PDA

View Full Version : "Deadly" Bird Flu Has Killed Only 88 People In The Entire World



Gold9472
02-11-2006, 12:49 PM
Deadly bird flu spreads in Europe

http://www.cnn.com/2006/HEALTH/02/11/birdflu.wrap/index.html

(Gold9472: Put it in perspective. 88 people is NOTHING compared to the amount of people that die from Cancer, AIDS, Parkinson's Disease, etc...)

Saturday, February 11, 2006; Posted: 8:31 a.m. EST (13:31 GMT)

ROME, Italy -- The deadly H5N1 bird flu strain that has killed at least 88 people around the world has been detected in Italy and Greece, according to officials.

The virus was found in swans in three Italian regions: Puglia and Calabria in southern Italy, and Sicily, Health Minister Francesco Storace told reporters on Saturday.

He did say exactly how many birds had been infected by the virus. But he said that the "most part" of 17 swans who were found dead were infected by H5N1.

"It's certain that the virus has reached Italy," The Associated Press reported Storace as saying after he briefed the Cabinet on the situation.

No human cases of infection have been reported in Italy.

Greek authorities also revealed on Saturday the deadly strain of bird flu was found in northern Greece, according to television reports.

On Friday, health officials in Azerbaijan say H5N1 was found in dead birds from the country's Caspian sea coast.

State-run Lider TV cited the results from a London laboratory that had tested the dead birds and the Ministry of Health is expected to make the announcement Friday.

Meanwhile, Nigerian authorities say they are mounting a major effort to battle the virus, which has been detected in two more states, and has so far killed more than 100,000 birds.

This is the first time the strain has been found in Africa, although no human infections have yet been reported in Nigeria.

Bird flu began ravaging poultry stocks across Asia in 2003, forcing the slaughter of 140 million birds. It has since spread to Europe and the Middle East.

So far the World Health Organization has confirmed 165 human cases of the disease in a number of nations, including Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Iraq, Thailand, Turkey and Vietnam.

Eighty-eight of those have proven fatal, a fatality rate of 53 percent.

But public health experts worry that if the virus mutates, it could pick up the ability to spread rapidly from person to person. If that were to happen, a global pandemic might ensue, killing millions of people.

On Thursday, China's Ministry of Health reported an 11th person was sickened by the virus, a 26-year-old female farmer in the southeastern province of Fujian. She has been hospitalized in a stable condition.

Seven of the 11 cases in China have so far proven fatal.

Not bode well for Africa
The discovery of the disease in one part of Africa does not bode well for the rest of the continent, said Alex Thiermann, special adviser to the director general of the World Organization for Animal Health.

"We have been saying for a while that were the disease to get to Africa, it's a continent where most countries have very weak veterinary infrastructure," he told CNN.

"And we know from our experience in Eastern Europe and in Southeast Asia that the rapidity to which the disease can be fought, and how quickly we can eliminate it ... is very directly related to the quality of the veterinary infrastructures."

Nigerian Information Minister Frank Nweke Jr. said three farms were quarantined, one each in the states of Kaduna, Kano and Jos and that they could be out of operation for up to a year.

He said the government was paying farmers 250 naira ($1.95) for each bird culled to compensate for their loss and to encourage other farmers to report diseased birds.

World Organization for Animal Health spokeswomen Maria Zampaglione told CNN they would assemble a team of bird flu experts to send to Nigeria by the end of the week and that the government was being helpful in its assistance.

Part of the team's job, she said, will be to determine how the birds came to be infected.

jetsetlemming
02-11-2006, 01:06 PM
Does that 88 count the animals? ANIMALS ARE PEOPLE, TOO! Think of all the poor chickens massacred... :P

somebigguy
02-11-2006, 02:10 PM
How many people have died because of government meddling and/or incompetence?

I think those people need to be eradicated first before we worry about some pathetic little bird flu.

Gold9472
02-11-2006, 02:13 PM
How many people have died because of government meddling and/or incompetence?

I think those people need to be eradicated first before we worry about some pathetic little bird flu.

"those people" need to be tried for their crimes... in a court of law that does not consist of judges or jurors on the "payroll". Let the chips fall where they may. I agree some need to hang for their crimes.

PhilosophyGenius
02-11-2006, 03:23 PM
Like I was saying before, it's just an excuse to have big give-aways to major corporations. Not even in a million years will the bird flue kill a million people.

:chknride:
Fuck the Bird Flu!