutions, read my book "How to Beat the Bird Flu Virus." You can find it on www.truthpublishing.com. There's even a downloadable free report, listing 12 potent antiviral foods, herbs and nutritional supplements that, based on my research, are far more powerful than Tamiflu. They work in ways less likely to be obsolete, even if the virus mutates. Even if the H5N1 mutates into something resistant to Tamiflu, it's highly unlikely it will be resistant to these 12 antiviral herbs.

In fact, right now, I could go out into my garden and I pick at least five or six, probably a dozen, different plants with potent, strong antiviral capabilities. I could make them into a tea or put them in some alcohol and make a tincture out of them. It's relatively easy to protect yourself against viruses. It doesn't mean you won't ever get the bird flu, especially if you have a suppressed immune system from drinking a lot of soft drinks (see related ebook on soft drinks) and consuming red meat, dairy products, processed foods, high sodium and foods with large amounts of additives. If you haven't been taking care of your health, you are far more susceptible to infection, even with the help of antiviral herbs, nutritional supplements and foods.

Your immune system is the best defense

Do you want to know the big strategy, the big picture? BE HEALTHY. If there were ever a reason to transform your health, letting go of those old, unhealthy habits and doing something positive for the future of your own health, this is as good a reason as you will find. This is a great reason! Give yourself a strong, healthy immune system, so you can survive the bird flu if it happens to come around. A strong, healthy, fully functioning immune system will absolutely give you a strong advantage over everyone else. If this thing ends up with a kill rate of 20 percent, meaning that four out of five people will survive this, you can easily be in the survival group if you take care of your health starting today.
Who will be the one out of five who won't make it? Well, it will typically be a person with a suppressed immune system -- someone who is unable to fight off viral infections, unable to hydrate themselves well, or who doesn't have good communication between the cells and organs of their body. We see these kind of people all around us today -- everyday people, who are following the standard American diet, avoiding exercise, avoiding sunlight, not drinking enough water, eating a lot of processed foods and so on.

Those people will definitely be more susceptible and, frankly, they're going to be out of luck. If this bird flu virus really hits, the hospital beds are going to be full and the drugs won't be there. Everybody will want to help you, but nobody will be able to. We just don't have that much medical bandwidth, that much capacity to treat hundreds of millions of people. We just don't have it. If this becomes a pandemic, it's up to you to take care of your own health and survive it.


The only side effect is enhanced health

Now, let's say all of this discussion is a complete waste of time; all of this is just overblown. Let's say the bird flu virus never gets out of Asia and never becomes a problem. What's the downside? You've gone through all this trouble to make yourself healthy. You gave up all those unhealthy foods and now have a super-strong immune system. There is no downside!

You haven't wasted your time getting healthy -- not at all. In fact, if you make these choices today, transforming your health and giving up those old, unhealthy habits, you will go on to have a healthier life anyway, regardless of whether or not there's a bird flu pandemic. Now certainly, the bird flu gives you a good reason to be healthy. It's not really necessary though; you can decide to do this anyway.

If you do pursue this health path, if you're not doing it already, then you will have nothing but positive side effects from it. So what if the bird flu doesn't hit? Hopefully it won't. Hopefully, no one will suffer from this. We don't want infectious disease running around all over the world. Hopefully, this is all a waste of time. All this preparation -- the immune system enhancement, the modifications to our diet and lifestyle, the exercise -- could be pointless in terms of the bird flu virus. That's still completely okay because, either way, you walk away healthier.

Don't make the mistake of thinking you can pop pills to save yourself from bird flu. Don’t rely on your government, your medical facilities in your local community or even the CDC and the WHO to save you. Sure, they're all doing a great job; in fact, they're doing an outstanding job. They deserve a lot of credit for what they're doing, but they can't help everybody. Stop thinking that those people are the solution.

The solution is being healthier yourself -- boosting your own immune system, transforming your health. Don't be a chronically diseased person when this virus comes around. If you already suffer from asthma, diabetes, cancer or heart disease, then you're going to be even more susceptible to this. Being healthy will give you the best chance of surviving; you can be among the four out of five who make it through this potential pandemic.

Again, if none of this happens, then it's good for us all. We're all safer, we're all better off and you walk away a much healthier person anyway. Isn't that really what we want to be -- healthy and safe? Doing that is relatively straightforward, but it isn't easy. You've got to give up on those soft drinks, for example. I know that it's tough, but it's doable. And the bird flu virus may finally give you a good reason to clean up your diet and get healthy.


http://www.newstarget.com/008734.html
 

libtoken

Veteran Member
http://www.promedmail.org/pls/promed/f?p=2400:1000

AVIAN INFLUENZA, HUMAN - EAST ASIA (93): CDC ADVICE
***************************************************
A ProMED-mail post
<http://www.promedmail.org>
ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases
<http://www.isid.org>

Date: Tue 21 Jun 2005
From: ProMED-mail <promed@promedmail.org>
Source: CDC, Update: Notice to Travelers, Avian Influenza A (H5N1), Tue 21
Jun 2005 [edited]
<http://www.cdc.gov/travel/other/avian_flu_ah5n1_031605.htm>


Notice to travellers: updated 20 Jun, 2005 (and 14 Apr 2005; released 16
Mar 2005)
---------------------------------------------------
According to a 15 Jun 2005 World Health Organization (WHO) report, the
Ministry of Health of Viet Nam has confirmed 4 new human cases of avian
influenza A (H5N1) virus infection. All 4 patients are alive. 2 are from
the northern city of Hanoi, the 3rd from the nearby province of Hai Duong,
and the 4th from the central province of Nghe An.

These are the latest in a series of sporadic human cases of H5N1 human
infection reported in Viet Nam since December 2004. Also since December
2004, there have been 4 cases reported from Cambodia. As of 17 Jun 2005,
there have been 107 human cases of avian influenza A (H5N1) reported in
Viet Nam (86), Thailand (17), and Cambodia (4), resulting in 54 deaths [and
one in Indonesia - Mod.CP]. For more information about H5N1 infections in
humans and the cumulative number of cases, visit the WHO website:
<http://www.who.int/csr/disease/avian_influenza/en/>.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) are in communication
with WHO and continue to closely monitor the H5N1 situation in Asia. CDC
has not recommended that the general public avoid travel to any of the
countries affected by H5N1. Most cases of H5N1 infection in humans are
thought to have occurred from direct contact with infected poultry.
Therefore, care should be taken to avoid contact, when feasible, with live,
well-appearing, sick, or dead poultry and any surfaces that may have been
contaminated by poultry, or their feces or secretions. Transmission of H5N1
viruses to 2 people through consumption of uncooked duck blood may also
have occurred in Vietnam in 2005. Therefore, consumption of uncooked
poultry or poultry products, including blood, should be avoided. It is
thought that a few cases of person to person spread of H5N1 viruses have
occurred. For example, one instance of probable person to person
transmission associated with close contact between an ill child and her
mother is thought to have occurred in Thailand in September 2004. More
recently, possible person to person transmission of H5N1 viruses is being
investigated in several clusters of human cases in Vietnam. So far, spread
of H5N1 virus from one ill person to another has been very rare and
transmission has not continued any further beyond one person.

H5N1 infections in humans can cause serious disease and death. An
inactivated vaccine to protect humans against influenza A (H5N1) is
undergoing human clinical trials in the United States, but no human H5N1
vaccine is currently available. The H5N1 viruses currently infecting birds
and some humans in Asia are resistant to amantadine and rimantadine, 2
antiviral medications commonly used for influenza. The H5N1 viruses are
susceptible to the antiviral medications oseltamavir and zanamavir,
although the effectiveness of these drugs when used for treatment of H5N1
virus infection is unknown. For more information about influenza antiviral
drugs, see <http://www.cdc.gov/flu/avian/outbreaks/asia.htm>.

Outbreaks of H5N1 among poultry have been confirmed in Cambodia, China,
Indonesia, Thailand, and Vietnam during 2005, and in Malaysia and Laos
during 2004. To reduce the risk of infection, Americans [and others]
visiting areas where outbreaks of H5N1 among poultry or human H5N1 cases
have been reported should observe the following measures to help avoid
illness: Before any international travel Always educate yourself and others
who may be traveling with you about any disease risks in areas you plan to
visit (for information about H5N1, see this website for information:
<http://www.cdc.gov/flu/avian/index.htm>).

Be sure you are up to date with all your inoculations, and see your doctor
or health care provider, ideally 4 to 6 weeks before travel to get any
additional shots, medications, or information you may need. CDC's health
recommendations for international travel to Southeast Asia are provided on
CDC's travelers' health website at <http://www.cdc.gov/travel/seasia.htm>.

Assemble a travel health kit containing basic first aid and medical
supplies. Be sure to include a thermometer and alcohol-based hand rub for
hand hygiene. See this webpage for other suggested items:
<http://www.cdc.gov/travel/other/travelers-health-kit.htm>.

