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Biotech / Medical : SARS and Avian Flu -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Henry Niman who wrote (2837)10/19/2005 7:56:23 PM
From: Elroy Jetson  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 4232
 
I had someone email me that their pharmacy couldn't fill their prescription for Tamiflu, because its in such short supply that the retail channels can no longer obtain it.

I wonder if that's true everywhere?

Roche had previously said they wouldn't divert the retail channel to fulfill large government orders.

Maybe there's just so much Star Anise to go around.
.



To: Henry Niman who wrote (2837)10/24/2005 10:14:04 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 4232
 
>> Stratfor: Special Report - October 24, 2005
>>
>>
>> Special Report: The Bird Flu and You
>>
>> Stratfor subscribers have been sending us a steady
>> river of requests
>> for our opinion on the bird flu situation. Although
>> we are not medical
>> experts, among our sources are those who are. And
>> here is what we have
>> been able to conclude based on their input and our
>> broader analysis of
>> the bird flu threat:
>>
>> Calm down.
>>
>> Now let us qualify that: Since December 2003, the
>> H5N1 bird flu virus
>> -- which has caused all the ruckus -- has been
>> responsible for the
>> documented infection of 121 people, 91 one of whom
>> caught the virus in
>> Vietnam. In all cases where information on the chain
>> of infection has
>> been confirmed, the virus was transmitted either by
>> repeated close
>> contact with fowl or via the ingestion of
>> insufficiently cooked
>> chicken products. In not a single case has
>> human-to-human
>> communicability been confirmed. So long as that
>> remains the case,
>> there is no bird flu threat to the human population
>> of places such as
>> Vietnam at large, much less the United States.
>>

>>
>>
>> The Politics of Genetics
>>
>> An uncomfortable but undeniable fact is that there
>> are a great many
>> people and institutions in this world that have a
>> vested interest in
>> feeding the bird flu scare. Much like the "Y2K" bug
>> that commanded
>> public attention in 1999, bird flu is all you hear
>> about. Comparisons
>> to the 1918 Spanish influenza have produced death
>> toll projections in
>> excess of 360 million, evoking images of chaos in
>> the streets.
>>
>> One does not qualify for funding -- whether for
>> academic research,
>> medical development or contingency studies -- by
>> postulating about
>> best-case scenarios. The strategy is to show up
>> front how bad things
>> could get, and to scare your targeted benefactors
>> into having you
>> study the problem and manufacture solutions.
>>
>> This hardly means that these people are evil, greedy
>> or irresponsible
>> (although, in the case of Y2K or when a health
>> threat shuts down
>> agricultural trade for years, one really tends to
>> wonder). It simply
>> means that fear is an effective way to spark
>> interest and action.
>>
>> Current medical technology lacks the ability to cure
>> -- or even
>> reliably vaccinate against -- highly mutable viral
>> infections; the
>> best available medicines can only treat symptoms --
>> like Roche's
>> Tamiflu, which is becoming as scarce as the
>> oftentimes legendary red
>> mercury -- or slow a virus' reproduction rate. Is
>> more research
>> needed? Certainly. But are we on the brink of a
>> cataclysmic outbreak?
>> Certainly not.
>>
>> A bird flu pandemic among the human population is
>> broadly in the same
>> category as a meteor strike. Of course it will
>> happen sooner or later
>> -- and when it does, watch out! But there is no --
>> absolutely no --
>> particular reason to fear a global flu pandemic this
>> flu season.
>>
>> This does not mean the laws of nature have changed
>> since 1918; it
>> simply means there is no way to predict when an
>> animal virus will
>> break into the human population in any particular
>> year -- or even if
>> it will at all. Yes, H5N1 does show a propensity to
>> mutate; and, yes,
>> sooner or later another domesticated animal disease
>> will cross over
>> into the human population (most common human
>> diseases have such
>> origins). But there is no scientifically plausible
>> reason to expect
>> such a crossover to be imminent.
>>
>> But if you are trying to find something to worry
>> about, you should at
>> least worry about the right thing.
>>
>> A virus can mutate in any host, and pound for pound,
>> the mutations
>> that are of most interest to humanity are obviously
>> those that occur
>> within a human host. That means that each person who
>> catches H5N1 due
>> to a close encounter of the bird kind in effect
>> becomes a sort of
>> laboratory that could foster a mutation and that
>> could have
>> characteristics that would allow H5N1 to be
>> communicable to other
>> humans. Without such a specific mutation, bird flu
>> is a problem for
>> turkeys, but not for the non-turkey farmers among
>> us.
>>
>> But we are talking about a grand total of 115 people
>> catching the bug
>> over the course of the past three years. That does
>> not exactly produce
>> great odds for a virus -- no matter how genetically
>> mutable -- to
>> evolve successfully into a human-communicable
>> strain. And bear in mind
>> that the first-ever human case of H5N1 was not in
>> 2003 but in 1997.
>> There is not anything fundamentally new in this
>> year's bird flu scare.
>>
>> A more likely vector, therefore, would be for H5N1
>> to leap into a
>> species of animal that bears similarities to human
>> immunology yet
>> lives in quarters close enough to encourage viral
>> spread -- and lacks
>> the capacity to complete detailed questionnaires
>> about family health
>> history.
>>
>> The most likely candidate is the pig. On many farms,
>> birds and pigs
>> regularly intermingle, allowing for cross-infection,
>> and similar
>> pig-human biology means that pigs serving in the
>> role as mutation
>> incubator are statistically more likely than the odd
>> Vietnamese
>> raw-chicken eater to generate a pandemic virus.
>>
>> And once the virus mutates into a form that is
>> pig-pig transferable, a
>> human pandemic is only one short mutation away. Put
>> another way, a
>> bird flu pandemic among birds is manageable. A bird
>> flu pandemic among
>> pigs is not, and is nearly guaranteed to become a
>> human pandemic.
>>
>> Pandemics: Past and Future
>>
>> What precisely is a pandemic? The short version is
>> that it is an
>> epidemic that is everywhere. Epidemics affect large
>> numbers of people
>> in a relatively contained region. Pandemics are in
>> effect the same,
>> but without the geographic limitations. In 1854 a
>> cholera epidemic
>> struck London. The European settling of the Americas
>> brought disease
>> pandemics to the Native Americans that nearly
>> eliminated them as an
>> ethnic classification.
>>
>> In 1918 the influenza outbreak spread in two waves.
>> The first hit in
>> March, and was only marginally more dangerous than
>> the flu outbreaks
>> of the previous six years. But in the trenches of
>> war-torn France, the
>> virus mutated into a new, more virulent strain that
>> swept back across
>> the world, ultimately killing anywhere from 20
>> million to 100 million
>> people. Some one in four Americans became infected
>> -- nearly all in
>> one horrid month in October, and some 550,000 --
>> about 0.5 percent of
>> the total population -- succumbed. Playing that
>> figure forward to
>> today's population, theoretically 1.6 million
>> Americans would die.
>> Suddenly the fear makes a bit more sense, right?
>>
>>
>> Wrong.
>>
>> There are four major differences between the 1918
>> scenario and any new
>> flu pandemic development:
>>
>> First -- and this one could actually make the death
>> toll higher -- is
>> the virus itself.
>>
>> No one knows how lethal H5N1 (or any animal
>> pathogen) would be if it
>> adapted to human hosts. Not knowing that makes it
>> impossible to
>> reliably predict the as-yet-unmutated virus'
>> mortality rate.
>>
>> At this point, the mortality rate among infected
>> humans is running
>> right at about 50 percent, but that hardly means
>> that is what it would
>> look like if the virus became human-to-human
>> communicable. Remember,
>> the virus needs to mutate before it is a threat to
>> humanity -- there
>> is no reason to expect it to mutate just once. Also,
>> in general, the
>> more communicable a disease becomes the lower its
>> mortality rate tends
>> to be. A virus -- like all life forms -- has a
>> vested interest in not
>> wiping out its host population.
>>
>> One of the features that made the 1918 panic so
>> unnerving is the "W"
>> nature of the mortality curve. For reasons unknown,
>> the virus proved
>> more effective than most at killing people in the
>> prime of their lives
>> -- those in the 15- to 44-year-old age brackets.
>> While there is no
>> reason to expect the next pandemic virus to not have
>> such a feature,
>> similarly there is no reason to expect the next
>> pandemic virus to
>> share that feature.
>>
>> Second, 1918 was not exactly a "typical" year.
>>
>> World War I, while coming to a close, was still
>> raging. The war was
>> unique in that it was fought largely in trenches,
>> among the least
>> sanitary of human habitats. Soldiers not only faced
>> degrading health
>> from their "quarters" in wartime, but even when they
>> were not fighting
>> at the front they were living in barracks. Such
>> conditions ensured
>> that they were: a) not in the best of health, and b)
>> constantly
>> exposed to whatever airborne diseases afflicted the
>> rest of their
>> unit.
>>
>> As such, the military circumstances and style of the
>> war ensured that
>> soldiers were not only extraordinarily susceptible
>> to catching the
>> flu, but also extraordinarily susceptible to dying
>> of it. Over half of
>> U.S. war dead in World War I -- some 65,000 men --
>> were the result not
>> of combat but of the flu pandemic.
>>
>> And it should be no surprise that in 1918,
>> circulation of military
>> personnel was the leading vector for infecting
>> civilian populations
>> the world over. Nevertheless, while the United
>> States is obviously
>> involved in a war in 2005, it is not involved in
>> anything close to
>> trench warfare, and the total percentage of the U.S.
>> population
>> involved in Iraq and Afghanistan -- 0.005 percent --
>> is middling
>> compared to the 2.0 percent involvement in World War
>> I.
>>
>> Third, health and nutrition levels have radically
>> changed in the past
>> 87 years. Though fears of obesity and insufficient
>> school lunch
>> nutrition are all the rage in the media, no one
>> would seriously
>> postulate that overall American health today is in
>> worse shape than it
>> was in 1918. The healthier a person is going into a
>> sickness, the
>> better his or her chances are of emerging from it.
>> Sometimes it really
>> is just that simple.
>>
>> Indeed, a huge consideration in any modern-day
>> pandemic is
>> availability of and access to medical care. Poorer
>> people tend to live
>> in closer quarters and are more likely to have
>> occupations (military,
>> services, construction, etc.) in which they
>> regularly encounter large
>> numbers of people. According to a 1931 study of the
>> 1918 flu pandemic
>> by the U.S. Public Health Service, the poor were
>> about 20 percent to
>> 30 percent more likely to contract the flu, and
>> overall mortality
>> rates of the "well-to-do" were less than half that
>> of the "poor" and
>> "very poor."
>>
>> But the fourth factor, which will pull some of the
>> strength out of
>> any new pandemic, is even more basic than starting
>> health:
>> antibiotics. The 1918 pandemic virus was similar to
>> the more standard
>> influenza virus in that the majority of those who
>> perished died not
>> from the primary attack of the flu but from
>> secondary infections --
>> typically bacteria or fungal -- that triggered
>> pneumonia. While
>> antibiotics are hardly a silver bullet and they are
>> useless against
>> viruses, they raise the simple possibility of
>> treatment for bacterial
>> or fungal illnesses. Penicillin -- the first
>> commercialized antibiotic
>> -- was not discovered until 1929, 11 years too late
>> to help when panic
>> gripped the world in 1918.
>>
>>
>>



