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New cases of bird flu underscore dangers of a global pandemic
By Dragan Stankovic
29 March 2005
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The appearance of new cases of the bird flu virus HIN5 among
poultry and humans in Asia has prompted urgent warnings about
the potentially catastrophic consequences of a deadly worldwide
pandemic. At present, the virus is transmitted to humans via infected
birds. With the virus entrenched in parts of Asia, what concerns
scientists and health workers is the possibility that a mutant
strain will emerge that can spread directly from human to human.
In late February, Dr Julie Gerberding, director of the US Centres
for Disease Control and Prevention, told a convention of the Association
for the Advancement of Science: Our assessment is that this
is a very high threat. Each time we see a new H1 antigen emerge,
we experience a pandemic of influenza. She explained that
a similar influenza virus killed an estimated 20-40 million people
in 1918-1919.
World Health Organisation (WHO) director general Lee Jong-wook
told the Financial Times in early March: Nobody knows
how bad it will be. But there is no disagreement that this is
just a matter of time. We cant be optimistic. WHO
estimates that a pandemic could kill 8 million people and put
another 30 million people in hospital. Other virologists put the
figures even higher.
British newspapers last week reported the comments of a senior
government official to a security conference in London, warning
that the number of deaths from an influenza epidemic in the United
Kingdom alone could reach 750,000. Up to a quarter of the workforce
could be absent through sickness. Professor Hugh Pennington, president
of the British Society for General Microbiology, said the death
rate could be even higherup to two million.
At this stage, a mutant strain has not emerged. The deaths
have been limited to relatively small numbers of people in South
East AsiaVietnam, Thailand and Cambodia. But as Dr Shigeru
Omi, a senior WHO official, warned at a conference last month
in Vietnam, the longer the virus circulates among animals, the
greater the risk for humans and the potential for a pandemic.
North Korea is the latest country to report the disease in its
bird population.
Vietnams death toll from bird flu reached 35 last Friday
when a 17-year-old woman from Nam Dinh province succumbed to the
disease. Authorities also confirmed that a 40-year-old woman from
Quang Ninh near the border with China had contracted the virus.
Two people have died in Cambodia, the most recent on March
22 in the southern province of Kampot. A third person, who had
close contact with the latest victim, also has the disease. Another
12 people have died in Thailand, bringing the overall deaths to
49 since 2003.
The fatality rate from the diseasethe ratio of deaths
to the number of casescurrently stands at 70 percent. Health
authorities suggest, however, that the actual rate may not be
so high as a number of less virulent cases could have gone unreported.
Health investigators have been concerned to identify quickly
any possible cases of human-to-human transmission of the disease.
One case in Vietnam early this year involved two brothers.
The elder brother died after eating raw duck blood porridge
at the funeral of his son. He was hospitalised on December 31
and died on January 9, but was not initially diagnosed with bird
flu. His younger brother, who looked after him in hospital, also
became ill and tested positive for the disease. Doctors retested
the dead brother and found he had contracted the virus, but eventually
ruled out human-to-human transmission. The younger brother survived.
WHO officials are also investigating the case of Cambodian
woman Tit Sakhan who died on January 30. Her younger brother died
nine days earlier and two other family members are sick. Tit Sakhan
was only diagnosed with the disease because she crossed into Vietnam
to seek medical attention. Compared to Vietnam, Cambodias
health system is even more rudimentary.
An article in the Washington Post this month highlighted
the limited character of preventative efforts in Cambodia. Surveillance
for the bird flu virus consists of a network of informants connected
via cell phone to an office in Phnom Penh. Cambodia is seeking
$10,000 in international assistance to pay for prepaid phone cards.
Overall annual per capita spending on health care, amounts to
just $US3.
Poor communications and the lack of trained medical personnel
and equipment are hampering control of the disease in all three
countries. More fundamentally, however, lack of education, endemic
poverty and economic backwardness are creating the conditions
for new cases of bird flu. Many small farmers are reliant on raising
fowl to survive and live in close proximity to their birds thus
increasing the chances of contracting the disease from sick birds.
In Vietnam, the virus has spread to poultry in almost half
of the countrys 64 provinces. Since December, 800,000 birds
have been culled in an effort to eradicate bird flu. Some 40 million
of Vietnams 258 million chicken and ducks have been slaughtered
since the disease emerged in late 2003. Around 80 percent of poultry
producers are small-scale farmers who raise a few dozen birds
to eat or sell.
Most fatal cases in Vietnam have been in the Mekong Delta.
Authorities in Ho Chi Minh City have ordered the slaughter of
all fowl in the city. But there is reportedly a thriving black
market in live chickens, which still can be bought in the city
for $2.50 each and a 60-cent finders fee.
While South East Asia would bear the immediate blunt of any
pandemic, these countries are least able to cope with such an
outbreak. Wealthier countries like Australia, the UK and the US
are building stockpiles of anti-viral drugs that have proven effective
in limiting the impact of flu viruses. Britain has ordered 14.6
million doses of the drug oseltamivir.
Poorer countries cannot afford to stockpile these expensive
drugs. Oseltamivir, for instance, costs $US120 for a six-week
course. At a WHO meeting in January on bird flu, a Thai delegate,
Dr Viroj Tangcharoensathien, suggested that drug patents be set
aside in the case of a pandemic to enable the production of cheap
anti-virals in the affected countries. US and French delegates
immediately rejected the idea declaring that it could lead to
smuggling and profiteering.
Research is also underway into the development of a vaccine.
Three potential vaccines are already undergoing clinical trials.
The value of a vaccine in combatting a mutant virus that is yet
to emerge is unknown, but researchers hope that it could at least
attenuate the disease. Thailand and Vietnam provided samples of
the human H5N1 virus to help develop a vaccine and are asking
for assistance to inoculate their populations but have received
no guarantees.
At a regional conference in Vietnam in late February, UN Food
and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) official Samuel Jutzi expressed
concern at the lack of financial support for preventing bird flu.
I perceive an alarming lack of commitment among the donors
and also among the affected countries, he declared. Last
year donor countries gave $18 million dollars but Jutzi estimated
that $300 million was needed.
In late January, the FAO warned that the Asian tsunami may
have compounded the dangers of bird flu. The organisation pointed
out that the devastation may lead to a large-scale movement of
poultry into affected areas under conditions where any ability
to monitor outbreaks of the disease has been destroyed. It noted
that one of the worst affected areasthe Indonesian province
of Acehwas along the route of migratory birds that have
been identified as possible carriers of the virus.
Writing in the International Herald Tribune, Dr Hans
Troedsson, WHO representative in Vietnam, and FAO official Dr
Anton Rychener drew a parallel with the December 26 Asian tsunami.
For the tsunami, the world had no warning. For the avian
influenza, the world is constantly being alerted about the danger.
Let us all heed the warning, the authors pleaded.
What is common to the tsunami disaster and the danger of a
bird flu pandemic is that the risks are known, preventive and
curative methods either exist or are being developed, and yet
the major powers treat the fate of millions of people in countries
like Vietnam with complete indifference. In the event of an outbreak,
it inevitably will be the poor of South East Asia and other countries,
including the US and Europe, who will be the hardest hit.
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