Identify in-country health care resources in advance of your trip.

Check your health insurance plan or get additional insurance that covers
medical evacuation in case you become sick. Information about medical
evacuation services is provided on the US Department of State website:
<http://www.travel.state.gov/medical.html>.

During travel: Avoid all direct contact with poultry, including touching
well-appearing, sick, or dead chickens and ducks. Avoid places such as
poultry farms and bird markets where live poultry are raised or kept, and
avoid handling surfaces contaminated with poultry feces or excretions.

As with other infectious illnesses, one of the most important preventive
practices is careful and frequent handwashing. Cleaning your hands often,
using soap and water (or waterless alcohol-based hand rubs when soap is not
available and hands are not visibly soiled), removes potentially infectious
material from your skin and helps prevent disease transmission.

Influenza viruses are destroyed by heat; therefore, as a precaution, all
foods from poultry, including eggs and poultry blood, should be thoroughly
cooked.

After your return: monitor your health for 10 days. If you become ill with
fever, difficulty breathing, cough, or any illness during this period,
consult a health care provider. Before you visit a health care setting,
tell the provider about your symptoms, whether you have had direct poultry
contact, and where you traveled. This way he or she can be aware you have
traveled to an area reporting avian influenza.

For more information about H5N1 infections in humans, visit the WHO website
and the CDC Avian Influenza site: <http://www.cdc.gov/flu/avian/index.htm>.

For more information about CDC's health recommendations for travel to Asia,
see <http://www.cdc.gov/travel/seasia.htm> and
<http://www.cdc.gov/travel/eastasia.htm>.




and also

A ProMED-mail post
<http://www.promedmail.org>
ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases
<http://www.isid.org>

Date: Tue, 21 Jun 2005
From: Nati Elkin <nati@poultrymed.com>
Source: Forbes COM / AFP, 21 Jun 2005 [edited]
<http://www.forbes.com/work/feeds/afx/2005/06/21/afx2102926.html>


China reports new outbreak of bird flu - FAO
--------------------------------------------
China today reported a new outbreak of deadly bird flu which has infected
128 geese and ducks in the north western Xinjiang region, killing 63 of
them, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) told Agence France-Presse.

The outbreak -- the 3rd reported by the Chinese government in the past 2
months -- occurred in Changji city near Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang,
the FAO said, citing Chinese government information. "We got this
information from the Ministry of Agriculture [MOA] this afternoon," said
Noureddin Mona, the FAO's representative in China. "The report said 128
geese and ducks were infected; 63 have died."

Citing the MOA report, which has not been made public, Mona said that
authorities have culled 1490 birds, including the infected geese and ducks
and those raised in nearby farms. "The MOA said it's under control," Mona
said. "No human cases were reported."

The infected birds were diagnosed by a national bird flu laboratory and
determined to have died from the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu, Mona said.
The MOA report did not say when the outbreak occurred.

Earlier [in June 2005], 1042 geese were infected with H5N1 at a farm in
Tacheng city in northwestern Xinjiang, near the border with Kazakhstan,
with 460 of them dying, state media had reported.

--
Nati Elkin, DVM
<http://www.poultrymed.com>
<nati@poultrymed.com>

[A 2nd outbreak of H5N1 in Xinjiang, to the south east of the recently
notified one on the Kazakh border, underlines the spread of the virus into
central Asia. A previous Kazakh newswire on an H5N1 outbreak in Xingiang,
adjacent to their border (see 20050620.1735), also mentioned ducks, though
the Chinese notification referred to geese only. Official information from
China would help to clarify the situation. - Mod.AS]

[see also:
Avian influenza, geese - China (04) 20050620.1735
Avian influenza, geese - China (03): OIE 20050608.1591
Avian influenza, wild waterfowl - China (03) 20050604.1558
Avian influenza, wild waterfowl - China (02): warning system 20050601.1529
Avian influenza, human - China (02): not 20050528.1484
Avian influenza, wild waterfowl - China 20050527.1462
Avian influenza, human - China: susp., RFI 20050525.1435
Avian influenza, geese - China (02) 20050523.1423
Avian influenza, geese - China 20050522.1413
Unexplained deaths, geese - China (Qinghai): RFI 20050510.1278]

..............arn/pg/sh
 

Martin

Deceased
AVIAN INFLUENZAMISUSE OF HUMAN ANTIVIRAL DRUG

Warning against illegal vaccine use


APIRADEE TREERUTKUARKUL

Animal health officials are keeping a close watch for illegal use of a human antiviral drug to vaccinate poultry against avian influenza.

It follows a warning by the World Health Organisation of a possible threat to public safety in the event of a global bird flu pandemic.

Livestock Development Department chief Yukol Limlaemthong has instructed provincial livestock officials to strictly control use of amantadine and other unauthorised vaccines at poultry farms in provinces previously hit by the bird flu epidemic _ such as Chachoengsao, Phitsanulok and Suphan Buri.

``We can't be complacent about bird flu outbreaks because nobody knows when it's going to strike the agricultural, health and economic sectors again,'' he said, even though there had been no reports of illegal use of the drug in those areas.

The action follows a report about China's use of amantadine, a human antiviral drug, on infected chickens to suppress bird flu outbreaks. WHO officials are expected to meet officials in Beijing this week to discuss the issue as it violates international livestock guidelines.

The revelation of the drug's misuse could explain why scientists discovered late last year that bird flu had grown resistant to the drug, which can now no longer be used to fight the virus in humans.

Amantadine is one of two drugs used to treat human influenza. But researchers last year determined that the H5N1 bird flu strain circulating in Thailand and Vietnam had become resistant, leaving only one alternative, osetamivir, still effective. This drug is much more expensive to mass produce and less affordable, especially for developing countries in Southeast Asia.

Mr Yukol said all drugs used to prevent respiratory and digestive disorders among farm chickens had to be registered with the Food and Drug Administration. Anyone found to have used trafficked vaccines or antiviral drugs without government permission would face legal action, he warned.

Public Health Minister Suchai Charoenratanakul remained pessimistic about the effectiveness of amantadine in fighting bird flu in humans.

He said stockpiling the present antiviral osetamivir and keeping the health surveillance system seemed to be the best way to prevent bird flu in humans.

Bird flu swept through Thailand in January and July 2004, killing 12 people and causing 60-80 billion baht of damage to the poultry industry, one of the country's major export sectors.

http://www.bangkokpost.com/News/23Jun2005_news20.php
 

Martin

Deceased
Wednesday, June 22, 2005

Cost seen limiting use of flu drug on birds in China
CHINA - High costs will limit the use of an anti-viral drug to treat Chinese poultry infected with deadly bird flu, the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) said on Wednesday.


The World Health Organisation gave tacit confirmation on Tuesday that amantadine, an anti-viral drug meant for humans, had been used on birds at Chinese farms, a practice that threatens to make the medication useless for fighting human influenza.

The Washington Post said at the weekend the Chinese government had encouraged farmers to use amantadine on poultry to suppress avian flu, which the government has since denied.

China's Ministry of Agriculture sent the FAO a report on Tuesday that said the government had never approved use of amantadine on birds and that it was well aware of the risks, Noureddin Mona, the FAO's representative in China, said.

"In the report, I could read between the lines that some farmers maybe used (amantadine)," Mona told Reuters. But the scope of use of the anti-viral drug would be limited in China because of the price.

"Using amantadine on poultry is very costly, it is not economical, because you have to use it every day, unlike the vaccines that are used once every six months," Mona said.

"The (bird flu) vaccines here in China are cheap and are distributed to some institutions like veterinary departments and they are distributed free of charge. And if some farmers buy them on their own, they can get some subsidies or compensation."

Scientists fear that avian flu, which is infectious in birds but does not spread easily among humans, could mutate into a form better able to pass from animals to people and possibly trigger a global flu pandemic.

The deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu first surfaced in poultry in Hong Kong and China eight years ago and has killed at least 37 people in Vietnam, 12 in Thailand and four in Cambodia.

China reported a new outbreak of H5N1 in its far western Xinjiang region this week, the third time the virus has been found among birds in remote western China in recent months.

"It looks like the virus is still very active," Mona said.
 

Martin

Deceased
Health officials increase surveillance of avian virus, push for vaccine

By Rebecca Vesely, STAFF WRITER
Inside Bay Area

FIRST THING every morning, Skip Skivington gets on the Internet and checks the latest news reports on bird flu activity in Asia.
Skivington is director of Kaiser Permanente Northern California's threat assessment management work group, and his team of five has made avian flu its top priority.

"This is a really scary subject," he said. "I lose sleep over it. We are planning and planning and hope we are prepared if it hits."