To: Henry Niman who wrote (2837)10/24/2005 11:01:16 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 4232
 

There has been human to human transmission of H5N1 since the beginning of 2004.


where is it ? in pittsburg ? in your dream ? in ligand lake ?

More Bird Flu in Russia, UN Says Keep Focus on Asia

By REUTERS
Published: October 24, 2005
Filed at 10:37 p.m. ET

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia confirmed more bird flu cases on Monday, raising fears it could spread over Europe, but a U.N. official said the best way to stop it was for donors to pay up and fight it where it began, among Asian fowl.

Skip to next paragraph The latest case in Russia killed 12 hens at a private dacha in Tambov, 400 km (250 miles) southeast of Moscow, last week. Authorities culled 53 ducks and hens and imposed a quarantine.

Tests confirmed it was the H5N1 avian flu strain which can infect humans, though not yet pass between them, officials said.


The European Union was poised to ban all imports of captive wild birds after a parrot died of H5N1 in quarantine in Britain.

More dead birds were found and taken for tests in Germany, Croatia, Hungary and Portugal as suspect cases multiplied.

But the numbers involved in Europe are still small and no humans there have been infected, unlike Asia where 61 people died after close contact with infected birds.

A World Health Organization official from Asia said Europe still had good prospects of stopping H5N1 reaching its tame bird population because it had reacted faster and more openly.

``There is an excellent chance for Europe to contain the Asian flu,'' said Shigeru Omi.

The U.N. food agency's head said the world must focus on Asia, and on stopping the virus passing between birds, as the best way to prevent the nightmare scenario of it mixing with a human strain to cause pandemic deadly flu.

``Too much time has gone by and even now we seem to focus more on addressing a possible pandemic which is spread from human to human,'' said Jacques Diouf, director general of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

``It's good to be ready should this happen. But for the time being we have 140 million birds killed or dying or have died because of avian influenza, with $10 billion of costs ... and it is still there (in Asia) that we are having contamination to human beings,'' he told Reuters in an interview in Canada.

He said the FAO had helped develop a $175 million strategy to control H5N1, which surfaced in South Korea two years ago, and had received pledges of $30 million in aid -- but donors had not yet handed over a single cent.

WESTWARDS

U.S. health officials, meanwhile, said on Monday they feared counterfeiters would try to cash in on the demand for Tamiflu, one of the few drugs that can treat bird flu, and said they were putting into effect measures to prevent this.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said it would work to help researchers and companies develop new flu drugs that might treat H5N1 and to work quickly to approve them.

Carried by migratory birds, H5N1 has now moved west as far as European Russia, Turkey and Romania.

``If, as we think, migratory birds will be one of the ways by which avian influenza is spreading around the world we can expect ... the problem in the Near East, in East and West Africa and naturally in North America and South America,'' said Diouf.

Croatia said it would cull more poultry after finding two more dead wild swans suspected of having an avian flu strain in a rural area where flu was found last week. The strain has yet to be identified.

Several geese and seagulls found dead north of Lisbon, in a fishing port where migrating birds are common, were being tested for flu, Portugal said.

German officials said on Monday night that 25 geese and ducks had been found dead in a pond near the town of Neuwied, close to the former German capital Bonn. Tests would be carried out on Tuesday to determine whether they had died of bird flu.

Countries in Europe, the Middle East and Africa have taken steps to try to stop migrating birds mixing with domestic fowl.

To close one possible channel of infection, the European Commission proposed a temporary ban on imports of wild fowl as pets. Veterinary experts will decide on Tuesday.

Fernand Sauer, director of public health and risk assessment at the European Commission, said confusion between different types of influenza was to blame for an exaggerated fear in Europe about the risks, which had reached hysteria.

