The expanding outbreak of bird flu in Asia is "nowhere close" to
being declared a pandemic, international health experts said.
"I think it's very important at this stage that we remain calm
about worst-case scenarios," Mike Ryan, the WHO's chief of global
epidemic response, said at an international emergency meeting in
Rome on Wednesday.
"What we're dealing with at the moment is small clusters of
cases associated with exposure to poultry," Ryan told
reporters.
Meanwhile, China sought to coordinate efforts to curb bird flu
across its vast territory as it confirmed a previous suspected bird
flu outbreak in Chenggong County in Yunnan Province. No person has
been reported to have contracted the disease so far.
The Agriculture Ministry announced Wednesday two more areas
where suspected outbreaks of bird flu had been found.
The two areas are Guandu District in Kunming, Yunnan's capital
city, and Gaolan County in Gansu Province, northwest China.
As soon as the suspected cases were detected, local governments
began slaughtering chickens and implementing compulsory
vaccinations.
Health Ministry spokesman Mao Qun'an said checkups had been
performed on 588 people who had close contact with infected
poultry, and none had the disease, the China Daily newspaper said
Wednesday.
With suspected poultry cases in areas thousands of kilometers
apart, the central government was seeking a coordinated, national
response.
A new National Bird Flu Prevention Headquarters has opened in
Beijing to oversee regional efforts to kill all sick birds and keep
a close watch on people who handled them.
Authorities have been killing and inoculating poultry near
suspected outbreaks.
Hundreds of thousands of birds have been slaughtered and the
government is paying compensation to farmers.
New regulations stipulate that new poultry dwellings must be
built at least 500 meters from any residence, the Beijing Youth
Daily said. It was not clear when the rules would take effect or
how they would be enforced in a country where many farm families
raise chickens in their yards.
The Ministry of Railways said birds without quarantine
certificates would not be allowed on trains, aircraft or ships
entering China must undergo inspection, Xinhua News Agency
reported.
The western metropolis of Chongqing has banned the transport of
poultry on open trucks and Shanghai has been scrubbing pigeon
droppings from public plazas.
Outside Beijing, the Badaling Safari Park has stopped feeding
live chickens to lions and tigers, giving them beef instead, Xinhua
said.
About 10 Asian countries and regions were affected by the bird
flu virus, with the death toll from the disease rising to around
14. Tens of thousands of chickens have been killed to keep the
disease from spreading.
On Tuesday, Peter Cordingley, spokesman for the WHO Western
Pacific Regional office, said in an interview with Xinhua that
Asian countries afflicted with bird flu should change their
lifestyle and ways of breeding chickens to prevent and control the
virus.
These countries should adopt a more healthy and cautious way in
raising and selling chickens, he said.
He said it was quite common in Asia for farmers to live close to
chickens and sell live chickens on the market. This proximity
greatly raised the possibility for humans to be infected with bird
flu, he said.
(Xinhua News Agency February 4, 2004)