New bird flu strain reaches Beijing

New bird flu strain reaches Beijing
Updated 14 April 2013
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New bird flu strain reaches Beijing

New bird flu strain reaches Beijing

BEIJING: A seven-year-old girl is Beijing’s first human case of H7N9 bird flu, local authorities said yesterday as China’s outbreak of the disease spread to the capital.
The girl, whose parents are poultry traders, was in a stable condition in hospital, the Beijing health bureau said. Her mother and father had been quarantined for observation but had shown no symptoms so far, it added.
She developed a fever, sore throat and headache on Thursday and her parents took her to hospital. Samples from her tested positive for H7N9 the following day, and the national disease control center confirmed the results yesterday.
Chinese officials announced nearly two weeks ago that they had found the H7N9 strain in humans for the first time, and the number of confirmed infections rose to 49 yesterday, 11 of whom have died.
Until the girl’s illness, all previous cases had been confined to eastern China, hundreds of kilometers from the capital.
Experts fear the prospect of such viruses mutating into a form easily transmissible between humans, which would have the potential to trigger a pandemic.
But the World Health Organization (WHO) said this week that there was as yet no evidence of human-to-human transmission.
One of the newly reported cases was a man in Shanghai whose wife had been confirmed with H7N9 and died earlier this month, the official Xinhua news agency reported, but it quoted health experts saying there was insufficient evidence to show he had acquired it from his wife.
Health authorities in China say they do not know exactly how the virus is spreading, but it is believed to be crossing to humans from birds, triggering mass poultry culls in several cities.
The United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization (FA0) has said H7N9 shows “affinity” to humans while causing “very mild or no disease” in infected poultry, making finding the source of transmission more difficult.

Cheng Jun, vice-director of Ditan hospital, where the girl was being treated, told state television: “Ever since the outbreak started in Shanghai we have been making preparations.”
Beijing, which has a population of more than 20 million, has already banned live poultry trading and pigeon releases, the health bureau said.
More than 500 birds were culled in the area where the family live in northeastern Beijing but samples tested negative for H7N9, Xinhua said, citing officials.
It added that the city drug administration had been ordered to stock up, including on enough Tamiflu — the medicine most commonly used to treat bird flu in humans — for two million people.
China has said it expects to have a vaccine ready in seven months but in the article the US experts said developing one could take “many months.”