Assam bird flu due to migratory birds: Ramadoss Hindu, India - Nov 29, 2008 ...bird flu earlier in states like Maharashtra, West Bengal and a few northeastern states. India has been pointing fingers at Bangladesh and Thailand for ...
Today's news for the Last Frontier Anchorage Daily News, AK - 35 minutes ago His mission is to scare trumpeter swans off the lake, away from the shotgun pellets that litter the lake bottom and have killed hundreds of the birds, ...
Thai Frozen Chicken: No Guarantee Bird Flu Free Bernama, Malaysia - Nov 20, 2008 Before this, the World Veterinary Health authorities have reported the outbreak of the bird flu disease in Sokhotai, Thailand. Following the freeze on the ...
Thai CPF says can hit sales target despite bird flu Reuters - Nov 12, 2008 Adirek Sripratak, chief executive of the country's top chicken exporter, said in a statement that an outbreak of bird flu in Thailand this week ...
Indonesia's Oct tourist arrivals up 21 p Life Style Extra, UK - ... accounts for 5 percent of gross domestic product, and was severely hit by bomb attacks in Bali and Jakarta, the tsunami in 2004, and outbreaks of bird flu.
Warning over Thai frozen chicken New Straits Times, Malaysia - Nov 21, 2008 Department director Dr Mohd Zairi Serlan said the smuggling of frozen chicken had been rampant lately following an increase in bird flu cases in Thailand. ...
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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: flu + bird + 65,500 Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)
Bird Flu: Govt Disinfects Farms This Day, Nigeria - Following the report of new cases of Avian Influenza alsoknown as Bird Flu in some states in Northern Nigeria, the Avain Influenza Project in Nasarawa State ...
Listening needed to communicate bird flu risks Jakarta Post, Indonesia - Aug 5, 2008 Rather than being satisfied with the various kinds of one-size-fits-all "Beat The Bird Flu" campaigns, journalists need to lend their ears more to the ...
No compensation yet for Bird Flu victims The Statesman, India - Aug 5, 2008 MALDA, Aug 5: The Malda district administration at present is not in a position to compensate a sum of Rs 500 to each bird flu victim who handed over ...
GPs refuse to treat bird flu patients NEWS.com.au, Australia - Aug 4, 2008 By Tory Shephard BIRD flu will hit Australia but some GPs will refuse to treat patients - preferring to keep themselves and their families safe, ...
Ancestors of chickens being studied for conservation Hindu, India - "Epidemics like bird flu in India, Hong Kong and other parts of South-East Asia could spell doom to the poultry industry and one of the fall back options ...
Two birds found dead; that makes 3 since July 13 in Visalia area Visalia Times-Delta, CA - 50 minutes ago The disease causes flu-like symptoms and can cause death, health officials say. Lourenco said the disease cannot be passed directly from birds to humans, ...
Bird flu claims one in Indonesia Independent Online, South Africa - Aug 4, 2008 Jakarta - The death toll from bird flu in Indonesia has risen to 112 after a 19-year-old man died from the virus last week, a health ministry official said ...
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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 western China. Figure 1 : H5N1 flu strains in wild birds in western China. Unfortunately ...
[CITATION] H5N1 virus outbreak in migratory waterfowl: a worrying development could help to spread this … H Chen, GJD Smith, SY Zhang, K Qin, J Wang, KS Li, … - Nature (London), 2005 - Nature Publishing Group London, UK
[DOC]American Heritage Dictionary-Ebsco OE Dictionary - hawaii.edu ... I was not able to find anything under avian flu, birdflu or mad cow. ...
The see also term of ?birdflu? also returned avian flu. ...
H5N1 outbreaks and enzootic influenza - RG Webster, M Peiris, H Chen, Y Guan - Emerg Infect Dis, 2006 - cdc.gov ... Alexander DJ. A review of avian influenza in different bird species. Vet Microbiol. ...
2004;23:453?65. Cyranoski D. Birdflu spreads among Java's pigs. Nature. ... -
[PDF]Influenza: an emerging disease - RG Webster - Emerg Infect Dis, 1998 - idready.org ... Because all known influenza A subtypes exist in the aquatic bird reservoir, influenza
is not an eradicable disease; prevention and control are the only ... -
Avian influenza A virus (H7N7) associated with human conjunctivitis and a fatal case of acute … - RAM Fouchier, PM Schneeberger, FW Rozendaal, JM … - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2004 - National Acad Sciences ... disease in humans (7). However, in Hong Kong in 1997 and 2003, highly pathogenic
avian influenza (HPAI) of subtype H5N1 was transmitted from birds to humans ...
Avian influenza H5N1 in tigers and leopards. - J Keawcharoen, K Oraveerakul, T Kuiken, RAM … - Emerging Infectious Diseases, 2004 - origin.cdc.gov ... The 2003?2004 avian influenza A (H5N1) virus outbreak in Southeast Asia resulted
in ... May 12, 2004) due to direct transmission of the virus from birds to humans ...
Influenza D Swayne - Book Chapter - ars.usda.gov ... tigers, domestic cats, dogs, stone martins, civets, and domestic pigs which were
exposed to H5N1 HPAI infected birds but these avian influenza (AI) virus ...
