27 July 2006

'Rapid response' targets bird flu

Southeast Asia
Jul 28, 2006
'Rapid response' targets bird flu
By Marwaan Macan-Markar

BANGKOK - With its 900,000-strong army of public health volunteers and its spending of more than US$250 million to help affected poultry farmers, Thailand was held up as a model for combating the spread of the deadly bird flu. But the avian influenza virus has proved it has many tricks under its wings.

This week saw Thailand's impressive record of remaining free of the H5N1 strain of the virus for more than seven months shattered by a virus that continues to remain resilient. Following reports in mid-July of a bird flu outbreak in the poultry population in thenorthern province of Pitchit came confirmation on Tuesday that a 17-year-old boy had died of the disease. It brings the human fatalities to 15 out of 23 reported human cases of bird flu in Thailand since 2004.

Elsewhere in Southeast Asia, this deadly virus is spreading in rural communities, with Indonesia being the worst hit. On July 20, Jakarta reported that a 44-year-old man had died of bird flu, making him the forty-second Indonesian to die from the virus due to close contact with contaminated poultry.

Indonesia now joins Vietnam as the two countries with the most human deaths from bird flu since the current outbreak began in the winter of 2003. But while Vietnam has brought bird flu under control - with no human fatalities reported this year - Indonesia offers a study in contrast. Thirty-one of the country's 42 bird flu deaths occurred since January.

Indonesia has also carved itself a niche for having the highest fatality rate of people reported with H5N1. It has recorded 54 cases of the disease, of which four-fifths have succumbed.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), 134 people have died of bird flu since early 2004 out of 231 people affected. Azerbaijan has had five deaths, Cambodia six, China two, Egypt six, Iraq two and Turkey four. This is apart from 42 deaths in Vietnam and Indonesia and those in Thailand.

Consequently, in an attempt to prevent a spike in such fatalities - and lay the groundwork to respond to any sign of the virus being passed between humans, which could evolve into a global pandemic, killing millions - efforts are under way in Southeast Asia to strengthen the health responses in rural communities.

The blueprint the WHO and the US-based Center for Disease Control (CDC) have in mind are "rapid response teams" in local communities.

"Each team will be between five to seven people and will include medical and nursing staff with proper equipment," WHO epidemiologist Mark Simmerman told Inter Press Service. "They will be trained to follow new standards that places the focus on areas such as containment efforts to control the virus."

The first three days after a virus is reported is pivotal, he added. "A containment plan, including shutting down schools, will be important to slow the spread of the virus. A quick response is vital."

In Southeast Asia, such rapid response teams could number in the hundreds "or even one or two thousand as the program develops", Simmerman explained at the conclusion of training for public health experts from 13 countries that took place in Bangkok this month.

"This will take time to accomplish, for the aim is to build a link between the local teams, the national response teams and international health teams," said Anthony Mounts, who heads the international epidemiology team at the CDC. "The CDC is trying to improve lab facilities to help diagnose avian influenza locally."

Such upgrading of laboratory facilities will bring to an end to the prevailing pattern in some countries across the region that are affected by bird flu of having to send virus samples for testing abroad, he explained. "Time is a factor here. This will allow the specimens to be collected and transported to national labs for testing within 24 hours."

Aiding this effort is the CDC's plans to make available new technology in the local laboratories real-time PCR (polymerase chain reaction).

"The machine will amplify the genes once a chemical is added that reacts and identifies the avian influenza gene," Mounts said. "It allows you to take specimens from the field and do these tests quickly. You can have accurate answers in a very short time."

The attempt to upgrade the public health responses to avian influenza comes at a time when experts are also drawing attention to the challenges that arise when detecting the H5N1 virus.

"The diagnosis of H5N1 is extremely challenging," microbiologist Kevin Baird wrote this month in The Jakarta Post. "It requires highly skilled scientists equipped with very expensive gear and extremely carefully chosen reagents. Only two laboratories in Indonesia are capable of doing it reliably, and between the two of them they have examined about 400 people since the middle of last year."

At the same time, the past two-and-a-half years have served as a learning curve for Southeast Asia in as much as it lived with the threat of bird flu. The region's readiness to respond to a possible pandemic comes from "what we have learned from our responses to avian influenza", Tawat Suntharajan, director general of Thailand's department of disease control, said while training senior epidemiologists from the region.

(Inter Press Service)

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

27/07: THE GLOBAL BIRD HOLOCAUST.

I see that the Irish have decided on gassing their chickens to death.

The Irish Government has apparently destroyed 4,000 chickens, in a DUMMY RUN of its plans for curbing the spread of bird flu in Ulster.

Curbing the spread of Bird Flu?????

I Did not know that Bird Flu was already spreading in Ulster!

I suppose that is, well, kind of a humane way to kill the poor creatures, as opposed to burning them alive, as some other countries have been doing.

Over 300 million bird from around the world have been killed over the last year or so.

Vast majority of these birds (over 99%) had nothing to do with the bird flu virus, were completely healthy and were minding their own business, doing what birds do.

They were killed "just-in-case"!

Any way, here is the Irish Way to do it:

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Belfast Telegraph Home > News



4,000 Ulster hens gassed to death in bird flu dry run


By Linda McKee

27 July 2006
The Government has destroyed 4,000 chickens in a dummy run of its plans for curbing the spread of bird flu in Ulster.

The hens, which had reached the end of their laying life, were destroyed near Cookstown by Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (DARD) staff testing a gas-based method of killing the birds.

Under European law, DARD staff are required to develop a contingency plan to tackle any outbreak of avian influenza and carry out real-time exercises to assure its effectiveness.

This week's test was carried out under controlled conditions and was followed by a debrief at Loughry Campus of the College of Agriculture, Food and Rural Enterprise.

A spokesman said: "This structured rehearsal was held after the trial to evaluate the efficacy of this methodology.

"Almost 40 DARD staff and observers from industry, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and the Department of Agriculture and Food participated in this operational trial.

"It was one of a series of such trials held on an ongoing basis to test all aspects of the Epizootic Disease Contingency Plan and ensure Northern Ireland's readiness to handle any future outbreaks of epizootic disease."

Health chiefs in Ulster have already carried out a number of dummy runs to test the healthcare system's readiness for any outbreak.

One high-level test, dubbed Operation Spring Chicken, was based on a nightmare scenario involving poultry workers contracting the H5N1 virus.

The exercise, organised by the Southern and Western Health Boards, involved setting up a special anti-viral treatment area with the help of doctors, nurses and communicable disease specialists.