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Tracking the next pandemic: Avian Flu Talk

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 08 2007 at 3:31am
 But the technology has proven unpopular with state agencies and Mr Sombat is still searching to find out why Confused 
The battle against bird flu - new tactics, effective strategy

Officials in Suphan Buri are confident of containing any future bird flu outbreaks thanks to an ingenious computer programme

Bangkok Post backgrounder

Since bird flu was first confirmed in Suphan Buri three years ago, measures to combat the deadly virus have included culling about 60 million fowls and stockpiling millions of doses of influenza vaccine.

But Suphan Buri livestock officials are now concentrating their efforts on the use of a Geographic Information System (GIS), which gives them instant access to geographically collated data.

And with the country now in the peak season for bird flu, they are confident they can handle a fresh outbreak far more effectively than before, and with just a few clicks on their computers.

"If this system had been in use here before the first outbreak, we would have been able to contain the disease much faster and better," said Wannee Santanmanas, chief of the provincial livestock office.

Suphan Buri was one of the first provinces where bird flu was found in November 2003, making the province a "culprit" in the subsequent spread of the virus.

"I believe Suphan Buri's bird flu surveillance and response system is one of the best in the country now," said Dr Wannee.

"The GIS helps us assess the scale of damage and come up with the best plan to combat the virus."

The GIS is a computer programme capable of integrating, storing, analysing, sharing, and displaying geographically-referenced information in a map format.

The same technology can be used in various fields of work, such as resource and asset management, and urban and healthcare planning.

It enables officials to pinpoint disaster-hit areas and respond appropriately.

The core part of the system is the database, which is stored in "layers". By combining layers, users get differing displays of data to assist their decision making.

Livestock officials Kwanchai Netnoi and Chatchai Wongsa are in charge of updating the bird flu-related data.

This includes details of bird flu-hit farms, changes in the fowl population, the location of poultry farms and the owner's name, and details of each outbreak in each district.

Although they have had to work harder since the GIS was installed, when the province was struck by the third round of bird flu in July 2005 they had reason to be proud of their work.

"We have to update the information every day and learn how to use this complicated programme," said Mr Chatchai. "It's a tough job, but we are glad that our work helps strengthen bird flu surveillance and control operations."

When the livestock office is alerted to unusual deaths of fowls, the "GIS guys" immediately create a GIS map with details of farm locations and history of past outbreaks in the area.

The provincial livestock chief will evaluate the situation based on the GIS information and dispatch a bird flu surveillance unit to investigate and disinfect the farms and nearby areas.

If the infection is confirmed, the GIS system can display the position of all farms in the five-kilometre radius where all poultry will be culled and a 10-kilometre zone where poultry movements will be banned.

"We are no longer clumsily plotting out the working area on a 1:4,000 topographic map," said Dr Wannee. "With the GIS high-resolution map and the integrated data we can identify the infected area and set up a surveillance zone rapidly and precisely."

The system also helps with the planning of a bird flu prevention scheme, focusing on high-risk areas.

"Instead of blanketing the entire province, we now know where to focus our work. This helps us save money and manpower," said Dr Wannee.

Suphan Buri livestock office's GIS system is more advanced than in other provinces mainly because of the strong support it has received from provincial governor Somsak Pureesrisak.

And the use of the GIS system in the province is not limited to bird flu.

Suphan Buri's education statistics and health records, details of natural disaster-prone areas, land use and forest cover are also in the database.

"A picture is worth a thousand words, but a map is worth a thousand reports," said Ueamduang Uthaikul, chief of Suphan Buri's GIS Operation Unit. "That's why we invest so much of our budget and manpower on the system."

Last year the province spent almost 70 million baht on information technology, including the establishment of the GIS Centre at the provincial hall.

"Considering the budget saving resulting from proper policy making and implementation, it's worth the investment," Ms Ueamduang said.

Sombat Yumuang, chief of the Geo-Informatics Centre for Thailand, providing data and training for government agencies and private clients, said what really makes the GIS so useful is not the advanced computer software and hardware, but the reliable and updated information.

A good GIS database, however, is not enough to guarantee that users will come up with a sound policy.

"Smart policy makers who can make the right decision using the GIS material are the most important factor," said Mr Sombat.

The agency has held several GIS training courses for officials from various agencies, including livestock officials from 10 pilot provinces, where the bird flu GIS systems were installed.

It produced samples of GIS material to show how this "little helper" can help state officials tackle national problems, such as the southern violence, education planning, disaster warning and emergency response.

But the technology has proven unpopular with state agencies and Mr Sombat is still searching to find out why.

Maybe it was because most state agencies had poor information management and collection system, he said. It was almost impossible to set up a GIS system from a poor database.

