Sunday, October 30, 2005

Flu Blamed for Deaths

VIETNAM - Two more suspected human deaths from bird flu have been reported in Vietnam. The virus has already killed more than 60 people in southern Asia - about 40 of them in Vietnam. The Tuoi Tre newspaper quoted a report from a hospital in the central province of Quang Binh as saying two patients who showed symptoms of bird flu infection had died in the past week. The report said the victims, a 14-year-old girl and a 26-year-old man, had eaten duck and a chicken's egg around a week before they fell ill. The girl died on October 23 and the man on October 26.

LINK

UN presses China for more details on bird flu scare

CHINA - The World Health Organization (WHO) pressed China on Friday to provide information on a 12-year-old girl who Chinese officials say died of pneumonia, but who was initially suspected of contracting deadly bird flu. "After SARS they know they should really provide timely information about what is going on," WHO spokeswoman Fadela Chaib told a news briefing in Geneva.


LINK

Wednesday, October 26, 2005

The Secret History of The World and How To Get Out Alive

IMPORTANT

If you heard the Truth, would you believe it? Ancient civilisations. Hyperdimensional realities. DNA changes. Bible conspiracies. What are the realities? What is disinformation?

The Secret History of The World and How To Get Out Alive is the definitive book of the real answers where Truth is more fantastic than fiction. Laura Knight-Jadczyk, wife of internationally known theoretical physicist, Arkadiusz Jadczyk, an expert in hyperdimensional physics, draws on science and mysticism to pierce the veil of reality. Due to the many threats on her life from agents and agencies known and unknown, Laura left the United States to live in France, where she is working closely with Patrick Rivière, student of Eugene Canseliet, the only disciple of the legendary alchemist Fulcanelli.

With sparkling humour and wisdom, she picks up where Fulcanelli left off, sharing over thirty years of research to reveal, for the first time, The Great Work and the esoteric Science of the Ancients in terms accessible to scholar and layperson alike.

Conspiracies have existed since the time of Cain and Abel. Facts of history have been altered to support the illusion. The question today is whether a sufficient number of people will see through the deceptions, thus creating a counter-force for positive change - the gold of humanity - during the upcoming times of Macro-Cosmic Quantum Shift. Laura argues convincingly, based on the revelations of the deepest of esoteric secrets, that the present is a time of potential transition, an extraordinary opportunity for individual and collective renewal: a quantum shift of awareness and perception which could see the birth of true creativity in the fields of science, art and spirituality. The Secret History of the World allows us to redefine our interpretation of the universe, history, and culture and to thereby navigate a path through this darkness. In this way, Laura Knight-Jadczyk shows us how we may extend the possibilities for all our different futures in literal terms.

With over 850 pages of fascinating reading, The Secret History of The World and How to Get Out Alive is rapidly being acknowledged as a classic with profound implications for the destiny of the human race. With painstakingly researched facts and figures, the author overturns long-held conventional ideas on religion, philosophy, Grail legends, science, and alchemy, presenting a cohesive narrative pointing to the existence of an ancient techno-spirituality of the Golden Age which included a mastery of space and time: the Holy Grail, the Philosopher's Stone, the True Process of Ascension. Laura provides the evidence for the advanced level of scientific and metaphysical wisdom possessed by the greatest of lost ancient civilizations - a culture so advanced that none of the trappings of civilization as we know it were needed, explaining why there is no 'evidence' of civilization as we know it left to testify to its existence. The author's consummate synthesis reveals the Message in a Bottle reserved for humanity, including the Cosmology and Mysticism of mankind Before the Fall when, as the ancient texts tell us, man walked and talked with the gods. Laura shows us that the upcoming shift is that point in the vast cosmological cycle when mankind - or at least a portion of mankind - has the opportunity to regain his standing as The Child of the King in the Golden Age.

If ever there was a book that can answer the questions of those who are seeking Truth in the spiritual wilderness of this world, then surely The Secret History of the World and How to Get Out Alive is it.


The Secret History of The World and How To Get Out Alive by Laura Knight-Jadczyk, published by Red Pill Press, Preface by Patrick Rivière


LINK

Sunday, October 23, 2005

Scientists aim for clone cure to bird flu

The Scotsman

RICHARD GRAY


SCOTTISH scientists are attempting to eliminate the threat of bird flu by creating a new breed of chicken that is resistant to the killer virus.