Highly pathogenic H5N1 influenza virus in smuggled Thai eagles, Belgium - S Van Borm, I Thomas, G Hanquet, B Lambrecht, M … - Emerg Infect Dis, 2005 - origin.cdc.gov ... leopards. Emerg Infect Dis. 2004;10:2189?91. Cyranoski D. Birdflu data
languish in Chinese journals. Nature. 2004;430:955. Suetens ...
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Thailand Faces Second Bird Flu Outbreak
The Thai government has ordered the slaughter of 300,000 chickens as officials of that country face the second outbreak of bird flu in the past year.
"The H5N1 virus was found in chickens in a local farm," Assistant Agricultural Minister Charal Trinvuththipong told Agence France-Presse on Sunday. The farm where the outbreak occurred is located in the Nakhon Phanom province, which is to the northeast of Bangkok. "It is the second outbreak [this year] following the one in the Phichit province, Charal added.
On Wednesday, a boy died from bird flu; it was the first human death from the disease in seven months. Charal told the wire service that 100 volunteers have been sent to kill the chickens near the affected area, although the move will not be announced officially until Monday.
So far, bird flu has infected 231 people around the world, and killed 134.
Human casualties remain largely confined to Asia and to people who have had close and prolonged contact with infected birds, such as poultry farm workers. Worries about bird flu have also led to the destruction of tens of millions of poultry, mostly in Asian nations, as officials struggle to contain the virus.
North Carolina Beaches Issue Jellyfish Alert
At least 75 people have been stung in the past week by jellyfish near Wrightsville and Carolina beaches, and the Hanover County Health Department has issued an alert in response, the Associated Press reported Saturday.
"I can't recall any particular year that it's been that bad," Charles Smith, director of Carolina Beach Ocean Rescue, told the wire service. One swimmer had to be taken to New Hanover Regional Medical Center with a suspected Portuguese man-of-war sting.
After arriving early at Wrightsville Beach, in mid-July, these sea nettles are bombarding Carolina Beach, where so many were in the water on Thursday that lifeguards posted red flags to alert visitors of dangerous conditions. At Wrightsville, lifeguards treated a dozen stings a day when the jellyfish were at their peak although they're now down to one sting a day, Ocean Rescue Director Dave Baker told the AP.
Experts say tropical weather, higher temperatures, salinity and rich feeding grounds are probably behind the trend.
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New Cases of Rabbit Fever Seen in Martha's Vineyard
Massachusetts health officials said Saturday that six new cases of a potentially fatal disease known as "rabbit fever" have been reported on Martha's Vineyard.
The disease, also known as tularemia, has plagued the island since an outbreak in 2000 made 15 people sick and killed one person, the state Department of Health told the Associated Press. The disease is caused by a bacterium commonly found in rodents and rabbits. Humans can get the disease through the bite of an infected dog tick, when an open sore or cut comes into contact with the bacteria, or by inhaling spores. It is not spread from person to person. Symptoms include skin lesions, swollen lymph nodes, or a flu-like feeling.
All six cases were reported between May 13 and July 5, the AP reported. Four patients were landscapers, and all six people had the respiratory form of the illness, were treated and are recovering. Left untreated, 7 percent of those with this form of the illness die, state health officials told the wire service.
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Group Suing Over Plan B Seeks White House Documents
As part of its lawsuit to force the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to allow over-the-counter sales of the emergency contraceptive Plan B, the Center for Reproductive Rights seeks to subpoena White House e-mails and other documents, the Associated Press reported.
The group, which wants to determine whether the White House tried to influence FDA regulators on whether to loosen sales restrictions on Plan B, made the request in a July 21 letter to U.S. District Court Judge Viktor Pohorelsky. The letter was released Friday, the AP said. A hearing on the request will be held Thursday.
The FDA had intended to allow over-the-counter sales of Plan B to women aged 17 and older, but delayed its decision to determine how to limit sales to that age group, former FDA Commissioner Lester Crawford stated in a sworn deposition given in the suit.
Currently, the emergency contraceptive can only be sold with a doctor's prescription, although a few states allow pharmacists to dispense the pills.
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College Students Learning How to Drink Safely, Study Finds
Although 80 percent of college students drink alcohol, less than 13 percent say they have been hurt or damaged property after they imbibe, a new survey of 28,000 students finds.
The Associated Press reported Saturday that the study involving 44 colleges and universities found 73 percent of those students who do drink protect themselves by using designated drivers, limiting what they spend at bars, counting drinks, and expecting friends to speak up if someone has had too much.
Michael Haines, of the National Social Norms Resource Center, noted some protective measures, such as avoiding drinking games and pacing drinks, deserve more attention than others.
"The safest place for college students to drink alcohol is on college campuses. All data points to that," he said. "Yet more is done to force the drinking off campus... Those policies have failed to reduce drinking."
The National Social Norms Resource Center advocates alcohol safety, recognizing student drinking happens and recommending ways to do it safely.
Critics suggest better alternatives include tougher penalties for student drinking and limiting student access to alcohol.