"Or maybe it's simply because state officials prefer not to see things too clearly because then they will have to work harder. That's why they always come up with vague policies," he said

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Faulty Towers ...........................
The transfers of hundreds of Finnish tourists have begun from a hotel in Phuket to other accommodation, following an outbreak of Legionnaires' disease in the popular beach resort hotel. Two Finns, one Norwegian, and two Swedish tourists have fallen ill with pneumonia caused by Legionella bacteria, after having stayed at the Phuket Grand Tropicana Hotel in Patong Beach, Phuket. All had been resident at the hotel in the period since November 20th. Legionnaires' disease does not necessarily cause any symptoms at all, while for patients in poor health the disease can be life-threatening. The National Public Health Institute has recommended the Finnish travel operator Aurinkomatkat should transfer all its clients from the hotel as soon as possible. The hotel must not be used until the water and air-conditioning systems have been cleaned and appropriate certifications on the completion of the measures have been received. The National Public Health Institute is urging all persons who have been resident in the hotel since November 20th and have fallen ill with fever of more than 38°C either during the trip or within 14 days after leaving the hotel to go to the doctor as soon as possible. However, if the symptoms have already disappeared, there is no need to seek medical care.

Pneumonia caused by Legionella bacterium can be fatal for the elderly with heart and lung conditions, says epidemiologist Tran Minh Nhu Nguyen from the National Public Health Institute. The Grand Tropicana has a constant quota of 125 rooms for Finnish travellers, and currently, more than 300 tourists are being acccommodated at the hotel, reports Tom Selänniemi of Aurinkomatkat. Other accommodation has already been found for part of the guests, even though it is not an easy task with the Chinese New Year being celebrated soon. According to Selänniemi, the travel agency has contacted all its customers who might have been at risk of having contracted the disease. Those who are leaving for Phuket soon have been offered alternative destinations, while the customer is also entitled to cancel the entire trip cost-free.     Epidemic Hazard - Asia Common Alerting Protocol

Event summary
GLIDE Number EH-20070114-9343-THA    
Event type Epidemic Hazard Date / time [UTC] 14/01/2007 - 04:06:21 (Military Time, UTC)
Country Thailand Area Patong Beach
County / State - City Phuket
Cause of event Unknow Log date 14/01/2007 - 04:06:21 (Military Time, UTC)
Damage level Moderate Time left
Latitude: N 7° 53.000 Longitude: E 98° 24.000
Number of deaths: Not or Not data Number of injured persons: Not or Not data
Number of missing persons: Not or Not data Number of infected persons 5
Number of evacuated persons: Not or Not data Summary: 5 persons *
http://visz.rsoe.hu/alertmap/woalert.php?lang=eng

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Yesterday they said they were stepping up the war against BF , as did China and Indo and Vietnam , all 24hrs before the first  outbreak news hits . there are a few more countries also saying we're on to it folks . News threads will be busy ........  The ducks belonged to several farmers and roamed rice fields to feed.Ouch
 

2,000 ducks culled as bird flu discovered in northern Thailand


dpa German Press Agency
Published: Monday January 15, 2007

Bangkok- Thailand on Monday confirmed its first bird-flu infections in poultry in six months and culled nearly 2,000 ducks in northern Thailand to halt the spread of the disease. About 100 ducks had died since Wednesday in Phitsanulok province, 340 kilometres north of Bangkok, and testing revealed the birds were infected with the H5N1 bird-flu strain, which can be deadly in people, the Thai Livestock Department said.

After the 2,000 ducks were culled, the department began testing birds within a 5-kilometre radius of the area, said Nirandorn Uerngtrakulsuk, director of the disease bureau.

The ducks belonged to several farmers and roamed rice fields to feed. Ouch 

Monday's was the first confirmed bird-flu outbreak in Thailand since July as the disease makes a reappearance in Asia.

Indonesia recorded four human deaths from H5N1 last week, when China also reported its first human case of the disease this winter, a farmer who recovered.

Vietnam has been fighting outbreaks among poultry in the Mekong Delta, and Japan last week confirmed its first cases among poultry in two years.
http://rawstory.com/news/2006/2_000_ducks_culled_as_bird_flu_disc_01152007.html
© 2006 dpa German Press Agency

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote July Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 15 2007 at 5:32am
    [January 15, 2007, 7:00 am]
"(AP) Thai Officials Find Bird Flu in Ducks"
BANGKOK, Thailand




A new outbreak of virulent bird flu was found in ducks in northern Thailand, officials said Monday, the first such case in six months.

The outbreak of the H5N1 virus was confirmed by laboratory tests after the deaths of more than 100 ducks were reported in Phitsanulok province, said Manet Runluang, an official at the Public Health Ministry's Department of Communicable Disease Control.

"We have found the H5N1 virus in the ducks and we have ordered around 2,100 ducks in the area to be killed," said Nirand Uaebumrungsut, a veterinarian with the Agriculture Ministry's Department of Livestock Development.

He added the area has many wild and free-range ducks and the department has been gathering birds from within a three-mile radius of the outbreak to be slaughtered.

