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Graph - Human versus Poultry Infections by Country
Does the number of poultry infections represent the number of separate incidents or the total number of birds found infected?
It is not the total number of birds infected. I think the counting unit is an "outbreak", but I am not sure how it is determined. I don't know if a reporting event is counted only once until it is resolved or, if each flare up on a different farm, for example as in West Bengal, is treated as a separate "outbreak".
Re: Graph - Human versus Poultry Infections by Country
Next question I am sure everyone is thinking. Why do three of these countries show no human cases despite quite high bird cases? Is there a strain in Myanmar, Pakistan and Nigeria, that is far different?
Please do not ask me for medical advice, I am not a medical doctor.
Avatar is a painting by Alan Pollack, titled, "Plague". I'm sure it was an accident that the plague girl happened to look almost like my twin.
Thank you,
Shannon Bennett
Next question I am sure everyone is thinking. Why do three of these countries show no human cases despite quite high bird cases? Is there a strain in Myanmar, Pakistan and Nigeria, that is far different?
A point of clarification. The graph only shows the list of countries with WHO confirmed cases. Myanmar, Pakistan, Nigeria (as well as Djibouti) all have only reported one confirmed case each. But Shannon's question is still valid. What medical, social, or political factors could account for such a low frequency of human cases in these countries with high numbers of poultry outbreaks?
Re: Graph - Human versus Poultry Infections by Country
here are a few I would suggest...
medical - lack of resources for good testing, many other serious diseases in the area
social - stigmatization issues, loss of livlihood for yourself and neighbors
political - fear of panic, economic losses
A point of clarification. The graph only shows the list of countries with WHO confirmed cases. Myanmar, Pakistan, Nigeria (as well as Djibouti) all have only reported one confirmed case each. But Shannon's question is still valid. What medical, social, or political factors could account for such a low frequency of human cases in these countries with high numbers of poultry outbreaks?
This was exactly the question I was trying to raise in my "H5N1 Puzzle". What is the possibility of getting a chart like the WHO yearly charts by country, but showing both human and avian events? Is there an onset of avian activity prior to the rise in human cases? Do the human cases then decline when the avian cases decline?
Re: Graph - Human versus Poultry Infections by Country
Bird cases signal infection is present. Human cases, nearly always follow the death of poultry.
It would be highly unlikely for birds to die in significant numbers and not infect a human. The graph while interesting, is in my estimation flawed. As in all statistical analysis, outliers should always be examined closely. The number of bird outbreaks compared to the human infections is fairly steady except in those three countries. I know of no strain, protocol or, social behavior to account for the differences. More likely as Kent noted above, for political, economic, or social reasons, locals do not measure the actual number of human cases. They just aren't found or they aren't reported.
Please do not ask me for medical advice, I am not a medical doctor.
Avatar is a painting by Alan Pollack, titled, "Plague". I'm sure it was an accident that the plague girl happened to look almost like my twin.
Thank you,
Shannon Bennett
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