By "it" Skivington means H5N1 avian influenza A, a lethal subtype of bird flu that has killed millions of birds in Asia and 54 people since its resurgence in December 2003.

Global health experts are sounding an alarm — in ever more urgent tones — that H5N1 has the potential to spread easily from human to human and lead to a worldwide pandemic.

Writing in the journal Nature inMay, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases in Bethesda, Md., Dr. Anthony Fauci, warned that averting a flu pandemic is a "race against time," and countries around the world are unprepared for a pandemic.

"Clearly there is much to be accomplished, and time is of the essence," he wrote.

In California, state and county health officials, as well as experts at Kaiser such as Skivington, are keeping a watchful eye for any suspicious cases of flu from people who have traveled to Asia. Meanwhile, agriculture experts are monitoring the bird populations in the state for any potential outbreaks.

"We figure if a pandemic is going to happen it will happen in California, and it will happen at one of our facilities since so many people are insured by Kaiser," Skivington said.

An evolving virus


While the United States is not on the brink of a bird flu epidemic, it is "a worrisome situation," Dr. Julie Gerberding, director of the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told reporters last month.

What is most worrisome about the H5N1 virus is that it is highly fatal, killing about half of people infected. Out of 107 people who have contracted bird flu in Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia since December 2003, 54 died. So far, most people appear to have caught the virus from handling sick birds or bird feces. It is spread from region to region by wild ducks.

A few cases of transmission between humans may have occurred in Thailand last year, heightening fears. In addition, the virus appears to have evolved in the past year, and "the risk for pandemic influenza could have risen," according to the World Health Organization.

Dr. Carol Glaser, chief of the California Department of Health Services' viral branch in Richmond, explained that a virus needs three components to create a pandemic: lack of immunity in the population, a highly pathogenic strain and easy transmission.

"Thank goodness that third component isn't in place," Glaser said.

"That's the one thing saving us from a pandemic right now."

In the past year, the state's lab in Richmond has tested 15 people who exhibited signs of bird flu — all were negative. In suspicious cases, the patients were ill with flu-like symptoms such as a fever, cough, sore throat and muscle aches. They had traveled to regions in Southeast Asia and had come into contact with poultry farms or markets.

Health officials are trying to speed up diagnosis of bird flu — a difficult task because unlike SARS, bird flu symptoms so far are nearly identical to garden-variety flu.

Today, 14 counties in the state are equipped to do preliminary testing for A and B flu strains, which can rule out the presence of avian flu more quickly than sending the specimen to Richmond. Alameda, Contra Costa and San Joaquin counties are among those that can do this preliminary testing.

For final confirmation of avian flu, the sample must be sent to the state lab in Richmond and is typically either driven to the lab or sent via courier.

"We've had some scary moments," Glaser said, notably a case in Southern California where the patient had traveled to Southeast Asia as part of a tour group and was gravely ill with what turned out to be pneumonia.

The federal government and state have a draft plan to respond to pandemic influenza. Kaiser Permanente completed its plan late last year. The 12-page Kaiser plan includes guidelines on triage and patient management, quarantine and infection control and key equipment and supplies such as ventilators.

Protecting humans


Meanwhile, state agriculture officials are surveying the poultry population and working with poultry farmers and live dealers to inspect their flocks.

Dr. Carol Cardona, a poultry veterinarian and avian flu experts at the University of California, Davis, is looking at "bird flow" — who raises and keeps the birds and where they are sold. This is particularly important in ethnic markets that sell small numbers of chickens and other live birds.

The state is launching a testing program with merchants in Northern California ethnic markets such as San Francisco's Chinatown this summer, Cardona said.

Another issue is regulating the movement of birds and other animals across borders. Health officials were shocked when several dozen tigers at a Thailand zoo died from bird flu after eating infected chickens in the fall.

"No one would have dreamed of testing tigers coming into this country for bird flu," Cardona said.

"We are wondering, what other animals are coming into the country that need to be tested?"

While surveillance is important, the looming problem is that there is no vaccine to protect humans from avian flu.

Dr. Wendell Brunner, director of public health for Contra Costa County, said the job of local health departments in the event of an outbreak would be vaccinating and quarantining the population — difficult when there's no vaccine.

During last fall's flu vaccine shortage, the Contra Costa County Health Department decided to distribute all of its supply on one day at sites around the county. The purpose of this exercise was to vaccinate the elderly and immune-compromised all at once. It also proved to be a valuable training exercise for Health Department staff in event of a bioterror outbreak or flu pandemic, Brunner said.

"We used this as an opportunity to get the public health staff to realize that in the event of an emergency, everyone is a disaster worker," Brunner said. "It's not just business as usual."

Money for research


Total spending on flu research increased fivefold to $116 million this fiscal year from $20.6 million in 2001, according to the National Institutes of Health. The World Health Organization has appealed for $100 million in flu pandemic prevention efforts.

But Brunner said the federal government needs to do more to spark vaccine development.

"I think there needs to be a federally funded flu vaccine program," he said. "It's unreasonable to expect private industry to fund this."

Research studies to test a vaccine began in April. Chiron Corp. in Emeryville and a second manufacturer, Sanofi Pasteur, are using H5N1 virus taken from a Vietnamese patient in February 2004 to develop a preliminary vaccine for the U.S. government.

It is unclear when the vaccine could be available to the general population.

Chiron is producing about 10,000 doses of the experimental vaccine, though production was delayed by several months due to problems at the company's Liverpool, England plant that scrapped the company's supply of annual flu vaccine in the fall and led to a nationwide shortage.

Chiron is expected to deliver the avian flu vaccine to the federal government for further testing later this summer, a Chiron spokeswoman said.

About 10 other companies worldwide are also working on a vaccine.

Dr. Anthony Iton, Alameda County's public health officer, said without a vaccine, tools to contain the virus would be limited to those during the 1918 flu pandemic that killed 20 million to 40 million people worldwide. What's worse, international travel and porous borders would make it much more difficult to contain a pandemic today.

"Absence of a vaccine returns us to the turn of the century in terms of infectious disease control," Iton said.

Many unknowns


Tamiflu, an antiviral drug that provides some protection against bird flu, is in short supply. At least 17 countries have ordered Tamiflu from manufacturer Roche AG. The United States has ordered only enough to treat about 2 percent of the population.

"Will it be enough? Most of us don't think so," Glaser said.

An infectious disease task force of 8,000 experts nationwide told the House Energy and Commerce Committee in late May that the federal government should stockpile enough Tamiflu for half the U.S. population.

But Tamiflu isn't the same as a vaccine, Iton said.

"I'm not hanging a lot of hope on Tamiflu," he said, noting that it could help people who fall ill with the virus but may do nothing to slow the spread of infection.

With all the unknowns, one thing health officials are sure of is that more needs to be done to prepare for avian flu.

"Sooner or later this virus, which is smarter than any human, will figure out a way to get to the United States," Cardona said.

http://www.insidebayarea.com/portlet/article/html/fragments/print_article.jsp?article=2814792
 

O2BNOK

Veteran Member
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.abc.net.au/rural/content/2005/s1390720.htm

Breakthrough bird flu test to protect poultry industry

Monday, 13/06/2005

Victorian scientists have developed a world first 24-hour test for all 15 strains of avian influenza, more commonly known as bird flu.

Microbiologist Doctor Simone Warren says the new test could identify bird flu in migratory bird populations, before the disease can take hold in Australia's poultry industry.

"So a test like this is not going to keep the virus out, because if the virus enters it's here," she said.

"But what we want to do is pick it up as quick as we can and minimise as much as we can the impact on the poultry industry in Australia."

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


Rapid test for bird flu developed25 June 2005
From New Scientist Print Edition

A TEST that can detect any of the 15 known strains of bird flu in just 24 hours will make it easier to screen wild birds for the virus without harming them.

Standard tests involve growing the virus in cells in a dish, which takes two weeks. Faster tests are available that rely on the DNA-amplifying PCR technique to detect the DNA of various avian influenza strains. "But they don't always pick up the virus from swab samples from a bird. Some require tissue samples," says Simone Warner of the Department of Primary Industries in Victoria, Australia.

Her team modified the key components, called primers, used for avian flu PCR testing. In tests on around 1500 bird swab samples, the method detected any of the 15 strains every time.

An Australian national surveillance system is being discussed. The new test should speed up the process and thus allow a rapid response.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Encouraging....

xoxo
 

Martin

Deceased
Western Blot Signals Phase 6 Bird Flu Pandemic in Vietnam

Recombinomics Commentary
June 23, 2005

>> The team will also be analysing some potentially disturbing but hard-to-assess test results that could suggest a significant number of additional human infections have occurred but went undetected.

The researchers, working at Hanoi's National Institute for Hygiene and Epidemiology, tested hundreds of stored blood samples looking for antibodies to the H5N1 virus to see if there have been more infections in the region than had been previously thought.

