Wednesday, January 23, 2008
Bird flu kills man in northern Vietnam, first human case this year
HANOI, Vietnam - Bird flu has killed a man in northern Vietnam, marking the country’s first human case this year, health officials said Wednesday.
The 32-year-old man from Tuyen Quang province, about 50 miles (80 kilometers) northwest of Hanoi, died last week, two days after being admitted to the national tropical disease hospital in Hanoi, said To Doan Hong of the provincial Preventive Medicine Center.
Test results later came back positive for the H5N1 strain of the virus, he said. It was the country’s 48th death reported since the virus began raging across Asia in late 2003.
Nguyen Huy Nga, director of the Ministry of Health’s Preventive Medicine Department, confirmed the results.
Hong said the man developed bird flu symptoms after slaughtering and cooking six geese and two chickens that had died at his backyard farm Jan. 9. Tests on poultry also came back positive for the H5N1 virus.
“Specimens taken from his family members and neighbors have been tested negative for the bird flu virus,” Hong said.
“We have disinfected his house and areas in the neighborhood.”
Health officials have warned the increased movement of people and poultry combined with cool weather could help spread the virus prior to the Lunar New Year festivities that begin Feb. 7.
Tuyen Quang and the northern province Thai Nguyen, along with the central province Quang Binh and southern Tra Vinh remain on the government’s bird flu watch list.
Source for bird flu story: The Canadian Press
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john T. on 01/23 at 07:26 AM
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Tuesday, January 22, 2008
Strain of Bird flu found in Turkey is H5N1 strain
This is an update to the previous story found here: Bird flu outbreak in Turkey
A spokesman for the Turkish Agriculture ministry has confirmed that the bird flu virus found in a village in northern Turkey is the H5N1 strain.
Spokesman Tunc Tuncel, confirmed during an interview that it indeed was the H5N1 strain of the virus.
He also said, ‘But we believe that it has not spread to any humans,’ and that preventive measures are already in place.
Avian flu story link: Thompson Financial
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john T. on 01/22 at 08:30 AM
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Indonesian man infected with bird flu brings country’s total to 120
Jan. 22, - The Indonesian health ministry is reporting that a 30 year old man near Jakarta has tested positive for the bird flu virus.
Joko Suyono, from the anti-bird flu center said that the man from Tanggerang town was treated at a hospital in Persahabatan set-up to handle human avian flu cases in east Jakarta since January 18.
“Two of his laboratories tests show positive today,” Suyono told Xinhua. The man did not have historical contact with fowl like many other victims of the disease, said the official.
On January 20 the man indicated symptoms of high fever, respiratory problems, leucopenia, thrombocytopenic, and pneumonia, said Suyono.
The man first showed the symptoms of the disease at January 14 and went to a hospital in the town before he was shifted to the hospital in east Jakarta, said the official.
Sources used in this bird flu story: Xinhua
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john T. on 01/22 at 07:30 AM
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Turkish officials report bird flu outbreak in Village
Jan 22 - Turkish authorities are reporting that the bird flu virus has infected chickens in a village in the northern Black Sea region.
Authorities are unsure if it’s the H5N1 form of the virus.
The virus was found among dead chickens that were collected from Saz village in Zonguldak province on Saturday and following examinations the bird flu virus was detected, the Agriculture Ministry said in a statement.
“All necessary measures have been taken around Saz village,” it said without giving details.
In an interview on Kanal 24 television, Muzaffer Aydemir, the Agriculture Ministry’s General Director of Protection and Control, said that the village has been put
under quarantine and all animal trade in the area has been halted.
He said the authorities had not begun culling poultry in the region because the case looks like a limited one.
“This is a very limited case. Only spotted in chickens of a citizen who hunts wild birds. We are sure that the virus passed to the chickens from wild birds,” Aydemir said.
He said the area surrounding the village was disinfected, but no other cases have been reported so far.
Consumers should not stop buying poultry products, he said and 12 teams of veterinary and other experts were working in the area to stop the disease spreading.
Source used in this avian influenza story: Reuters
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john T. on 01/22 at 07:17 AM
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Friday, January 18, 2008
Bird flu strain claims fifth swan
A fifth swan at a sanctuary in Dorset has tested positive for the virulent H5N1 strain of bird flu, environment department Defra has said.
The first case of avian influenza was found at the Abbotsbury Swannery, near Chesil Beach, on 10 January.
John Houston, general manager, said: “We are expecting to have a run of positives and negatives while [the virus] works its way through the herd.”
Restrictions on the movement of birds, imposed last week, remain in place.
