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  • #76
    Re: Confirmation of Avian Influenza H7N2 Infection

    Commentary at

    Comment


    • #77
      Re: Confirmation of Avian Influenza H7N2 Infection

      Originally posted by niman View Post
      Commentary

      H7N2 Familial Cluster in Wales England

      Recombinomics Commentary
      May 29, 2007


      A dozen schoolchildren and two members of staff at Ysgol Henllan primary school near the Corwen farm have been offered courses of anti-flu drug Tamiflu after one of the pupils is thought to have contracted the virus.

      The child lives at a neighbouring property to the farm and the staff and pupils receiving treatment had all been in close proximity to the youngster.

      The above comments on the H7N2 outbreak fail to capture the confusion regarding the testing of patients and contacts. The student described above, Megan Evans, had symptoms and responded to treatment. An interview with her father, Ian Evans, indicated he was positive and his wife was initially positive, but subsequently tested negative. Moreover, one of Megan's classmates had symptoms, but tested negative.

      Thus, in the Evans family, three members either tested positive or had symptoms, suggesting H7N2 was efficiently transmitted from human-to-human. The number of human cases is remarkably high, since only 15 chickens were bought at the market.

      The owners of the farm also initially had symptoms, although they too tested negative. A better picture of human H7N2 infections will emerge when convalescent serum is tested for H7 antibodies. However, at this time, the human-to-human spread appears to be quite efficient, comments by government officials notwithstanding.

      The inability to reliably test patients with symptoms, or reliably track contacts, is a major cause for concern. Although these initial cases are mild, extensive passage of H7N2 through a na?ve human population can lead to genetic alterations that could affect virulence. These concerns are compounded by the inability of the surveillance program to detect H5N1 or H7 in live wild birds and the potential for dual infections in a number of hosts.


      .
      "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

      Comment


      • #78
        Re: Confirmation of Avian Influenza H7N2 Infection

        Date: Tue 20 May 2007
        Source: BBC News online a.m. Tue 29 May 2007 [edited]
        <http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/6699595.stm>


        <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=556 border=0 valign="top"><TBODY><TR vAlign=top><TD vAlign=top width=2 bgColor=white> </TD><TD vAlign=top width=554><!-- start: main content --><TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100&#37;" summary="" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD align=left><INPUT onclick="javascript:this.disabled=true; doSubmit('Back');" type=button value=Back></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE summary=""><TBODY><TR><TD noWrap align=right>Archive Number</TD><TD noWrap align=left>20070529.1734</TD></TR><TR><TD noWrap align=right>Published Date</TD><TD noWrap align=left>29-MAY-2007</TD></TR><TR><TD noWrap align=right>Subject</TD><TD noWrap align=left>PRO/AH/EDR> Avian influenza H7N2, human - UK (05), WHO</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
        AVIAN INFLUENZA H7N2, HUMAN - UK (05), WHO</PRE></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></P>Avian flu contacts 'identified'
        -------------------------------
        Teachers and pupils at Ysgol Henllan have been given treatment [for
        avian influenza]. Health officials say they have identified all the
        people who came into close contact with an outbreak of avian flu at a
        smallholding in north Wales. The number of people found to have had
        contact with the disease rose over the weekend to 142, of which 12
        are being treated as being positive for bird flu. The mild H7N2
        strain of bird flu was first found last week [20-26 May 2007] among
        chickens at a farm near Corwen, Conwy.

        Children at a Denbighshire school are being offered anti-viral
        medication. A year-5 pupil at Ysgol Henllan suspected of contracting
        the virus has been linked to the smallholding. A dozen children, aged
        9 and 10, and 2 teachers at the school are being given Tamiflu
        treatments as a precaution. The National Public Health Service of
        Wales has said a total of 142 people have had either direct or
        indirect contact with the virus, which is not the virulent H5N1
        strain of avian flu. A total of 12 people are being treated as
        "positive," but no one is seriously ill.

        Of the 142 to come into contact with the virus, 47 came into contact
        "in the household setting," 14 in the school and 81 in "the workplace
        setting." Health officials held a meeting for concerned parents at
        the school on Monday evening [28 May 2007], in which it was stressed
        the risk of anyone contracting the virus is very small.

        The National Public Health Service of Wales's director for north
        Wales, Andrew Jones, said it was "reassuring" so few people had
        reported symptoms. He said, "We are treating 12 cases as positive. We
        always approach schools in a precautionary way. We are advising them
        that the risk to the population is low and that avian flu is a
        disease of birds. It would be very unusual for it to spread from
        person to person."