A source familiar with the research said scores of samples came back positive.

"These are highly questionable results," said Dick Thompson, director of communications for the WHO's communicable diseases branch in Geneva.

Normally speaking, laboratories would run a microneutralization test, which measures the concentration in the blood of antibodies capable of attacking or neutralizing the H5N1 virus. That test cannot be done at the Hanoi lab, because it doesn't have a high enough biosafety and biosecurity rating. <<


The above comments raise major concerns regarding the number of H5N1 positive patients in northern and central Vietnam. Earlier reports had indicated the National Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology had collected about 1000 serum samples from patients and birds in northern and central Vietnam. These included samples from Quang Binh in central Vietnam where are reported 195 people had bird flu symptoms, Haiphong, where a family of 5 were hospitalized on the same day and all five were H5N1 positive, and Quang Ninh, where a 34 year old physician developed acute respiratory distress on April 1 that was quickly followed by president Bush signing an executive order making bird flu a quarantinable disease in the United States.

After the samples were tested in northern Vietnam an urgent meeting was called and the samples were said to have been shipped to CDC in Atlanta. Shortly thereafter another urgent meeting was called and hed on May 6-7 in Manila. Although alarms were sounded, the results from the serum samples were not released, which would have created a dramatic jump in the number of H5N1 lab confirmed patrients, and signal phase 6 of the pandemic.

Instead, it sounds like another test was required, and when it also showed a high number of positives, the test was designated "research" and the data has still not been released.

So now there are hundreds of H5N1 positives in patients in Vietnam, but more tests are required, but Vietnam lacks the testing facilities. There is so much H5N1 outside the lab that H5N1 cannot be grown inside the lab.

The monitoring of H5N1 in Asia is well beyond scandalous.


http://www.recombinomics.com/News/06230501/H5N1_Western_Blot_Phase_6.html
 

libtoken

Veteran Member
http://www.abc.net.au/ra/news/stories/s1400018.htm

International bird flu experts arrive in Vietnam
Last Updated 24/06/2005, 18:53:09

An international team of experts has arrived in Vietnam to study the likelihood of greater human-to-human transmission of the bird flu virus.

The team of virologists and epidemiologists from Britain, Hong Kong, Japan and the United States will work with Vietnamese scientists until the middle of next week.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) says recent information on the virus in Vietnam will help in preparing for a possible global pandemic.

The WHO has been urging governments to prepare for a pandemic, after a study in Vietnam showed signs of a greater risk of human-to-human transmission of bird flu.

A total of 54 people have died from the H5N1 virus in Vietnam, Thailand and Cambodia since the epidemic started in 2003.

(snip)

On Monday, a health official said about 6,000 chickens were infected with bird flu in Ben Tre province of southern Vietnam in the country's first such outbreak in two months.

Neighbouring China has had three bird flu outbreaks in the past two months, leading authorities to cull thousands of infected birds.
 

Martin

Deceased
Waterfowls in Vietnam's central province infected with bird flu



One-fifth of total waterfowl flocks in Vietnam's central Quang Tri province have just been found to contract bird flu virus strain H5N1, local newspaper Saigon Liberation reported Friday.

The provincial Veterinarian Bureau has culled over 23,000 waterfowls, mainly ducks, in the 38 infected flocks. It will further the culling if the 144 untested flocks prove to be infected with H5N1.

Vietnam, which has seen no bird flu outbreaks since April, culled a flock of 6,700 chickens in southern Ben Tre province in mid-June after specimens from 6,000 dead or sick poultry in the flock were tested positive to H5N1.

An international team, consisting of top virologists and epidemiologists from Chinese Hong Kong, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States, arrived in Vietnam on June 6 to study the possibility of more widespread H5N1 human transmission, changes in the virus strain, and the likelihood of increased person-to-person transmission, said a press release by the office of the World Health Organization (WHO) Representative in Vietnam on Friday.

"What has happened in Vietnam may have public health implications for the entire world, and will be crucial in preparing for a possible pandemic," Hans Troedsson, WHO Representative in the country, was quoted in the release.

In mid-June, the Preventive Medicine Department under Vietnam's Health Ministry announced that four local people were infected with H5N1 from June 1-17, including two from Hanoi capital city, one from northern Hai Duong province, and one from central Nghe An province.

The newly confirmed cases bring the total in Vietnam since mid- December 2004 to 59 cases, of which 18 were fatal. Since the first bird flu patient was detected in Vietnam in late 2003, Vietnam had detected 86 human cases of bird flu infection, including 38 fatalities, in 31 cities and provinces, the department confirmed late last week.

Source: Xinhua

http://english.people.com.cn/200506/24/eng20050624_192146.html
 

Kim99

Veteran Member
International Team to Vietnam to Confirm Phase 6 Pandemic

Recombinomics Commentary
June 24, 2005

>> A team of international experts is in Vietnam studying whether the H5N1 bird flu virus may be evolving into a form that might trigger a human pandemic, the World Health Organization said on Friday.

The team of virologists and epidemiologists was looking at "the possibility of more widespread H5N1 human transmission, changes in the H5N1 virus and the likelihood of increased human-to-human transmission," it said in a statement.

"What has happened in Vietnam may have public health implications for the entire world and will be crucial in preparing for a possible pandemic," Hans Troedsson, WHO Representative in Vietnam, was quoted as saying in the statement…..

So far, there have been very few cases in which human-to-human transmission is suspected, including a Thai woman killed by the virus after cradling her dying daughter all night.<<

The comments on the international team indicate that the team is going to Vietnam to confirm that pandemic phase 6 has begun. Earlier reports provide more detail on the testing which uses western blot to show that many (probably hundreds or thousands) of serum samples from patients in northern and central Vietnam have antibodies to H5N1 providing evidence for infections this season.

The concluding statement above is simply false. Investigators suspect that the human-to-human transmission is extensive and sustained, signaling phase 6. However, most of the cases in northern and central Vietnam are mild relative to the H5N1 bird flu cases in the south, so the announcement of the large number of positives has been delayed for months as more excuse for not reporting the data are made.

Last year there were several small familial clusters in Vietnam and Thailand, including the one described above. The clusters did not extend beyond family members, but they were bimodal for disease onset dates. Thus, 5-10 after the index case developed symptoms, the relative caring for the index case would develop symptoms and test positive fro H5N1.

This season there were more such clusters, but most were in northern Vietnam. The cluster became larger, extended for longer time periods, and affected a wider age range.

The largest reported outbreak was in Quang Binh in the central highlands. Media reports indicated 195 people had symptoms after one girl died and her brother developed symptoms. Like the other clusters, samples from the index case were not collected, but the younger brother developed symptoms and tested positive for H5N1. However, he survived as did most if not all of the 195 with symptoms. Samples were collected from at least 30 individuals, but the results of the testing by the Institute for Hygiene and Epidemiology in Hanoi was not disclosed.

This outbreak was followed by an outbreak in Haiphong that included a family of five. All five family members were hospitalized on March 22 and all tested positive for H5N1. Neighbors were also hospitalized, but test results were not disclosed.

Another cluster at the Sweden-Vietnam hospital raised the possibility of human-to-human transmission and when a physician at the hospital developed acute respiratory distress on April 1, President Bush signed an executive order making bird flu a quarantinable disease.

[B]Thus in April a large number of serum samples had been collected from suspected clusters of bird flu patients. Instead of announcing test results, the shipment of the samples to the CDC in Atlanta was announced on April 15, with results expected within a week. Instead of announcing the results, an urgent meeting in Manila was called for May 6-7. Instead of announcing the results, WHO put out statements on the evolution of H5N1 and general comments on larger clusters. However, the cases described above were not declared positive.Now there is an international team going to Vietnam to again look at results[/B]. Western blot analysis has confirmed that these patients had been infected, but the data is considered to be "research data" pending confirmation by an HI test. However, the media report indicates Vietnam cannot run the HI test, so the announcement of the positives and the conclusion that phase 6 has begun has not been made.

Media reports have indicated the samples had been sent to the CDC in Atlanta, who has the facilities to do the HI tests. Similarly, Canada has sent scientists to Hanoi and Canada can do the HI tests. Because the number of positive samples are so high, an alternative test is being developed, which would avoid shipment of samples and a rapid confirmation that the mild cases are infected with H5N1. This test will allow WHO to know hwo is infected, but will also allow the patients to remain unconfirmed and off the official list because the test is a "research test".

Thus, WHO can delay the announcement of efficient and sustained human-to-human transmission until the dead bodies increase.

However, there have been 28 confirmed or suspect cases admit to another hospital in Hanoi this month. These patients are from at least 6 provinces in northern and central Vietnam. easily cause upper respiratory tract infections, leading to more efficient They have sore throats, a symptoms not commonly reported in H5N1 patients. This new symptom may indicate H5N1 now can more human-to-human transmission, as H5N1 continues to expand its host range and reach into a human reservoir infected with H5N1 that can be easily transported and transmitted within the human population.

