Asian countries afflicted with bird flu should change their
lifestyle and ways to deal with chickens to prevent and control the
fatal virus, an official of the World Health Organization (WH O)
said here Tuesday.
Peter Cordingley, spokesman of the WHO Western Pacific Regional
Office based in Manila, said in an interview with Xinhua that Asian
countries affected by the bird flu crisis should adopt a more
healthy and cautious way in raising and selling chickens.
"They have to completely change their lifestyle and attitude
toward animals," he said.
He said it is quite popular in Asia that farmers live closely
with their chickens and sell live chickens on the market. This
proximity greatly raises the possibility for human to be infected
with bird flu, he said.
Bird flu, or avian influenza, is a contagious disease of animals
caused by a virus that normally infect only birds and, less
commonly, pigs.
There have been 11 Asian countries and regions reporting bird
flu cases in animals so far. Among them, only Vietnam and Thailand
have reported bird flu cases in humans.
Cordingley cited Hong Kong as a success in dealing with bird
flu. Although the first documented human infections with the virus
occurred in Hong Kong in 1997, ailing 18 persons and killing six of
them, it witnessed no second bird flu outbreak afterward.
"In Hong Kong, Chinese people love to go to the markets to
choose live chickens and have them killed, but maybe those days are
over," he said.
After a "big scare" in 1997, Hong Kong has immediately taken
measures to cope with bird flu. "They separate animals in the
market, separate live chickens from the chicken meat, have all
farmers take licenses and accept examination every week. The
poultry market will close twice a week and get cleaned," he
said.
Cordingley also said that Japan and South Korea appear to have
controlled bird flu outbreak quickly. They can more easily stop the
spread of bird flu because chicken farms there are usually more
concentrated.
On the contrary, he said, chicken farms in countries like
Thailand and Vietnam are more scattered, making it more difficult
to control the virus spread.
Cordingley said medical and scientific groups in America, China
and some other countries are studying the bird flu vaccine, which
is expected to be finished in six months.
WHO, Food and Agriculture Organization and other international
health organizations have also been urging the international
community to provide assistance to the affected areas as to contain
the spread of the virus more quickly and effectively.
(Xinhua News Agency February 4, 2004)