Earlier, Defra said there was currently no evidence to suggest the disease was widespread among wild birds in the area, but officials were closely monitoring the situation.
Mr Houston said: “There are still four or five dead swans which have been picked up - and for which there are no test results as of yet.”
International importance
He said Defra staff and staff from the swannery had so far taken swabs from about 60 mute swans at the swannery.
They are hoping to establish whether the birds are building up resistance to the outbreak.
The swannery will be given the all-clear if no birds test positive for the virus after 21 days.
The swannery is part of an area of wetland recognized to be of international importance.
The Health Protection Agency has monitored about 12 staff at the swannery for signs of the disease, although the risk of infection is said to be low.
Workers have been given a course of anti-viral drug Tamiflu as a precaution.
Bird flu story link: BBC News
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john T. on 01/18 at 03:37 PM
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Iran detects new bird flu outbreak
TEHERAN (AFP) — Iranian veterinary authorities have detected a new outbreak of the deadly H5N1 bird flu virus among migratory and indigenous birds in the north of the country, the ISNA news agency reported on Friday.
“The strain of highly pathogenic bird flu that had been detected among migratory swans in ponds at Anzali has been discovered among wild geese and ducks around lakes in Barzanghib and among local birds,” veterinary chief Mojtaba Norouzi was quoted as saying.
“All the chickens in the neighboring village have been destroyed,” Norouzi said, adding a warning against people hunting birds in the area.
Norouzi said no cases of bird flu had been found among farm birds.
Avian influenza story link: AFP
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john T. on 01/18 at 03:34 PM
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Indonesian boy dies of bird flu - 97th
JAKARTA, Jan 18 (Reuters) - An eight-year-old Indonesian boy died of bird flu on Friday, the health ministry said, bringing the country’s death toll from the virus to 97.
The boy from Tangerang, west of the capital Jakarta, died after being treated for one day at the country’s main bird flu treatment center, the ministry said in an e-mailed statement.
The ministry said the fact the boy’s neighbor ran a chicken slaughterhouse was a risk factor and it was investigating.
Bird flu story source: Reuters
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john T. on 01/18 at 03:32 PM
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Ukraine finds H5N1 bird flu in Crimea
KIEV (Reuters) - A new outbreak of the strain of bird flu that is deadly to humans has struck Ukraine after being kept under control for two years, veterinarians said on Friday.
Ukraine’s Veterinary Inspectorate said the outbreak was detected this week in the village of Rovnoye in the Crimean peninsula, the same region hit in late 2005.
A total of 153 birds died suddenly at a private firm where more than 25,000 poultry were kept.
“Yesterday, tests were concluded and DNA of the H5N1 virus was found,” a veterinary inspectorate spokesman, Anatoly Osadchi, told Reuters.
“The village has been sealed off, guards have been posted at entry points and a quarantine is in place. All the birds are being incinerated.”
The inspectorate said the first six deaths were noted on Tuesday, followed by dozens more over the next two days.
Avian flu story link: Reuters
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john T. on 01/18 at 03:30 PM
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Wednesday, January 16, 2008
Fourth swan tests positive for H5N1 bird flu in UK
LONDON (Reuters) - A fourth swan in southern England has tested positive for the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu, Britain’s farm ministry said on Wednesday.
“There is currently no evidence to suggest widespread disease in the wild bird population but enhanced surveillance is taking place and poultry keepers in the area are reminded to remain vigilant,” a spokeswoman said.
Last week, the ministry confirmed that three wild swans at a bird sanctuary in Dorset had died from the virus. In the latest case, the dead swan was collected on January 11 as part of a wild bird surveillance program in the same area.
Bird flu story source: Reuters
Related stories:
Bird flu fears as strain found in wild swans
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john T. on 01/16 at 03:16 PM
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Tuesday, January 15, 2008
Bird flu outbreak confirmed in east India
NEW DELHI, January 15 (RIA Novosti) - India’s agriculture officials confirmed on Tuesday that an outbreak of bird flu in poultry in the east of the country was the deadly H5N1 strain.
“Now we can say it is definitely bird flu,” Pradip Kumar, a ministry official, said adding that 250,000 birds would be culled
Kumar said bird flu cases had been reported in two administrative districts in the state of West Bengal. He said the outbreak was reported at private farms in the Birbhum District, some 250 km (160 miles) from the state’s capital, Calcutta, and at a state poultry farm in a nearby district.
The affected area has since been cordoned off and is under surveillance, the official said.
Bird flu story source: RNIA
Note: This is an update to the earlier story found at this link: Chicken deaths in India prompt bird flu scare
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john T. on 01/15 at 08:21 AM
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