Bird flu flares again in Asia
Bird flu has resurfaced in parts of Asia, with human deaths reported in Indonesia, Myanmar, Pakistan and China and fresh outbreaks plaguing other countries during the winter months when the virus typically flares.
Pakistan on Saturday confirmed the country's first death from the bird flu virus, the health ministry said in a statement.
It said six people had been infected with the H5N1 strain of avian influenza, all of them in North West Frontier Province, which borders Afghanistan.
"Five of them have fully recovered. One of the confirmed cases died in hospital while his brother, who could not be tested, has also died," the ministry said.
In Myanmar a seven-year-old girl has become the military-run country's first confirmed human case of bird flu, an official and the World Health Organisation said Saturday.
The girl was hospitalised in eastern Shan state in late November after developing fever and headache, but was discharged this week after showing signs of recovery, the Myanmar health official said.
"She is the first human case (of bird flu)," the official from Myanmar's livestock department said.
Indonesia, the nation hardest hit by the H5N1 virus, announced its 93rd death on Friday. A 47-year-old man died a day earlier in a Jakarta hospital, said Health Ministry spokesman Joko Suyono. The man fell ill on Dec. 2 and was admitted with flu-like symptoms, becoming Indonesia's 115th person infected with the disease.
The World Health Organisation also confirmed Myanmar's first human case. A 7-year-old girl from the eastern Shan State became ill Nov. 21 in an area where poultry outbreaks had earlier been reported. She was hospitalised and has since recovered.
The WHO hailed the secretive country for its transparency and swift action in alerting outside health officials about the case. Myanmar's ruling junta has been under international fire since September for killing and arresting pro-democracy protesters, with dissident groups putting the death toll about 200.
"They handled it very, very well," said Shima Roy, spokeswoman for WHO's regional office in New Delhi. "They actually did house-to-house surveillance, especially in the area where there had been an outbreak of avian influenza in poultry."
In China, the military in eastern Nanjing banned the sale of poultry this week after a father and son came down with the disease earlier this month. Health officials confirmed the 24-year-old man died from the virus a day before his father, 52, became sick. It was the country's 17th bird flu death.
The two were believed to have eaten a traditional dish known as "beggar's chicken," in which the bird is wrapped in lotus leaves and baked. However, the cause of infection remained unclear.
Most human cases have been linked to contact with sick birds, and experts say that no human bird flu cases have ever been traced to eating properly cooked poultry or eggs.
The father is recovering after taking the antiviral Tamiflu, said Hans Troedsson, World Health Organisation representative in China. More than 80 people who had contact with the family were being monitored for symptoms.
Local animal health officials said last week no H5N1 outbreaks had been detected among the province's poultry, but Troedsson said sick birds typically are not reported prior to human deaths in China a sign the country's surveillance systems need to be improved.
The virus has killed 208 people worldwide since it began ravaging Asian poultry stocks in late 2003, according to the WHO.
Scientists say it is impossible to predict what the H5N1 virus will do, but more bird flu outbreaks often occur when temperatures drop as winter sets in.
Officials in Pakistan were investigating the country's first suspected bird flu cases Friday after two poultry farm workers died this week after being hospitalised with flu-like symptoms in Peshawar, said Khushdil Khan, medical superintendent of the Khyber Teaching Hospital.
Blood samples were sent to the Health Ministry in Islamabad for testing, but the results have not been confirmed, Khan said. Pakistan has grappled with bird flu outbreaks among poultry for the past two years, but no human cases have been reported.
Meanwhile, the disease has resurfaced in several provinces across Vietnam in recent months, killing or forcing the slaughter of thousands of birds. So far, 46 people have died from the virus nationwide.
Hong Kong closed its famed Mai Po bird sanctuary to the public for three weeks starting Friday after a wild gray heron discovered nearby tested positive for the virus. Russia and Poland also have experienced recent outbreaks among poultry, but neither have detected human cases.
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