        Hugh Pennington, a microbiologist and bird flu expert from Aberdeen
        University, added, "You have to be in quite close contact with
        infected birds to get infected. It doesn't spread from one infected
        person to another. It's still a bird virus; someone infected isn't
        going to cause any more human cases."

        The 1st confirmed case involved a smallholding at Llanfihangel Glyn
        Myfyr, Conwy. Owners Tony Williams and Barbara Cowling, who have
        tested negative for the virus, called in a vet after their Rhode
        Island Red chickens began to die. They bought the chickens at
        Chelford Market at Macclesfield, Cheshire, some 70 miles (112 km)
        away, on 7 May [2007]. A total of 30 chickens from the smallholding
        have now been slaughtered after 15 birds died.

        The 2nd possible case emerged on Saturday [26 May 2007] about 35
        miles (56 km) away, at a farm on the outskirts of Efailnewydd, near
        Pwllheli. It has also been linked to the market.

        ******
        [2]
        Date: Tue 29 May 2007
        Source: BBC News, online, p.m. Tue 29 May 2007 [edited]
        <http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/6701927.stm>


        Bird flu checks reach hospitals
        -------------------------------
        Hospital patients and staff are being offered anti-viral treatment by
        health officials fighting a bird flu outbreak in north Wales. Nearly
        80 people at Ysbyty Glan Clwyd at Bodelwyddan are being offered
        Tamiflu because of contact with a health worker who is being treated
        for the H7 virus. About another 70 patients and staff at Ysbyty
        Gwynedd in Bangor are being contacted to see that they are well.

        A total of 12 people with flu-like symptoms or conjunctivitis have
        been identified. The National Public Health Service for Wales (NPHS)
        stressed that no one has been seriously ill and the risk to the
        health of the general public is low. So far the service has found a
        total of 221 people who may have come into contact with the virus,
        which is not as serious as the H5NI strand of the disease.

        History of outbreak:
        24 May [2007]: The 1st outbreak at Llanfihangel Glyn Myfyr, Conwy; 45
        chickens slaughtered but farms test negative for virus.
        26 May: The 2nd possible outbreak at farm at Efailnewydd, near
        Pwllheli; no test results yet.
        29 May: A total of 221 may have had contact with bird flu; 36 in
        "household setting," 14 in school, 171 in workplace.

        The 1st confirmed case of the avian flu was confirmed last Thursday
        [24 May 2007] among chickens on a smallholding near Corwen in
        Denbighshire. The Rhode Island chickens 1st affected were bought at a
        Chelford Market in Macclesfield, Cheshire on 7 May. On Saturday [26
        May 2007] a 2nd possible case emerged at a farm on the outskirts of
        Pwllheli although results of tests on birds there have not been finalised.

        Some year-5 children at Ysgol Henllan in Denbighshire are being
        offered anti-viral treatment after one pupil was linked to the 1st
        smallholding. The NPHS said 79 patients and staff from ward 6 at Glan
        Clwyd Hospital were now being offered Tamiflu as a precaution. A
        further 69 patients and staff from the A&E unit, Tryfan and Gogarth
        wards at Ysbyty Gwynedd in Bangor have been contacted because a
        patient, who has now been discharged, has also had treatment for the virus.

        Marion Lyons, NPHS's communicable disease control consultant, said,
        "We have assessed the risk to others and can confirm that the
        healthcare worker was working at Ysbyty Glan Clwyd during the time
        when she may have been infectious, between 21 and 23 May [2007]. The
        patient at Ysbyty Gwynedd may also have been infectious while at
        Ysbyty Gwynedd. However, as the patient was discharged on 18 May, and
        the incubation period is 8 days, anyone would have had symptoms by 26 May."

        The NPHS stressed that experience of this particular bird flu virus
        in humans was limited, so it was "actively managing" the response.
        Person-to-person spread would be very unusual, it said, but limited
        spread has been seen elsewhere in the past. Dr Lyons added, "We are
        looking for people who have had flu-like symptoms or conjunctivitis.
        It is the symptoms which are important to identify. It is reassuring
        that so few of the large number of contacts have had symptoms."