Researchers at the Roslin Institute in Edinburgh, where Dolly the Sheep was created, are using cloning technology to produce poultry that are genetically resistant to flu infection.

Working with scientists at Cambridge University they have already proved they can protect against flu viruses by inserting small pieces of DNA into cells in the laboratory.

And within the next couple of weeks they will begin implanting the genetic material into hen eggs in an attempt to produce the world's first flu-resistant chickens.

Dr Helen Sang, project leader at Roslin, said: "It is a long-term solution to a very real threat that has become so evident recently. We are due to begin the process of introducing the genetic material into the chickens and then challenging them with influenza to see if it is effective."

Bird flu is commonly found in wild birds and is spread as they migrate around the world, shedding the virus into areas populated by domestic poultry.

Although most bird flu is not infectious to humans, in the case of the highly contagious H5N1 strain it can be passed to humans who have had close contact with infected birds.

The scientists claim they will be able to make chickens resistant to all types of avian influenza, dramatically reducing the risk of humans catching the disease from birds.

Dr Laurence Tiley, who developed the resistance genes at Cambridge University, said: "Chickens provide a bridge between the wild bird population where avian influenza thrives and humans where new pandemic strains can emerge. Removing that bridge will dramatically reduce the risk posed by avian viruses to humans."

But he added it could be more than five years before the flu-resistant chickens will become widely available, probably too late to prevent the current avian flu crisis from hitting UK poultry farms.

He said: "Once we have had regulatory approval, we believe it will only take between four and five years to breed up enough chickens to replace the entire world population."


more info

Wednesday, October 19, 2005

Signs of Further Spread of Bird Flu Strain as China, Russia, Romania Report New Cases

By Judith Ingram Associated Press Writer

Published: Oct 19, 2005

MOSCOW (AP) - Russian authorities detected a deadly strain of bird flu south of Moscow on Wednesday and China reported a fresh outbreak in its northern grasslands - signs the deadly virus was spreading across Siberia to the Mediterranean along the pathways of migratory birds.

The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization warned of a marked increase in chances that bird flu would move to the Middle East and Africa - and hit countries poorly equipped to deal with an outbreak. The European Union announced plans for an exercise simulating a human flu pandemic to improve readiness in case the bird virus mutates to form a strain transmissible among people.

In Asia, crucible of the virus, China's official Xinhua news agency said 2,600 birds in the northern grasslands had died of the disease. It did not give details on when the birds were found, and sought to reassure the public that the outbreak was contained.

The H5N1 strain was detected in Siberia in July. Migratory birds flying over the region from elsewhere in Asia were blamed for the outbreak, and the virus had been registered in six districts in Siberia and the Urals region.

Preliminary genetic tests now have found an H5N1 flu virus in samples of birds taken from a village south of Moscow, the Russian Agriculture Ministry said. Further tests are needed to confirm the finding and determine whether the H5N1 strain is the same one that has devastated flocks in Asia since 2003.

If so, it would mark the first appearance of the virus in European Russia, west of the Ural Mountains.

Officials said 220 of 3,000 domestic birds in the village of Yandovka had died. Birds on the six affected farms were being destroyed, and local officials have decided to kill all poultry in the village. In addition, a quarantine was established around Yandovka. Villagers were prohibited from leaving except in emergencies.

More than 200,000 people in the region were given standard flu vaccinations, the ITAR-Tass news agency said. Such shots are given to prevent normal flu so that if the person gets infected with the bird virus, there is no human flu strain inside the body to mix with and create a dangerous hybrid.

The H5N1 strain of bird flu has killed 60 people in Asia, but no one in Russia has been diagnosed with it, officials said. Most human cases have been traced to direct contact with infected birds, but scientists fear the virus will mutate into a form that can spread from person to person, possibly killing millions.

In Hungary, officials announced Wednesday that preliminary experiments with an H5N1 vaccine indicate it works. Health Minister Jenoe Racz said he and dozens of others were inoculated three weeks ago and tests showed that antibodies to the virus had appeared in his blood.

"The results are preliminary, but I can say with 99.9 percent certainty that the vaccine works," he said.