Countries that have already suffered from flu outbreaks were redoubling their efforts to stop its return.

North Korea said mechanisms were in place to eliminate ``any slight symptoms in time,'' using its experience from an outbreak of a different strain earlier this year when more than 200,000 chickens were destroyed and 1.1 million poultry vaccinated.

A report that China would close its borders if it detected human-to-human transmission of bird flu unsettled Hong Kong stocks, with shares in hotels, retailers and airlines sliding.

An Australian firm said on Monday it was confident a vaccine it was testing in humans could protect against a pandemic form of the H5N1 virus unless it undergoes major genetic changes.

CSL Ltd, the world's largest maker of blood plasma products, has begun human vaccine trials using different dosages and hopes to know results by February.

More Articles in International >



To: Henry Niman who wrote (2837)10/26/2005 11:26:27 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4232
 
As it is said a liar is always a liar: henry niman -- once was a drowned liar in lake ligand and now lied about human to human bird flu case !!!!



To: Henry Niman who wrote (2837)11/2/2005 2:41:17 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 4232
 
Just a Drill, but Flu Shots Were Real, and Popular
By SHADI RAHIMI
The city's health department offered free flu vaccines yesterday to anyone who showed up at a clinic in Chelsea. It was an experiment to simulate what might happen during a major outbreak, and the answer seemed to be: plenty of waiting.

A couple of hundred people were waiting when the clinic opened at 7:30 a.m. at Covenant House, the children's shelter on West 17th Street. Although precise figures were not tabulated, nearly 4,000 people were vaccinated, and the operation was extended 40 minutes beyond the 9 p.m. closing time last night.

Many waited two to three hours - or more - for a shot.

They were from all walks of life, the healthy and sick, elderly people brought by caretakers, parents with children in tow, the unemployed and people in business suits. While some said it went smoothly, others doubted the city's ability to handle a pandemic.

Gene Geisert, a 78-year-old Manhattan resident who had been waiting for two hours, pointed to the few hundred people seated around him inside the sweltering auditorium at Covenant House. "There's no pandemic, and it's absolutely jammed in here," he said. "It's going fairly well for what they're doing now. But in an emergency, I just don't know."

The commissioner of the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Dr. Thomas R. Frieden, said during a news conference yesterday morning that a flu pandemic would present "an enormous challenge" for the city. The clinic was conducted to test how quickly a large number of people could be vaccinated during an emergency, he said.

The department aimed to administer 250 shots per hour but was moving at a much slower pace earlier yesterday morning because there was "more interest than anticipated," Dr. Frieden said.

Fear about the bird flu that has killed dozens of people in Asia is driving many New Yorkers to get flu shots this season, Dr. Frieden said, although there is in fact no vaccine that protects against the H5N1 strain of avian influenza.

Two hours after the Chelsea clinic opened, only about 300 vaccines had been administered, Dr. Frieden said. By 1 p.m., about 50 people were lined up for tickets and forms outside Covenant House while a few hundred others waited inside. By that time, nearly 1,000 people had received their shots.

By 3 p.m., the clinic had moved into the larger gymnasium next to the auditorium to accommodate more workers. A staff member in the gym noted that the clinic was behind schedule but indicated the rows of workers at tables checking paperwork and giving injections: "These people are working their fingers to the bone."

Later, the pace picked up, with workers administering about 350 shots per hour, officials said.

People seeking shots gave different reasons for putting up with the wait. Until now, public clinics had limited vaccines to the elderly or people with serious health problems. And while the health department has directed those with insurance to private doctors, some who were waiting said their doctors had no vaccine available.

Most people occupied their time by reading newspapers or books, listening to music, sleeping in their seats, studying the numbers on their tickets or complaining about the wait to the people next to them. With other appointments pending, some left in frustration, giving up their tickets to others. Others left to run errands or have lunch, returning an hour or more later to learn their numbers had yet to be called.

The 563rd person in line, Gloria Rosado, a 29-year-old Manhattan resident, said she made it to her Upper East Side bank and back with plenty of time left to wait.

Ms. Rosado said she came to the clinic because her doctor told her he had not received any vaccine.

"I always get sick," she said. "If you're a betting person, you can bet on that. I'm terrified of getting shots, but I don't want to get sick. The last time I got the flu, it hit me like a Mack truck."

Ms. Rosado was among many others at the clinic who did not suffer from serious health problems, but wanted to avoid the flu.

For example, Kaylie Keesling, a 21-year-old Brooklyn Heights resident, said she got the flu last year and was not able to attend school or go to work for two weeks.

Ms. Keesling, a college student whose Florida health insurance company does not extend her coverage to New York, arrived at the clinic at 1:10 p.m. and waited in a line outside, behind several dozen people. "I expected to wait," she said with a shrug. "Nothing is free, and when it is, people come running."

Others were less patient. Nieves Mejia, 60, of Chelsea, left the auditorium to go for a walk, and then to get coffee. She waited two hours to get her shot from the free clinic because her doctor had also told her that he did not have any vaccine.

"It's terrible," said Ms. Mejia, who received her shot at 10:25 a.m. "I didn't expect anything like this."

By holding the clinic, the department aimed to test its operations, including how seamlessly it can redeploy personnel, and to collect suggestions through evaluation forms about how to improve its clinics, said a deputy commissioner, Dr. Isaac Weisfuse.

The availability of the vaccine has improved this year compared with the last, he said, when there were widespread shortages.



To: Henry Niman who wrote (2837)11/3/2005 12:39:21 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 4232
 
nytimes.com
Poverty and Superstition Hinder Drive to Block Bird Flu at Source

By KEITH BRADSHER
Published: November 3, 2005
PREY ROGNIENG, Cambodia - When the half-starved chickens started dying this summer and the barefoot children developed fevers here in this village of thatched huts and emerald rice fields, residents were terrified and deeply divided about the cause of their misfortune.

Some blamed bird flu and took their weakened children to a clinic in a nearby provincial city, where a medic diagnosed human influenza instead. But other residents said it was witchcraft by the only village resident not born here, 53-year-old Som Sorn, who moved here eight years ago when she married an elderly local farmer.

When Mrs. Som Sorn's husband went into the jungle to cut wood one afternoon and she began cooking rice over a fire on the dirt floor of her hut, a local man with a machete took action and later collected $30 in donations from grateful neighbors, a month's wages.

"The assassin grabbed her hair, pulled her head back and cut her throat," said Ya Pheorng, the village leader. "Her neck was almost completely severed."

The sorcery allegation and grisly killing underline what United Nations and American officials describe as the difficulty of preventing a global human epidemic of bird flu: the disease is most prevalent among poultry and wild birds in impoverished rural areas of Southeast Asia with low levels of literacy, high levels of superstition and very little health care.

If the disease does make the jump from transmission by birds to person-to-person transmission, the crucial question will be whether the first few cases can be isolated quickly. If not, frightened people nearby could start fleeing, carrying the disease to big cities and then around the world by jet. In a telephone interview at the end of a recent weeklong trip to Southeast Asia, Michael O. Leavitt, the secretary of health and human services, compared the early stages of a flu pandemic to the beginnings of a forest fire.

"If one happens to be at the source of the spark, it's simple to put it out with your foot," he said. "The question is, will we be there?"

Only four countries, all in Southeast Asia, have had laboratory-confirmed human cases of bird flu so far: Cambodia, Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam. Cambodia is the poorest, with the most rudimentary health system outside urban areas.