        --
        Communicated by:
        ProMED-mail
        <promed@promedmail.org>

        ******
        [3]
        Date: Tue 29 May 2007
        Source: World Health Organisation (WHO, CSR, Disease Outbreak News,
        Tue 29 May 2007 [edited]
        <http://www.who.int/csr/don/2007_05_29/en/index.html>


        Avian influenza A/(H7N2) in the United Kingdom
        ----------------------------------------------
        On 25 May 2007, the United Kingdom Health Protection Agency (HPA)
        announced that influenza A/H7N2 virus infection had been laboratory
        confirmed in four individuals exposed to infected poultry in Corwen
        Farm, Conwy, Wales. The poultry outbreak in Wales started on a
        smallholding, Corwen Farm, Conwy, on 8 May 2007, was laboratory
        confirmed on 24 May 2007, and notified to the World Organisation for
        Animal Health on 25 May 2007.

        For more information from the WHO Regional Office for Europe, see:
        <http://www.euro.who.int/flu/situation/20070526_1 >
        (Human cases of avian influenza A/H7N2 in the United Kingdom)

        --
        Communicated by:
        ProMED-mail Rapporteur Marianne Hopp

        [The number of individuals under surveillance and offered Tamiflu
        treatment as a precautionary measure has increased, but the number of
        persons exhibiting flu-like symptoms and/or conjunctivitis remains at
        12. There is no unequivocal evidence to suggest that the H7N2 virus
        exhibits an enhanced ability to spread from person to person. - Mod.CP]

        [see also:
        CSI:WORLD http://swineflumagazine.blogspot.com/

        treyfish2004@yahoo.com

        Comment


        • #79
          Re: Confirmation of Avian Influenza H7N2 Infection

          No enhanced ability
          CSI:WORLD http://swineflumagazine.blogspot.com/

          treyfish2004@yahoo.com

          Comment


          • #80
            Re: Confirmation of Avian Influenza H7N2 Infection

            Patients given flu drugs after health worker contracts virus <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE class=headerTable cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=* border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>May 30 2007

            </TD></TR><TR><TD>
            </TD></TR><TR><TD colSpan=2>by Madeleine Brindley, Western Mail
            </TD></TR></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=400 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD colSpan=3> </TD></TR><TR><TD colSpan=3>MORE than 70 patients and hospital staff have been given anti-flu drugs after a healthcare worker contracted the avian flu virus.
            Staff and patients at two hospitals ? Ysbyty Glan Clwyd and Ysbyty Gwynedd ? have been identified as potentially at risk of contracting H7N2.
            They are among a list of 221 people who have been identified as contacts, although the number of people confirmed as showing signs of contamination remains unchanged at 12 ? none are seriously ill.
            It emerged last night that 79 patients and staff from ward six at Ysbyty Glan Clwyd have been offered Tamiflu as a precaution after coming into contact with a healthcare worker who is being treated for the virus.
            And a further 69 patients and staff who were treated at Ysbyty Gwynedd?s accident and emergency department, Trysfan and Gogarth wards, have also been contacted by health officials.

            Story continues
            ADVERTISEMENT

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            <SCRIPT language=JavaScript type=text/javascript><!-- var MPUBlockLength = 718; //--></SCRIPT>
            A male patient was treated at the hospital in Bangor for the avian flu virus, but was discharged on May 18.

            A spokesman for North West Wales NHS Trust, which runs the hospital, last night said 66 of these people had been contacted and none are experiencing symptoms.

            He added, ?The incubation dates suggest that we will not see any further development of the disease in these people.?

            The incubation period for this strain of avian flu is eight days, during which time infected people would be expected to experience flu-like symptoms or conjunctivitis.

            Dr Marion Lyons, lead consultant in communicable diseases for the National Public Health Service for Wales (NPHS), said, ?We are actively managing the outbreak. This involves taking every precaution in identifying possible contacts of the infected poultry or people who have been ill after contact with the infected poultry.

            ?We have assessed the risk to others and can confirm that the healthcare worker was working at Ysbyty Glan Clwyd during the time when she may, possibly, have been infectious, between May 21 and May 23.

            ?Consequently the patients and staff with whom the healthcare worker has had contact are being offered Tamiflu as a precaution.?

            Health officials have not yet been able to rule out person-to-person spread of avian flu, although it is understood that the majority of confirmed cases had some form of close contact with the smallholding at the centre of the outbreak.

            It was confirmed last Thursday that 15 chickens had died from H7N2 avian flu at a farm in Llanfihangel Glyn Myfyr, near Corwen.

            The chickens ? 22-week-old Rhode Island Reds ? had been bought by the smallholding?s owners Barbara Cowling and Tony Williams from Chelford Market, in Cheshire.

            A 1km exclusion zone, to prevent the movement of birds, is in place around the farm and 30 birds were slaughtered last week.

