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BEIJING, Feb. 2, (Xinhuanet) -- With more bird flu
reports cropping up, the nation has moved quickly to step up measures to contain
the spread of the virus.
New suspected cases were reported Sunday in the city of Yongkang, in Zhejiang Province; Yichang, in Hubei; Chenggong County, Yunnan; Pingyu County, Henan Province; and a division of the
Xinjiang Production and Construction Corp in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous
Region.
On Saturday Ezhou of Hubei Province and Chao'an
County of Guangdong Province also reported the virus.
The World Health Organization (WHO) said China's
window of opportunity to stop the spread of the disease is narrowing, though
there have been no human cases.
It has been almost a week since the first confirmed
the presence of H5N1 avian influenza, or bird flu, in poultry in South China's
Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. Such cases were also reported in Hunan and
Anhui provinces.
So far, there are no known human cases of H5N1 avian
influenza in China, said Ministry of Health spokesman Mao Qun'an.
A report yesterday of a possible human case in
Shanghai was discounted by China's Ministry of Health, said the WHO's Beijing
office yesterday.
President Hu Jintao, on a state visit to Egypt, said
on Saturday China has full confidence in its ability to tackle the problem and
in preventing the disease from spreading.
The Chinese mainland has been culling poultry within
3 kilometres of infected farms and vaccinating poultry within 5 kilometres.
Measures also include a ban on exports of poultry and
poultry products from affected areas, closure of poultry markets and
strengthening quarantine requirements of the residents from affected areas.
The State Council has established a National Bird Flu
Prevention Headquarters in an effort to intensify prevention and control work on
bird flu, and Vice-Premier Hui Liangyu was appointed director-general of the
headquarters.
However, with more outbreaks reported daily, the
mainland's window of opportunity to contain the spread appears to be getting
smaller, said WHO spokesman Roy Wadia.
The greater the number of cases, the bigger the
challenge, especially given the mainland's size and the geographical spread of
poultry populations.
One of China's main weapons against the influenza
spread is speed.
When the disease breaks in a new place, culling
poultry, isolation and quarantines are quickly imposed, said Mao Qun'an of the
Ministry of Health.
Still, the WHO has raised concerns over the
environmental impact of the bird culls and urged people involved "take suitable
safety precautions" to help prevent the possibility that these people might be
infected.
In Hong Kong, local officials are also taking
measures to ensure poultry retailers observe the law.
So far, there have been several cases reported in
Viet Nam and Thailand of bird to human transmission of H5N1 avian influenza.
While there are no confirmed cases of human to human
transmission, the World Health Organization said Sunday that two sisters who
died of bird flu in Viet Nam may have caught the disease from their brother.
That may prove to be the first known case of human-to-human transmission of the
lethal virus.
"The investigation has not been able to conclusively
identify the source of infection for the two sisters," the WHO said in a
statement. "However, WHO considers that limited human-to-human transmission,
from the brother to his sisters, is one possible explanation," it said.
According to an analysis from experts at the centre
for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, the United States, human-to-human
contact is not farfetched.
If a person already infected with common human flu
contracts the bird flu virus, the two could link.
Should that happen, the bird flu virus may combine
with human flu virus and gain the ability to spread among humans.
People do not have a natural immunity to H5N1. That's
what makes the scenario of human-to-human transmission so dangerous, said Roy.
Still, the H5N1 virus must face several hurdles
before it can mutate, Roy added.
At the same time, WHO refuted claims that bird flu
virus originated from China.
There is no evidence to support the claims that China
is the source of the bird flu virus, and there is no clear answer yet as to
where the virus originated, WHO spokeswoman Fadela Chaib was quoted as saying.
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(China Daily) |