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Joined: May 2005
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From Reuters 11/16/2005

By Brian Rhoads 17 minutes ago

Bird flu has killed at least one person in China, officials said on Wednesday, confirming the spread of the deadly virus into people in another large Asian country where it might prove hard to contain.

One victim in eastern Anhui had died and another in the central province of Hunan was suspected of having been killed by the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu, China's official Xinhua news agency reported.

A second person diagnosed with bird flu in Hunan had recovered, it said.

The deadly H5N1 form of bird flu has already killed more than 60 people in Asia and is endemic in poultry in parts of the region. The previous confirmed deaths were in Vietnam, Thailand, Indonesia and Cambodia.

The virus remains hard for people to catch and is still essentially a disease in birds. However, experts fear H5N1 could mutate into a form that passes easily among people, just like human influenza, putting millions of lives at risk.

World Health Organization (WHO) spokesman Roy Wadia said it was no surprise that bird flu had spread to humans in the world's most populous nation.

"It's not a surprise. It shows that China like other countries that have bird flu in poultry can have human cases," Wadia said.

China has been trying to contain about a dozen outbreaks of the deadly H5N1 strain of the bird flu virus among poultry in at least six provinces in the past month.

Xinhua identified the Anhui victim as a 24-year-old woman surnamed Zhou, who fell ill on November 1 and died on November 10. She had had contact with dead chickens and geese on her family farm.

The WHO said China had informed it that a 9-year-old boy from Hunan province suspected of having bird flu was indeed stricken by the H5N1 virus.

His 12-year-old sister, who fell ill and died in October, had H5N1 antibodies and most likely succumbed to bird flu, Xinhua and WHO spokesman Wadia said. The children had close contact with infected poultry, Wadia said.

Chinese officials initially reported that the two children in Hunan had suffered pneumonia and not bird flu, but later invited international experts to help confirm the cases. The boy was discharged from hospital over the weekend.

Quote:

An important thing to remember is that the transmission appears to be from bird to human. There has yet to be a clear case of transmission from human to human

MJ



Joined: Jun 2004
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rex Offline
Who will I break next?
15000+ posts
Who will I break next?
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Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 46,308
EVERYBODY PANIC


November 6th, 2012: Americas new Independence Day.
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Banned from the DCMBs since 2002.
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Banned from the DCMBs since 2002.
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I have former colleagues and friends in HK who are deeply disturbed by this.


Pimping my site, again.

http://www.worldcomicbookreview.com


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