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Medical Forum / General / General / May 2006

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May 19, 1997: Avian flu kills young boy

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Fred Goodwin, CMA - 19 May 2006 21:08 GMT
May 19, 1997: Avian flu kills young boy

http://www.historychannel.com/tdih/tdih.jsp?category=disaster&month=10272957&day
=10272984

http://tinyurl.com/grelo

A three-year-old boy dies of avian influenza in Hong Kong on this day
in 1997. By the time the outbreak was controlled, six people were dead
and 1.6 million domestic fowl were destroyed.

The young boy, the first victim of the flu outbreak, had been
hospitalized six days earlier with severe coughing and fever. He had
been around chickens that were found to be infected with avian
influenza. This virus, identified as flu type A(H5N1), had been found
in chickens in March. Other people who worked with the chickens were
immediately tested; some tested positive. More disturbingly, a health
care worker, a lab technician and a neighbor--all of whom did not deal
directly with chickens--also tested positive for this type of flu.

By November, there were 18 recorded cases; six of the victims died.
Finally, on December 28, authorities decided that it was necessary to
slaughter the chickens and other domestic fowl in Hong Kong to prevent
further spread of the disease. About 1.6 million animals were killed
and buried. Though no other cases were reported immediately after the
slaughter, officials continued to keep an eye on the virus. Over the
next eight years, between 1997 and 2005, the H5N1 virus mutated,
becoming extraordinarily lethal, and was responsible for 62 more human
fatalities in Asia, as well as the deaths of more than 140 million
birds, a portion of which were intentionally destroyed in an effort to
contain it.

In the fall of 2005, the virus spread suddenly from Asia to Europe. The
European debut of the flu, which is much more deadly than the common
"seasonal" form that kills about 36,000 Americans annually, sparked
concerns that if the virus were to mutate to a form communicable
between humans, a devastating pandemic would result. Scientists
estimate that as many as 150 million people could die in a few months.
As 2005 came to a close, nations around the world, in concert with the
World Health Organization, scrambled to assemble viable disaster and
containment plans and amass stockpiles of antiviral drugs. Soon after,
the virus was found in birds in Africa, but has only been spread to
humans who came into close contact the blood, bodily fluid or droppings
of infected chickens.
Eric rogers - 23 May 2006 03:46 GMT
> May 19, 1997: Avian flu kills young boy

You know, they still haven't found a strain of the bird flu that is
transmitted from PERSON TO PERSON. It has only been transmitted to
either the old, young, or thse with a weak immune system. The CDC,
however, is trying to mutate it to be communicable person to person.
                                                             _______
 +---------------------------------------------------+      |\\   //|
 | Eric Rogers macruadhi@netscape.com                |      | \\ // |
 +---------------------------------------------------+      |  > <  |
                                                            | // \\ |
                                              Alba gu brath |//___\\|
 
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