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Fresh culling proposed in Manipur, 300 people under supervision

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  • Fresh culling proposed in Manipur, 300 people under supervision

    <TABLE cellSpacing=20 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD width="100%"><SMALL>Fresh culling proposed in Manipur, 300 people under supervision</SMALL>
    Wednesday August 1 2007 16:50 IST <SMALL>IANS</SMALL>
    <SMALL>IMPHAL/NEW DELHI: Nearly 200,000 poultry have been culled in Manipur in the drive against bird flu and authorities have decided to begin a second round. Health officials on Wednesday said over 300 people are under special medical supervision though no human has contracted the disease so far.

    The first phase of culling is likely to end on Thursday and the second one is to stamp out birds from backyard farms.

    "We had identified 86 sectors for the culling operation and expect to finish the task by Thursday. We would begin a second round of operation immediately to ensure there are no poultry left in the area," K Gopal, nodal officer of the Animal Disease Control Programme in Manipur, told IANS.

    The culling began last week in a five km radius around the farm at Chenngmeirong near Imphal where the deaths were originally reported. There are an estimated 800 poultry farms in the area.

    About 34 Rapid Response Teams with five members in each group led by a veterinarian are involved in the culling as laboratory tests earlier confirmed the dead birds had H5NI strains, which are highly pathogenic in nature.

    "We shall now begin a massive cleaning and disinfecting drive in the area before taking up the second round of culling operation," Gopal said. There have been no fresh reports of the viral disease spreading to other parts of the state.

    Health officials said there were no reports of humans contracting the virus although a massive surveillance campaign was on to ensure safety of the locals. Over 200,000 people have gone through health checkups so far.

    At least 334 people, including 171 cullers, have been put under special medical supervision, said health ministry officials in New Delhi.

    "As of now, 171 cullers are under the cover of Tamiflu (a precautionary medicine) and their health status is being monitored," an official statement said.

    The medical teams consisting of 680 health personnel have conducted house-to-house active surveillance July 30, authorities said.

    They covered 45,032 houses in places including the Imphal municipality area, Luwangsangbam, Koirengei, Lamlongei, Ahalup, Matai and Kontha. Officials said out of the houses surveyed, 935 had backyard poultry.

    "A total of 235,161 people were covered in the health drive. And 163 cases of fever or acute upper respiratory tract infection were found and four people had handled either dead or sick birds. These cases are being monitored," the ministry said.

    Officials said the isolation ward in JN Hospital, Imphal was ready to receive patients. Two ventilators have been installed to provide critical care. This is in addition to the critical care facilities available at the Regional Institute of Medical Sciences, Imphal.

    "Adequate supply of logistics like Tamiflu, N-95 masks and personal protective gears have been made available to the state government," the officials added. http://www.newindpress.com/NewsItems...tories&Topic=0&
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    CSI:WORLD http://swineflumagazine.blogspot.com/

    treyfish2004@yahoo.com

  • #2
    Re: Fresh culling proposed in Manipur, 300 people under supervision

    hmmmmmmm...

    Originally posted by treyfish View Post
    special medical supervision

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Fresh culling proposed in Manipur, 300 people under supervision

      That's alot of supervision!
      CSI:WORLD http://swineflumagazine.blogspot.com/

      treyfish2004@yahoo.com

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Fresh culling proposed in Manipur, 300 people under supervision


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        India monitors four children after bird flu outbreak in Manipur


        Wed Aug 1, 2007 8:13PM IST
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        NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Health officials in India were monitoring four children suffering from fever on Wednesday after they had contact with dead or sick poultry in Manipur, where authorities are fighting a bird flu outbreak in fowl.
        The children have been restricted to their homes and are being visited twice a day by medical professionals, said Vineet Chawdhry, joint secretary in the ministry of health.
        "We are being extra careful," Chawdhry said, adding that throat swabs and blood samples taken from the children had been sent to a federal laboratory, where tests for the H5N1 strain of bird flu will be carried out.
        The children live within a 5-km radius of a small poultry farm where more than 130 chickens died last month from the H5N1 virus.
        Health officials have checked more than 235,000 people around the affected farm since the weekend for flu symptoms, while veterinary workers have culled a similar number of birds in the remote northeastern state.
        India had two major flare-ups of bird flu in its western region last year.
        Manipur neighbours Myanmar, which has battled several outbreaks of bird flu in chickens this year, including one reported last week.
        Globally, at least 192 people have died due to bird flu out of 319 cases since 2003, the World Health Organisation says.
        The H5N1 strain remains mainly a bird virus but experts fear it may mutate into a form that passes easily between humans, triggering an influenza epidemic in which millions could die. http://in.reuters.com/article/topNew...070801?rpc=401&




        ? Reuters 2007. All rights reserved.
        CSI:WORLD http://swineflumagazine.blogspot.com/

        treyfish2004@yahoo.com

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