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Tracking the next pandemic: Avian Flu Talk

Bird flu kills Indonesian woman

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    Posted: December 10 2007 at 10:46pm
 

Bird flu kills Indonesian woman, country's death toll at 92

http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/156562.html

Jakarta - A 28-year-old Indonesian woman has died of bird flu, bringing the country's death toll from the H5N1 avian influenza virus to 92 - the world's highest, a Health Ministry official said Tuesday. The woman from Tanggerang district town in Banten province on the outskirts of the capital, died Monday at Jakarta's Persahabatan Hospital, designated to treat cases of avian flu, said Ningrum, an official at the Health Ministry's bird-flu information centre.

Ningrum said the woman fell sick on December 1 and sought medical treatment at Sari Asih Hospital in Tanggerang three days later. She was admitted to Persahabatan Hospital on December 8 with fever, breathing difficulty and pneumonia. She died two days later.

Ningrum said the Health Ministry is still investigating the history of the woman's illness, but added that poultry were founded in her neighbouring areas.

Her death was Indonesia's 92nd out of 114 diagnosed cases of bird flu in humans. Both figures are the highest in the world. At least 208 people have died in 12 countries in Asia and Africa of the disease, according to World Health Organization statistics.

The most-common way to contract the H5N1 virus is through contact with infected fowl. Although bird flu remains mainly an animal disease, experts fear the virus could mutate and spread from human to human, turning into a pandemic that could kill millions of people worldwide.
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Indonesia confirms another bird flu death

    December 11 2007 at 10:50AM

Jakarta - A 28-year-old woman from the outskirts of the Indonesian capital has been confirmed as dying of bird flu, raising the toll in the nation worst affected by H5N1 to 92, the health ministry said on Tuesday.

Two laboratory tests on the woman, who died on Monday at a hospital in Jakarta, showed that she was infected with the highly pathogenic virus, a statement from the ministry's bird flu information centre said.

Two positive results of tests on blood and tissue samples from a victim are needed before Indonesian authorities confirm a bird flu infection.

Muhammad Nadhirin, an official at the centre, said that a team of five experts had been dispatched on Monday to the victim's neighbourhood.

No birds however had died in the area in the past six months
The team said that "the source of infection could be from poultry 100 metres away from the victim's house, but we're waiting for test results on whether the poultry is infected with the virus", Nadhirin told AFP.

He said the victim, who had sold ornamental plants, bought plant fertiliser from the neighbour which may have been contaminated by the faeces of infected birds. No birds however had died in the area in the past six months and the poultry appeared healthy, he added.

The virus is usually transmitted to humans from infected birds.

Scientists fear, however, that the virus may mutate into a form easily transmissible between humans, sparking a deadly global pandemic that the World Bank has said could cost up to two trillion dollars.

The victim, named Mutiah, lived in the satellite city of Tangerang, just west of Jakarta, where three other bird flu deaths have been reported since October.

Confirmation of the latest death comes as some 10 000 international visitors attend a UN climate change summit on the Indonesian resort island of Bali, about 970 kilometres away from Jakarta.

The latest Indonesian H5N1 death follows that of a 24-year-old man in China's eastern Jiangsu province on December 2 from the same virus.

The man's father was also infected, raising fears of human-to-human transmission, but there was no biological evidence of this, Chinese officials said Monday. No reports of outbreaks in birds had occurred in the province.

The World Bank said last week that international donors had committed more than 400 million dollars to fight bird flu at a conference on the virus in New Delhi aimed at devising ways to tackle the disease.

But the Bank has projected a need for 1,2 billion dollars over the next two to three years to help countries fight bird flu.

Excluding the latest death, H5N1 has killed 207 people worldwide since late 2003, though the number of deaths has declined from 79 in 2006 to 49 this year, according to the World Health Organisation's official toll.


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