UN health body confirms 4 Egypt bird flu cases
Posted on: Monday, 3 April 2006, 06:50 CDT
CAIRO (Reuters) - The World Health Organization (WHO) has confirmed that four Egyptians have caught bird flu, including two who died from the virus, an Egyptian health ministry official said on Monday.
Nasr al-Sayyed told Reuters that a WHO laboratory in Britain had verified the four cases. The result was received on Sunday, he said. The Egyptian government sends samples from people it suspects have caught the virus to the WHO for final confirmation.
The government says a total of eight Egyptians have been infected by bird flu. Two of those have recovered, while the others are still being treated.
Bird flu has killed at least 105 people worldwide, according to the most recent figures from the WHO. That figure does not include the deaths in Egypt.
The virus was first detected in Egypt in birds in February and has devastated the poultry industry. The government has banned domestic rearing of fowl, but people in poor rural areas are ignoring instructions to get rid of their poultry.
Bird flu has so far not been transmitted from human to human, but can be caught from infected birds. Although difficult for humans to catch, scientists fear it could mutate into a form that can pass easily between humans.
Source: REUTERS
Related Articles
- Canada finds bird flu, unclear what virus strain
- Government Working on New Bird Flu Vaccine
- Poland reports first case of bird flu
- Team to Study Bird Flu in Turkey
- Limits Found in Bird Flu Drug's Use Virus Can Become Invulnerable Rapidly
- Bird Flu Study Shows Virus Evolution in Action
- Bracing for Bird Flu
- Bird Flu 'Bad, Bad Virus' -- St. Jude Expert Says Outbreak 'a Matter of Time'
- Bird Flu Alert: Deadly Virus: How It Began and Why It is Spreading Our Way
- Bird Flu Pandemic Would Drain Drug Supply
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds