Bird flu kills Cambodian boy, Egyptian baby infected
PHNOM PENH (Reuters) – The death of a boy of 12 in Cambodia
and the case of a sick baby girl in Egypt underlined on
Wednesday the threat posed to children by the bird flu virus.
In Europe, experts called for new precautions because cats,
and possibly other mammals, can be infected and could spread
the virus. Dr Albert Osterhaus, of Erasmus University in
Rotterdam warned that cats may help the virus to adapt into a
more highly infectious strain in humans which could spark a
pandemic.
H5N1 bird flu has spread rapidly across Europe and the
Middle East in recent weeks, and has flared anew in Asia.
Germany said on Wednesday that tests had shown a form of
H5N1 had spread to domestic fowl in the eastern state of
Saxony.
Several European Union countries, including Germany, have
reported cases of avian flu in wild birds, but most have
managed to keep it out of domestic flocks. France, in February,
was the first EU nation to report an outbreak on a domestic
farm.
Bird flu remains essentially an animal disease, but can
infect people who come into direct contact with infected birds.
It has killed 108 people since late 2003, according to the most
recent figures from the World Health Organization.
Experts fear it will mutate into a form that passes easily
from person to person, sparking a pandemic in which millions
could die and crippling the global economy.
Children who play outdoors in areas shared with backyard
poultry are one of the groups most at risk.
In the latest case in Cambodia, a boy from the southeastern
province of Prey Veng, abutting Vietnam, died on Tuesday night,
said Michael O’Leary, the WHO representative in Phnom Penh.
He said a laboratory in the capital confirmed the boy was
infected with the H5N1 avian flu virus.
CAT CAUTION
Two Egyptian women have died of bird flu in recent weeks.
Egypt said its latest human case was a baby girl from the
south of the country whose father raised birds in his home.
“This case was discovered on Tuesday and tests carried out
… showed that the case was positive,” Health and Population
Minister Hatem el-Gabali said, adding that she was in a stable
condition after receiving treatment.
Fears over the virus have grown in pet-loving Europe after
reports that cats had in Germany had become infected.
Animals such as dogs, foxes, ferrets and seals may also be
vulnerable to infection, researchers said in a commentary in
the journal Nature.
They recommended that in areas where avian flu is endemic,
cats should not be in contact with birds or their droppings.
Cats may need to be kept indoors and if animals or other
carnivores show signs of illness they should be tested for
H5N1.
“Perhaps there is a case for developing a vaccine for cats
as well,” Osterhaus told Reuters.
There is no evidence that people can contract bird flu
through eating properly cooked meat, but the spread of the
virus has depressed poultry sales in many markets.
Germany said it would start culling to prevent the spread
of bird flu after finding it on a farm which houses more than
16,000 turkey, geese and chickens. Follow-up tests were being
carried out at a national veterinary disease agency to confirm
it was the highly pathogenic form of the virus.
“This is the first case of H5N1 in domestic fowl (in
Germany) and this makes it somewhat explosive,” Saxony’s
Minister of Social Affairs, Helma Orosz, told a news
conference. “Tonight we will start to kill all the birds.”
(Reporting by Darren Schuettler in Bangkok, Amil Khan in
Cairo, Pat Reaney in London and Louis Charbonneau in Berlin)