Thailand's Public Health Ministry ordered the communicable disease control department to increase measures to curb the outbreak and prevent its potential spread to humans, said Health Minister Mongkol Na Songkhla.

"Although we have not found a case in many months,...

...we have asked governmental health organizations to help monitor cases of flu, coughs and pneumonia, especially among people who have come into contact with birds," Mongkol said.

Health experts advise special caution about flu during winter months, when people are more susceptible to infections.

Since it began ravaging Asia's poultry in late 2003, the H5N1 bird flu virus has spread to the Middle East and Africa and killed at least 159 people around the world, according to the World Health Organization.

There have been 17 human deaths in Thailand.

Most of those killed have been infected by sick birds, but WHO fears the virus could mutate into a form that easily spreads among humans, possibly sparking a pandemic.

Copyright 2007 by the Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
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    Fresh outbreak of bird flu reported in N Thailand


www.chinaview.cn 2007-01-15 17:44:29

    BANGKOK, Jan. 15 (Xinhua) -- Fresh outbreak of bird flu was reported in northern Thai province of Phitsanulok, the first in almost six months, provincial livestock department said on Monday.

    The new outbreak of the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu virus was confirmed by laboratory tests after the deaths of over 100 ducks at a farm in the province, the Bangkok-based news network The Nation reported Monday.

    The provincial livestock department has ordered a slaughter of over 1,900 ducks at a farm in Phitsanulok on Monday after officials found the outbreak during a routine inspection at the farms in the province, the report said.

    Methee Ketadisorn, provincial livestock chief, said that his department has put the virus spreading under control and did not find other cases in an area of five-kilometer radius from the farm, which was located in Plaichumpon Tambon (sub-district), Muang district (provincial seat).

    The fresh outbreak is the first in almost six months, Methee said.

    He added that it was lucky that they found the virus quickly so that they responded in time.

    Thailand is among the countries hardest hit by the H5N1 avian influenza virus, recording 17 human fatalities out of 25 infected cases, since the most recent outbreak here in 2004.

Editor: Fiona Zhu
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    Thailand Responds To Bird Flu Outbreak
By UPI
Jan 16, 2007


Health officials in Thailand have urged farmers to take special precautions against avian influenza following the discovery of the H5N1 virus in ducks.

The virus was discovered in the northern province of Phitsanulok, the Thai News Agency reported. A similar virus has been found in wild birds in the central province of Suphan Buri, but officials say that determining whether it is H5N1 could take several weeks.



Dr. Thawat Suntrajarn, head of the Disease Control Department, also advises farm families to get immediate medical attention for anyone showing symptoms similar to bird flu.

Provincial Livestock Office director Methee Ket-adisorn said poultry on farms within 3 miles of the one where the infection was discovered in Phitsanulok are being checked. Health workers are also surveying farm families in the province.

All provinces are setting up "war rooms" for a rapid response if the outbreak spreads, the report said. (c) UPI

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    Thursday, January 18, 2007

Thai officials find bird flu in ducks

The Associated Press


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

BANGKOK -- A new outbreak of virulent avian influenza was found in ducks in northern Thailand, officials said Jan. 15, the first such case in six months.

The outbreak of the H5N1 virus was confirmed by laboratory tests after the deaths of more than 100 ducks were reported in Phitsanulok province, said Manet Runluang, an official at the Public Health Ministry's Department of Communicable Disease Control.

"We have found the H5N1 virus in the ducks and we have ordered around 2,100 ducks in the area to be killed," said Nirand Uaebumrungsut, a veterinarian with the Agriculture Ministry's Department of Livestock Development.

He added the area has many wild and free-range ducks and the department has been gathering birds from within a three-mile radius of the outbreak to be slaughtered.

Thailand's Public Health Ministry ordered the communicable disease control department to increase measures to curb the outbreak and prevent its potential spread to humans, said Health Minister Mongkol Na Songkhla.

"Although we have not found a case in many months, we have asked governmental health organizations to help monitor cases of flu, coughs and pneumonia, especially among people who have come into contact with birds," Mongkol said.

Health experts advise special caution about flu during winter months, when people are more susceptible to infections.

Since it began ravaging Asia's poultry in late 2003, the H5N1 bird flu virus has spread to the Middle East and Africa and killed at least 159 people around the world, according to the World Health Organization.

There have been 17 human deaths in Thailand.

Most of those killed have been infected by sick birds, but WHO fears the virus could mutate into a form that easily spreads among humans, possibly sparking a pandemic.

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Thailand Tests 11 People for Possible H5N1 Bird-Flu Infection

By Suttinee Yuvejwattana

Jan. 19 (Bloomberg) -- Thailand is monitoring 11 people for possible bird flu, less than a week after the lethal H5N1 avian- flu virus killed poultry in the country's first outbreak in more than five months.

The people, who are from nine Thai provinces, are being treated in the hospital for flu-like symptoms and had recent contact with dead poultry, Suphan Srithamma, a spokesman for the Public Heath Ministry, said in a telephone interview today.