However, the World Health Organization said it was unaware of the details of the Hungarian findings and was unable to comment on their validity or whether the vaccine - even if it works - would be viable.

Scientists in the United States already have reported positive results from tests on their own H5N1 vaccine, but so far have not been able to make the vaccine a practical option because it uses too much of a scarce ingredient and requires two doses to work.

The EU, meanwhile, was trying to assess whether the H5N1 strain of bird flu had spread into Macedonia and Greece. H5N1 already has been confirmed in two villages in Romania and in Turkey.

Global health experts are keeping a close eye on bird flu because they fear the Asian H5N1 strain could mutate and trigger a human flu pandemic.

Asia is considered at greatest risk, but the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization expressed fear that Africa was poorly prepared to respond to a bird flu outbreak.

"One of our major concerns is now the potential spread of avian influenza through migratory birds to northern and eastern Africa," said Joseph Domenech, the FAO's chief veterinary officer.

The bird flu would be even harder to deal with in Africa than in Asia, because weak veterinary services lack the resources to vaccinate or slaughter animals to guard against infection, said Erwin Northoff, the organization's spokesman.

---

Associated Press writers Pablo Gorondi in Budapest, Hungary, Aidan Lewis in Rome, and Raf Casert in Brussels, Belgium, contributed to this report.

Tuesday, October 18, 2005

Greece becomes first EU country to confirm bird flu

No direct threat to people in Britain, says minister ·
Romania fears quarantine may have been too late

James Meikle and Mark Honigsbaum
Tuesday October 18, 2005

The Guardian

Greece yesterday confirmed its first case of bird flu, as the disease that has plagued south-east Asia continued its rapid spread westward. It is the first country in the European Union to report apparent infection, although cases are being tackled in Turkey and Romania.

The Greek agriculture minister, Evangelos Basiakos, reported the case on a turkey farm on the Aegean Sea island of Oinouses, near the coast of Turkey. The European commission said last night it was preparing to ban the movement of live birds and poultry meat from the region, which also includes the nearby resort island of Chios.

Authorities in Romania were yesterday monitoring poultry in six more villages in the Danube delta, amid fears that quarantine restrictions on villages already suspected of harbouring the disease may have come too late. Bulgaria and Croatia are also testing birds, although as there is no evidence yet of infection.


Full Story at Signs of the Times

Friday, October 14, 2005

EU experts meet as avian flu spreads

Last Updated Fri, 14 Oct 2005 06:15:57 EDT CBC News

European experts on avian influenza and bird migration are holding an emergency meeting in Brussels Friday, a day after health officials confirmed the deadly H5N1 virus has spread from Asia to Europe.

Tests confirmed Thursday that the strain has shown up in dead birds on a farm in northwestern Turkey. Farmers in the village of Kiziksa have since slaughtered more than 8,000 chickens, turkeys and ducks.

Infected migrating birds have taken the virus from southeast Asia to poultry populations in Russia, Mongolia, Kazakhstan and now Eastern Europe, but human cases remain limited to four southeast Asian countries.

The World Health Organization points out that the H5N1 virus does not spread easily from birds to humans, but the United Nations body is nonetheless calling for increased vigilance and precautions.


LINK to full story

Thursday, October 13, 2005

Swine Deaths in Ceamulia de Jos Romania

Swine Deaths in Ceamulia de Jos Romania

Recombinomics Commentary
October 13, 2005

The fear of avian flu infection is still not high enough to make Ceamurlia villagers report that pigs also started to die.

At least seven were found dead in the villager households during the last three days.

The above translation of a Romanian report of swine deaths in the same village, Ceamulia de Jos, where H5 wild bird flu was found is cause for concern.

The H5N1 sequences from Qinghai Lake had European swine sequences, indicating flu in wild birds had recombined with swine sequences in the past. The swine deaths in association with the poultry deaths is similar to the fatal swine outbreak in Sichuan, Chua, adjacent to Qinghai province.

The outbreak in China was said to be due to bacterial infections, but the possible involvement of H5N1 was raised because of the proximity to Qinghai Lake.

More information on the symptoms and cause of death in the swine would be useful.

Saturday, October 08, 2005

Turkey takes action after first bird flu case

Last Update: Sunday, October 9, 2005. 1:09pm (AEST)

Turkey says it has had to destroy all winged animals in a village in the western province of Balakasa, after discovering the country's first case of bird flu.

