PHNOM PENH: An 11-year-old Cambodian boy has died of bird flu, a hospital official said on Monday, the impoverished kingdom's third confirmed fatality -- all children -- from the illness this year.
The boy, who was from northern Kampong Chhnang province, died on Friday morning, six hours after he was admitted to hospital, according to Denis Laurent, deputy director of Kantha Bopha Hospital in the capital.
"We tried to do our best... but it was too late and we could not do anything to save him," he told AFP.
Another doctor said the boy had eaten infected poultry.
In an unrelated case, a second boy -- aged eight-years-old -- is in a stable condition in hospital in Phnom Penh after testing positive for the H5N1 deadly flu.
The disease typically spreads from birds to humans through direct contact. But experts fear it could mutate into a form easily transmissible between humans, with the potential to trigger a pandemic.
Authorities have struggled to control bird flu outbreaks in Cambodia, which recorded 14 deaths from the illness last year, the deadliest outbreak of the virus in the country since 2003.
Cambodian children are at particular risk as they often live in close proximity to poultry.
The boy, who was from northern Kampong Chhnang province, died on Friday morning, six hours after he was admitted to hospital, according to Denis Laurent, deputy director of Kantha Bopha Hospital in the capital.
"We tried to do our best... but it was too late and we could not do anything to save him," he told AFP.
Another doctor said the boy had eaten infected poultry.
In an unrelated case, a second boy -- aged eight-years-old -- is in a stable condition in hospital in Phnom Penh after testing positive for the H5N1 deadly flu.
The disease typically spreads from birds to humans through direct contact. But experts fear it could mutate into a form easily transmissible between humans, with the potential to trigger a pandemic.
Authorities have struggled to control bird flu outbreaks in Cambodia, which recorded 14 deaths from the illness last year, the deadliest outbreak of the virus in the country since 2003.
Cambodian children are at particular risk as they often live in close proximity to poultry.
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