``We have brought these patients in to closely watch them and to carry out a series of tests,'' Suphan said. ``So far, none of the results has been positive and no one has shown to be infected with the virus, but we will keep monitoring them for 10 days.''

Thailand is one of four Asian countries to report fresh H5N1 outbreaks in poultry in the past two months, signaling a resurgence of the disease that threatens to infect people and possibly spark a flu pandemic. About 2,100 poultry were culled in the northern Thai province of Phitsanulok to control the spread of the H5N1, the Agricultural Ministry's Avian Influenza Control Center said on Jan. 15.

The H5N1 strain is known to have infected 267 people in 10 countries since 2003, killing 161 of them, the World Health Organization said on Jan. 15. Millions could die if H5N1 mutates to become as contagious as seasonal flu, touching off a global outbreak.

Thailand has recorded 25 human H5N1 cases, 17 of which were fatal. The last reported human infection occurred in July 2006 in a 59-year-old man from Nong Bua Lam Phu Province in the northeastern part of the country. He died of severe pneumonia on Aug. 10, according to the WHO.

Of the 11 patients being monitored in the hospital, three are from the central province of Suphan Buri, 100 kilometers (62 miles) from Bangkok, where dead pigeons and other wild birds were found to have died last month of H5N1.

To contact the reporter on this story: Suttinee Yuvejwattana in Bangkok at Suttinee1@bloomberg.net .

Last Updated: January 19, 2007 00:02 EST
 
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 Meanwhile, the Disease Control Department had announced that testing showed that 111 persons suspected to be infected with bird flu, including a duck farmer in Ayutthaya province, were suffering from ordinary fever or pneumonia and not from bird flu.

The tests were carried out during the first three weeks of January, a Public Health Ministry spokesperson said. (TNA) 
 
2,000 poultry culled at Lao border
http://www.bangkokpost.com/breaking_news/breakingnews.php?id=116192
Thai health officials in this Mekong River province bordering Laos, some 615 kilometres northeast of Bangkok, have culled more than 2,000 poultry suspected to have been stricken with the deadly avian influenza -- bird flu.

A total of 230 chickens at a farm in Si Chiang Mai district of Nong Khai died of unknown causes Saturday, forcing the provincial authorities to later cull some 2,000 chickens at the farm. Another 60 chickens raised by villagers living near the farm were also destroyed.

Nong Khai governor Supot Laowansiri said the change in the weather could be one reason for the chickens at the farm to have died unnaturally.

Governor Supot said lab tests on the dead chickens could be known within three days.

Meanwhile, the Disease Control Department had announced that testing showed that 111 persons suspected to be infected with bird flu, including a duck farmer in Ayutthaya province, were suffering from ordinary fever or pneumonia and not from bird flu.

The tests were carried out during the first three weeks of January, a Public Health Ministry spokesperson said. (TNA)
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Avian Influenza surveillance in human
As at January 20, 2007.

Bureau of Epidemiology, Department of Diseases Control, Ministry of Public Health


I. Avian Influenza in human situation 2007

 

Since January 1, to January 20, 2007, the Bureau of Epidemiology has received reports of influenza or pneumonia cases in Avian Influenza Surveillance Network from the Provincial Health Offices and Disease Prevention and Control Regional Offices. The investigation and analysis were summarized as follows:

  • Cumulative number of patients under surveillance are 111 cases 31 provinces; Today reports are 19 cases. Six cases from Lopburi, 4 from Suphanburi, 3 from Prachubkirikhun, and 1 each from Kanchanaburi, Prachinburi, Phichit, Nonthaburi, Ayutthaya and Satun.
  • Confirmed human case of avian influenza 2006 = 3 cases, with 3 death cases.
    ·  The first death case, reported from Phichit province, Tabklo district is 17 years old male,  He had onset on July 15, 2006 and died on July 24, 2006.
    ·  The second death case, reported from Uthai Thani province, Sawang Arom district is 27 years old male. He had onset on July 24, 2006 and died on August 3, 2006.
    ·  The third death case, reported from Nong Bua Lampoo province, Non Sung district is 59 years old male. He had onset on July 14, 2006 and died on August 10, 2006.
  • There are 36 cases under investigate reported, of which waiting for laboratory result.

Conclusion:

·   In 2005, there are 5 confirmed human cases of avian influenza, with 2 death cases.

·   In 2006, there are 3 confirmed human dead cases of avian influenza.

 

II. Avian Influenza International Situation, www.who.int

Avian Influenza situation update in Egypt : 18 January 2007

http://www.who.int/csr/don/2007_01_18/en/index.html

Viruses with a genetic mutation, linked in laboratory testing to moderately reduced susceptibility to oseltamivir, have been discovered in two persons previously reported with H5N1 infections in Egypt. Both patients had been on treatment with oseltamivir for two days before the clinical samples that yielded the viruses were taken.