The news comes a day after Romania reported its first case of the flu.

A strain of the virus has killed more than 60 people in South-East Asia over the past two years.

The disease was discovered on a farm in the west of Turkey.

Details are still sketchy, but according to the Anatolia Newsagency, the outbreak first came to official attention on Wednesday.

The agency says all birds on the farm were slaughtered the next day and the entire area has been disinfected.

Turkey's agriculture minister says the situation is under control and every precaution has been taken to stop the disease spreading.

-BBC

Turkey confirms bird flu; village locked down

Saturday, October 8, 2005; Posted: 10:08 p.m. EDT (02:08 GMT)

ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP) -- Turkey's agriculture minister on Saturday confirmed the country's first cases of bird flu and ordered the destruction of all birds in the village where it was detected to prevent the disease from spreading, the Anatolia news agency said.

Military police also have set up roadblocks at the village near Balikesir in western Turkey, 250 miles from Istanbul. The officers checked vehicles to make certain no birds were being brought in or out.

The infected birds belonged to a turkey farmer, CNN-Turk reported, saying that 2,000 birds died. Anatolia did not cite a number, but said animals on the farm that did not die of the disease were destroyed.

Cases of bird flu also were confirmed Saturday in Romania, which borders Turkey.

The outbreak was confirmed by Agriculture Minister Mehdi Eker, who said that Turkish officials had been communicating with the European Union and other international organizations about the outbreak, Anatolia reported. Eker did not specify how many birds died of the disease.

Anatolia, quoting officials, said the birds in Turkey died of the H5 type of bird flu -- but it was not immediately clear whether it is the exact strain that health officials are especially worried about.

"Unfortunately we met with bird flu," Anatolia quoted Eker as saying. "But everything is under control, every kind of precaution has been taken so that it doesn't spread."

There are several strains of bird flu, but only a few are deadly. Experts are tracking a strain known as H5N1 for fear it could mutate and spawn a human flu pandemic.

H5N1 has swept through poultry populations in Asia since 2003, infecting humans and killing at least 60 people, mostly poultry workers, and resulting in the deaths of more than 100 million birds. The virus does not pass from person to person easily.

Health Ministry officials ordered birds in the village destroyed Saturday, saying that farmers would be compensated for their losses, Anatolia said. Stray dogs also were ordered slaughtered as a precaution, though authorities did not explain why.

Eker said the flu was likely carried by birds migrating from the Ural Mountains, which divide Europe and Asia, across Turkey and into Africa.

Thursday, October 06, 2005

Killer flu of 1918 caused by bird virus

By Clive Cookson, Science Editor

Published:
October 5 2005 19:32
| Last updated: October 5 2005 19:32

The virus responsible for the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic, which killed an estimated 50m people worldwide, has been reconstructed by genetic engineering in a high-security US laboratory.


Preliminary studies show that it is an avian flu virus that mutated to spread quickly between people just as many experts fear will happen soon with the current H5N1 strain of bird flu in Asia. Details of the project are published today in the journals Science and Nature. The US National Institutes of Health approved the research, despite its apparent risk, because it will help scientists find new treatments for the most dangerous types of flu.

The Centres for Disease Control laboratory in Atlanta made a live virus with the full genetic sequence of Spanish flu, using an engineering technique called “reverse genetics” developed at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York.

“We felt we had to recreate the virus and run these experiments to understand the biological properties that made the 1918 virus so exceptionally deadly,” said Terrence Tumpey, head of the CDC team. “We wanted to identify the specific genes responsible for its virulence, with the hope of designing antivirals or other interventions that would work against virulent influenza viruses.”

The key genetic data for the experiment came from the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology in Washington DC. Over the past eight years scientists there have pieced together the entire Spanish flu genome, from viral fragments isolated from preserved lung samples of patients who died in 1918 and from a female victim whose body was fortuitously frozen in Alaskan permafrost.

Many of the flu viruses circulating today were descendants of the H1N1 strain that swept the world in 1918 so the population still had some protective immunity against it, said Jeffery Taubenberger, leader of the AFIP team. “It is unlikely that a1918-like virus wouldbe able to cause a pandemic today.”