            Tests on samples taken from a second farm, on the Llyn Peninsula, last night confirmed birds at the site had not been infected with the virus despite a link with Chelford Market.

            Meanwhile a dozen schoolchildren and two members of staff at Ysgol Henllan primary school, in Denbigh, have also been offered courses of Tamiflu after one of the pupils contracted the virus.

            The child lives at a neighbouring property to the farm and the staff and pupils receiving treatment had all been in close proximity to the youngster.

            Although health officials have been keen to reassure the public that the North Wales outbreak does not pose a serious risk to the public, the fact that a cluster of 12 people with symptoms has developed is unique.

            Until now there have only been two occasions when the H7N2 avian flu virus crossed the species barrier from poultry to humans.

            Both cases occurred in the US and involved only one person each ? in 2002 and 2003.

            The North Wales outbreak will become the focus for intense scientific study, particularly if person-to-person transmission is established. Some of the 12 people who have been identified as experiencing flu-like symptoms and conjunctivitis did not have close contact with the infected poultry.

            Dr Brendan Mason, a consultant epidemiologist at the NPHS, said, ?We are not, at the moment, saying that person-to-person transmission has taken place, but we cannot rule that out.

            ?We have been looking very hard to identify cases when they have occurred and to prevent them. We have been looking at people who have been in close contact with the poultry or with the human cases.

            ?This is not serious in the sense that we have had a limited number of cases and the cases of avian flu in humans have been very tight and associated with the small holding, with the chickens or people close to it. There is no suggestion that the virus has taken hold or that there are long chains of transmission from person to person to person.?

            Many experts believe the next pandemic flu strain will emerge from the animal kingdom ? some believe the highly pathogenic H5N1 strain, which has killed more than 180 people across South East Asia could be a potential source, if it mutates to become more readily transmitted between humans. But the NPHS does not believe H7N2 will mutate to form a new, virulent virus.

            Dr Mason said, ?We have been very fortunate in the timing of this because, where pandemic strains have emerged in the past, it has been through a reassortment of two viruses, where one person or an animal has become infected with two different strains with the ability to mix.

            ?We are well out of the European and UK flu season and no human flu virus strains are circulating in Wales at the moment.?
            </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

            Comment


            • #81
              Ah, yes, so much for:

              So much for the vaunted British bird flu readiness system.

              So much for British influenza protocols in hospital.

              Can you say SARS? Eerie parallels, with health care staff apparently spreading the virus.

              Remember, folks, it was the second wave in 1918 that was the killer. The first wave was relatively benign.

              I agree completely with Dr. Niman. This, after only 15 chickens were purchased? There is another, developing story here. SOMETHING happened/is happening at that bird market.

              Comment


              • #82
                Re: Confirmation of Avian Influenza H7N2 Infection

                Has there been any confirmation to the May 7th market having 1400 fowl (of different types)? Were all 1400 sold?

                Comment


                • #83
                  Re: Confirmation of Avian Influenza H7N2 Infection

                  Hospital worker in bird flu alert link










                  Staff and patients at a hospital are being treated with anti-avian flu drugs after it emerged a health worker may have been infected with the virus.
                  Almost 80 people at Glan Clwyd hospital in north Wales have received the Tamiflu drug as a precaution.

                  The move comes after it was confirmed a worker at the hospital was being treated for the H7 flu virus.

                  Health officials are contacting a further 69 people at Gwynedd hospital after a former patient suffered symptoms.

                  On Monday, schoolchildren and staff at Ysgol Henllan primary school near the Corwen farm were offered courses of anti-flu drug Tamiflu after a pupil fell ill.

                  A total of 12 people are so far thought to have contracted the avian flu virus since it was discovered at a farm in Corwen last week.

                  Preliminary tests have confirmed two people are suffering from the H7 virus. Further tests are being carried out on the remaining 10 to establish whether they also have the illness.

                  The disease is the "very mild" H7N2 strain rather than the more virulent H5N1 variety.

                  Dr Marion Lyons, lead consultant in communicable disease control for the National Public Health Service for Wales, said: "We have assessed the risk to others and can confirm the healthcare worker was working at Ysbyty Glan Clwyd during the time when she may possibly have been infectious, between May 21 and 23.

                  "Consequently, the patients and staff with whom the healthcare worker has had contact are being offered Tamiflu as a precaution."

                  The virus is thought to have spread from infected chickens, which were traded at Chelford Market in Cheshire two weeks ago.

