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  • Greece finds bird flu virus in wild duck

    Greece finds bird flu virus in wild duck

    Posted: 18 November 2006 0323 hrs

    ATHENS - Greece said Friday it had found bird flu in a wild duck shot by a hunter, adding that more tests were underway to establish whether the virus was the strain that can kill humans.

    The H5 virus, most of whose sub-types are only lethal to birds, was confirmed in the migratory duck killed in a coastal area of the central prefecture of Fthiotida, the agriculture ministry said in a statement.

    Samples from the bird will be sent to the EU Reference Laboratory for avian influenza in England to determine whether the virus is in fact H5N1, the highly pathogenic strain that has killed 152 people in the Far East, the Middle East and China since 2003.

    The relevant European Union authorities have also been informed, the ministry said.

    This is the first H5 case reported in Greece since the summer.

    Earlier this year, the Greek authorities confirmed 33 cases of H5N1 between February and March, all in wild birds.

    Yet even though no domestic poultry cases turned up, demand for chicken in the country took a serious blow for weeks.

    Local authorities in Fthiotida have been advised to ban the transport of live poultry near the area where the duck was hunted.

    Poultry owners have been warned to keep their flocks indoors, and the public advised to alert the authorities to all bird carcass finds, the ministry said.

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  • #2
    Re: Greece finds bird flu virus in wild duck

    Fthi?tida (or Phthiotis) is on the mainland in central Greece:

    ...when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth. - Sherlock Holmes

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    • #3
      Re: Greece finds bird flu virus in wild duck

      BIRD FLU

      H5 strain found in wild duck in central Greece; measures demanded

      A veterinary laboratory in Halkida, Evia, said yesterday that it had discovered the H5 strain of bird flu in a wild duck that was found in Fthiotida, central Greece. The H5 virus is only lethal to birds but samples from the duck will be sent to England to determine whether the virus is the H5N1 strain which can also kill humans. Authorities in Fthiotoda have been instructed to adopt emergency bird flu measures, such as ensuring that poultry is kept indoors.

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      • #4
        Re: Greece finds bird flu virus in wild duck

        News from a press release that was emailed to me sans url:

        "A new press release and some new info about Greece.

        The bird was a shoveler Anas clypeata.

        According to a new press release issued yesterday by the ministry:
        - The tests initially were made at a regional veterinary lab searching
        only for subtypes H5 & H7. The H5 was isolated.

        - On Friday samples were forwarded to the national AI reference lab for
        further tests. This lab searches for all H subtypes. After
        haematogglutination suspension tests [I am not sure I am using the
        correct english terms; I hope you understand it] a positive response to
        LP H6 was found as well as a weaker response to H5
        .

        - Samples of the bird are forwarded to the London AI reference lab for
        further tests."

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        • #5
          Re: Greece finds bird flu virus in wild duck

          Originally posted by canagica
          News from a press release that was emailed to me sans url:

          "A new press release and some new info about Greece.

          The bird was a shoveler Anas clypeata.

          According to a new press release issued yesterday by the ministry:
          - The tests initially were made at a regional veterinary lab searching
          only for subtypes H5 & H7. The H5 was isolated.

          - On Friday samples were forwarded to the national AI reference lab for
          further tests. This lab searches for all H subtypes. After
          haematogglutination suspension tests [I am not sure I am using the
          correct english terms; I hope you understand it] a positive response to
          LP H6 was found as well as a weaker response to H5.

          - Samples of the bird are forwarded to the London AI reference lab for
          further tests."
          Thanks for the update. The hemagglutinin inhibition test showed the the bird had antibodies to H5 and H6, but it is important that H5 was isolated, which should lead to a full characterization, including a full H5 sequence.

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          • #6
            Re: Greece finds bird flu virus in wild duck

            Avian flu steps swing into action

            Authorities are implementing safety measures in parts of Fthiotida, central Greece, where a migrating duck was found to be infected with the H5 strain of bird flu last week.

            The sample has been sent to a laboratory in London to determine whether it is the H5N1 strain which can also kill humans.

            Safety measures include local farmers keeping all poultry in enclosed areas where they cannot come in contact with wildlife possibly carrying the virus.

            Authorities have called for calm, saying that all the necessary steps have been taken and that the area where the migrating duck was found, on a riverbank close to the town of Anthilis, is not located near any poultry farms.

            ?The initial plan for monitoring the bird flu was to take 1,580 samples during 2006. However, following measures adopted last winter, the number of samples taken have already reached 5,000, of which 33 were found to be positive with the virus,? said Panayiotis Triantafyllou, head of the Agricultural Ministry?s department for bird diseases.

            The government yesterday presented the 2002 state budget proposal to Parliament, revising most of its targets for 2001 and 2002 downward because of the economic fallout from the September 11 terrorist attacks on America. Nevertheless, the budget showed strong growth and aimed for a surplus of 0.8 percent of GDP, which will be spent on […]
            ?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 ~~~

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Greece finds bird flu virus in wild duck

              Location...
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              "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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              • #8
                Re: Greece finds bird flu virus in wild duck

                Originally posted by Dutchy
                ......following measures adopted last winter, the number of samples taken have already reached 5,000, of which 33 were found to be positive with the virus,? .........
                I wonder if this ALL is of 2006, and how many of those 33 are this late in the year?

                Hopefully most of the 33 positives were several months ago.
                .
                "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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