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  • China shares bird flu samples in "breakthrough": WHO

    China shares bird flu samples in "breakthrough": WHO

    Thu Sep 28, 2006 6:11 PM BST

    GENEVA (Reuters) - China has shared long-sought samples of the H5N1 bird flu virus, in what many scientists view as a breakthrough in cooperation, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Thursday.

    The samples, taken from some of the thousands of wild birds which died in Qinghai Lake in April 2005, have been sent to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC), a WHO collaborating center in Atlanta, for further analysis, WHO officials said.

    "My understanding is they have been shipped to a WHO collaborating center now from the Ministry of Agriculture," WHO scientist Michael Perdue told a news briefing.

    He said the animal samples, the first from China in 2-1/2 years, should help scientists understand the origin of a sub-type of the deadly H5N1 virus which later circulated in Turkey and Africa but is genetically different from the one hitting other parts of Asia, including Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam.

    Leading scientists have repeatedly expressed concerns that China was not sharing all genetic data from bird flu cases -- widely seen as vital to track mutations and develop a vaccine against a human pandemic.

    "Most people do see it as a breakthrough for cooperation," Perdue told Reuters.

    The lake, a major stop-off point for migratory birds in the remote northwestern Qinghai province, has become a focus for scientists studying mutations of the virus.

    The Agriculture Ministry previously had placed "certain restrictions" on sharing the virus samples, but this had been resolved through negotiations, Perdue said without giving details. He said the samples from birds which died at the lake were shipped a week ago from a key Ministry of Agriculture laboratory in Harbin to the CDC.

    CDC officials expected to receive the samples later on Thursday and it was hoped they would include additional animal samples requested from China, he said.

    "We have to wait to see exactly what they shipped," he said.

    Chinese scientists have published some analyses of the samples, but the CDC is expected to carry out more sophisticated testing with antibodies which will reveal variations of immune responses, according to the WHO expert.


    "It gives us an animal index case for birds to have the samples from Qinghai Lake, which is the first time that particular type was detected in China," Perdue told Reuters.

    "It will go into the global collection we are making of the virus to see how it changes over time," the American added.

    Hualen Chen, head of China's national avian influenza reference laboratory in Harbin, was among 70 scientists worldwide who last month announced the launch of a global body to share genetic bird flu data.

    China has shared samples from human cases, David Heymann, WHO's acting special representative on avian influenza, said.

    The WHO has confirmed 21 human bird flu cases including 14 deaths in China since November 2005.Bird flu remains essentially an animal disease, but has killed 148 people of 251 people confirmed as having the virus in 10 countries since 2003, according to the Geneva-based WHO.



    <Edit : guess who will be the next boss of WHO...
    "Addressing chronic disease is an issue of human rights that must be our call to arms"
    Richard Horton, Editor-in-Chief The Lancet

    ~~~~ Twitter:@GertvanderHoek ~~~ GertvanderHoek@gmail.com ~~~

  • #2
    Re: China shares bird flu samples in &quot;breakthrough&quot;: WHO

    http://www.washtimes.com/world/20061...4438-1983r.htm

    Avian-flu samples on the way to CDC

    By John Zarocostas
    THE WASHINGTON TIMES
    Published October 2, 2006

    GENEVA -- After 18 months of stalling and repeated calls for cooperation by international health officials, China is expected to deliver a batch of animal virus samples of the lethal avian influenza virus H5N1, senior global health officials say.

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) laboratory in Atlanta expects the samples to arrive "in the coming days," said Mike Purdue, head of a team that is studying how influenza moves from animals to humans on behalf of the World Health Organization (WHO).

    Dr. Purdue told The Washington Times that the necessary paperwork was completed by Chinese authorities last week, but one carrier did not want to haul the samples, so they will be shipped by another company for WHO.

    WHO first asked China to share the samples in the spring of 2005, after thousands of migratory birds died in the province of Qinghai. The 10 samples expected by the CDC are from Qinghai and other regions, Dr. Purdue said.

    International health officials and diplomats have long been frustrated by Beijing's failure to send the samples promptly, despite its public pledges of full cooperation after its reluctance to share information aggravated a crisis over severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in 2003.

    The sharing of specimens is essential if researchers are to find a vaccine and more effective anti-viral drugs against bird flu. Since 2003, there have been 251 human cases of the avian influenza virus in 10 countries, of which 148 resulted in deaths.

    Some Asian and Western health diplomats attribute the delay to a bureaucratic turf war between China's Ministry of Agriculture, which has been reluctant to share the samples, and the Ministry of Health, which has been more willing to co-operate. The same sources said Chinese authorities were now fully sharing human samples from victims of bird flu and HIV/AIDS.

    Despite its dynamic economy and huge foreign reserves, China offered only $10 million at a pledging conference in Beijing in January aimed at strengthening global preparedness against a human avian influenza pandemic.

    Senior Western diplomatic sources said China initially offered no contribution at all and only came forward with the $10 million pledge when pressure was put on its political leaders. However, diplomats are cautiously optimistic that China is moving in the right direction on global health issues.
    In a significant move, China has put forward Margaret Chan, a senior WHO official, for the top post of the global health agency, which is vacant after the sudden death in May of the incumbent, Lee Jong-wook. This is the first time that China has nominated a candidate for a major global agency.

    Dr. Chan, formerly Hong Kong's top health official, played a pivotal role in stamping out an avian-flu outbreak in the city in 1997. In July 2005, she publicly scolded China for stalling on vital cooperation over the outbreak of bird flu.

    Another leading candidate in a crowded field is Shigeru Omi, a Japanese national and WHO regional director for the Western Pacific. Asian diplomats described fierce behind-the-scenes lobbying by Tokyo and Beijing for their respective nominees. The outcome is to be decided on Nov. 9.

    .
    "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation

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