                  A further 30 birds have now been slaughtered and restrictions were put on a second farm in the Llyn Peninsula, around 45 miles from the Corwen property.


                  Last Updated: 30 May 2007
                  "We are in this breathing space before it happens. We do not know how long that breathing space is going to be. But, if we are not all organizing ourselves to get ready and to take action to prepare for a pandemic, then we are squandering an opportunity for our human security"- Dr. David Nabarro

                  Comment


                  • #84
                    Re: Confirmation of Avian Influenza H7N2 Infection

                    Bird flu warning for two hospitals

                    Patients and staff at two hospitals in North Wales are being offered anti-viral drugs after coming into contact with people who may be ill with bird flu


                    Last updated at 23:50pm on 29th May 2007
                    Bird flu is an ever-present worry for farmers

                    Patients and staff at two hospitals in North Wales are being offered anti-viral drugs after coming into contact with people who may be ill with bird flu.



                    At Ysbyty Glan Clwyd hospital, Bodelwyddan, near Rhyl, 79 patients and staff spent some time with a healthcare worker who is suspected to be ill with an H7 strain of the virus.



                    They are being offered the drug Tamiflu, which minimises the symptoms associated with flu.



                    At Ysbyty Gwynedd hospital, Bangor, 69 patients and staff associated with an A & E unit are being called because they may have been in contact with a patient carrying the virus.


                    The development came as health chiefs were trying to stamp out the spread of a virus which has been traced to chickens on a small farm near Corwen, North Wales.


                    Previously, some 12 children aged nine and ten and two teachers at a school in the area have been treated with Tamiflu.


                    The 14 had been in contact with a nine-year-old girl who is thought to have fallen ill with the virus after visiting the farm at the centre of the alert.
                    "We are in this breathing space before it happens. We do not know how long that breathing space is going to be. But, if we are not all organizing ourselves to get ready and to take action to prepare for a pandemic, then we are squandering an opportunity for our human security"- Dr. David Nabarro

                    Comment


                    • #85
                      Re: Confirmation of Avian Influenza H7N2 Infection

                      Published: 30th May 2007
                      http://www.macclesfield-express.co.u...s.html?rss=yes

                      Bird flu fears

                      POULTRY keepers, buyers and sellers, who attended the early May Bank Holiday sales at Chelford Market 24 days ago, were today urged to contact government farming watchdogs in the wake of a bird flu outbreak.


                      Defra ? the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs ? are appealing to anyone present at the auction on Monday, May 7, to contact them after 15 hens in North Wales died when they were infected with avian influenza.


                      Officials ? who stress the disease is the H7N2 strain rather than the more deadly H5N1 virus ? have traced the 15 affected Rhode Island Reds to the agricultural centre in Chelford.
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                      And now they need to track down the 140 chicken sellers, not to mention the buyers, who were in attendance on a particularly busy Bank Holiday sale.


                      Bosses at Chelford Market last night (Tuesday) confirmed no-one working there was showing signs of the disease and the Health Protection Agency stress the risk to the general public is low.


                      Regular Monday sales of poultry have been suspended until the all-clear is announced, but it was business at usual at the agricultural centre this week as livestock shows continued.


                      Partner at Frank Marshall, Gwyn Williams, said: "Anything that removes part of our business is difficult, but this is not on the same scale as when all livestock sales were shut down between February 2001 and February 2002 because of Foot and Mouth disease.


                      "All of the 541 poultry pens are cleaned and disinfected at the end of every sale. We are very tight on anything that appears ill, whatever the animal, and there was no sign at all that day."


                      "We are very proud of our record here for welfare and keep a close eye on this."


                      The mild form of avian influenza was confirmed 70 miles away at a smallholding in Conwy, after owners called in vets when their Rhode Island Red hens began to die.


                      A total of 30 chickens have been slaughtered after 15 birds died and a one kilometre restriction zone was in place.


                      Tests were also underway at a second farm on the Llyn Peninsula. Both bought birds from Chelford on May 7.


                      At the time of going to press, four people tested positive for bird flu ? two in North Wales and two in Merseyside ? although others, including a child at a primary school linked to the Conwy farm, are being offered treatment.

                      No-one is seriously ill.


                      A Defra spokeswoman said: "Following confirmation of Low Pathogenic H7N2 Avian Influenza in the flock, we amended the general licence to specify that chickens or ducks must not be taken to bird gatherings.


                      "This temporary measure will be kept actively under review over the next few days as the disease situation becomes clearer."


