Bird Flu Concerns Take U.S. Health Secretary to Asia
Leavitt travels through four nations as disease
fears rise in EuropeOct 11, 2005
Washington – U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Michael
Leavitt is getting an on-the-ground look at the steps Asian nations are
taking to control bird flu as he visits Thailand, Cambodia, Laos and
Vietnam.
Leavitt will visit facilities such as poultry farms, markets,
agricultural districts and medical laboratories, according to a
Washington-based spokesman, to see the environments where avian
influenza has flourished since December 2003.
A highly pathogenic form of avian influenza – H5N1 – has been
confirmed in 11 nations and has caused the deaths of more than 150
million birds.
Humans also have been infected in almost 120 cases confirmed by the
World Health Organization (WHO) so far, and more infections are
expected. Sixty of those cases have proved fatal.
Leavitt and other global health leaders warn that this infectious
strain of bird flu could set off a global pandemic, causing the deaths
of millions.
That outcome would depend on whether H5N1 mutates to become a disease
easily transmitted among humans. So far, most patients have been exposed
to the disease through direct contact with infected birds.
H5N1 has proved lethal in its own right, but epidemiologists have
further reason to believe that a global disease outbreak is looming. Flu
epidemics come in cycles, with three in the last century in 1918-1919,
1957-1958 and1968-1969.
“[T]he likelihood of another is very high, some say even certain,”
Leavitt said October 11 in Bangkok briefing after meeting with Thai
officials.
WHO Director General Dr. Lee Jong-wook and U.S. Under Secretary of
State for Global Affairs Paula Dobriansky are accompanying Leavitt on
this trip.
LEAVITT’S MISSION
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one of the
agencies with the Department of Health and Human Services, is involved
in a partnership with the Thai Ministry of Public Health to operate an
International Emerging Infections Program that is conducting disease
surveillance in Thailand to track the movement of bird flu.
Leavitt is visiting that program on this tour. In all four nations he
will meet with ministers of health, and in some countries he will also
meet with ministers of agriculture and heads of state, in what
Washington-based spokeswoman Christina Pearson describes as a
relationship-building tour.
Leavitt’s trip began just days after the United States on October 7
hosted the first meeting of some 80 nations joined in an International
Partnership on Avian and Pandemic Influenza.
President Bush announced formation of the partnership at the U.N.
General Assembly in September. A senior State Department official said
the partnership meetings focused on three primary topics:
• Prevention -- Limiting the spread of the disease and reducing the
risk to humans;
• Response and containment -- Planning rapid action at the first sign
of sustained human transmission; and
• Preparedness and planning -- Developing national plans for action
in the event of outbreaks. (See
related article.)
DISEASE REPORTS IN EUROPE
This almost two-year-old outbreak of avian influenza began in Southeast
Asia. It moved into Central Asia in August with reports of disease in
Kazakhstan and Russia.
Now, Turkey and Romania report sickness in birds that appears to be
avian influenza, though official laboratory confirmation is still in
process.
In western Turkey, 1,700 domestic birds succumbed to illness,
according to a report submitted to the World Organisation for Animal
Health (OIE).
Authorities have followed up with roadblocks around the village
involved, according to press reports, as tests are conducted to identify
the pathogen.
From eastern Romania near the Black Sea comes another report of avian
flu among 100 ducks and hens on a single farm, though H5N1 is not
confirmed.
Romania reports to the OIE that it has undertaken various approaches
to control the outbreak, including quarantine, disinfection of the scene
and screening of birds.
Romania also reports that wild birds are suspected as the source of
infection.
When Russia confirmed avian influenza in August with 120,000 birds
dead or destroyed, likelihood was raised that the virus could follow
migratory bird routes into the Balkans and the rest of Europe. (See
related article.)
For more information, see
Bird Flu.
Source: US Department of State
By Charlene Porter
Washington File Staff Writer
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