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India says nearly done on local bird flu vaccine |
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Posted: July 10 2006 at 6:44am |
India says nearly done on local bird flu vaccine
Mon Jul 10, 2006 7:41 AM ET
By Krittivas Mukherjee MUMBAI, July 10 (Reuters) - India is close to developing its own vaccine against avian flu in poultry with final phase trials showing 90 percent success, the head of the country's top animal disease research laboratory said on Monday. India's new experimental vaccine will target the H5N1 strain of the virus that has spread rapidly through poultry flocks in Europe, Asia and Africa and killed 131 people across the world since 2003. "So far we imported the vaccines, but now we can say we are close to developing our own," said H.K. Pradhan, head of the High Security Animal Diseases Laboratory. India has culled hundreds of thousands of birds since February when it reported its first outbreak in poultry. Though no human infections were reported, thousands of people were monitored for flu-like symptoms and the panic saw people staying away from chicken meat and eggs, mauling India's $7.3 billion poultry industry. Pradhan's laboratory, India's only facility conducting tests for the H5N1 variant of bird flu, isolated 48 virus strains from more than 80,000 bird samples during its vaccine trials. "I think this will be the best vaccine for bird flu," Pradhan told Reuters by telephone from Bhopal in the central state of Madhya Pradesh where the laboratory is located. "We just need to check for a few remaining parameters before we can officially declare. So far, it looks very good," he said, adding tests of the vaccine on birds showed 90 percent of response parameters like anti-body response were met successfully. The final results will be submitted to federal authorities by July 15. Vietnam, where 42 people have died of bird flu, is also developing its own vaccine against avian influenza in poultry to replace ones imported from China. Countries like Thailand which have also had human fatalities plan to test bird flu vaccines on humans while global drug makers like GlaxoSmithKline Plc <GSK.L> are rushing to develop a vaccine to protect humans. Last month, Indian authorities said bird flu had subsided and in six months the country could be declared free from the infection. India is not developing a vaccine for humans but has imported vaccines for poultry from the Netherlands. |
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Left Field
Adviser Group Joined: January 13 2006 Status: Offline Points: 176 |
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I can only recommend that you all stop worrying about a vacine for the birds and concentrating on one for people.
I really doubt the first world countries will be able to produce enough (vacine) for their own population when this goes H to H. And if you think they will share, are u ever in for an eye opener.
And a word of advice to the "Countries of Evil" forget any help. It would be easier to just let the bf take care of you then even give a second thought to helping you.
Does this sound cold? Well it's reality.
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