                      She added as part of the tracing exercise and epidemiological investigation to determine the source of the outbreak and any spread, Defra want to hear from anyone who purchased from or supplied to Chelford Market on Monday, May 7, or any poultry keeper who visited the market on that day whose birds have since become ill.


                      Mr Williams said there were around 140 vendors at the sale from all over the country, with many different purchasers.


                      He said: "We don?t know which hens were the carriers but Defra want to contact anyone who was there. We have given contact details of all buyers and sellers on that day, which was busy because it was a bank holiday.


                      "As a responsible measure we cancelled the sale this Monday (May 28) and we will review the situation as of next week. Defra amended the licence restricting sales of chicken and ducks. We were not compelled to cancel the sale, we could have gone ahead with other types of birds, but decided not to."


                      He said they were not particularly worried about future sales, and added: "This is a very low pathogenic strain and I think it?s more precautionary than anything else.


                      "Defra are trying to place the source of the infection but there is no ready way of identifying birds. They could have been bought at Chelford but we don?t know yet whether the birds that came through here were infected or carriers."


                      A spokeswoman for Defra said Animal Health officials visited Chelford Market to offer advice to people and farmers if they had been at the sale earlier this month. The cage and aviary bird sale will go ahead on Wednesday, June 6.


                      POULTRY farmers who were at the May 7 sale at Chelford Market should contact Jenny Kirby at the Macclesfield Express on 01625 424445 ext 30, or the DEFRA helpline on 08459 33557.
                      Jenny Kirby

                      First published by the Macclesfield Express
                      "We are in this breathing space before it happens. We do not know how long that breathing space is going to be. But, if we are not all organizing ourselves to get ready and to take action to prepare for a pandemic, then we are squandering an opportunity for our human security"- Dr. David Nabarro

                      Comment


                      • #86
                        Re: Confirmation of Avian Influenza H7N2 Infection

                        Comment


                        • #87
                          Re: Confirmation of Avian Influenza H7N2 Infection

                          No bird flu at second suspect farm

                          30/5/2007

                          Tests at a second farm in Wales where bird flu was a possibiity, because of its links with Chelford Market, have proved negative.

                          Meanwhile the National Public Health Service for Wales has identified 221 people who may have had contact with the avian flu, 36 in the household setting, 14 in school and 171 in workplace settings (including patients and staff at two hospitals)

                          By 3pm yesterday, Monday, 12 avian flu contacts had been identified who had or have had symptoms of a flu like illness or conjunctivitis. This is unchanged from the day before.

                          No one is seriously ill.

                          Seventy nine patients and staff from Ward 6 at Ysbyty Glan Clwyd are being offered tamiflu as a precaution because of contact with a healthcare worker who is being treated for the H7 flu virus.

                          Sixty nine patients and staff from the Accident and Emergency Unit, Trysfan Ward and Gogarth Ward at Ysbyty Gwynedd are also being contacted because a patient, who is now discharged, is also being treated for the avian flu virus.

                          The full list of contacts is constantly changing as possible contacts are added to or taken off the database. Contacts are added if contact was possible. They are taken off if detailed questioning shows that there was no contact.

                          People with symptoms of conjunctivitis and flu and meet the definition of a case have been given treatment. They have been advised to stay at home until they are better.

                          All well contacts are being given medication to reduce the severity of any impact from the infection if their last contact with a case was only a week ago.

                          Dr Marion Lyons, Lead Consultant in Communicable Disease Control for the National Public Health Service for Wales, said: “We believe the risk to the health of the general public is low. Avian flu is primarily a disease of birds. H7N2 is different to and very mild compared with H5N1.

                          “Of the people with conjunctivitis or a flu-like illness, some did not have close contact with infected poultry.

                          A Special Helpline available for general information about avian flu in people is open from 7am to 8pm daily. The number is 0845 600 3678.

                          Test results for the H7N2 strain of avian flu from poultry on a farm on the Llyn Peninsula have proved negative. Final results received today by the Welsh Assembly Government confirm that birds on the farm are not infected with this virus.


                          Birds on the farm were tested because of a connection with Chelford Market on 7 May which is linked to the Corwen outbreak where H7N2 was confirmed in poultry on 24 May, 2007. All birds on this site were slaughtered by 5 pm on Friday 25 May and cleansing and disinfection of the site has now been completed.

                          Chief Veterinary Officer Dr Christianne Glossop said: > We are very pleased with today’s results but must not be complacent so early in our investigations into the source of this outbreak. Considerable efforts continue in this complicated tracings exercise.