Cambodia's difficulties and small successes in fighting bird flu are indicative of the struggle that lies ahead. Scientists predict the struggle could last for many years and may have to be fought in other poor areas as well, notably in India and Bangladesh and East Africa. But United Nations officials say the disease will probably remain most prevalent and most dangerous here in Southeast Asia, where chickens wander freely in and out of homes and even apartment buildings, mixing constantly and intimately with people to an extent not found in most other countries.

In two decades of turmoil beginning in the 1970's, most of Cambodia's doctors died in the Khmer Rouge's killing fields or fled the country. Many of the country's current generation of health care professionals can scarcely read or write and received rudimentary medical training in Vietnamese, a language they barely speak, during the Vietnamese occupation in the 1980's.

Since the first chickens began dying of bird flu in Cambodia in January 2004, the country has made some progress, with modest foreign assistance, in controlling the disease in poultry and keeping people healthy. Yet formidable gaps linger in the country's defenses.

Those gaps highlight the continued mismatch between limited efforts to slow the spread of bird flu among poultry in developing countries and increasingly large efforts by industrialized countries to prepare for a possible human outbreak. The United States and other industrialized countries are spending billions of dollars to stockpile antiviral medicines and other gear for treating people who may become infected. But the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization has been able to collect only $30 million from industrialized nations since February for a campaign to delay or prevent an epidemic, a little over one-sixth of the $175 million and rising that the F.A.O. says is needed.

In Phnom Penh, Cambodia's capital, American and German foreign aid has just helped supply the latest Western equipment to a virology lab at the Cambodian government's animal health department. But the virus samples are taken for testing from chicken carcasses brought in from all over the country to a moldering building next door. Researchers cut apart the carcasses in a room with no air-conditioning and a fan that blows air out the windows and across an alley. A crowded elementary school with no glass in its windows is just 10 yards away.

"They need to completely seal this area," said Dr. Lu Huaguang, a Pennsylvania State University avian virologist temporarily working in Phnom Penh to help set up the virology lab.

At the Food and Agriculture Organization's office a few blocks away, Tsukasa Kimoto, the chief representative, talks proudly of an innovative program to train the country's 6,000 village animal health workers to identify bird flu and report it immediately. But only 500 of these workers have been trained so far, he acknowledged, and the virus may be back soon, as it appears to be most active here from December through March.

Most of the poultry in Cambodia roams so freely that if one bird is found sick, it is practically impossible to catch and kill nearby birds to curb the spread of the disease, Mr. Kimoto said.

"Chasing those chickens one after another is a rather tedious thing - we don't have the people," he said.

12Next Page >



To: Henry Niman who wrote (2837)11/3/2005 10:01:40 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 4232
 
too busy hunting for human-human flu virus ??

To: bigpike who wrote (2564) 10/19/2005 7:35:43 PM
From: Henry Niman Read Replies (6) of 3073

There has been human to human transmission of H5N1 since the beginning of 2004.



To: Henry Niman who wrote (2837)11/3/2005 10:07:19 AM
From: re3  Respond to of 4232
 
any updates, Henry ?



To: Henry Niman who wrote (2837)11/3/2005 10:07:27 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4232
 
too busy hunting for human-human birdflu virus ?? what is the NEW henry niman LIE ? is it posted on niman website ???

To: bigpike who wrote (2564) 10/19/2005 7:35:43 PM
From: Henry Niman Read Replies (6) of 3073

There has been human to human transmission of H5N1 since the beginning of 2004.



To: Henry Niman who wrote (2837)11/16/2005 10:58:34 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 4232
 
healthpolitics.com
In humans, the appearance was less dramatic. H5N1 first infected a human population in Hong Kong in 1997. There were 18 documented cases and six deaths. It reappeared in 2 cases, causing one death in 2003, but shortly thereafter broke out in Vietnam, Thailand and Cambodia. As of June 2005, there were 100 documented human cases with a 54 percent mortality rate. Most transmission has been the result of direct contact with infected poultry. 1,2

But 100 deaths does not a pandemic make. You need three things for a pandemic. First, a highly virulent organism. Second, lack of human immunity to the organism. And third, the ability for easy transmission from human to human. 3 In 1918, H1N1 had all three. That’s why 20 to 40 million people died. In 2005, H5N1 has the first two, but not the third – at least not yet.



To: Henry Niman who wrote (2837)11/18/2005 10:14:49 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 4232
 
Star Rises in Fight Against Bird Flu
Demand for a Chinese Fruit Skyrockets

By Peter S. Goodman
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, November 18, 2005; D01

BEILIU, China -- For the past three decades, Qin Chenghao has lived the life of an ordinary farmer. He has tended to the trees covering the mountains that rise from the musty soil of southern China, harvesting the star-shaped fruit on their branches. Year after year, the same few traders arrive to buy his crop to sell as seasoning and traditional medicine.

This year, however, Qin's world changed. The star anise dangling from his trees emerged as a source for the key ingredient in Tamiflu, a pharmaceutical known to lessen the severity of avian flu. The output from his 1,300-acre Darong Mountain Star Anise Plantation in Guangxi province is now more than a simple means of spicing up stewed pork -- it is a crucial weapon in a global campaign against a pandemic that health experts say could kill tens of millions of people.

Qin's once-sleepy existence has given way to the life of an entrepreneur caught in a gold rush. The price of his crop has nearly tripled in the past four months, reaching about 80 cents per pound. Stocks have disappeared earlier in the season than anyone can remember, as Chinese pharmaceutical companies snap up what fruits they can to extract the shikimic acid contained within -- the substance that is the basis of Tamiflu.

"All of a sudden, our industry has become so important," Qin said, as he reached his chopsticks toward a plate of stir-fried wild greens before halting to answer a call on his cell phone. "Before, it was pretty quiet. Now, I answer my phone all day long. People call from all over the country. It's never been like this before."

With its semi-tropical climate and crowded cities and villages chockablock with pork and poultry farms, southern China is believed to be the source of the H5N1 avian influenza, which has been blamed for the deaths of at least 64 people in Asia since 2003. Now the very same area may hold the antidote as well. It literally grows on trees.

Dried star anise -- or bajiao , as it is called in Mandarin Chinese -- is a spice found in many Chinese kitchens, imparting a licorice-like taste to stewed meats. For as long as anyone can remember, Chinese doctors have prescribed bajiao to treat colic in babies, as well as headaches, abdominal pain and intestinal distress in adults.

More recently, farmers in northeastern China have mixed bajiao into animal feed because it keeps livestock warm through near-arctic winter months. Although most star anise is consumed domestically, a small export market also exists. The French, for example, are increasingly using star anise as flavoring for Pernod and other anisette liqueurs. And in the United States, star anise is found in five-spice powders available in grocery stores.

When Tamiflu was invented nearly a decade ago by researchers at Gilead Sciences Inc. in California, they used a different substance, quinic acid from the tropical cinchona tree. But when Roche Holding AG, the Swiss pharmaceutical giant, bought a license to make the drug, it substituted a form of star anise found in southwestern China.

This year, with bird flu hopscotching from Southeast Asia to Turkey to Britain, Roche has embarked on an expansion campaign aimed at increasing the production of Tamiflu tenfold over 2003 levels by the end of next year. Guangxi province -- home to 90 percent of China's star anise, which is itself the source of 90 percent of the global supply -- has become the heart of a crucial industry.