 

WHO report in brief : Since 2004, to 15 January 2007, there had been 267 H5N1 confirmed reported cases, with 161 deaths in 10 countries; Vietnam 93 cases with 42 deaths; 25 cases with 17 deaths in Thailand; 79 cases with 61 deaths in Indonesia; Six confirmed dead cases in Cambodia; 22 cases with 14 deaths in China; 14 cases with 6 deaths in Turkey; 3 cases with 2 deaths in Iraq; 8 cases with 5 deaths in Azerbaijan; 18 cases with 10 deaths in Egypt; and one confirmed case in Djibouti. (Table 1)

 Table 1 : Details of confirmed H5N1 cases from WHO reports.

Year/

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

TOTAL

Country

Cases

Deaths

Cases

Deaths

Cases

Deaths

Cases

Deaths

Cases

Deaths

Cases

Deaths

Azerbaijan

0

0

0

0

0

0

8

5

0

0

8

5

Cambodia

0

0

0

0

4

4

2

2

0

0

6

6

China

1

1

0

0

8

5

13

8

0

0

22

14

Djibouti

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

1

0

Egypt

0

0

0

0

0

0

18

10

0

0

18

10

Indonesia

0

0

0

0

19

12

56

46

4

3

79

61

Iraq

0

0

0

0

0

0

3

2

0

0

3

2

Thailand

0

0

17

12

5

2

3

3

0

0

25

17

Turkey

0

0

0

0

0

0

12

4

0

0

12

4

Viet Nam

3

3

29

20

61

19

0

0

0

0

93

42

TOTAL

4

4

46

32

97

42

116

80

4

3

267

161

III. Domestic Avian Influenza in poultry situation

 

The poultry situation reported from Avian Influenza control center, Department of Livestock Development since January 1, 2006, till January 19, 2007, revealed 109 tambons in 37 provinces, are the areas where sick and dead poultry had been reported and waiting laboratory confirmation. Detail could be found from www.dld.go.th website.

 

IV. International Avian Influenza in Animals (Type H5)

 

Avian influenza in animals on the Office International des Epizooties (OIE), World Organisation for Animal Health web site (http://www.oie.int/eng/en_index.htm or www.dld.go.th); since January 1 to December 29, 2006; confirmed infected poultry of avian influenza in 57 countries.

*Case definitions for Avian Influenza in Humans in Thailand (15 May 2006)

 

1.    Suspect: An individual

·   whose body temperature is more than 38°C and who has at least one of the following symptoms: muscle pain, cough, breathing difficulty, or shortness of breath, or physician suspects pneumonia or influenza, and

·   who has a history of direct contact with sick or dead poultry in the last 7 days or there were reports of unusual poultry deaths in the village in the last 14 days or had been looking after another pneumonia patient in the last 10 days before illness onset, but

·   who does not have a specimen which complies with the recommendation for laboratory testing for Influenza A/H5.

 

2.    Probable case: a suspect

·   who developed signs and symptoms of, or died from, acute respiratory failure.  

3.    Confirmed case: a suspect

·   who has a final standard laboratory confirmation of Influenza A/H5 through at least one of the following methods:

    A. Single RT-PCR method using two primer/probe sets, or using specimens collected from at least two different locations (such as throat swab and nasopharyngeal aspirate, etc.), or using at least two specimens collected from a patient at different period of illness),

   B. Viral culture

   C. Neutralization test (four-fold antibody increase between acute and convalescent serum)

 

4.    Case under investigate: a patient

·   whose additional clinical information, and/or history of exposure to risk factors, and/or laboratory results are needed before any conclusion can be made.

 

5.    Excluded case: a patient

·   who does not fall under any of the above definitions and is therefore excluded.


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Note ..But the state pharmaceutical firm would wait for instruction from the Disease Control Department before starting production as the tablets have a relative short shelf life of about two years......

The Thai-produced Oseltamivir, called "A" Flu,
UPDATED: 18:15, January 24, 2007
Thai anti-viral drug effective to counter bird flu: official
< langage=""> printResizeButton(); http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/200701/24/eng20070124_344386.html 

Tests show the Thai-made generic version of the anti-viral drug Oseltamivir, better known as Tamiflu, is safe and effective in the treatment and prevention of avian influenza, according to a top official of a state-owned drug firm.

The Thai-produced Oseltamivir, called "A" Flu, which is manufactured by the Government Pharmaceutical Organization (GPO), will be submitted to Thailand's Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for registration within the coming two months, GPO managing director Mongkol Jivasantikarn said on Wednesday.

According to Mongkol, the Faculty of Medicine at Siriraj Hospital carried out bio-equivalence studies and clinical trials in 30 patients. The tests showed the Thai-made anti-bird flu drug to be bio-equivalent to the Tamiflu in terms of absorption, disposition and efficacy.