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/0...al_Phase_6.html
__________________
 
Last edited:

BB

Membership Revoked
The comments on the international team indicate that the team is going to Vietnam to confirm that pandemic phase 6 has begun. Earlier reports provide more detail on the testing which uses western blot to show that many (probably hundreds or thousands) of serum samples from patients in northern and central Vietnam have antibodies to H5N1 providing evidence for infections this season.

This is the first paragraph from the report posted above. Dr. Niman who has already told us that phase 6 has begun is here telling us that WHO will now SOON make this announcement to the whole world. "Hundreds or thousands" of samples will reveal they were infected with H5N1. Once this announcement is made, it will move to the top of the News-food-chain.

This also is a warning that H5N1, in phase 6 (human-to-human transmission), must already be spreading around the world. The coming WHO announcement will only confirm the virus is spreading from human to human, not how far it's spread already. It could already be in America!
 

Martin

Deceased
Posted on Fri, Jun. 24, 2005





Group estimates potential flu death toll

KEVIN FREKING

Associated Press


WASHINGTON - More than a half-million people could die and more than 2.3 million could be hospitalized if a moderately severe strain of pandemic flu virus hits the United States, a research group said Friday.

The report from the Trust for America's Health assumes that 25 percent of a country's population would become infected if a strain of avian flu became highly contagious and humans had no natural immunity against it. The researchers also assumed the severity of the strain would fall about midway between the pandemic of 1918 and the pandemic of 1968.

The research group says the staggering number of potential deaths and hospitalizations would overwhelm the nation's health care system - and displays the need for greater planning and resources.

It's a message that some lawmakers quickly embraced.

"Unfortunately, the United States is woefully underprepared to respond in the event of a pandemic outbreak," said Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn. "We have a responsibility to focus much greater energy on preparing for avian influenza and similar public-health threats, whether natural, accidental or intentional in origin."

Asia's latest bird-flu outbreak began late last year and has killed 38 people in Vietnam, 12 in Thailand and four in Cambodia. People killed by the flu so far have contracted it from sick birds. The fear is that the virus will mutate to the point that it can be contracted from humans.

Seasonal flu kills an estimated 36,000 to 40,000 people annually in the United States. More than 200,000 people are hospitalized each year because of influenza, and the costs to the national economy is $10 billion, as a result of lost productivity and direct medical expenses.

The Trust for America's Health called on lawmakers to provide more than the $58 million that they've already approved for purchasing influenza countermeasures for a national stockpile. The organization specifically calls for the purchase of more Tamiflu, which it said may be an effective treatment option while scientist worked on a vaccine.

The group estimated that the federal government has ordered 5.3 million courses of Tamiflu for the stockpile, but that it would require about 70 million doses to cover 25 percent of the U.S. population, which is the rate the World Health Organization has recommended.

http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/news/breaking_news/11980361.htm
 

Martin

Deceased
June 24, 2005

Concern about the future of Tamiflu drug

By HELEN BRANSWELL

TORONTO (CP) - News of legal wrangling between the company that invented the flu drug Tamiflu and the company licensed to market it has raised concerns about the future availability of a drug many governments are scurrying to stockpile as a hedge against an influenza pandemic.

Both companies insisted Friday production will continue apace. And Hoffman-La Roche, the Swiss drug giant that makes the drug, said it will proceed with plans to expand its global manufacturing capacity eight-fold by the end of 2006.

But the prospect of the drug becoming the subject of in a protracted court battle worried some of the influenza experts who have been urging the world to prepare for a flu pandemic.

Dr. Frederick Hayden, the scientist who led the initial clinical trials that showed oseltamivir (Tamiflu) worked against human flu viruses, admitted he sees cause for concern in the dispute between Roche and drug inventor Gilead Sciences.

Gilead is a publicly traded drug developer based in Foster City, Calif. and generated revenues of more than $1.3 billion US last year.

"The timing is very awkward. This is a crucial time for many countries with regard to developing their pandemic response plans and building antiviral stockpiles," said Hayden, a virologist at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville.

"They have a responsibility to the global community and public health in general to make sure that there is not any impact on drug supply during this time."

Scientists at Gilead invented the drug, which blocks the ability of invading flu viruses to spread throughout the body. It is one of only two antiviral drugs believed to be effective against the H5N1 avian flu strain currently causing so much worry in Southeast Asia.

Gilead licensed the drug to Roche, which introduced it to the U.S. market in 1999.

Oseltamivir can be taken to protect against infection. But its primary use has been to shorten the course of illness in people who come down with the flu.

Until fears of a pandemic mounted, the drug languished in most markets except Japan, where it is commonly used during flu season.

One of the reason Gilead cites in its letter of intent to terminate the licensing agreement is that Roche has failed to adequately promote and support the drug and to bring it to additional markets.

Currently the entire global supply of Tamiflu has been made in a European production pipeline that culminates at the company's plant in Basel, Switzerland. Roche is highly secretive about the drug and does not reveal how much of the drug it makes or sells annually.

Roche is in the process of getting licensing approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for a U.S. production line with facilities dotted across a number of states including Colorado, South and North Carolina and New Jersey.

That production line, which is to be brought into commission this year, is key to Roche's ability to fulfil the large Tamiflu contracts it has signed with a number of governments around the world, including Britain, Germany and France. Canada has already taken possession of 22.5 million pills - enough to treat 2.25 million people.

Some fear there may be less incentive for Roche to continue that expansion - and undertake others - if it is unsure of its future rights to the drug.

But a spokesperson for Roche Canada insisted the company's plans have not been altered by Gilead's move.

"It's business as usual." Leigh Funston said, adding Roche's top priority is to continue to produce and market Tamiflu globally "including our current and future government pandemic orders."

For its part, Gilead said it couldn't comment on Roche's continued commitment to expansion, but insisted it would be ready to take over production once the licence has been terminated and the mandatory two-year interval - during which Roche will produce the drug - has passed.

"I couldn't comment on their motivations, obviously," said Amy Flood. "What I can say is that we would immediately initiate the work necessary to ensure that Gilead is prepared on our end."

Hayden said whatever their differences, the companies have a responsibility to ensure continued production of the drug.

Dr. Arnold Monto, a flu expert at the University of Michigan, predicted the companies will come to an agreement rather than enter into a lengthy court case.

"My overall feeling is it would be counterproductive for both sides to rock the boat too much," he said from Ann Arbor, Mich.


http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Canada/2005/06/24/pf-1103380.html
 

Martin

Deceased
Doctors lambaste 'Mr Bird Flu' officials for complacency


APIRADEE TREERUTKUARKUL

''Mr Bird Flu'' officials, appointed by the Public Health Ministry to fight the epidemic in every province, were under attack yesterday by doctors for complacency.

Kamnuan Ungchusak, director of the Epidemiology Bureau, said he was worried about a third bird flu outbreak in the country mainly because ''Mr Bird Flu'' officials and provincial health staff appointed to monitor the epidemic had lowered their guard due to an absence of new human infections since October.

''Although the situation has ebbed, the red-alert status on bird flu surveillance must remain. Otherwise, we won't be able to control the disease if a global influenza pandemic happens,'' he told a seminar on preparations for a new wave of bird flu, attended by health officials from across the country.

Public Health Minister Suchai Charoenratanakul appointed officials in each province to act as ''Mr Bird Flu'', mapping out plans to combat avian influenza and lead teams to eradicate any sign of the outbreak.

However, only seven cases of influenza and pneumonia were being reported to the ministry each week. He questioned the accuracy of those figures, given that an estimated 120,000 Thais are believed to contract pneumonia and influenza across the country every year.

People with pneumonia and influenza have sometimes been found to also have avian influenza.

Fewer reports of influenza and pneumonia infections were troubling authorities who monitored the disease, said Dr Kamnuan.

Buares Sripratak, the Nakhon Sawan provincial public health chief, said a ''Mr Bird Flu'' was supposed to take swift action, keep raising awareness of the disease among people and prepare teams and volunteers to fight the virus.

However, in reality they had to wait for the green light from policy makers before undertaking any prevention plan, he said. Top ministry officials and governors must give them more authority to make quick decisions to promptly control any bird flu outbreaks, he added.

Dr Kamnuan warned that the next bird flu outbreak would be more severe and difficult to control if it happened.

Since January last year, the H5N1 strain of avian flu has spread across Asian countries, devastating poultry flocks and killing at least 54 people in Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam and Indonesia. World Health Organisation officials have warned the virus could easily undergo genetic changes to create a strain capable of killing tens of millions of people worldwide.

Tawee Chotepitayasunont, an influenza expert at the Queen Sirikit National Institute of Health, called on ''Mr Bird Flu'' officials to prepare for a pandemic he expected in the next two years.

