WSJournal - Concerns Grow About New Avian-Flu St
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WSJournal - Concerns Grow About New Avian-Flu Strain
Disease May Move Easily to Humans;
U.S. Is Preparing to Develop a Vaccine.
BEIJING—Concerns about a deadly new strain of bird flu intensified Friday as the disease claimed a sixth life in eastern China and agricultural authorities in Shanghai ordered a wide-scale slaughter of poultry in an effort to stem its spread.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned U.S. public-health departments and physicians to be on the lookout for signs of the new virus, a variant of the H7N9 strain of avian flu. The CDC said it is developing a diagnostic kit to send to U.S. states and China, and is working on a seed virus for a vaccine that could be prepared should the disease start spreading human-to-human.
VIDEO - China is killing all poultry at a Shanghai market as the bird-flu death toll rose to six people. Dr. Leo Poon of the University of Hong Kong tells us more about the newest strain of the virus.
Flu experts said they are concerned about the new virus because it exhibits signs of being more readily able to infect humans from ailing birds than is another form of avian flu known as H5N1, which has been infecting people off and on for more than a decade.
China now has confirmed 16 cases of H7N9 nationwide, with patients ranging in age from 4 to 87, who became ill between Feb. 19 and March 31. The number of cases, while small, is large for the early stages of an outbreak, and some flu experts said the fact that they are spread over a relatively wide geographic area is reason for concern.
Among the people found to be infected, several are believed to have been in close contact with birds, including a 48-year-old who transported poultry, a 45-year-old poultry butcher and a 38-year-old chef.
Authorities stressed they have yet to find a case of human-to-human transmission, which would make the disease more dangerous; the cases they have seen appear to come from human contact with birds.
Shanghai technicians wearing protective suits began Friday to cull poultry at a wholesale market where the H7N9 bird-flu virus was detected.
"So far there is no evidence that the H7N9 virus can be spread between human beings, which makes us relieved," Wu Fan, director of the Shanghai Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said Friday.
Chinese authorities are investigating illnesses in the families of two of the people who had confirmed H7N9, to see if any members have the disease—a finding that could suggest human transmission.