Mongkol was quoted by the state-run Thai News Agency as saying that the GPO has a capacity to produce 400,000 tablets of the generic drug every day and has a stockpile of active ingredients sufficient to produce 800,000 tablets immediately.

But the state pharmaceutical firm would wait for instruction from the Disease Control Department before starting production as the tablets have a relative short shelf life of about two years.

The Thai government has said it planned to build a stockpile of million tablets of the antiviral drug as a defence against the possible flu pandemic.

Mongkol declined to comment if Thailand would export the generic to neighboring countries.

"Whether we would export it to our neighbors depends mainly on whether the drug is still under patent protection in those countries and whether we could meet the demand here in Thailand," he said.

Just on Tuesday, Thai northeastern province of Nong Khai was confirmed as the country's second bird flu outbreaking province this year. About 10 days earlier, authorities also found the deadly H5N1 virus in ducks in northern Phitsanulok province.

Source: Xinhua

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    Bird Flu spreads in Vietnam // 26 Jan 2007


According to the Vietnam Vet Department, bird flu has been discovered in 41 villages, 18 districts and 8 provinces (Ca Mau, Bac Lieu, Hau Giang, Vinh Long, Kien Giang, Tra Vinh, Soc Trăng and Can Tho City). The total number of dead infected fowls is nearly 19,000.



The Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Mr. Cao Duc Phat has requested provinces in the Mekong Delta region to prohibit people to move duck flocks from one village, town or province to another village, town or province until bird flu is stamped out. He has also issue a Directive which requests immediate vaccination for all duck flocks. Ducks in infected villages have to be locked up. Healthy and vaccinated flocks in the villages where bird flu has been eliminated, or where there is no bird flu at all, are allowed to run on the fields within the villages’ boundaries. All activities related to the killing of ducks, and duck meat and egg sales must follow the ministry’s regulations.
Poultry killing and selling activities are to be constantly supervised. In addition, people are asked to lock up and vaccinate poultry, as well as constantly clean and sterilize coops, and limit contacts with strange poultry, wild birds and strangers. Local authorities must co-ordinate with the police to find and stamp out smuggling centres, and guide border villages to persuade people not to participate in poultry smuggling and to expose violators.
The Vet Department has recently asked the Ho Chi Mihn City area’s vet centre and the vet boards of Long An and Binh Duong to investigate the possibility of poultry’s immunity to the bird flu vaccine. With two shots for every fowl, the protection rate should be 70 %.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote July Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2007 at 5:19am
    Thai officials observe virus mutation in pigs
       


Thailand's provincial public health officials have been alerted to keep a close watch on the possibility of the mutation of viruses in pigs following the deaths of two people from H3N2 human influenza.

Thawat Sunthrajarn, director-general of Disease Control Department, said on Friday that pigs have been proven to be capable of contracting bird flu virus known as H5N1 and H3N2 human flu virus without showing any symptoms.

"This provides an ideal place for the two strains of virus to mix and mutate," Thawat was quoted by the Bangkok Post's website as saying.

The director-general noted that the most scary thing is that the mutation of the two strains of virus occurs in human bodies or other mammals. He said that in the past whenever there was a bird flu outbreak, health officials would take blood samples from mammals to test for bird flu virus.

One man recently died of H3N2 virus in Thai northeastern Nong Khai province and a five-year old girl also died from the virus in central Prachuab Khiri Khan province. Meanwhile, Nong Khai and nearby Phitsanulok have been confirmed as the country's first two bird flu outbreaking provinces this year.

Source: Xinhua

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2007 at 4:45pm
 
He reconfirmed that fresh outbreaks were found in only two provinces -- Phitsanulok in the north and Nong Khai in the northeast -- and that there were still 40 patients under close supervision whose status has not yet been determined
UPDATED: 08:23, January 30, 2007
Thailand to revise bird flu, human flu strategy
 

Thailand's bird flu prevention agencies concerned will draft a revised strategy to control and prevent outbreaks of avian and human influenza virus for the long term, Deputy Prime Minister Kosit Panpiemras said on Monday.

After chairing a committee meeting on preparedness for preventing, responding and controlling both bird flu and human influenza, Kosit said the meeting agreed to draft the new strategy on dealing with outbreaks of both bird flu and human flu viruses, the Thai News Agency reported.

A committee headed by the National Economic and Social Development Board secretary general will be appointed to draft the plan, he said, adding that the current strategy, approved by the cabinet in 2005, ends this year and should be replaced with the revised one.

The new plan is expected to have a duration of three or five years and will include poultry vaccination as an added measure should an outbreak reach critical proportions.

He reconfirmed that fresh outbreaks were found in only two provinces -- Phitsanulok in the north and Nong Khai in the northeast -- and that there were still 40 patients under close supervision whose status has not yet been determined.

There have been 25 bird flu patients in Thailand since the most recent outbreak here in 2004, of whom 17 died of the H5N1 virus.

