WHO cautious over Indonesia bird flu outbreak (AP) Updated: 2005-09-22 18:52
The growing number of people with bird flu-like symptoms
in Indonesia does not mean the outbreak is becoming worse, and there is no sign
the virus can be passed easily among people, top U.N. health experts said on
Thursday.
An Indonesian
worker vaccinates a chick on a farm to protect thousands of healthy chickens
from bird flu virus in Banten town of West Java province September 22, 2005.
[Reuters]
Alarm has spread in populous Indonesia. Bird flu has
killed four people and 11 are under observation in the capital. Two others, both
children, have also died but the government is awaiting results to confirm if
the H5N1 virus killed them.
Despite the cases, there is no evidence the H5N1 strain has mutated into a
form that could trigger a pandemic, said Georg Petersen, the World Health
Organization's Indonesia representative.
Nevertheless, he pointed to the possibility of transmission through very
close contact with an infected person.
"I think very close contact with a sick person might infect that caretaker.
That is why in hospitals we need to take all precautions ... That would be in a
way a human-to-human transmission, but that demands close, close contact," he
said.
Petersen said the case of a father and his two daughters who died in the
Tangerang suburb of Jakarta in July might have involved "within-family
transmission."
Thailand had reported a probable case of human-to-human transmission in
September 2004, when a 26-year-old woman died of bird flu after "prolonged
face-to-face exposure" with her daughter, who was hospitalized with the virus.
Dr Margaret Chan, the WHO's global special representative on avian flu, also
said on Thursday there was no sign the virus had mutated into a form that could
easily spread among people.
"So far there is no evidence for increased chance of human-to-human
transmission," Chan told Reuters by telephone from Sydney after attending a WHO
conference in Noumea, capital of New Caledonia in the South Pacific.
All the confirmed and suspected cases have come from, or near, the capital
Jakarta.
Chan said the rise in the number of suspected cases did not point to an
epidemic.
"With increased surveillance it's not unusual that you would pick up more
cases," Chan said.
Bird flu has killed 64 people in Asia since 2003 and has since been found in
birds in Russia and Europe.
HIGH ALERT
Petersen said laboratory tests on people killed by bird flu in Indonesia
showed they had the same or a similar virus that has killed millions of poultry
in Asia.
"The tests from the 37-year-old woman ... so far that looks like the bird
virus. So there is no reason to believe there has been any mutation so far,"
Petersen said of the fourth confirmed bird flu death in the country.
Indonesia's health minister said on Thursday a two-year-old girl who died in
Jakarta this week had shown bird flu symptoms, adding that hospitals would be
enhanced to cope with the virus.
Eleven patients were now under observation at the designated bird flu
hospital in Jakarta, Siti Fadillah Supari added, raising the number from 10.
Indonesia is waiting results from Hong Kong after a five-year-old girl also
died on Wednesday after suffering bird flu-like symptoms.
I Nyoman Kandun, the head of disease control at Indonesia's health ministry,
said tests so far showed only one patient out of those under observation was
positive for the H5N1 virus. That patient was related to the Jakarta woman who
died of bird flu almost two weeks ago.
The government has appealed for public calm over the outbreak, which has
dominated local media in recent days. On Monday, it imposed a state of high
alert, giving authorities power to order people with symptoms of the virus into
hospitals.
The WHO last week warned bird flu was moving toward a form that could be
passed between humans and the world had no time to waste to prevent a pandemic.
Past pandemics have killed millions.
The U.N. health agency was also working with Jakarta to bolster stocks of the
anti-viral drug Tamiflu.
Australia said on Thursday it would pay A$30,000 for
10,000 doses of anti-viral bird flu medicine for Indonesia aimed at protecting
health workers in the event of a pandemic.
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