The research suggests that Spanish flu arose in a different way to the viruses that caused the other two 20th century pandemics. In 1957 and 1968 an existing human virus underwent genetic mixing with a bird virus to produce a new “reassorted” strain in one step.

In 1918, however, an entirely avian virus gradually adapted to function in humans through a sequence of mutations. Although the analysis is incomplete, about four to six mutations seemed to have taken place in each of the eight viral genes, Dr Taubenberger said.

Ominously, the H5N1 strain currently circulating in Asia is undergoing similar humanising mutations though it has not accumulated as many changes as Spanish flu.

■ Health officials in Jakarta and Hong Kong on Wednesday said tests had shown H5N1 virus in apparently healthy chickens in Indonesia. Until now it had been thought that chickens quickly sickened and died when infected with H5N1. The presence of infected but symptomless chickens could complicate the fight against bird flu.

Tuesday, October 04, 2005

U.S. Rushes to Finish Influenza Pandemic Plan

From the Los Angeles Times

The Health secretary is leading a drive to boost federal efforts, and funding, to prepare for a global outbreak if avian flu mutates.

By Warren Vieth
Times Staff Writer

October 3, 2005

WASHINGTON — Even before it can tally the full cost of post-hurricane reconstruction, the Bush administration is seeking congressional support for an expanded government effort to prepare for a worldwide influenza pandemic.

The Department of Health and Human Services is rushing to complete its first comprehensive plan for coping with a possible flu pandemic, and could release the final version as early as this week. It is expected to be accompanied by a request for several billion dollars in new funding, and Congress appears to be willing to cover at least a portion.

Health authorities are particularly concerned about a virulent strain of avian flu in Asia that has killed several dozen people who handled infected birds. There are signs the virus may now be developing the ability, through mutation, to spread from human to human. It is the mutated form that could cause a pandemic.

The administration's pandemic plan is part of a broader effort to accelerate preparations for a potential health disaster. Conservative estimates of fatalities in a flu pandemic number in the millions worldwide, and in the tens of thousands in the United States.

The government has begun contracting with pharmaceutical makers to develop vaccines targeted at new strains of influenza virus. It has started stockpiling millions of doses of antiviral medicines that could limit symptoms and reduce the chances of spreading the virus. President Bush is pressuring other countries to conduct better surveillance for flu outbreaks, share information more readily and commit to aggressive containment measures.

Still, administration officials cautioned that even perfect planning would only lessen the devastation caused by a pandemic, not prevent it.

Bush's preparedness initiative is being directed by Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt, who said that of all the issues within his purview, including hurricane recovery and bioterrorism, the one that keeps him awake at night is influenza.

"It's a world-changing event when it occurs," Leavitt said in an interview. "It reaches beyond health. It affects economies, cultures, politics and prosperity — not to mention human life, counted by the millions."

Bush has taken up the cause personally, prodding the United Nations to make a priority of preparing for a pandemic and raising the issue in one-on-one discussions with the presidents of Russia and China and the prime minister of Indonesia, where in many parts of the country avian flu is endemic in poultry.

"We need to take it seriously," Bush said after a recent meeting with President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia. "I talked to Vladimir about avian flu; I talked to other world leaders about the potential outbreak of avian flu. If avian flu were to hit this country, do we have the proper response mechanisms? Does the federal government have the authority necessary to make certain decisions?"

The need to improve preparedness planning in the U.S. was underscored last October when the American company that provided half of the country's flu vaccines announced that it could not provide shots because of contamination in its British factory.

Last week, Leavitt held private briefings with key lawmakers on Capitol Hill to present the administration's case for an expanded preparedness program. The response was almost immediate. Several members issued public statements endorsing a broader campaign, and the Senate on Thursday approved a measure calling for $3.9 billion in new funding.

That's about what it would take to finance some of the bigger-ticket items in the pandemic plan, such as the development, acquisition and stockpiling of enough vaccine to inoculate 20 million Americans and enough antiviral drugs to help protect another 20 million, according to estimates by the Trust for America's Health, an independent policy research and advocacy group based in Washington.

"We need more than just a plan; we need the resources to actually activate it," said Jeffrey Levi, a pandemic specialist at the Trust. "The real test of the plan will be whether it comes with dollars attached."