                          “I repeat my request to any people in Wales who either bought or sold poultry at Chelford Market in Cheshire on Monday 7 May 2007 or any poultry keeper in Wales who visited Chelford Market on this date whose birds have subsequently become ill, to contact their local Animal Health office.

                          “All bird keepers throughout Wales should continue to be vigilant and maintain strict biosecurity precautions monitoring their birds for any signs of infectious
                          disease. Again, if anyone is concerned about the health of their birds they should contact Animal Health."

                          The Welsh Assembly Government continues to co-ordinate the operation working closely with Whitehall departments.

                          Find your Welsh holiday here - self catering cottages, hotels, bed and breakfasts, caravan sites, bunkhouses in all areas of Wales. Details, pictures, prices, availability for hundreds of holiday properties.
                          ?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


                          • #88
                            Re: Confirmation of Avian Influenza H7N2 Infection

                            http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidrap/con...ales.htmlWelsh officials announce four H7N2 flu cases, suspect human-to-human transmission

                            Lisa Schnirring Staff Writer

                            May 29, 2007 (CIDRAP News) - Four people in Wales and northwest England have tested positive for the low-pathogenic H7N2 avian influenza subtype found last week in chickens at a small farm in Wales, and local public health authorities suspect some degree of human-to-human transmission of the disease.
                            England's Health Protection Agency (HPA), in announcing the positive tests 4 days ago, said five other patients whose test results were negative for the virus are undergoing treatment as a precaution because they had similar illnesses. All of the patients who tested positive for the virus had contact with infected birds, the HPA said.
                            The National Public Health Service (NPHS) for Wales said in a statement today that of 221 people who were identified as contacts so far, 12 are ill with conjunctivitis or a nonserious flulike illness. The NPHS said it could not rule out human-to-human spread of the virus but that it had no laboratory confirmation of such cases.
                            "Of the people with conjunctivitis or a flulike illness, some did not have close contact with infected poultry," said Marion Lyons, lead consultant in communicable disease control for the NPHS, in the press release.
                            On May 24 veterinary officials in Wales confirmed a low-pathogenic H7N2 avian influenza outbreak at a farm near the northern town of Denbighshire. For outbreaks of mild strains of avian flu subtypes such as H7N2, public health officials often order culling of birds and monitor human cases because the viruses could mutate into highly pathogenic forms.
                            Welsh veterinary officials think the infected chickens could have been exposed to the virus on May 7 at the Chelford Market in Cheshire. Tests on birds at another farm in Llyn Peninsula came back negative today, according to a statement from the Welsh government.
                            Of 221 patients identified as contacts, 171 may have been exposed in a workplace setting, including patients and staff at two hospitals, the NPHS statement said. At one of the hospitals, 79 patients and staff were offered oseltamivir because of contact with a healthcare worker who was treated for the H7 flu virus. Lyons said in the NPHS statement that the sick staff member was working between May 21 and 23, when she may have been infectious.
                            At the other hospital, 69 patients and staff were notified because a patient who had the H7N2 illness was recently treated at the facility. Lyons said the patient was discharged on May 18, and after an 8-day incubation period, anyone who was ill would have had symptoms by May 26. "So we are contacting all staff and patients to ensure that they remained well and to reassure them," she said in the statement.
                            Lyons said that people who have had contact with individuals who became ill with the H7N2 virus are being offered prophylactic antiviral medication.
                            "Investigations also show that, when it spreads from person to person, the illness experienced becomes milder," she said in the press release.
                            In a related development, children at a primary school in the town where the Welsh farm is located are being given antiviral medication after one of their classmates became ill with suspected H7N2 infection, the London Evening Standard reported today. The ill child visited the affected farm 10 days ago for less than 15 minutes, the Standard report said.
                            "It is very rare to see this particular flu virus, so we are taking every reasonable precaution to eliminate it from the community, " Brendan Mason, a consultant epidemiologist, told the Standard.
                            Some infectious disease experts say human illnesses associated with the H7N2 outbreak in Wales are a reminder that other virus subtypes?not just the well-known H5N1 strain?could spark a pandemic.
                            "There may be a bit of complacency when it comes to recognizing the pandemic potential of H7 viruses," Michael Perdue from the World Health Organization (WHO) told the Associated Press (AP) today.
                            The number of [H7] human cases seems large for the small number of bird deaths, he told the AP. "Unless there's something unusual about the contact with birds, that suggests the virus is finding new ways of getting to humans," he said in the AP report.
                            Other experts say the focus on the H5N1 subtype's pandemic potential is justified. "We know that H7 can cause outbreaks in chickens and that it can occasionally jump the species barrier, but it has not done it nearly to the extent of the H5N1 virus," said Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
                            David Halvorson, DVM, a veterinarian in avian health at the University of Minnesota in St Paul, told CIDRAP News that H5 and H7 subtypes both have the ability to generate a highly pathogenic virus of the same subtype, but there's no way to project when and if such evolution will occur. "Whether that will happen quickly, as it did in Chile or British Columbia, or not happen for over 10 years, as it has not done in New York live bird markets, is not predictable," he said.
                            The WHO's Regional Office for Europe said human illness from other H7 subtypes has occurred in two other instances in the past few years. In 2006 a poultry worker in the United Kingdom was diagnosed with conjunctivitis linked to an H7N3 poultry outbreak, and in 2003 an outbreak of highly pathogenic H7N7 in the Netherlands resulted in 86 confirmed cases of mild illness, with one death?a veterinarian who died from acute respiratory distress syndrome.

