WHOThursday 25 March 2010, 9:51AM
Media release from WHO
The World Health Organization (WHO) warned today that newly
confirmed human and poultry cases of avian influenza this year are
a reminder that the virus poses a real and continuous threat to
human health.
So far this year, 21 human cases of H5N1, including seven deaths,
have been reported. Sixteen of those were in Egypt (including five
deaths), four in Viet Nam (including one death), and one in
Indonesia (who died). So far in 2010 Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia,
India, Israel, Myanmar, Nepal, and Viet Nam have all reported
outbreaks of the disease in poultry or wild bird flocks,
highlighting the fact that people often are falling sick and dying
in the same areas that the virus is persistently present in the
environment.
H5N1 is considered endemic in Egypt and parts of South East
Asia.
The presence of H5N1 in poultry poses a health risk in two ways.
First, it places those in direct contact with birds - usually rural
folk and farm workers - at risk of catching the often-fatal
disease.
Second, the virus could undergo a process of "reassortment" with
another influenza virus and produce a completely new strain.
Gene reassortment can occur when a host - an animal - is infected
with two or more viruses at the same time, and when the viruses
combine to form an entirely new virus.
Gene reassortment is also called antigenic shift.
"There is a constant risk that the H5N1 virus will combine with
another strain of influenza," said Dr Takeshi Kasai, Regional
Adviser for Communicable Disease Surveillance and Response.
"The influenza virus is unpredictable; in areas where H5N1 is
endemic, WHO and its partners are working to build surveillance
systems to identify changes in the behavior of the virus, raising
awareness about the risks and protective measures, and building
skills and capacity to respond to outbreaks quickly."
People are at risk of contracting H5N1 when handling, transporting,
slaughtering, or processing infected poultry, or by coming into
contact with infected poultry faeces.
People are also at risk if they eat raw or undercooked infected
poultry or poultry products, including infected eggs.
People can protect themselves from being infected with H5N1 by
avoiding contact with the source of infection (e.g., keeping
poultry out of the house, burying dead birds) and maintaining good
personal and food hygiene practices (washing hands, not buying or
eating sick birds, slaughtering birds away from the kitchen and
eating areas).
People should report any death or illness in their flocks to the
relevant animal health authorities.
Worldwide, human cases peaked at 115 (and 79 deaths) in 2006 and
have generally declined since then, with 73 human cases (and 32
deaths) reported last year.
The case fatality rate for reported human cases of H5N1 is around
59%.