Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: flu + bird + deadly Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008) | | News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version | Results 1 - 10 of about 244 for flu bird deadly. (0.11 seconds) |
| | Hunters can help keep out bird fluFlorida Today, FL - Nov 28, 2008Even a positive hit for one of avian bird flu's less harmful cousin viruses would be of concern. "It would probably be something to worry about, ... |
Gombe wipes out bird fluDaily Champion, Nigeria - Nov 27, 2008... Vet nary Research Institute (NVRI) Vom, Plateau state where it was discovered that the virus was more deadly than the common HN51 bird flu," Toro said. |
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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: health + flu + bird Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)GPs refuse to treat bird flu patientsNEWS.com.au, Australia - Australian Medical Association state president Dr Peter Ford said most doctors had received no formal training in dealing with a flu pandemic. SA Health ... |
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Source: Google News Avian flu: H 5 N 1 virus outbreak in migratory waterfowl - H Chen, GJD Smith, SY Zhang, K Qin, J Wang, KS Li, … - Nature, 2005 - palgrave-journals.com ... Figure 1 : H5N1 flu strains in wild birds in ... might be carried along the birds' winter
migration ... World Health Organization Inter-country Consultation Influenza A ...
Global task force for influenza - R Fouchier, T Kuiken, G Rimmelzwaan, A Osterhaus - Nature, 2005 - nature.com ... An outbreak of avian flu among chickens in the Netherlands in 2003 led to the culling
of 31 million birds. Initially, the ministry of health issued warnings ...
[PDF] Fear of human pandemic grows as bird flu sweeps through Asia - A Abbott, H Pearson - Nature, 2004 - lib.cau.edu.cn ... months. Cutting the links: health officials are culling chickens in a concerted
effort to halt the spread of bird flu to humans. In ...
PUBLIC HEALTH: Enhanced: Will Vaccines Be Available for the Next Influenza Pandemic? - K Stohr, M Esveld - Science, 2004 - sciencemag.org ... Dangers of "Bird Flu" is a presentation of the University of Wisconsin's Why Files.
The Animal Production and Health Division of the Food and Agriculture ...
PUBLIC HEALTH: Enhanced: Public Health Risk from the Avian H5N1 Influenza Epidemic - NM Ferguson, C Fraser, CA Donnelly, AC Ghani, RM … - Science, 2004 - sciencemag.org ... 2004 Science Update by A. Abbott and H. Pearson titled "Bird flu sweeps through
Asia" (1) is made available. The Pacific Public Health Surveillance Network ...
INFECTIOUS DISEASES: Bird Flu Infected 1000, Dutch Researchers Say - M Enserink - Science, 2004 - sciencemag.org ... becoming infected, perhaps because the birds replicated the ... to be corroborat- ed,
cautions flu specialist Maria Zambon of the UK Health Protection Agency ...
[PDF] Bird flu and pandemic flu - JT Macfarlane, WS Lim - British Medical Journal, 2005 - bvsde.paho.org ... 2653 articles) Other Public Health (1688 articles) Other Epidemiology (1603 articles)
Other Infectious Diseases (118 articles) Bird flu (675 articles) Clinical ...
- Pandemic risks from bird flu The risk to humans is small, but we need to be better prepared - W Barclay, M Zambon - BMJ, 2004 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov ... Pandemic risks from bird flu. The risk to humans is small, but ... deputy director Enteric,
Respiratory and Neurological Virus Laboratory, Health Protection Agency ...
Avian Influenza Viruses and their Implication for Human Health - D Kaye, CR Pringle - Clinical Infectious Diseases, 2005 - UChicago Press ... Avian Influenza Viruses and their Implication for Human Health. ... Asian flu?), 1968
(?Hong Kong flu?), and 1977 ... accepted that feral aquatic birds are the ...
Controlling avian flu at the source - R Webster, D Hulse - Nature, 2005 - nature.com ... Hong Kong done to successfully control H5N1 bird flu? ... quail (the original sources
of flu); introducing two ... Hong Kong departments of health, agriculture, and ...
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Bird flu has deadly friends: health experts
Last Updated: 2006-12-08 11:08:10 -0400 (Reuters Health)
By Alistair Thomson
BAMAKO - Bird flu may be the tip of the iceberg. Experts meeting in Mali say the deadly H5N1 virus is just one of a plethora of diseases threatening animals and people around the world as global warming, intensive farming, increased travel and trade help dangerous microbes breed and spread.
"The experts are telling us that other diseases are going to emerge or re-emerge," said Francois Le Gall, the World Bank's lead livestock specialist for Africa."Almost every year there is a new disease appearing, and 75 percent of these emerging or re-emerging diseases are coming from animals; 80 percent of those have zoonotic potential," he said in an interview.Le Gall said such zoonoses -- animal diseases that humans can also catch -- included Rift Valley fever, rabies and anthrax. "These could come together to create what the experts are calling 'the perfect microbial storm'," he said.But Le Gall said progress being made to tackle the current bird flu outbreak by strengthening veterinary and human health monitoring systems around the world would temper the risk of an apocalyptic conflagration of diseases."All the measures we are using now are going to be useful to control all these emerging or re-emerging diseases -- like veterinary services, public health services," he said.What singles out bird flu is the potential of the virus to mutate into a human form of influenza capable of passing from person to person, not just from infected animals.International health experts were winding up a three-day meeting in Mali, the fourth global bird flu summit since late last year, aimed at plotting strategies to halt the spread of the disease and seeking donor funds for this campaign.GLOBALISATION, CLIMATE CHANGE"Remember that with globalisation, and unprecedented movements of merchandise, of people, there is a continuous transfer of pathogens," Bernard Vallat, director general of the World Organization for Animal Health, told Reuters."This is made worse by climate change. Many disease vectors have colonised new territories," Vallat said.Some diseases were being spread by mosquitoes or other insects whose larvae were previously killed off by cold winters, but who now survive in temperate zones, he said."Unfortunately, there are plenty of examples. There is a disease called blue tongue, which infects sheep, which for the first time in history has attacked northern Europe, the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, and by a vector that is capable of spreading the virus in this region, which is unprecedented."Blue tongue spreads via biting insects, but does not affect humans.But West Nile disease, which affects birds and was first found in Egypt and is spread by mosquitoes, has killed hundreds of people in the United States since it first spread there in 1999 -- probably via an imported pet bird, Vallat said."Now the United States is completely infected, as well as southern Canada and Mexico. In a few years this disease which was completely unknown (there) has colonised all the eastern United States via a mosquito vector," he said."Microbes can cross the world in a few hours," he said."The globalisation of exchanges of people, merchandise and commodities is a phenomenon that affects the whole planet more and more each year. It's a good thing, but it brings with it new risks. We have to be prepared."
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