What is bird flu?
It's
an illness caused by avian (bird) influenza viruses. These viruses
affect both wild and domesticated birds, including chickens, ducks, and
turkeys. The birds shed virus particles in their saliva, nasal
secretions, and feces. People who have close contact with infected birds
can get sick - and could possibly spread the virus to other people.
Credit: Flickr/Curt Gibbs
January 25, 2013,
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia - Bird flu has infected three humans in Cambodia, killing two, health officials said Friday.
The
cases that have occurred in the first three weeks of this year amount
to as many cases the country reported throughout all of 2012.
The cases are among the first reported in 2013 for the
virulent virus, known as H5N1, which the World Health Organization says
has killed 360 other people worldwide since surfacing in 2003.
WHO
and Cambodia's health ministry announced that a 15-year-old girl in a
village in southeastern Takeo province and a 35-year-old man in central
Kampong Speu province died after being hospitalized with bird flu. An
8-month-old boy in the capital, Phnom Penh, was treated and survived.
Cambodia reported three cases last year, all of them fatal. Since 2005, it has recorded 21 cases, 19 of them fatal.
The
disease remains hard for people to catch, but experts fear it could
mutate into a more deadly form that spreads easily from person to
person. So far, most human cases have been linked to contact with
infected poultry.
The announcement follows news Wednesday that
international scientists who last year halted controversial research
with the deadly bird flu virus said they were resuming their work as
countries adopt new rules to ensure safety.
- Gov't wants bird flu research kept under wraps, away from terrorists
- Bird flu researchers continue controversial work on lab-made strain
- US: Don't publish details of lab-bred bird flu
An
outcry had erupted when two labs - in the Netherlands and the U.S. -
reported they had created easier-to-spread versions of bird flu. Amid
fierce debate about the oversight of such research and whether it might
get in the hands of terrorists, those scientists voluntarily halted
further work last January.
Those scientists announced Wednesday
they were ending their moratorium now that health authorities have had
time to determine how they will oversee high-stakes research involving
dangerous germs. Several countries have already issued new rules.
In letters published in the journals Science and Nature this
week, scientists wrote that those who meet their country's requirements
have a responsibility to resume studying how the bird flu might mutate
to become a bigger threat.
"We fully acknowledge that this
research -- as with any work on infectious agents -- is not without
risks," wrote the researchers," wrote the researchers, who included Dr.
Yoshihiro Kawaoka of the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Dr. Ron
Fouchier of Erasmus University in the Netherlands. "However, because the
risk exists in nature that an H5N1 virus capable of transmission in
mammals may emerge, the benefits of this work outweigh the risks."
No comments:
Post a Comment