The current draft of the administration's plan fills several hundred pages. It describes the role of the federal government in coordinating the response to a flu pandemic and outlines steps to be taken at all levels of government before and during an outbreak.

In addition to production and stockpiling of vaccines and antivirals, the plan seeks to conduct research, prepare public education campaigns and develop ways for hospitals to handle large numbers of patients.

Health authorities say one of the biggest challenges would be vaccine development.

Scientists cannot create the best possible vaccine until they know which form of the virus they're fighting. That means public health officials must remain vigilant and ready to isolate the virus once one emerges in a form that can spread among humans rapidly.

By then, the first wave of the pandemic probably would have already begun. But officials would still face the work of producing, distributing and administering the vaccine on a widespread basis. The process would take six to eight months, according to the department of Health and Human Services.

Hospital workers and other health professionals would be the first to receive vaccinations, so they could tend to pandemic victims without falling ill themselves. But a rapidly spreading contagion could quickly deplete the initial stores of vaccine, creating national or regional shortages, contributing to public alarm and requiring some kind of rationing program.

To slow the pandemic's spread while vaccine production is being cranked up, the plan calls for stockpiling antiviral medicines, which reduce the severity of symptoms and shorten the duration of illness, but only if administered during the first 48 hours of infection.

The plan outlines other steps that federal, state and local authorities might be required to take to contain a pandemic. They include quarantines, travel restrictions, cancellation of public events and other group gatherings, and closures of schools, colleges, office buildings and public facilities.

Levi said the administration deserved credit for stepping up its planning.

"Leavitt has become the point person on this," he said. "We finally have a political appointee out front talking about these issues. That's the signal that there's a much higher level of engagement."

But some health authorities and preparedness advocates expressed concern that the flurry of activity had not compensated for what they called an inadequate response to evidence that the risk of a pandemic had increased substantially since new strains of avian flu began infecting humans in 1997.

"They're struggling to get ahead of the curve," said John Barry, author of "The Great Influenza," a book about the 1918 flu pandemic that killed an estimated 50 million people worldwide, including 675,000 in the United States. "They're not there yet."

Barry's book is at the top of Leavitt's recommended reading list. He said he had handed out at least 30 copies, tabbed and underlined to emphasize key sections, and planned to distribute an additional 50 or so to lawmakers and administration officials in coming days. He said the book had been read by Bush, who took it with him to the Texas ranch where the president spent his August vacation.

The 1918 pandemic was the deadliest flu outbreak in recorded history. Most of the fatalities occurred during the first 24 weeks of the contagion. AIDS, by comparison, has killed half that many people worldwide over the last 24 years.

During the last year of World War I, the devastation caused by the flu outbreak in the United States was exacerbated by government inaction. Instead of moving aggressively to quarantine the first victims and alert the public to the seriousness of the threat, authorities initially downplayed its significance.

The administration of President Wilson did not want to undermine its efforts to mobilize troops, manufacture materiel and maintain public support for America's deepening participation in the war.

Blunders by local officials made matters worse. In Philadelphia, where scores of war-bound soldiers had fallen ill, authorities refused to cancel a pro-war parade despite warnings it would spread the virus through the civilian population. Within weeks, the city had so many casualties it ran out of coffins and had to bury victims in mass graves dug with steam shovels.

Leavitt said pandemic preparations were underway before Hurricane Katrina struck in late August. But he acknowledged that for him, at least, the sense of urgency was heightened by what he saw first-hand at the 17 evacuee medical shelters he visited.

"You cannot walk into one of those places and see bed after bed after bed of hospital cots," he said, "and not think … what if we were dealing with this in 50 states?"

New UN pandemic czar says survival of "world as we know it" may be at stake

TORONTO (CP)

- A flu pandemic could fundamentally alter the world as we know it, warns the public health veteran charged with co-ordinating UN planning for and response to the threat.

Inadequate - and inequitably shared - global resources and the uncertainties inherent in trying to predict the behaviour of influenza combine to create planning dilemmas that are "monster difficult," Dr. David Nabarro said in an interview describing his new job and the challenges ahead.

Progress will demand appealing "to people's recognition that we're dealing here with world survival issues - or the survival of the world as we know it," Nabarro explains.

"And therefore we just can't go on approaching it with sort of business-as-usual type approaches."