Health authorities do not recommend using star anise to try to ward off the flu. While production of Tamiflu starts with the acid contained in star anise, it involves multiple chemical steps, some using dangerous explosives, and the resulting drug does not remotely resemble the original material. Moreover, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration warned in 2003 that some star anise teas sold in health-food stores were making people dangerously ill. These were thought to be made from Japanese star anise, which contains a dangerous compound not present in the Chinese spice. The FDA warned that "Japanese star anise in its dried or processed form cannot be distinguished from Chinese star anise through visual examination."

In years past, little bajiao was purchased by pharmaceutical companies. Now, say traders, half the stocks are being bought by drugmakers, some of whom process star anise into shikimic acid for sale to Roche. Given that a freshly sprouted star anise tree takes six years to produce fruit, supply is likely to remain tight for some time.

Some 250 miles west of Hong Kong, this area lies far from the pharmaceutical laboratories where scientists contemplate preempting a pandemic. Peasants pedal bicycles past limestone hills, carrying ducks to market. Carts pulled by tractors haul coal to industrial furnaces. Farmers stand in the knee-deep muck of rice paddies under the shade of conical hats, hacking away with machetes at golden stems ready for harvest.

Qin, the general manager of the star anise plantation, has for years hired local villagers to pluck ripe fruit from his trees in the spring and fall. They dry the fruit on the ground under a pounding sun, then sell it to merchants from all over the country -- the first link in a complex distribution chain.

No one here seems to know what happens to the fruit after it is taken away, nor do most people grasp why more traders than ever are appearing. Some are vaguely aware of the connection to bird flu: Qin says he read about Tamiflu and star anise in a local newspaper. Most say they have heard nothing to explain the bonanza.

But they like the math involved. This year, Qin figures to earn $12,500 -- roughly double last year's income. He has invested his winnings into a local power plant venture, seeking to capitalize on another Chinese boom, the surging demand for energy.

Still, many villagers complain that they have not shared in the spoils because most sold their harvest before the price spike. If Chinese farmers have learned anything from their history, it is that famine and chaos can arrive with little warning. Conditioned against speculation, most farmers here sell what they have as soon as they have it.

"The middlemen make all the money," groused Lu Jimo, 81, as he laid out for sale a few small, plastic bags filled with the dried, burnt-amber fruit.

Usually, stocks of star anise last until Chinese New Year, in late January or early February. This year, most of the harvest was sold and shipped out in early November. Traders have grown desperate.

"They offer a high price and push us to find some," said Lan Zizhong, 26, a local middleman. "I get calls every day -- 'We'll take however much you can get' -- and I have to tell them I can't find any."

Much of the stock lands in a crowded market in the nearby city of Yulin, where traders come from as far away as northern China. Plastic sacks of dried star anise sit piled to the rafters in a warren of brick warehouses. But on a recent afternoon, little was for sale, amplifying the tight supply.

"We're holding on to what we have left to wait for a higher price," said Chen Chao, one merchant. "Every day, the price climbs."

As he spoke, a crew of men piled sacks high atop a truck headed for Anhui province in central China. A wholesaler from Zhejiang, a coastal province south of Shanghai, trolled the narrow alleyway for stocks for sale. Another crew pulled sacks from a warehouse to ready a shipment for Xian, a city full of pharmaceutical companies.

In a written statement, Roche said it relies on Chinese star anise for about two-thirds of its needed shikimic acid. The company said it is expanding efforts to increase production of the compound through a fermentation process that does not require star anise.

That might eventually cool the market here, and perhaps restore some tranquility. But obscurity might be gone forever.

"Now, all the foreigners know about us," Qin said.

Staff writer Justin Gillis and special correspondent Eva Woo contributed to this report.



To: Henry Niman who wrote (2837)11/18/2005 10:21:11 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 4232
 
Tracking Avian Flu
Since 2003, avian influenza has killed at least 64 people and spread from Southeast Asia to Europe
washingtonpost.com



To: Henry Niman who wrote (2837)11/18/2005 10:23:15 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 4232
 
washingtonpost.com

How far "bird flu" virus has traveled down the evolutionary path to becoming a pandemic virus is unknown. Nor is it certain that the much-feared strain will ever acquire all the genetic features necessary for rapid, worldwide spread. Nevertheless, the similarities between the Spanish flu virus of 1918 and the H5N1 strain slowly spreading through Asia provide unusually concrete evidence of how dangerous the newer virus is.



To: Henry Niman who wrote (2837)11/18/2005 10:38:29 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 4232
 
Facts About Bird Flu

Tuesday, October 18, 2005; 5:14 PM

Q: What is bird flu?

A: Avian influenza, or bird flu, is a virus that is highly contagious among wild birds and often fatal to domesticated birds and poultry. The H5N1 strain was first detected in humans in 1997 and has killed 60 people in Southeast Asia since 2003.


Flu Q&A
Bird Flu: How Big A Threat?
Avian flu is an imminent threat to health and well-being. For birds. In Asia and Eastern Europe. That reality is easily missed in the face of warnings of an impending global pandemic.

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Read what bloggers are saying about this article.
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Q: What are the symptoms of bird flu in humans?

A: Human symptoms can include typical flu-like symptoms, like fever, cough, sore throat and muscle aches, as well as eye infections, pneumonia and severe respiratory illness.

Q: How do humans get bird flu?

A: The virus is spread through contact with infected birds or contaminated surfaces. However, risk of infection in humans is low and person-to-person transmission is rare.

Q: What is the pandemic threat?

A: Scientists worry the H5N1 virus will mutate and become more easily spread from person to person, spurring a pandemic.

Q: How can doctors detect bird flu?

A: With a blood test.

Q: Is there a vaccine for bird flu?

A: There is no commercial vaccine currently available, but clinical trials for a vaccine against the H5N1 virus are underway.

Q: How is bird flu treated?

A: Research suggests that human flu drugs can be effective in treating H5N1 if administered quickly. But the virus can be resistant to such drugs.

Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention



To: Henry Niman who wrote (2837)5/11/2006 10:42:14 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4232
 
May 11, 2006
Migrating Birds Didn't Carry Flu
By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL
ROME, May 10 — Defying the dire predictions of health officials, the flocks of migratory birds that flew south to Africa last fall, then back over Europe in recent weeks did not carry the deadly bird flu virus or spread it during their annual journey, scientists have concluded.

International health officials had feared that the disease was likely to spread to Africa during the southward migration and return to Europe with a vengeance during the reverse migration this spring. That has not happened — a significant finding for Europe, because it is far easier to monitor a virus that exists domestically on farms but not in the wild. "It is quiet now in terms of cases, which is contrary to what many people had expected," said Ward Hagemeijer, a bird flu specialist with Wetlands International, an environmental group based in the Netherlands that studies migratory birds.

In thousands of samples collected in Africa this winter, the bird flu virus, A(H5N1), was not detected in a single wild bird, health officials and scientists said. In Europe, only a few cases have been detected in wild birds since April 1, at the height of the migration north.

The number of cases in Europe has fallen off so steeply compared with February, when dozens of new cases were found daily, that specialists contend that the northward spring migration played no role. The flu was found in one grebe in Denmark on April 28 — the last case discovered — and a falcon in Germany and a few swans in France, said the World Organization for Animal Health, based in Paris.

In response to the good news, agriculture officials in many European countries are lifting restrictions intended to protect valuable poultry from infected wild birds.

Last week, the Netherlands and Switzerland rescinded mandates that poultry be kept indoors. Austria has loosened similar regulations, and France is considering doing so. The cases in Europe in February were attributed to infected wild birds that traveled west to avoid severe cold in Russia and Central Asia but apparently never carried the virus to Africa. The international scientists who had issued the earlier warnings are perplexed, unsure if their precautions — like intensive surveillance and eliminating contact between poultry and wild birds — helped defuse a time bomb or if nature simply granted a reprieve.