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                              Re: Confirmation of Avian Influenza H7N2 Infection

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                              Healthcare worker and hospital patient among those with bird flu symptoms <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE class=headerTable cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=* border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>May 31 2007

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                              </TD></TR><TR><TD colSpan=2>by Madeleine Brindley, Western Mail
                              </TD></TR></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=400 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD colSpan=3> </TD></TR><TR><TD colSpan=3>THE number of people with symptoms of bird flu rose to 13 in Wales yesterday.
                              The National Public Health Service (NPHS) for Wales last night said these 13 have ? or have had ? flu-like symptoms or conjunctivitis.
                              They include a healthcare worker, who was working at Ysbyty Glan Clwyd, a patient treated at Ysbyty Gwynedd and a child at Ysgol Henllan, near Denbigh.
                              Health officials have also identified 220 people who have had contacts with either poultry infected with H7N2 bird flu, the Ty?n Llwyn smallholding at the centre of the outbreak, or people who have experienced symptoms.
                              But none of the 69 patients who were in contact with the man treated at Ysbyty Gwynedd have shown any symptoms of the illness, officials said.

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                              A total of 79 people who were in contact with the healthcare worker have been given the anti-viral medicine Tamiflu.

                              Dr Marion Lyons, lead consultant in communicable disease control for the NPHS, said, ?North West Wales NHS Trust staff have contacted all 69 patients and staff who had been in contact with the patients at Ysbyty Gwynedd. No one reported symptoms of conjunctivitis or flu-like illness in the time period when the flu could have been incubating. So, I am pleased to conclude that there has been no spread of the flu in the hospital.?

                              Local health boards and other primary care services have introduced a system to help identify patients who may be suffering mild flu-like symptoms or conjunctivitis. Officials expect this to lead to a rise in the number or people suspected of contracting the disease. Dr Lyons said, ?We have been looking more closely at these and I expect to identify some new cases of people who could have avian flu.?

                              It also emerged last night that everyone who has become ill is directly connected either with the infected poultry or the first few cases of illness.

                              There have been no cases of illness in people with more distant contacts. Tests on 12 of the affected people in Wales have revealed that two have tested positive for the H7 subtype of the virus which was isolated from the affected poultry.

                              But the definition of a case of avian flu relies as much on clinical symptoms with a history of contact with infected birds or another human case.

                              Meanwhile, Wales? chief veterinary officer said there was no cause for complacency among poultry keepers, despite tests on a second farm on the Llyn Peninsula coming back negative for the H7N2 virus.

                              Birds on the farm were tested because of a connection with Chelford Market, in Cheshire, on May 7 ? the Corwen outbreak is believed to have been caused by infected chickens bought there.

                              Dr Christianne Glossop said, ?We are very pleased with the results but must not be complacent so early in our investigations into the source of this outbreak. Considerable efforts continue in this complicated tracings exercise.

                              ?Anybody in Wales who either bought or sold poultry at Chelford on May 7 or any poultry keeper in Wales who visited the market on this date whose birds have subsequently become ill, to contact their local animal health office.

                              ?All birdkeepers throughout Wales should be vigilant and maintain strict bio-security precautions, monitoring their birds for any signs of infectious disease.?

                              The T?n Llwyn farm, in Llanfihangel Glyn Myfyr, has been cleansed and disinfected. http://icwales.icnetwork.co.uk/0100n...name_page.html
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