Possible signs could already be seen of an increasing number of countries affected by bird flu outbreaks and family clusters of human infections, he said.

Unlike the past when the fatality rate was high, less severe bird flu symptoms were diagnosed, allowing patients to travel without notice and they could easily spread the virus to other people, he said.

http://www.bangkokpost.com/News/25Jun2005_news21.php
 

Martin

Deceased
State drafts pre-emptive plan to fight avian virus

By Benjamin Lanka

The Journal Gazette


The Indiana Department of Health has drafted a plan to prepare for and respond to a potential pandemic of the Asian bird flu.

Dr. Judith Monroe, state health commissioner, Tuesday said the state’s draft plan has been given to experts throughout the state as well as local health officials to examine before it is presented to the public.

Included are plans to educate the public as well as health officials about the disease as a way to prepare for an outbreak. She said the plan also includes how to respond to and communicate information regarding an outbreak.

“It really goes back to very basic health preparation,” she said.

Since the beginning of last year, the highly lethal bird flu virus has devastated poultry in nine East Asian countries and infected more than 100 people, killing at least 54. International health experts have warned that the virus could undergo genetic change and spawn a global pandemic. The disease is not yet transferable among humans, but Monroe said that could happen if the virus mutates.

Monroe said the disease has not been discovered in the United States yet, but there are fears of an outbreak because humans have no natural immunity to the flu strain.

She said people can take common precautions to prevent the disease such as washing hands and going to the doctor when they feel sick. She also said people who catch the flu have an increased chance of getting pneumonia, so she recommended high-risk groups – the elderly or people with chronic diseases – to investigate pneumonia vaccines.

Monroe said the final plan will be sent to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention this summer. She said all states are preparing a plan for the disease because of fears that it could spread quickly.

http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/journalgazette/news/local/11956064.htm
 

Martin

Deceased
Ethics of stockpiling flu drugs for doctors' relatives questioned
Last Updated Fri, 24 Jun 2005 21:33:06 EDT
CBC News
Some Canadian doctors are quietly building personal stockpiles of an antiviral flu drug for their families in case of a pandemic, but the practice may be viewed as unethical.

The antiviral drug Tamiflu, or oseltamivir, is currently considered the best way to prevent and treat bird flu.


Tamiflu can prevent infection if used early enough.
"In the first wave of a pandemic, there will probably not be enough vaccine available to treat everyone," said Paul Brown of Roche Pharmaceuticals in Mississauga, Ont., the company that licenses the drug in Canada. "Antivirals like Tamiflu are going to be critically important."

Physicians realize the potential value of stockpiling the drug before a pandemic hits. Doctors and other health-care workers will be among the first to receive antivirals from the federal government's stockpiles during a pandemic, but their families won't be eligible for the drugs.

CBC-TV's Maureen Taylor found 12 doctors who wouldn't openly admit it, but acknowledged writing prescriptions for Tamiflu for personal stockpiling purposes.

As a public health practitioner, Michael Osterholm of the Centre for Infectious Disease Research and Policy in Winnipeg thinks it's best to let the government decide who should get the drugs during a pandemic.

But, "as a husband, a father and a friend, do I think the idea of personally stockpiling is something you should be considering? Absolutely," Osterholm said.




Since pandemics usually come in two or three waves, stockpiles of Tamiflu are expected to be quickly depleted. Only one company in Switzerland makes the drug.

Infectious disease specialist Dr. Allison McGeer of Toronto's Mount Sinai said she understands why some of her colleagues are acquiring a personal stockpile of Tamiflu. Ethically, though, she said the federal government should be protecting everyone.



"The best protection if we don't have vaccine is one dose of prophylactic for every Canadian for every day for two waves of the pandemic," McGeer said.

The idea of personal stockpiles of Tamiflu worries most public health officials like McGeer, and some are advising doctors against writing the prescriptions.

The reasons against stockpiling are:

The resistance hypothesis – Widespread use of Tamiflu among patients with influenza could lead to resistant strains of flu, potentially making the drug useless.
Shelf-life: Tamiflu is only guaranteed for five years, yet no one knows when a pandemic will hit.
Equity: At $5 per pill, not everyone will be able to afford a personal stockpile.

The federal government's pandemic plan calls for patients to get the drugs first, followed by health-care workers. There is no way to predict how long the stockpile will last.

During a flu pandemic, the government's advice to the general population will remain the same as always: wash your hands, stay home when sick, and cover coughs to reduce the spread of the virus, said Dr. David Butler-Jones of the Public Health Agency of Canada.



http://www.cbc.ca/story/science/national/2005/06/24/flu-drugs050624.html?print
 

Kim99

Veteran Member
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Chance of bird flu between humans increases-Vietnam

Sat Jun 25, 2005 12:53 AM ET

Reuters
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=worldNews&storyID=8891083

HANOI (Reuters) -
Vietnam's agriculture ministry was quoted as saying on Saturday that the mutation of a bird flu virus was increasing the infection possibility between humans.
State-run media cited a ministry report as saying
laboratory test results overseas and at home showed the antigen structure of virus is changing.

"The ministry warned in the report that the mutation of the H5N1 virus is raising the possibility of infections on humans, because the test results of international and domestic laboratories showed the virus's antigen structure
contained a change," the Saigon Giai Phong (Liberation Saigon) daily said.

The mutation of the virus explains why Vietnam did not detect major outbreaks in poultry in recent months but people still fell sick of avian influenza, it said.

Officials could not be reached for comment on Saturday.

Bird flu has killed 38 people in Vietnam since it arrived in Asia in late 2003 along with 12 Thais and four Cambodians.

Eighteen of the Vietnamese victims have died since
December in the latest wave of infections by the virus, which seems to thrive best in the cool of winter.

Officials said just one outbreak in poultry has been
detected and isolated in the southern Mekong Delta this month, but nine people were found having bird flu in the north where the summer is under way.

On Friday the World Health Organization said a team of international experts has been working in Vietnam this week to study whether the H5N1 virus may be evolving into a form which might trigger a human pandemic.

Scientists have been tracking the evolution of the H5N1 virus, which is infectious in birds but does not spread easily among humans, as they fear it could mutate into a form capable of unleashing a pandemic.

Humans would have no immunity to the mutated virus and millions could die, they say.
 

Martin

Deceased
Posted on Sat, Jun. 25, 2005





Bird flu experts alarmed

Virus has not subsided, raising pandemic fears.

By Marian Uhlman

Inquirer Staff Writer


The unusual behavior of the avian flu has gotten stranger: The virus, which caused no confirmed cases last summer in Vietnam, is continuing to infect people this year.

Its persistence is boosting anxiety levels among world health officials who say the virus eventually could mutate and fuel a devastating pandemic.

"Everything suggests, that the situation we are in now, there is a greater risk for a pandemic than for many decades," said Dr. Peter Horby, a medical officer and epidemiologist for the World Health Organization in Hanoi. "The situation is much more complex than a year ago."

In a telephone interview, Horby said he's more concerned because the virus continues to infect people in Vietnam and is widespread in Asian bird populations, even showing up unexpectedly in domesticated ducks.

"This year, there doesn't appear to be a stop," said Klaus Stöhr, head of WHO's global influenza program in Geneva. "Every human case is worrisome because there is another chance for the virus to [mutate] and a higher chance for a pandemic to occur."

WHO confirmed four human cases this month in Vietnam, and news reports suggest two more cases have been identified this past week. By comparison, the country had no reported cases between April and late summer last year, Stöhr said.

As of mid-June, 107 human cases - including 54 deaths - have been confirmed in Vietnam, Thailand and Cambodia in the last 18 months. The majority occurred in Vietnam.

When the avian flu first started infecting people in late 2003 in Vietnam, Horby said, it was expected to be around weeks or maybe months before subsiding. But now, he said, "we are almost in a chronic outbreak situation."

No one knows whether the avian virus - also called H5N1 - will trigger a pandemic, but it's got many health experts on edge. If the virus figures out how to efficiently infect people, it could sicken and kill millions because humans lack immunity against the disease. Commerce would likely come to a halt, and food and medicines could be in short supply.

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have collected new viral samples in Vietnam from humans to evaluate whether it is getting more dangerous, according to Dave Daigle, an agency spokesman. He said the CDC plans to publish its findings soon.

Stöhr said it was unclear why human cases have not receded this summer. It could be better surveillance or more instances of bird-to-human transmission. Or perhaps the virus has become more adept at infecting people.

"We have to plan our actions more urgently now that the virus is with us," Horby said. "There is no respite."

Horby said health officials need to undertake a more systematic investigation of cases to improve treatment. He said the best way to use antivirals is still being researched.

