Thu, Feb 05, 2004 News Editorials 632832820 visits
 Photo News
 More World News
 Johnny Neihu
 
 Community Compass
 
  • Back Issue

  •   << >>   Full List

  • TaipeiTimes
  •   Subscribe
  •   Advertise
  •   Employment
  •   FAQ
  •   About Us
  •   Contact Us
  •   Copyright
  • Search Most Read Story Most Viewed Photo
     Print
     Mail
     wiki links

    Bird-flu death count increases to 14

    CASUALTY: A 16-year-old girl who died on Tuesday was confirmed as having bird flu, while Singaporeans took their pet chickens along to the slaughterhouse

    AP, BANGKOK
    Thursday, Feb 05, 2004, Page 5

    A veterinary worker sprays disinfectant on sacks containing slaughtered chickens transported on a tractor before they are thrown into a big pit for burying at Co Dong village in the northern province of Ha Tay, Vietnam, yesterday. The bird flu outbreak has been spreading in 53 of Vietnam's 64 provinces and cities.
    PHOTO: AFP
    Asia's human death toll from bird flu rose to 14 yesterday while China addressed its broadening zone of infected poultry with a new bird flu headquarters and Singaporeans turned in pet chickens for slaughter to keep their city-state disease-free.

    Health experts say the wide range of the bird flu striking Asia's poultry boosts chances that the virus could mutate into a global menace for people, but say the disease is "nowhere close" to being declared a pandemic.

    Most human cases have been traced directly to contact with sick birds, and although human-to-human transmission has not been ruled out in the case of one Vietnamese family, the experts say there is no sign of a new strain that can easily infect many people.

    The latest death was announced yesterday in Vietnam. The 16-year-old girl died early Tuesday at a disease clinic in Ho Chi Minh City, clinic deputy director Tran Tinh Hien said.

    Vietnam has confirmed 10 deaths, and four have been confirmed in Thailand, the only other country to report human cases.

    China said Wednesday it has no human infections, but that officials were investigating cases in poultry in 12 of its 31 regions -- with the provinces of Gansu and in Xian added overnight to regions with suspected cases.

    A new National Bird Flu Prevention Headquarters has opened in Beijing to oversee regional efforts to kill all sick birds and keep close watch on people who handled them, though it was unclear how the center would overcome the typical communications obstacles between local governments and the Beijing government.

    "The whole of China is trying to prevent bird flu," Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Zhang Qiyue said.

    Health experts say the best policy is to destroy infected poultry while ensuring that people carrying out the culls are not exposed to the virus.

    On an optimistic note, Thailand's deputy prime minister said yesterday that officials there believe they'll eradicate the virus from the country's farms by week's end. The virus has struck more than half of the country's provinces.

    After the World Health Organization (WHO) announced on Sunday that human-to-human transmission could not be ruled out in the case of the Vietnamese family -- raising alarms globally -- the organization has sought in recent days to play down concerns.

    WHO officials say contact with sick birds also can't be ruled out in the infections, and that anyway the case doesn't seem to represent a newly dangerous strain of the illness.

    "I think it's very important at this stage that we remain calm about worst-case scenarios," Mike Ryan, WHO's chief of global epidemic response, said Tuesday in Geneva. "We have a strain of influenza with the potential to pick up human genes, and we're nowhere close to declaring a pandemic."

    What experts fear most is a new virus hybrid combining the contagiousness of human flu with the deadliness of bird flu -- and there's been no evidence of that yet.

    Illustrating the deadliness of bird flu, only two of the 14 confirmed cases of bird flu in humans in Vietnam have recovered, while 10 have died and two remain hospitalized.

    Governments in Cambodia, Laos, Indonesia, Japan, Pakistan, South Korea and Taiwan also are battling the disease, and at least 45 million chickens have been slaughtered in government-ordered culls. However, health officials say the strain of bird flu striking Taiwan and Pakistan is milder and is not a serious threat to humans.

    Many countries still free of the virus have banned poultry imports from affected countries and tightened disease surveillance.

    In Singapore, the city-state asked residents to hand over any pet chickens to eliminate possible reservoirs of the virus. The government said yesterday that residents gave up 57 pets for slaughter so far.
    This story has been viewed 3929 times.

  • Advertising