Source: Xinhua

http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/200701/30/eng20070130_345944.html
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2007 at 10:49pm

I. Avian Influenza in human situation 2007

 

Since January 1, to January 29, 2007, the Bureau of Epidemiology has received reports of influenza or pneumonia cases in Avian Influenza Surveillance Network from the Provincial Health Offices and Disease Prevention and Control Regional Offices. The investigation and analysis were summarized as follows:

  • Cumulative number of patients under surveillance are 307 cases 43 provinces; Today reports are 31 cases. Fourteen cases from Suphanburi, 5 from Phitsanulok, 2 each from Nonthaburi, Kanchanaburi, Sukhothai and Loei, and 1 each from Chiangmai, Nan, Uttaradit and Nakhonsithammarat.
  • Confirmed human case of avian influenza 2006 = 3 cases, with 3 death cases.
    ·  The first death case, reported from Phichit province, Tabklo district is 17 years old male,  He had onset on July 15, 2006 and died on July 24, 2006.
    ·  The second death case, reported from Uthai Thani province, Sawang Arom district is 27 years old male. He had onset on July 24, 2006 and died on August 3, 2006.
    ·  The third death case, reported from Nong Bua Lampoo province, Non Sung district is 59 years old male. He had onset on July 14, 2006 and died on August 10, 2006.
  • There are 30 cases under investigate reported, of which waiting for laboratory result.
  • This list of people under surveillance keeps growing. It is flu season though and they seem to be watching closely. Probably nothing to be concerned about. But it is alarming to see.
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 http://a.tribalfusion.com/f.ad?site=AsiaTimes&adSpace=ROS&size=728x90&type=var&requestID=1963413476
 
Feb 1, 2007
Empowering women to fight bird flu
By Marwaan Macan-Markar

BANGKOK - Women from ethnic communities in the hilly northern part of Laos have, for more than a decade, been encouraged to go into poultry breeding as a way of earning a living in Southeast Asia's poorest nation.
However, this initiative has come up against a daunting challenge in the shape of the deadly bird-flu virus that has flared up again in many parts of Southeast Asia in recent months. To counter this, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) is again turning to women as < = ="http://goldsea.com/GAAN/adjs.php?n= 172223793&what=zone:117&block=1&exclude=," =text/>
the best defenders of their communities.
"Giving women the knowledge and tools to stop the spread of avian influenza is absolutely imperative," Manoshi Mitra, senior social development specialist at the ADB, said from the bank's head office in Manila. "They will be taught how to identify the disease and equipped with first-aid kits, too.'
"We have to convince them that they are the ones who will lose if there is an outbreak. It will impact them directly," she said. "We want to employ one female poultry worker for every community."
The project, which gets under way in February, is geared to help poverty-stricken ethnic-minority families that are already disadvantaged because they speak a language that is different from the Lao used by the majority. An estimated 17,000 households in 400 villages are expected to gain from this initiative.
Across the rest of landlocked Laos, breeding poultry has become the mainstay of village economies. "It is evident that every family has back-yard poultry - between 10 [and] 30 chickens per household," Abdulai KaiKai, project officer at the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) office in Laos, said in an interview from Vientiane. "The income from the sale of eggs and chicken helps supplement the family income."
Since July, UNICEF has been leading an awareness campaign in the provinces to stem the spread of the H5N1 strain of avian influenza. "There have been puppet shows and dramas with a bird-flu theme that tell people what they should do to stay safe," said KaiKai. "About a fifth of the villages have been covered through this."
Laos has proved a mystery, since the deadly H5N1 strain first appeared in the winter of 2003 in this region and kept reappearing subsequently as temperatures dropped during the winter. Laos has had very few bird-flu outbreaks in its poultry population and none of the country's 5.4 million people has fallen ill.
By contrast, all of its immediate neighbors - China, Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia - have been hit by the virus, affecting both humans and poultry. Vietnam and Thailand are grappling with a new outbreak. Since the winter of 2003, 42 people have died in Vietnam out of 93 reported cases, while 17 people have died in Thailand out of 25 reported cases. Cambodia has recorded six deaths from six cases.
There was a minor bird-flu outbreak in Laos in March 2004, with a bulk of the 46 poultry farms hit being near Vientiane, the capital, and a second outbreak last July.
"There has been no evidence since December 2003 that suggests H5N1 is raging through the villages," said Tony Williams, avian-influenza team leader at the Food and Agriculture Organizations's (FAO) office in Laos. "Laos has escaped the worst of bird flu."
What has helped, according to the food agency, is the relative distance of rural communities from one another.
According to the FAO, transporting poultry without proper safeguards has been a key feature in fueling the spread of the virus, with Indonesia, the worst-affected country, illustrative of this trend. By the end of January, Indonesia had reported 63 deaths out of 81 cases of infection.
"Wild birds are less responsible for the spread of the virus in the current outbreak," said Hiroyuki Konuma, deputy head of FAO's Asia-Pacific office. "The poultry trade and the movement of live birds have played a role in spreading the virus."
Since the beginning of the year, the FAO has recorded new bird-flu cases in China, Egypt, Indonesia, Japan, Nigeria, South Korea, Thailand and Vietnam. That is the same number of countries - then all in Northeast and Southeast Asia - that had recorded outbreaks in 2003. During the 2005-06 period, the virus took wing, spreading beyond East Asia to the Middle East, Europe and Africa.
Until the current cycle of outbreaks, now in their fourth winter season, poultry breeding was promoted as an option for women in rural communities for additional income. "It was seen as a way for women to start a business and take the first step out of poverty," said Anni McLeod, senior livestock policy officer at FAO. "It required very little investment, it could be managed by women and the turnover was very fast."
Bangladesh, which has more than 60 million people living in poverty, had emerged as a celebrated example of this development model before the latest bird-flu outbreak. According to the ADB, poultry breeding by some 500,000 people, most of them women, had helped transform many poor communities.
They were able to "put more food on the table, educate their children, and even save enough to lease or buy agricultural land, thanks to an innovative livestock project", said an ADB officer. "The project [trained] women in raising chicks as well as local hens and ducks, managing poultry production and sales, and providing veterinary care."
The regional financial institution hopes to replicate in Laos the successes in Bangladesh. "Bangladesh represented a real success story," said Mitra. "It demonstrated the importance of poultry breeding in lifting women and their families out of poverty."
(Inter Press Service)
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Thailand revises bird flu, human flu strategy
 