"It would be nice to be hopeful that it would not emerge as a pandemic," said Karen Lacourciere, a program officer in basic research at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. "Nobody knows what that magic switch is that turns the influenza virus into a pandemic strain."

Dr. David Fisman, an assistant professor at the Drexel University of Public Health, said "it is biologically plausible" for avian flu virus to fuel a pandemic.

"The common thread of infectious agents is that they throw you curve balls," he said.

With so much in flux, experts say they do not know when or how another pandemic will happen - only that it will.

Dr. Paul Offit, infectious disease chief at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, is less concerned that avian flu looms as a potential killer strain.

"The mutation that would have to happen in order for this virus to be efficiently transferred from one person to another has never happened. I believe it most likely never will," said Offit, whose thinking has been influenced by the late Maurice Hilleman, a renowned Philadelphia vaccine pioneer who figured out how the flu virus undergoes genetic changes.

Offit wonders what will happen if avian flu doesn't become a pandemic: Will people take the threat less seriously and neglect to prepare for one? And what are the implications for annual flu epidemics that already lead to about 35,000 U.S. deaths and 200,000 hospitalizations a year?

"It could be the-boy-who-cries-wolf phenomenon," said Offit. "When the pandemic actually does come - and it will - will we listen?"

Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, sees the developments in Asia as more reason to worry. He doubts the past will predict the virus' future.

Unlike previous pandemics, where a virus underwent a major genetic overhaul all at once, Osterholm said the avian strain has been changing gradually since it was first identified in 1997. He believes the virus will continue to transform, increasing the likelihood it will ultimately lead to a pandemic.

"We haven't done much to eliminate the source in Asia," said Osterholm, a former bioterrorism special adviser to the current Bush administration. "And there is a dynamic mutation laboratory over there. I see nothing to slow down the mutations."

Its wide reach across Asian countries, courtesy of bird populations, leads Stöhr to conclude "there has never been an outbreak of avian influenza of this magnitude."

"And there is no indication that the virus will go away fast."

http://www.philly.com/mld/philly/living/health/11981568.htm
 

almost ready

Inactive
Hi, Martin

Nice name. Once I went on the annual processional in a small town in south Germany in honor of St. Martin, who was a rich guy on horse back who tore his fine cloak in half to give warmth to a freezing beggar. We sang and walked at night throughout the town.

Thank you for taking your time to keep the TB2Kers informed.

Was thinking, reading recombinomics news today, that the lack of response to warm weather might be the thing that makes a flu into a pandemic. Most flus are weather sensitive, giving us a unique flu season which is different from the cold season (likes different conditions) and both wane in the summer.

The Tamiflu issue is no longer an issue, except for folks trying to sell some solace. The flu has already surpassed its ability to help. For my part, I'm getting tuned up at the acupuncturist and using diet and exercise to relieve any stress on liver and other organs needed for healing. Also have some oregano oil, which I'll be mixing with emu oil 1:10 and using as a rub. Also garlic buds placed between the toes at night can be tasted in the morning! Imagine that! I've read some books on the great plague, which came and went in Europe several times over a 60 year period. Many survivors swore that it was their heavy garlic consumption that saved them, but I imagine it must be used raw to keep the enzymes and all active. Yuck. Well, salsa could cover up some of it.

Thanks again, Martin. You honor your namesake.
 

Kim99

Veteran Member
From the Health Protection Agency site in Britain:


Avian Influenza (H5N1) in humans

As of the 22 June, 2005 the WHO have reported the following cases of laboratory-confirmed human cases of influenza A (H5N1) in Viet Nam, Cambodia and Thailand:

Between 26/12/04 - 10/03/04
- Viet Nam: 23 cases of which 16 were fatal.
- Thailand 12 cases of which 8 were fatal.

Between 19/07/04 - 08/10/04
- Viet Nam: 4 cases of which 4 were fatal.
- Thailand: 5 cases of which 4 were fatal

Between 16/12/04 - 13/05/05
- Viet Nam: 59 cases of which 18 were fatal.
- Cambodia: 4 cases of which 4 were fatal.

Since 26 December 2003, a total of 107 cases of which 54 have been fatal.

Updates and case details can be found on the WHO: Avian Influenza homepage.

http://www.hpa.org.uk/infections/topics_az/avianinfluenza/situation_update.htm


This is a 50% mortality rate! Of course there are very likely many cases (I hope) that weren't reported because they were mild. There have been years where I know we have had the flu and didn't go to the Dr. so it didn't get reported. There have been new cases in Vietnam since this report, but I don't think any of them died. Also, notice nothing about China because of course they are admitting to nothing! There were some reports last month however about many human bird flu cases. Then the news just stopped. So who knows what's going on? Hopefully we'll find out before it's here.
 

Martin

Deceased
June 26, 2005

Six-month quarantine plan to fight deadly flu
Jason Allardyce



SCOTS could be confined to their communities for more than six months and banned from attending public gatherings under an emergency plan to contain an expected flu pandemic.
A government report, obtained by The Sunday Times, reveals that public health officials believe as many as 64,000 could be killed by a virulent strain of influenza, which could strike Scotland “at any time”.



The death toll — 15,000 higher than the previous estimate — has been revised amid fears that the as many as 1.25m Scots would be infected by the disease.

In the 138-page document, experts warn that it would take more than six months to develop a vaccine for the pathogen, either a mutation of the avian flu virus — which has already claimed dozens of victims across Asia — or some other deadly strain.

During that time home curfews would be imposed on anyone infected with the virus and people would be prevented from leaving communities ravaged by the pathogen.

Public gatherings such as football matches, pop concerts and church services could be cancelled and schools and nurseries closed. Meanwhile, everyone in Scotland could be required to wear protective face masks and screening would be introduced at all UK ports and airports. Anyone infected would be quarantined.

International health officials have been warning for several months that the avian flu virus circulating in Asia could cause a pandemic. Even if a global outbreak of bird flu is avoided, experts believe it is only a matter of time before another strain causes huge loss of life.

Even when a vaccine is produced supplies could be very limited and there is no guarantee it will be effective, the government report warns.

Under what ministers regard as the most likely scenario, 14.5m people in Britain would fall ill, causing widespread loss of life and massive disruption to society. Such an outbreak is likely to kill at least 4,500 people in Scotland, but under officials’ worst case scenario 709,000 Britons, including about 64,000 Scots, would die.

Officials say Britain could be hit by a national fuel shortage and businesses would be devastated by absenteeism, with as many as a quarter of the workforce too sick to work. “The prime objectives are to save lives, reduce the health impact of a pandemic and minimise disruption to essential services while maintaining business continuity and reducing the general societal disruption that is likely to ensue,” the report states.

“There is some evidence that big gatherings of people encourage spread, and measures to flatten the epidemic curve can be helpful in easing the most intense pressure on health services.”

However, Professor Hugh Pennington, one of Britain’s leading microbiologists, said there was no evidence to suggest that the restrictions would limit the spread of the disease.

“Restrictions like this do not seem to be a vital precautionary measure,” he said.

He added the government should instead be spending more money on anti-viral drugs and on developing a vaccine that might prevent the disease.

Britain has stockpiled more than 14m courses of the antiviral drug Tamiflu but this is only enough to help one quarter of the population expected to fall ill.

The Asian outbreak has killed 34 Vietnamese, 12 Thais and one Cambodian since 2003 and recurred several times despite the slaughter of millions of birds.


http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2090-1669859,00.html
 

Martin

Deceased
Bird flu 'as grave a threat as terrorism'

By Geoffrey Lean, Environment Editor
26 June 2005

Bird flu is now as much of a danger to Britain as terrorism, ministers have been told by the Government's official emergency body.

Top officials from the Civil Contingency Secretariat (CCS), part of the Cabinet Office, told a cabinet subcommittee last week that a flu pandemic - which it believes could kill 700,000 Britons - is now one of the most serious threats facing the country.

Plans are being made to close schools and cancel sporting fixtures in an attempt to limit the spread of the virus, and official advice on how to try to avoid being infected will be ready for publication this summer.

Cobra, Britain's emergency committee, will co-ordinate attempts to fight the virus. But the Government accepts that, if the flu reaches Britain, there is no hope of stopping an epidemic, and that the only hope is to mitigate its effects.

The top-level warning comes as alarming evidence emerges from Asia that the virus, which has killed more than half of those known to have caught it, is spreading. Patchy reports from China and Vietnam suggest that the disease is affecting larger clusters of people, raising concern that it is mutating into a highly infectious strain that will sweep through the world. The World Health Organisation has warned that "the world is now in the gravest possible danger of a pandemic", while the Food and Agriculture Organisation calls it a "sword of Damocles" hanging over the globe.

Last week's warning was delivered by the CCS's head, Bruce Mann, to the cabinet subcommittee. The secretariat, which says its job is to "look for trouble", keeps tabs on about 100 potential threats from floods to major accidents in factories to a terrorist attack. It now rates bird flu as among the greatest of them all.

