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Tundraco's Daily Living Guide to Emergency Preparedness
Avian Influenza (Bird Flu) Information
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Information on Avian Influenza
A.K.A.
Bird Flu
Information on the 2003-04 Avian Influenza Outbreak
A CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) Fact Sheet
An outbreak of avian
influenza, more commonly known as
bird flu, is affecting bird populations in countries
throughout Asia. The outbreak is caused by the H5N1 subtype
of influenza A. Human cases also have been reported.
- In birds: Outbreaks of avian influenza
A (H5N1) have been confirmed among poultry in Cambodia,
China, Hong Kong (in a single peregrine falcon), Indonesia,
Japan, Laos, South Korea, Thailand, and Vietnam.
Visit the
World Organization for Animal Health website at http://www.oie.int for
more information.
- In people: The outbreak
of bird flu has resulted in human cases of H5N1 infection
in Vietnam and Thailand. Deaths have been reported.
At this time it is believed that these cases resulted
from contact with infected birds or surfaces contaminated
with excretions from infected birds. An investigation
is ongoing to determine the source of human infections.
Visit the World Health Organization (WHO) website at http://www.who.int/en/ for
more information.
Information on Influenza A (H5N1)
- Background: Influenza A (H5N1) is
a subtype of the Type A influenza virus. Wild birds are
the natural hosts of the virus, hence the name avian
influenza or bird flu. The virus was first isolated from
birds (terns) in South Africa in 1961. The virus circulates
among birds worldwide. It is very contagious among birds
and can be deadly to birds, particularly domesticated
birds like chickens.
- Infection: The virus does
not typically infect humans. In 1997, however, the first
instance of direct bird-to-human transmission of H5N1
was documented during an outbreak of avian influenza
among poultry in Hong Kong; the virus caused severe respiratory
illness in 18 people, of who 6 died. Since that time,
there have been other instances of H5N1 infection among
humans. (See "Basic Information
about Avian Influenza.") But so far, H5N1 viruses
have not been capable of efficient human-to-human transmission.
This is something that is being watched carefully and
is being investigated during this outbreak.
- Spread:
Infected birds shed virus in saliva, nasal secretions
and feces. Avian influenza viruses spread among susceptible
birds when they have contact with contaminated excretions.
It is believed that most cases of H5N1 infection in humans
have resulted from contact with infected poultry or contaminated
surfaces.
Current H5N1 Strain
The H5N1 strain implicated in the current outbreak has
been genetically sequenced. Following is a summary of
what has been learned:
- All genes are of bird origin. This means
that the virus has not acquired genes from human influenza
viruses, a development that would make person-to-person
spread more likely.
- There are likely different
variations of H5N1 virus circulating at this time.
Genetic sequencing of virus samples from South Korea
and Vietnam show that the viruses in these two countries
are slightly different.
- Genetic sequencing of A(H5N1) virus samples from
human cases in Vietnam and Thailand show antiviral
resistance to amantadine and rimantadine, two of the
antiviral drugs commonly used for influenza. The remaining
two antivirals (oseltamavir and zanamavir) should still
be effective against this strain of H5N1.
Containment
Key to containing the outbreak is the culling (killing)
of sick and exposed birds. This was done to contain
the 1997 H5N1 outbreak in Hong Kong. Many experts
believe this was crucial to averting many more human
cases. For the current outbreak in Asia, governments
are culling poultry to try to contain the virus.
Patients are being treated and isolated, and investigations
are underway to determine the source of infection.
What Will
Happen
All influenza viruses can change. It is possible that
an avian influenza virus could change so that it could
infect humans and could spread easily from person to
person. Because these viruses commonly do not infect
humans, there is little or no immune protection against
them in the human population. If an avian influenza
virus were able to infect people and gain the ability
to spread easily from person to person, an "influenza
pandemic" could begin.
CDC Response to Outbreak
CDC is working closely with WHO and other partners
in an effort to address the outbreak. For its part, CDC
activities include the following:
- Activation
of CDC’s Emergency Operations Center
to provide round-the-clock coordination and response.
- Deployment of 6 staff members (epidemiologists,
laboratorians and a data manager) as part of the WHO
investigation team in Vietnam working with Vietnam's
human and animal health authorities to assess the extent
of the outbreak among humans and animals, identify
risk factors for human infection, and determine the
characteristics of influenza A (H5N1) viruses isolated
from human and poultry cases.
- As 1 of 4 WHO Collaborating
Centers in the WHO Global Influenza Network, CDC laboratories
are conducting extensive testing of specimens from
Asia to determine the characteristics of the recent
H5N1 viruses compared with other avian influenza viruses.
This information is needed to help develop an H5 vaccine
for the current situation.
- CDC’s WHO Collaborating
Center is developing reagent kits that will be distributed
to laboratories throughout Asia, the U.S., and elsewhere
so that they can detect recent H5N1 viruses.
CDC Recommendations
Travelers: CDC advises that travelers to countries
in Asia with documented H5N1 outbreaks should avoid poultry
farms, contact with animals in live food markets, and
any surfaces that appear to be contaminated with feces
from poultry or other animals. (For more information,
visit CDC’s Travelers’ Health page at http://www.cdc.gov/travel/.)
Health
Departments and Health Care Professionals:
CDC has provided U.S. health departments with interim
guidance on enhanced surveillance and laboratory
testing to help identify possible cases of H5N1
influenza that might be imported into the United
States.