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    <table summary=""><tbody><tr><td align="right" nowrap="nowrap">Archive Number</td> <td colspan="1" rowspan="1" align="left" nowrap="nowrap">20060904.2513</td></tr><tr><td align="right" nowrap="nowrap">Published Date</td> <td colspan="1" rowspan="1" align="left" nowrap="nowrap">04-SEP-2006</td></tr><tr><td align="right" nowrap="nowrap">Subject</td> <td colspan="1" rowspan="1" align="left" nowrap="nowrap">PRO/AH> Avian influenza, human (139): Indonesia</td></tr> </tbody></table>
    AVIAN INFLUENZA, HUMAN (139): INDONESIA
    *******************************************
    A ProMED-mail post
    <http://www.promedmail.org>
    ProMED-mail is a program of the
    International Society for Infectious Diseases
    <http://www.isid.org>

    Date: Sun 3 Sep 2006
    From: Mary Marshall <tropical.forestry@btinternet.com>
    Source: The Mercury News online, Sun 3 Sep 2006 [edited]
    <http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercu...d/15425359.htm>


    Indonesia: Analysis of the North Sumatran Cluster
    -----------------------------------------------
    Dowes Ginting, the most wanted man on Sumatra island, lay dying. He
    had abandoned the hospital where he had seen his relatives succumb
    one after another, and he had fled deep into the mountains, trying to
    outrun the black magic he feared had marked him next. For 4 nights,
    witnesses recalled, a medicine man hovered over him in a small
    clapboard home, resisting the evil spell.

    Ginting, a wiry 32-year-old, had watched disease burn through his
    family over the previous 2 weeks, killing 6 and sickening 2 others,
    including himself. International health experts grew increasingly
    concerned when laboratory tests confirmed they were sickened by bird
    flu, the largest cluster of the disease ever recorded. But Dowes
    feared medical treatment more than he did the avian influenza. And so
    he ran, potentially exposing villagers across the province to the
    highly lethal virus.

    In the end, the outbreak in May 2006 did not presage the start of a
    worldwide epidemic. But the enormous difficulties that Indonesian and
    international disease specialists confronted in investigating the
    outbreak and protecting against its spread raised fundamental
    questions about whether bird flu could be contained if it mutated
    into a form more easily spread among people. "If this were a strain
    with sustainable transmission from human to human, I can't imagine
    how many people would have died, how many lives would have been
    lost," said Surya Dharma, chief of communicable disease control in
    North Sumatra province.

    Officials from the World Health Organization (WHO), drawing on
    sophisticated computer modeling of a theoretical bird flu outbreak in
    Southeast Asia, have suggested that a pandemic could be thwarted
    through a rapid containment effort in the affected area, including
    the right mix of drugs, quarantines and other social controls. To
    succeed, the anti-viral drug Tamiflu would have to be distributed to
    90 percent of the targeted population, roughly defined as those
    within at least a 3-mile radius of each case. The drug would have to
    be administered within 21 days from the "timely detection" of the
    initial case of an epidemic strain. Residents would have to stay
    home, limit contact with others and take the medicine as prescribed.
    In the case of the North Sumatra cluster, almost none of this
    happened, according to extensive interviews with health officers,
    family members and villagers. The underlying problem was that most
    family members and villagers were convinced that magic, not flu, was
    to blame. "How can you ever get people to cooperate if they don't
    even believe you," Dharma said.

    Health investigators have concluded that the 8-person cluster in
    Sumatra began with Ginting's older sister, who fell ill in late April
    [2006]. They suspect she was infected with bird flu from live
    chickens sold in a market where she peddled oranges, limes and chili
    peppers or from contaminated poultry droppings in manure used in her
    garden. She died and was buried before any samples were taken to
    confirm bird flu. Several days after she became sick, the extended
    family had gathered in the village of Kubu Sembilang for a feast of
    roast pig and chicken curry to celebrate the annual harvest festival.
    That night, many of the relatives slept in the same small room with
    the sister, who had developed a serious cough. By the time she died,
    a sister, a brother, 2 sons, a niece and a nephew had become ill. Flu
    specialists said the final victim, her brother Dowes Ginting, in turn
    probably caught the virus from his infected son. Health experts have
    concluded this was the 1st time the bird flu virus had been passed
    from one person to another and then on to a 3rd person.

    "None of us thought it was bird flu. We thought it was black magic,"
    said Anestia Tarigan, the wife of the youngest Ginting brother,
    Jones, the only victim to survive [and not a blood-relative -
    Mod.CP]. "Everyone in the family was getting sick and no one else
    was. Someone had put a spell on our family. Black magic is very
    common in our place."

    Indonesian and WHO investigators discovered that many residents in
    Kubu Sembilang were unwilling to share information or give blood
    samples that could reveal how widely the virus was circulating. Many
    villagers believed that claims of bird flu were a lie. Some even
    threatened the investigators. When a team of officers 1st arrived
    from the provincial health department, they were warned by their
    local counterparts that it was too dangerous to enter the village.
    Investigators were able to take samples from only 2 people in the
    village, including the local midwife, said Diana Ginting, chief of
    the district health department, who shares a common surname in the
    region. Indonesian health officials working with an international
    team returned day after day to the village and made progress. They
    recruited 20 local volunteers to monitor fellow residents for fever
    and set up a temporary health post on the soccer field offering free
    medical care. The investigators methodically pieced together the
    chronology of the outbreak. They traced those who had contact with
    the victims and provided them with Tamiflu. But many of those closest
    to the Gintings refused to take it. As a medicine man treated Dowes
    Ginting, Indonesian and international health investigators finally
    tracked him down and urged his family to take him to a hospital. They
    demurred: He needed 2 more days of traditional treatment, they said.
    That night, he took a turn for the worse and died.

    [Byline: Alan Sipress, Washington Post]

    --
    ProMED-mail
    <promed@promedmail.org>

    [This article provides a useful resume of the investigation of the
    cluster of human cases of H5N1 avian influenza virus infection which
    involved 8 members of an extended family in the village of Kubu
    Sembilang in the province of North Sumatra. For the 1st time, there
    was clear evidence of passage of virus from one person to another and
    onward transmission to a 3rd member of an extended family. It should
    be emphasized, however, that no other comparable cluster of cases has
    been identified in Indonesia or elsewhere. There has been no evidence
    to date that the H5N1 avian virus is evolving to a form more easily
    transmitted from human to human. Similarity of the genetic
    constitution of close relatives still seems to be the determining
    factor in susceptibility to infection. - Mod.CP]</pre>
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