"Is it like Y2K, where also nothing happened?" asked Juan Lubroth, a senior veterinary official at the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization in Rome, referring to the expected computer failures that did not materialize as 1999 turned to 2000. "Perhaps it is because it was not as bad as we feared, or perhaps it is because people took the right measures."

Still, he and others say, the lack of wild bird cases in Europe only underscores how little is understood about the virus. And scientists warn that it could return to Europe.

"Maybe we will be lucky and this virus will just die out in the wild," Mr. Lubroth said. "But maybe it will come back strong next year. We just don't have the answers."

The feared A(H5N1) bird flu virus does not now spread among humans, although scientists are worried it may acquire that ability through natural processes, setting off a worldwide pandemic. The less bird flu is present in nature and domestically on farms, the less likely it is for such an evolution to occur, they say.

Worldwide, bird flu has killed about 200 humans, almost all of whom were in extremely close contact with sick birds.

Specialists from Wetlands International, who were deputized by the Food and Agriculture Organization, sampled 7,500 African wild birds last winter in a search for the disease. They found no A(H5N1), Mr. Hagemeijer said, so it is not surprising that it did not return to Europe with the spring migration.

While bird flu has become a huge problem in poultry on farms in a few African countries, including Egypt, Nigeria and Sudan, specialists increasingly suspect that it was introduced in those countries through imported infected poultry and poultry products. Mr. Hagemeijer said the strength of the virus among wild birds possibly weakened as the southward migration season progressed, a trait he said was common in less dangerous bird flu viruses. That probably limited its spread in Africa, he said.

A(H5N1) is the most deadly of a large family of bird flu viruses, most of which produce only minor illness in birds.

Many bird flu viruses are picked up by migratory birds in their nesting places in northern lakes during the summer and fall breeding season. As the months pass, the viruses show a decreasing pattern of spread and contamination.

"So it tends to be mostly a north-to-south spread, and then it wanes," Mr. Hagemeijer said.

Still, this means that the cycle could start again this summer, if the virus — which can live for long periods in water — has persisted in those breeding areas. Many bird specialists contend that a small number of wetland lakes in Central Asia and Russia may harbor the virus all the time, serving as the origin of European and Central Asian infections.

Scientists still do not know which birds carry the virus silently and which die from it quickly, or how it typically spreads from wild bird to wild bird, or between wild birds and poultry.

Farm-based outbreaks of bird flu still occur constantly in a number of countries, although not in Europe. Ivory Coast had its first outbreak of bird flu, on a farm, last week.

But other countries, like Turkey, have made substantial progress in containing the disease among poultry, Mr. Lubroth said. He added that he hoped that quick measures to limit outbreaks had reduced the virus's spread in Africa.

After the virus was found on farms in Nigeria in January, many specialists expected it to spread rapidly among farms and into wild birds in the region. Apparently, it did not.

"Why didn't it sweep up the coast from Niger, to Benin and Senegal and back up through Europe? Why didn't it hit Africa's big lakes?" Mr. Lubroth asked.

"All we have are a few snapshots of the virus. What we need is a movie of its life cycle."

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To: Henry Niman who wrote (2837)5/13/2006 3:11:00 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 4232
 
May 14, 2006
Avian Flu Wanes in Asian Nations It First Hit Hard
By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr.
Even as it crops up in the far corners of Europe and Africa, the virulent bird flu that raised fears of a human pandemic has been largely snuffed out in the parts of Southeast Asia where it claimed its first and most numerous victims.

Health officials are pleased and excited. "In Thailand and Vietnam, we've had the most fabulous success stories," said Dr. David Nabarro, chief pandemic flu coordinator for the United Nations.

Vietnam, which has had almost half of the human cases of A(H5N1) flu in the world, has not seen a single case in humans or a single outbreak in poultry this year. Thailand, the second-hardest-hit nation until Indonesia recently passed it, has not had a human case in nearly a year or one in poultry in six months.

Encouraging signs have also come from China, though they are harder to interpret.

These are the second positive signals that officials have seen recently in their struggle to prevent avian flu from igniting a human pandemic. Confounding expectations, birds making the spring migration north from Africa have not carried the virus into Europe.

Dr. Nabarro and other officials warn that it would be highly premature to declare any sort of victory. The virus has moved rapidly across continents and is still rampaging in Myanmar, Indonesia and other countries nearby. It could still hitchhike back in the illegal trade in chicks, fighting cocks or tropical pets, or in migrating birds.

But this sudden success in the former epicenter of the epidemic is proof that aggressive measures like killing infected chickens, inoculating healthy ones, protecting domestic flocks and educating farmers can work, even in very poor countries.

Dr. Nabarro said he was "cautious in interpreting these shifts in patterns" because too little is known about how the disease spreads.

Other officials agreed.

"To say the disease is 'wiped out' there is probably too strong, too positive," said Dr. Wantanee Kalpravidh, chief of flu surveillance in Southeast Asia for the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization, which fights animal diseases. The governments of Thailand and Vietnam "believe they got rid of it," she said, "but they also believe that it might be coming back at any time."

Very different tactics led to success in the two countries.

While Vietnam began vaccinating all its 220 million chickens last summer, Thailand did not because it has a large poultry export industry, and other nations would have banned its birds indefinitely. (Vaccines can mask the virus instead of killing it.)

Instead, Thailand culled wide areas around infected flocks, compensated farmers generously and deputized a volunteer in every village to report sick chickens.

It vaccinates fighting cocks, which can be worth thousands of dollars, and even issues them passports with their vaccination records so they can travel, Dr. Nabarro said.

Government inspectors sample birds everywhere; in February, Thailand reported that samples from 57,000 birds had come back negative.

According to Dr. Klaus Stöhr, a flu specialist at the World Health Organization, Thailand and Vietnam also delivered the antiviral drug Tamiflu to even the smallest regional hospitals and told doctors to treat all flu patients even before laboratory diagnoses could be made.

Dr. Nabarro particularly praised the leaders of the two countries for ordering high-level officials — deputy prime ministers — to fight the disease, and for making sure that enough cash to entice farmers to hand over their birds for culling flowed down official channels without being siphoned off.

Hints suggest that the disease is also being beaten back in China, the country where it is assumed to have begun. International officials tend to greet official public health reports from China skeptically, in part because it concealed the outbreak of the SARS virus there for months. It did not officially report any bird cases for years, even though many scientists contend the virus incubated there between its first appearance in humans in Hong Kong in 1997 and the current human outbreak, which began in Vietnam in 2003.

Some top Chinese officials have blamed the reluctance of local officials to report bad news to Beijing. Dr. Nabarro said he recently met a vice premier "who made it clear that they are absolutely determined to get the fullest possible cooperation from provincial authorities."

China's reported human cases have remained low: 8 last year and 10 this year.

Perhaps more important, its poultry cases — which lead to human cases and increase the risk of a mutant pandemic strain — seem to be dropping.

According to the World Health Organization, China said it had outbreaks in 16 provinces in 2004. In 2005, it reported outbreaks in only 12 provinces, but one in November was so large that 2.5 million birds were culled to contain it.

After that, the Agriculture Ministry announced that it would vaccinate every domestic bird in China, which raises and consumes 14 billion chickens, ducks and geese each year. The official news agency reported about the same time that a fake flu vaccine, possibly with live virus in it, might have spread the disease.