On the same day as the ministerial warning, Britain had its first official exercise to prepare for the epidemic. Operation Arctic Sea was staged in the East Midlands to test capabilities to deal with mass illness and death. Officials have also been scouring the country to find sites for mass mortuaries, but Sarah Webb, a regional health emergency planning adviser for the official Health Protection Agency, says that military bases which had been investigated for the purpose had been declared "off-limits" to them "because of Iraq activities".

Official advice is being prepared to help people to cut the risk of catching the disease - including simple hygiene, staying at home, and avoiding gatherings of people - and local authorities are urged to get prepared. But Steve Miller, the head of public protection for the London Borough of Newham, told a seminar organised by the Chartered Institute of Environmental Health last week that there was still "some lethargy".

He said: "The biggest drawback is that people feel it is not their job, but somebody else's, or that someone will tell them what to do. We are late, but not too late."


http://news.independent.co.uk/low_res/story.jsp?story=649760&host=3&dir=58
 

Kim99

Veteran Member
http://www.effectmeasure.blogspot.com/

Sunday, June 26, 2005
It can't happen here

Who could imagine our government acting like this?

Bird flu is now as much of a danger to Britain as terrorism, ministers have been told by the Government's official emergency body.

Top officials from the Civil Contingency Secretariat (CCS), part of the Cabinet Office, told a cabinet subcommittee last week that a flu pandemic - which it believes could kill 700,000 Britons - is now one of the most serious threats facing the country.

Plans are being made to close schools and cancel sporting fixtures in an attempt to limit the spread of the virus, and official advice on how to try to avoid being infected will be ready for publication this summer.

Cobra, Britain's emergency committee, will co-ordinate attempts to fight the virus. But the Government accepts that, if the flu reaches Britain, there is no hope of stopping an epidemic, and that the only hope is to mitigate its effects. (The Independent)
George W.'s cabinet obviously knows something the British cabinet doesn't. Like evolution is a secular hoax, so we don't have to worry about the virus adapting. That means I don't have to worry about reports like this:

The unusual behavior of the avian flu has gotten stranger: The virus, which caused no confirmed cases last summer in Vietnam, is continuing to infect people this year.

[snip]

"Everything suggests, that the situation we are in now, there is a greater risk for a pandemic than for many decades," said Dr. Peter Horby, a medical officer and epidemiologist for the World Health Organization in Hanoi. "The situation is much more complex than a year ago."

[snip]

"This year, there doesn't appear to be a stop," said Klaus Stöhr, head of WHO's global influenza program in Geneva. "Every human case is worrisome because there is another chance for the virus to [mutate] and a higher chance for a pandemic to occur."

WHO confirmed four human cases this month in Vietnam, and news reports suggest two more cases have been identified this past week. By comparison, the country had no reported cases between April and late summer last year, Stöhr said.

[snip]

When the avian flu first started infecting people in late 2003 in Vietnam, Horby said, it was expected to be around weeks or maybe months before subsiding. But now, he said, "we are almost in a chronic outbreak situation."

[snip]

Stöhr said it was unclear why human cases have not receded this summer. It could be better surveillance or more instances of bird-to-human transmission. Or perhaps the virus has become more adept at infecting people.

"We have to plan our actions more urgently now that the virus is with us," Horby said. "There is no respite."

[snip]

Unlike previous pandemics, where a virus underwent a major genetic overhaul all at once, [Dr. Michael] Osterholm said the avian strain has been changing gradually since it was first identified in 1997. He believes the virus will continue to transform, increasing the likelihood it will ultimately lead to a pandemic. (Philadelphia Inquirer)
I'm glad I live in the US, where avian flu isn't a problem. I'd be pretty scared if I lived in the UK.

P.S. If despite this, the threat of bird flu still bothers you, look for the launch of the FluWiki (announcement tomorrow).


posted by Revere at 9:13 AM
 

Kim99

Veteran Member
http://insidebayarea.com/businessnews/ci_2821554


Gilead after Tamiflu rights
By John Lauerman and Marni Leff Kottle, Bloomberg News



Gilead Sciences Inc. said it is seeking to regain the rights to Tamiflu, the influenza drug that may treat lethal forms of the disease, from Roche Holding AG.
Gilead delivered a termination notice to Basel-based Roche for "material breach" of the companies' 1996 development and licensing agreement, Foster City-based Gilead said in a statement Thursday.

Roche failed to effectively promote Tamiflu in all markets and had manufacturing problems that led to shortages, Gilead said in the statement. The U.S., the U.K., Japan and Italy are among countries that have bought or are planning to purchase $1.4 billion of Tamiflu to fight a worldwide outbreak of lethal flu that health experts say is inevitable.

"You can imagine that they've not been pleased with Roche's performance with the product in the flu marketplace," said Gregory Wade, senior health-care research analyst with Pacific Growth Equities in San Francisco, in a telephone interview. "We believe Gilead is taking this move to increase its participation in the economic opportunities."

Wade, who owns Gilead shares, rates them "overweight.'

Roche said it was disappointed with Gilead's action and would continue to produce the drug globally.

"We strongly disagree with their decision but have every intention to resolve this issue with them," the company said in a statement. "We remain deeply committed to keeping Tamiflu available to patients for the treatment and prevention of influenza."

In laboratory experiments reported last year, Tamiflu inhibited the H5N1 influenza virus, a bird flu that has killed more than 50 people and forced the slaughter




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of 100 million birds in Asia this year. Almost all patients have caught the flu from birds, and researchers are concerned that the virus will gain the ability to spread easily from person to person and cause a global health catastrophe.
Gilead "can no longer accept Roche's consistent record of inactivity and neglect" of Tamiflu, said John Milligan, Gilead's Chief Financial Officer, in a conference call with investors and analysts.

Roche has failed to market Tamiflu in all of the countries where the drug is approved, Gilead said in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing. Roche has won approval to sell the product in 64 countries and has failed to introduce the drug in 43 of them, including Italy, Spain, China and most of Latin America, Gilead said in the filing.

Roche didn't do enough to promote Tamiflu in the U.S. last year when the country had a shortage of flu vaccines, Gilead said in the filing. Roche hasn't communicated Tamiflu's benefits to doctors and other health professionals, the filing said.

"I think their chance of increasing their participation in the economics of Tamiflu are 100 percent," Pacific Growth's Wade said. "The degree remains in question, but they do have a negotiating point with Roche."
 

Martin

Deceased
Bird flu virus detected at Japan farm
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2005-06-26 21:31

The H5N2-type avian influenza virus has been detected in chickens at a poultry farm in Mitsukaido, east Japan's Ibaraki Prefecture, the Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Ministry announced Sunday.

The ministry confirmed the infection of chickens with the virusat the farm after about 430 of its 25,000 chickens died between March and May.

Poultry farms in the area have been barred from moving their chickens and eggs beyond a radius of five kilometers from the bird-flu infected farm, according to Kyodo News.

The local government will begin disinfecting or disposing of the chickens and eggs at the farm on Monday, Kyodo said.



http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/english/doc/2005-06/26/content_454698.htm
 

Kim99

Veteran Member
Bird flu virus in Vietnam evolves

www.chinaview.cn 2005-06-27 10:33:57

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2005-06/27/content_3141330.htm

HANOI, June 27 (Xinhuanet) -- Laboratory tests in Vietnam and abroad have indicated that the antigen structure of bird flu virus strain H5N1 in the country is changing, local newspaper Labor Monday quoted a Vietnamese Health Ministry report as saying.

The change, which might increase the possibility of bird flu infections on human, explains why people in Vietnam have still been infected with H5N1 in recent months, although it has detected no major outbreaks.

The mutation also makes it more difficult for health agencies to identify high-risk areas, since poultry infected with H5N1 with a change in the antigen structure do not exhibit the disease's symptoms, said the report.

An international team, consisting of top virologists and epidemiologists from Chinese Hong Kong, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States, is studying the possibility of more widespread H5N1 human transmission, changes in the virus strain, and the likelihood of increased person-to-person transmission. The experts are expected to make initial conclusions on the virus's mutation late this month.

To minimize infections on poultry as well as humans, Vietnam will start vaccinating fowls against bird flu viruses in northern Nam Dinh province and southern Tien Giang province on a trial basis in early August, and then do the same in other localities with high risks of outbreaks in October if the vaccination proves effective.

The country's Veterinary Department is asking localities to reduce the number of poultry flocks, raise and slaughter them on large scale in concentrated areas, and cull infected poultry as well as flocks of less than 30 fowls which are raised freely in gardens or fields, regardless they contract H5N1 or not.

The total of bird flu patients confirmed in Vietnam since mid-December 2004 has increased to 59 cases, of which 18 were fatal. Enditem
 
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