Two more deaths from bird flu reported (China Daily/AFP) Updated: 2006-01-12 06:18
Diagnosing bird flu is difficult as its symptoms are similar to those of
respiratory illnesses, Wadia said.
Only quick diagnosis and treatment can ensure effective medical treatment, he
said.
"The latest deaths indicate that H5N1 is a particularly virulent pathogen, as
we have seen in cases in other countries," Wadia said.
Globally, the human bird flu fatality rate is between 50 per cent and 60 per
cent.
Wadia praised China for its efforts and its attitude in fighting the virus.
"The government has certainly not at all been complacent about this. They are
remaining quite realistic," he said.
Indeed, the Health Ministry on Tuesday warned the nation about the dangers of
complacency in terms of bird flu surveillance and monitoring of outbreaks.
"We cannot lower our guard in the slightest degree against the risk of bird
flu triggering a new epidemic," the ministry's deputy director general, Mao
Qun'an told a press briefing.
"As long as there are still outbreaks among animals... we cannot say bird flu
is already past its peak."
In particular he warned against the nightmare scenario of bird flu starting
to spread from human to human, rather than the current transmission pattern from
bird to human.
Medical experts have warned human-to-human transmission could lead to a
global pandemic that could kill millions of people.
The WHO cannot predict when a pandemic will occur, or if it will occur at
all, Wadia said.
"As more outbreaks occur among poultry and animals around the world, and as
more human cases occur, the virus has more chances to transmit more effectively
from animals to humans, or possibly among humans as well," Wadia said.
The WHO has alerted countries, especially those in Asia, to be ready to
respond quickly to any signs of emergence of a pandemic strain of the H5N1
virus.
Asia remains the centre of H5N1 avian influenza, as it is in this part of the
world that the virus is prevalent, even entrenched, the spokesman said.
Bird flu has swept vast parts of Asia, killing at least 76 people in the
region since 2003.
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