Dr. Stöhr, who is in charge of W.H.O. flu vaccine efforts, said he was told by Chinese agriculture officials that the country was now producing 46 billion doses of poultry vaccine a year, and was supplying vaccines to Vietnam.

China's most recent monthly reports describe much smaller outbreaks than were previously common: findings of a few dead wild birds and culls of 126,000 birds in one spot and 16,000 in another, for example.

"We are hopeful that China has turned the corner," Dr. Nabarro said.

In Cambodia and Laos, which separate Thailand and Vietnam, the situation is vague.

Laos has reported no human cases and last reported poultry outbreaks two years ago. Cambodia's reported human cases dropped to two this year, from four last year. No poultry outbreaks were reported, but surveillance is so spotty that some must have occurred and gone unnoticed, Dr. Kalpravidh said, because the country's six human victims were infected by poultry.

Cambodia was slow to compensate farmers for their birds because of problems with corruption in a previous cash-for-guns program.

Health specialists generally agree that there is little clear chance of infected birds landing in the United States.

Where the Southeast Asian governments have taken action, however, the risk of the virus returning is ever present, Dr. Nabarro said.

For example, he said, it probably exists in Vietnam in Muscovy ducks, which can harbor the virus but do not get sick, and it has turned up in isolated birds in open-air markets near the Chinese border. (Single birds do not constitute an outbreak.) Since Chinese farmers can get three times as much for a chicken in Vietnam as they can at home, the temptation to smuggle persists.

"Tomorrow, the whole thing could change again," Dr. Nabarro said. "We need to be on the alert at all times."

5 Cases Confirmed in Indonesia

JAKARTA, Indonesia, May 13 (Reuters) — Local tests have confirmed that three Indonesians who died in the past week had avian flu, a Health Ministry official said Saturday.

Authorities have sent blood and swab samples of the three people — all from one family — to a World Health Organization-affiliated laboratory in Hong Kong. Local tests are not considered definitive.

A toddler and a 25-year-old man from the same North Sumatra family also tested positive for bird flu, but they are still alive, said Nyoman Kandun, a director general at the Health Ministry.



To: Henry Niman who wrote (2837)5/13/2006 7:41:25 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4232
 
March 28, 2006
AVIAN FLU: THE UNCERTAIN THREAT -- Q+A; How Serious Is the Risk?
By DENISE GRADY AND GINA KOLATA

1. How Serious Is the Risk?

Over the last year, it has been impossible to watch TV or read a newspaper without encountering dire reports about bird flu and the possibility of a pandemic, a worldwide epidemic. First Asia, then Europe, now Africa: like enemy troops moving into place for an attack, the bird flu virus known as A(H5N1) has been steadily advancing. The latest country to report human cases is Azerbaijan, where five of seven people have died. The virus has not reached the Americas, but it seems only a matter of time before it turns up in birds here.

Even so, a human pandemic caused by A(H5N1) is by no means inevitable. Many researchers doubt it will ever happen. The virus does not infect people easily, and those who do contract it almost never spread it to other humans. Bird flu is what the name implies: mostly an avian disease. It has infected tens of millions of birds but fewer than 200 people, and nearly all of them have caught it from birds.

But when A(H5N1) does get into people, it can be deadly. It has killed more than half of its known human victims--an extraordinarily high rate. Equally alarming is that many who died were healthy, not the frail or sickly types of patients usually thought to be at risk of death from influenza.

The apparent lethality of A(H5N1), combined with its inexorable spread, are what have made scientists take it seriously. Concern also heightened with the recent discovery that the 1918 flu pandemic was apparently caused by a bird flu that jumped directly into humans.

In addition, A(H5N1) belongs to a group of influenza viruses known as Type A, which are the only ones that have caused pandemics. All those viruses were originally bird flus. And given the timing of the past pandemics -- 1918, 1957, 1968 -- some researchers think the world is overdue for another. It could be any Type A, but right now (A)H5N1 is the most obvious.

The virus lacks just one trait that could turn it into a pandemic: transmissibility, the ability to spread easily from person to person. If the virus acquires that ability, a pandemic could erupt.

Everything hangs on transmissibility. But it is impossible to predict whether A(H5N1) will become contagious among people. The virus has been changing genetically, and researchers fear that changes could make it more transmissible, or that A(H5N1) could mix with a human flu virus in a person, swap genetic material and come out contagious.

But most bird flu viruses do not jump species to people. Some experts say that since A(H5N1) has been around for at least 10 years and the shift has not occurred, it is unlikely to happen. Others refuse to take that bet.

The A(H5N1) strains circulating now are quite different from the A(H5N1) strain detected in Hong Kong in 1997, which killed 6 of 18 human victims. Over time, A(H5N1) seems to have developed the ability to infect more and more species of birds, and has found its way into mammals -- specifically, cats that have eaten infected birds.

The actual number of human cases may well exceed the number that have been reported, and may include mild cases from which victims recovered without even seeing a doctor. If that is true, the real death rate could be lower. But no one knows whether mild cases occur, or whether some people are immune to the virus and never get sick at all.

In the absence of more information, health officials must act on what they see -- an illness that apparently kills half its victims.

2. Q. How will we know if the virus starts spreading from person to person and becomes a pandemic?

A. If there is a pandemic, it would be everywhere, not in just one city or one country. To detect such an event as early as possible there is an international surveillance system, involving more than 150 countries, that searches for signs that a new flu strain is taking hold in humans.

One hallmark of a pandemic flu would be an unusual pattern of illnesses -- lots of cases, possibly cases that are more severe than normal and, possibly, flu infections outside the normal flu season.

Ordinary human flu viruses, for reasons that are not entirely understood, circulate only in winter. But pandemics can occur at any time. A pandemic would also involve a flu virus that was new to humans, meaning that no one would have immunity from previous infections.

3. Q. If bird flu reaches the United States, where is it likely to show up first?

A. Although health officials expect bird flu to reach the United States, it is impossible to predict where it may show up first, in part because there are several routes it could take.

If it is carried by migrating birds, then it may appear first in Alaska or elsewhere along the West Coast.

But if the virus lurks in a bird being smuggled into the United States as part of the illegal trade in exotic birds, it could land in any international airport. Bird smuggling is a genuine problem: in 2004, a man was caught at an airport in Belgium illegally transporting eagles from Thailand, stuffed into tubes in his carry-on luggage.

The birds turned out to be infected with A(H5N1), and they and several hundred other birds in a quarantine area at the airport had to be destroyed.

In theory, an infected human could also bring bird flu into the United States, and that person could fly into just about any international airport and go unnoticed if the virus had yet to produce any symptoms.

4. Q. Does bird flu affect all birds?

A. No one knows the full story. Scientists say A(H5N1) is unusual because it can infect and kill a wide variety of birds, unlike a vast majority of bird flus, which are usually found in wild birds, not domestic fowl, and which cause few symptoms.

Some researchers suspect that wild ducks, or perhaps other wild birds, are impervious to A(H5N1), and may be the Typhoid Marys of bird flu -- getting the virus, spreading it to other birds but never becoming ill themselves. No one has good evidence of this yet, but that may be because the way scientists discovered A(H5N1) infections was by finding birds that had gotten the flu and died.

As virologists like to point out, dead birds don't fly. So migratory birds cannot spread the virus if they are dying shortly after being infected. That is why some researchers say that if wild birds are spreading the A(H5N1) virus, it must be a bird species that can be infected but does not become ill.