BANGKOK, Jan 29 (TNA) - Thailand's national committee on bird flu prevention will draft a revised strategy to control and prevent outbreaks of avian and human influenza virus for the long term, according to Deputy Prime Minister Kosit Panpiemras.

Speaking after chairing a committee meeting on preparedness for preventing, responding and controlling both bird flu and human influenza, Mr. Kosit said the meeting agreed to draft the new strategy dealing with outbreaks of both bird flu and human flu viruses.

A committee headed by the National Economic and Social Development Board secretary general will be appointed to draft the plan, he said.

He added that the current strategy, approved by the cabinet in 2005,  ends this year and should be replaced with the revised one.

The new plan is expected to have a duration of three or five years and will include poultry vaccination as an added measure should an outbreak reach critical proportions.

He reconfirmed that fresh outbreaks were found in only two provinces -- Phitsanulok in the north and Nong Khai in the northeast -- and that there were still 40 patients under close supervision whose status has not yet been determined.

Meanwhile, deputy permanent secretary for Agriculture Yukol Limlamthong said the new outbreaks come from the residual virus and from native birds, not domestic stocks. Flooding in many provinces last year also complicated the situation.

There have been 25 bird flu patients in Thailand since the most recent outbreak here in 2004, of whom 17 died of the H5N1 virus. (TNA)-E003
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 31 2007 at 11:01am
  • Cumulative number of patients under surveillance are 327 cases 43 provinces; Today reports are 20 cases. Eight cases from Suphanburi, 3 from Phitsanulok, 2 each from Prachubkirikhan and Buriram, and 1 each from Bangkok metropolis, Saraburi, Prachinburi, Nakhonnayok and Nan.
  • List is still growing. If this reaches 2000+ I will be concerned. They seem to be doing a good job of keeping tabs on flu patients.
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    Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 31 2007 at 11:02am
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    Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 02 2007 at 10:13pm
    Avian Influenza in human situation 2007

     

    Since January 1, to Febuary 1, 2007, the Bureau of Epidemiology has received reports of influenza or pneumonia cases in Avian Influenza Surveillance Network from the Provincial Health Offices and Disease Prevention and Control Regional Offices. The investigation and analysis were summarized as follows:

    • Cumulative number of patients under surveillance are 384 cases 44 provinces; Today reports are 32 cases. Thirteen cases from Suphanburi, 4 from Chiangrai, 3 from Lopburi, 2 from Nakhonnayok, and 1 each from Bangkok metropolis, Angthong, Kanchanaburi, Prachinburi, Phitsanulok, Nakhonsawan, Phichit, Nakhonphanom, Khonkaen and Ubonratchathani.
    • Confirmed human case of avian influenza 2006 = 3 cases, with 3 death cases.
      ·  The first death case, reported from Phichit province, Tabklo district is 17 years old male,  He had onset on July 15, 2006 and died on July 24, 2006.
      ·  The second death case, reported from Uthai Thani province, Sawang Arom district is 27 years old male. He had onset on July 24, 2006 and died on August 3, 2006.
      ·  The third death case, reported from Nong Bua Lampoo province, Non Sung district is 59 years old male. He had onset on July 14, 2006 and died on August 10, 2006.
    • There are 53 cases under investigate reported, of which waiting for laboratory result.

    Still growing.

     

    http://thaigcd.ddc.moph.go.th/AI_case_report_070201.html

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