The United Nations health agency sought Tuesday to dampen fears of bird flu
striking large numbers of people, even as the death toll in Asia climbed to 13.
A 7-year-old boy became the fourth person to die from the disease in
Thailand. Vietnam has reported nine fatalities.
"I think it's very important at this stage that we remain calm about
worst-case scenarios," said Mike Ryan, head of the global epidemic response
network at the World Health Organization. "What we're dealing with at the moment
is small clusters of cases associated with exposure to poultry."
"We have a strain of influenza with the potential to pick up human genes, and
we're nowhere close to declaring a pandemic," Ryan told reporters.
Asia's bird flu crisis topped the agenda at a three-day emergency meeting
beginning Tuesday at the headquarters of the UN Food and Agriculture
Organization in Rome. Experts hope to work out strategies for tackling the
outbreak and preventing future one.
Joseph Domenech, chief of the FAO animal health department, addressed the
concern the virus could mutate.
"Today we are not at this stage, but until now the veterinary, the animal
outbreaks, are multiplying. It's still an increasing curve, so if it continues
that way, the risks are still more and more important," he said.
Ten Asian countries are battling bird flu, also known as avian influenza, and
at least 45 million chickens have been slaughtered across the region to stop its
spread. Cases in humans have been reported only in Vietnam and Thailand, with
most traced to direct contact with sick birds.
Fears the disease had spread to Europe subsided after doctors said a German
tourist who came down with flu-like symptoms after visiting Thailand was most
likely free of the disease.
Investigators have been unable to trace the infections of two Vietnamese
women to contact with chickens and have not ruled out human-to-human
transmission. But even if the women did catch the disease from a family member,
limited transmission of the virus between people is not the real danger.
What experts fear most is the virus mutating into a form that passes easily
between people - a pandemic strain that is a hybrid of the bird virus and a
normal human influenza variety.
"What we're saying is that we're not dealing with an imminent threat to
public health, but we are dealing with a potential threat to public health,"
Ryan said.
The other countries battling the disease are China, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos,
Indonesia, Japan, Pakistan, South Korea and China's Taiwan Province. However,
health officials say the strain of bird flu striking Taiwan and Pakistan is
milder and is not considered a serious threat to humans.
Ryan, who steered WHO's response to last year's SARS epidemic in Asia and
Canada, said authorities worldwide must keep bird flu under close surveillance.
"This latest avian influenza outbreak sends another shot across the bows,
another warning to us that we must be ready in the event of the emergence of a
pandemic strain," he said. "While we're watching, we've got to be preparing."
WHO has sent teams to the region and to the meeting in Rome. At least 25
international experts from 15 countries were attending that meeting, including
high-level veterinary officials from affected nations and representatives of the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Health officials say destroying infected birds, if safely carried out, is the
best way to contain the disease, but the mass slaughter and import bans have
ravaged Asia's poultry industry.
WHO officials have said people who eat poultry are not at risk from bird flu
but that import restrictions on live birds are needed to halt the spread of the
disease among farm flocks.
The European Union and Japan have both barred poultry products from Thailand,
with the EU extending its ban Tuesday for another six months. The extension also
applies to a ban on pet birds from Cambodia, Indonesia, Japan, Laos, Pakistan,
China, South Korea, Thailand and Vietnam.
Asian tourism has begun to suffer, although WHO has not issued any travel
warnings as it did during the SARS outbreak.
WHO also is spearheading the hunt for a bird flu vaccine. Ryan said
prototypes developed by the agency will shortly be supplied to pharmaceutical
companies so they can begin research on a useable vaccine, which experts expect
to be ready within months.
"This is something that is very achievable, this is not some brave new
world," Ryan said. "Giving a worst-case scenario without taking into account our
possibility to intervene successfully (with a vaccine) I think at this point
would be scaremongering."