5. Q. When people die from avian flu contracted from birds, what kills them?

A. Like victims of severe pneumonia, many patients die because their lungs give out. The disease usually starts with a fever, fatigue, headache and aches and pains, like a typical case of the flu. But within a few days it can turn into pneumonia, and the patients' lungs are damaged and fill with fluid.

In a few cases, children infected with A(H5N1) died of encephalitis, apparently because the virus attacked the brain. A number of people have also had severe diarrhea -- not usually a flu symptom -- meaning that this virus may attack the intestines as well. Studies in cats suggest that in mammals the virus attacks other organs, too, including the heart, liver and adrenal glands.

But more detailed information about deaths in people is not available because very few autopsies have been done. In some countries, like Vietnam, where many of the deaths occurred, autopsies are frowned upon. Researchers say they may glean useful information from autopsies, but fear that pressing for them would alienate the public in some areas.

6. Q. When experts refer to bird flu as A(H5N1), what does that mean?

(See chart and diagram for explanation)

7. Q. If I got bird flu, how would I know?

A. There is no reason to suspect the disease unless you may have been exposed to it. Since the virus has not reached North America, doctors do not look for bird flu in people unless they have traveled to affected regions or have been exposed to sick or dead birds.

The early stages of the illness in people are the same as those of ordinary flu: fever, headache, fatigue, aches and pains. But within a few days, people with bird flu often start getting worse instead of better; difficulty breathing is what takes many to the hospital. In any case, patients with flulike symptoms that turn severe or involve breathing trouble are in urgent need of medical care.

8. Q. Can I be tested for avian flu?

A. There is no rapid test for bird flu. There is a rapid test for Type A influenza viruses, the group that A(H5N1) belongs to, but the test is only moderately reliable, and it is not specific for A(H5N1).

State health departments and some research laboratories can perform genetic testing for A(H5N1) and give results within a few hours, but they do not have the capacity to perform widespread testing.

Because of the limited availability of testing and the extremely low probability of A(H5N1) in people in the United States, the test is recommended only for patients strongly suspected of having bird flu, like travelers with flulike symptoms who were exposed to infected birds.

9. Q. Do any medicines treat or prevent bird flu?

A. Two prescription drugs, Tamiflu and Relenza, may reduce the severity of the disease if they are taken within a day or two after the symptoms begin. But Relenza, a powder that must be inhaled, can irritate the lungs and is not recommended for people with asthma or other chronic lung diseases.

Both drugs work by blocking an enzyme -- neuraminidase, the ''N'' part of A(H5N1) -- that the virus needs to escape from one cell to infect another. But just how effective these medicines are against A(H5N1) is not known, nor is it clear whether the usual doses are enough. Also unknown is whether the drugs will help if taken later in the course of the disease.

Although government laboratories and other research groups are trying to develop vaccines to prevent A(H5N1) disease in people, none are available yet.

10. Q. If there is an epidemic of flu in humans, how can I protect myself?

A. If there is a vaccine available, that would be the best option. But if there is no vaccine it may be hard to avoid being infected. Flu pandemics spread quickly, even to isolated regions. The 1918 flu reached Alaskan villages where the only way visitors could arrive was by dog sled.

The vaccines produced every year to prevent seasonal flu are unlikely to be of any use in warding off a pandemic strain. But a flu shot could provide at least some peace of mind, by preventing the false alarm that could come from catching a case of garden-variety flu.

Similarly, people over 65 and others with chronic health problems should consult their doctors about whether they should be vaccinated against pneumococcal pneumonia, a dangerous illness that can set in on top of the flu. Again, that vaccine will not stop bird flu, but it may prevent complications.

Some health officials have recommended stockpiling two to three months' worth of food, fuel and water in case a pandemic interferes with food distribution or staffing levels at public utilities, or people are advised to stay home.

Many health experts have advised against stockpiling Tamiflu or Relenza, the prescription-only antiviral drugs that may work against bird flu. Doctors say the drugs are in short supply and hoarding may keep them out of reach of people who genuinely need them.

Also, they say, self-prescribing may lead to waste of the drugs or misuses that spur the growth of drug-resistant viruses. But people may not trust the government to distribute these drugs, and may want their own supplies.

Doctors say people can take precautions like avoiding crowds, washing their hands frequently and staying away from those who are sick.

Masks may help, but only if they are a type called N-95, which has to be carefully fitted. So far, masks and gloves have been recommended only for people taking care of sick patients.

Avoiding the flu can be hard because it is not

always possible to spot carriers. Many people

get and spread flu viruses and but never know

they are infected.

11. Q. Is the government prepared for a bird flu pandemic?

A. No. The nation does not have an approved flu vaccine for people or enough antiviral drugs or respirators for all who would need them. The best protection in any flu pandemic will come from a vaccine, but scientists cannot tell ahead of time what strain the vaccine should protect against.

Efforts are under way to make a vaccine for A(H5N1). But the virus could mutate in a way that makes experimental vaccines ineffective, requiring more than one vaccine.

Moreover, there is no assurance that the next pandemic will even involve A(H5N1). It may involve a different strain of bird flu, and an

A(H5N1) vaccine would not work for it. Recent efforts to develop a sort of universal flu vaccine that would work across strains have failed.

For now, the hope is to spot a pandemic early and quickly make a vaccine. Investigators are developing new and better ways to make vaccines -- a bird flu, for example, cannot be grown in fertilized eggs like other flu viruses because it kills the chicken embryos -- but these new methods must first be approved by the Food and Drug Administration.

Preparations also include government plans to stockpile drugs to protect people who were exposed to the flu and to reduce the severity of the disease in those who are ill. But the one antiviral drug that everyone wants to buy and stockpile, Oseltamivir, also sold by Roche as Tamiflu, is in short supply.

In retrospect, scientists say, maybe the nation should have started preparing sooner. But until the current bird flu appeared, there was little interest in such expensive and extensive preparations.

12. Q. If bird flu reaches the United States, will it be safe to eat poultry or to be around birds or other animals?

A. Poultry is safe to eat when it is cooked thoroughly, meaning that the meat is no longer pink and has reached a temperature of 180 degrees Fahrenheit. The risk is not from cooked meat -- cooking kills viruses. Instead, it is from infected birds that are still alive or have recently died. So the person who killed an infected chicken, butchered it or put it in the pot would be at greater risk than the one who ate it.

It's not clear how long the virus lives on a dead bird, but it is unlikely to survive more than a couple of days. And it seems unlikely that infected chicken will find its way to supermarkets.

If the bird flu strikes poultry farms, the farmers will know there is a problem. Before they die, the birds develop major hemorrhages, with blood streaming from their cloacas and beaks. When the flu gets to a poultry farm, farmers have to destroy their flocks, and poultry from infected farms cannot be sold for meat.

As for contact with healthy birds or animals, there is no need to panic. The A(H5N1) virus is a nasty one. If chickens or other animals became infected they would get sick and die, and you would know the virus was present.

But animals can carry many diseases besides influenza, and whenever you are around animals it is a good idea to wash your hands afterward. Because cats in Europe have caught A(H5N1), apparently from eating infected birds, health officials there advise keeping pet cats indoors, but no such recommendation has been made in the United States.

For now, officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say it is safe to have bird feeders, and they note that even if the virus does arrive here, the kinds of birds that perch at feeders are far less likely to carry A(H5N1) than are aquatic birds like ducks and geese.

13. Q. Is it safe to buy imported feather pillows, down coats or comforters and clothing or jewelry with feathers?

A. Imported feathers may not be safe. There is a risk to handling products made with feathers from countries with outbreaks of bird flu, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Feathers from those countries are banned in the United States unless they have been processed to destroy viruses.