Scientists discover new bird flu strain that evades all vaccines and eradication measures
(NaturalNews) The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences today
heard about a previously unknown, dangerous strain of H5N1 bird flu
discovered in southern China, which is spreading from birds to people in
Southeast Asia and sparking fears of a third wave of infection from
the disease.
According to a team from State Key Laboratory of Emerging Infectious
Diseases and St. Jude's Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, Tenn.,
the H5N1 strain still mostly affects birds, and only infects people
with close, prolonged association with infected
birds or people, but this new strain could be the key to its development
into a version easily transmittable between humans. If that happens, it
would likely kick off a pandemic that could claim millions of lives.
The team monitored
H5N1 in market chickens, ducks and geese, and found the new strain emerged
last year, displacing previous strains in southern China by early this
year. The compulsory
chicken vaccination program did not stop the strain; indeed the
scientists suggest it may have even exacerbated the
virus.
The new strain has spread across China, especially in urban and rural
areas, and also to Hong Kong, Laos, Malaysia and Thailand in what the
team is calling a new outbreak wave in Southeast
Asia.
"The predominance of this virus over a large geographical region within a short period directly challenges current
disease control measures," the team concluded.
"The implications of this study are that current control measures, as generally practiced to control avian
influenza,
are ineffective," said professor Yi Guan of the University of Hong
Kong, leader of the team describing the virus at the proceedings. He
added that there was no information yet that suggested the new strain
was any more highly pathogenic or a more likely candidate for pandemic
than any other H5N1 subtype. A strain currently found in Eurasian and
African
poultry populations is considered the most likely candidate for pandemic influenza.
However, the new strain illustrates how more frequent and broader
flu surveillance is needed in both poultry and humans, the team said, otherwise identifying a human outbreak will be difficult.
According to official World Health Organization figures, H5N1 has so far infected a total of 256 people, 152 of who have died.
Source:-
http://www.naturalnews.com/020937_bird_flu_H5N1.html