Guest guest Posted January 5, 2006 Report Share Posted January 5, 2006 2 siblings die from bird flu in Turkey By beth Rosenthal International Herald Tribune THURSDAY, JANUARY 5, 2006 ROME Two siblings who lived on a farm in rural Turkey have died of avian influenza, health authorities there said Thursday, making them the first human victims of the disease outside of China and Southeast Asia. Both children had close contact with sick poultry, the route by which virtually all human victims have become infected with the virus. About 140 people in Asia, where the dreaded H5N1 bird flu virus was first detected, have been stricken. About half of them have died. The discovery of human bird flu cases near Europe, while distressing, was not surprising, international health officials said. Every country that has has experienced a large-scale avian influenza outbreak in birds has also had a handful of human victims. Despite today's worrisome developments, the risk to the general population is negligible, officials said. " What's happened here is what we have already seen in Asia, " said McNab, a spokesperson for the World Health Organization in Geneva. " These children were infected by infected poultry, so it doesn't change our assessment of risk for the general population in Europe. " Turkey recorded its first outbreaks of H5N1 in domestic poultry this fall, when the virus brought into the country by birds migrating from Central Asia. Over the past year, the virus has skipped from Southeast Asia, where it first emerged around five years ago, to western China, Russia, Ukraine and, this fall, to southeastern Europe. Although testing in Turkey has revealed that the children died from an avian influenza virus, it has not yet been confirmed that they succumbed to the virulent H5N1 strain, although " everything points to that conclusion, " McNab said. A WHO team from Copenhagen was scheduled to be dispatched to Turkey on Thursday to help the local authorities learn more about the cases, and samples from the deceased children are on their way to England for further testing. In recent months, there have been a number of outbreaks of bird flu in poultry in Turkey, including confirmed and suspected outbreaks in provinces adjacent to where the children lived, in Agri Province, near the Iranian border. Fatma Kocyigit, 15, and her 14-year-old brother, Mehmet Ali Kocyigit, from the city of Van, both died of pneumonia caused by avian influenza in the past four days, according to the Turkish Anatolia news agency. Their 11-year-old sister, Hulya, and some neighbors have been hospitalized, the news agency said. All of the children were involved in caring for poultry, although there are no officially reported outbreaks in the village where they live. " We're facing an important problem, " said Agriculture Minister Mehdi Eker, at a news conference before heading to Van. " We should calmly take all measures required by science and medicine and implement them without panic. " While the lethal H5N1 strain of bird flu virus does not, at the moment, readily infect humans or pass from person to person, international health authorities worry that it might acquire those capabilities through a naturally occurring process in which flu viruses exchange genes. Should it acquire that capability, H5N1 has the potential to set off a devastating influenza pandemic and kill millions. The more people who are infected with H5N1, the more the opportunities for dangerous gene mixing to occur. If a person were simultaneously infected with the H5N1 virus, the normal seasonal influenza virus in his body would become an perfect crucible for gene exchange, potentially creating an easily transmissible human H5N1 virus. The vast majority of bird flu cases, both in animals and humans, have been found in Asia, particularly Vietnam and China. China has recently decided to vaccinate its entire poultry stock against the disease after experiencing more than 20 outbreaks this year. This fall, birds in Turkey, Romania and Croatia tested positive for the disease, its first appearance in Europe. But detection and reporting from the rural counties where bird flu most often occurs is often haphazard, leaving international health authorities uncertain about the extent of the problem. For example, there have been no official reports of bird flu in poultry in the province where the children live, although it is almost certainly occurring there. The last reported outbreak in Turkey was on Dec. 27 when health authorities in neighboring Igdir Province notified the World Organization for Animal Health in Paris that 1,200 chickens, ducks, geese and turkeys in the village of Kopruler had died of avian influenza. http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/01/05/news/flu.php Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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