| | Thu, January 01 1970, 7:00 AM
A new strain of bird flu that emerged in China over the past
month is one of the "most lethal" flu viruses so far, worrying health
officials because it can jump more easily from birds to humans than the
one that started killing people a decade ago, World Health Organization
officials said Wednesday.
Scientists are watching the virus
closely to see if it could spark a global pandemic but say there is
little evidence so far that it can spread easily from human to human.
WHO's
top influenza expert, Dr. Keiji Fukuda, told reporters at a briefing in
Beijing that people seem to catch the H7N9 virus from birds more easily
than the H5N1 strain that began ravaging poultry across Asia in 2003.
The H5N1 strain has since killed 360 people worldwide, mostly after
contact with infected fowl.
Health experts are concerned about
H7N9's ability to jump to humans, and about the strain's capacity to
infect birds without causing noticeable symptoms, which makes it
difficult to monitor its spread.
"This is definitely one of the
most lethal influenza viruses we have seen so far," Fukuda said. But he
added that experts are still trying to understand the virus, and that
there might be a large number of mild infections that are going
undetected.
The H7N9 bird flu virus has infected more than 100
people in China, seriously sickening most of them and killing more than
20, mostly near the eastern coast around Shanghai. Taiwan on Wednesday
confirmed its first case, a 53-year-old man who became sick after
returning from a visit to the eastern Chinese province of Kiangsu.
In comparison, the earlier bird flu strain, H5N1, is known to kill up to 60 of every 100 people it infects.
Wednesday's briefing came at the end of a weeklong joint investigation by WHO and Chinese authorities in Beijing and Shanghai.
Experts
said they still aren't sure how people are getting infected but said
evidence points to infections at live poultry markets, particularly
through ducks and chickens. They said it was encouraging that reported
infections appeared to slow down after the closure of live poultry
markets in affected areas.
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