The former head of the World Health Organization's crisis operations was seconded to the UN to co-ordinate world response to both the ongoing avian influenza outbreak in Southeast Asia and preparations for a human flu pandemic.

A native of Britain, Nabarro says the decision to appoint a planning czar reflects surging political concern that the world may be facing a pandemic springing from the H5N1 avian flu strain, which is decimating poultry in Asia and has already killed at least 60 people in Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia and Indonesia.

"Governments have realized that this is something to be worried about," he says, adding the UN must harness that concern and the resources it frees up.

"It's a rare thing, political commitment to deal with a health issue. And when you've got it, you must use it well," he insists.

"We're not going to have such an excellent window of opportunity to really start moving forward with this for long. And so we must take advantage of it now."

One of the monster dilemmas Nabarro describes relates to antiviral drugs, which may be able to blunt the blow of pandemic flu.

But there are only two drugs which, in laboratory settings, work against all possible pandemic strains, oseltamivir (sold as Tamiflu) and zanamivir (sold as Relenza). Both are expensive and made in limited quantities. And there appears to be no quick or easy way to ramp up production.

In addition, the supplies that exist - as well as most of those that will be made in the foreseeable future - are spoken for. They are either squirreled away in or destined for stockpiles held by the world's wealthy nations.

"So we're going to have very little stuff and it's already stuck away in stockpiles . . . that people will protect with their lives. And yet we're going to have to find some way to ration these things so that they are given to the folk who need them the most," Nabarro says.



That statement may reflect Nabarro's position on the pandemic learning curve. Setting priorities for who will and won't get antiviral drugs is a responsibility of governments, not the UN or the WHO.

Nabarro also made several missteps in his initial news conference at the UN on Thursday, including straying far afield from the WHO's estimate of the number of deaths a new pandemic might exact. He suggested between five million and 150 million people might die.

Less than 24 hours later the Geneva-based WHO reeled back in Nabarro's estimate, saying its own longstanding projection of two million to 7.4 million excess deaths was more likely. The official WHO estimate was calculated using a mathematical model based largely on the Hong Kong flu of 1968, the mildest pandemic of the last century.

If Nabarro is still learning the myriad intricacies of his new subject, he appears to already understand that the eventual death toll is only a portion of the damage a pandemic would wreak.

"It would really disturb many, many systems and our capacity to cope in many countries would not be that great," he says, predicting food supplies in the developed world - where diets are comprised almost exclusively of purchased (not home-grown) food - "would be particularly badly hit."

A leading advocate for pandemic preparedness, Dr. Michael Osterholm, has warned a pandemic would have a substantial and highly disruptive impact on the production and movement of goods, leading to shortages of many products critical to daily life.

He says at this point, planning for ways to keep society functioning must be the priority task.

"We basically are going to have a lot of the world's population who are going to come through this," says Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota.

"But just as we saw, very painfully in the Gulf States (after Hurricane Katrina), a lot of people are going to suffer a great deal who are going to live.

"And we need to plan about how we're going to minimize that suffering and get those people through so they don't die from other collateral damage-related concerns. Like lack of other medications. Lack of food. Water."

Nabarro acknowledges the challenges ahead are enormous.

"My base point is: How to deal with an issue that's so impossibly difficult that we're bound to end up saying 'We didn't get it right' if there is a pandemic, or, if there isn't a pandemic where people are going to say 'You scared us all for nothing. "

Monday, October 03, 2005

Bird flu jumps transmission barrier in humans

By Tom Clifford, Assistant Editor

Published: 1/10/2005, 07:48 (UAE)

DUBAI - Bird flu has broken the transmission barrier and jumped from human to human, according to the World Health Organisation.

Most cases have been bird to human but transmission between people increases fears of a global pandemic.

The acknowledgement came on a day when the organisation had to backtrack on the number of potential deaths forecast from a bird flu pandemic created by widespread human-to-human infection.


Dr David Nabarro said on Thursday, less than one day into his new role as the UN coordinator for global readiness against an outbreak, that measures taken by the world today would determine whether bird flu ended up killing five million or as many as 150 million people.

The figure of 150 million deaths was quickly played down by the WHO yesterday.

"There is obvious confusion, and I think that has to be straightened out. I don't think you will hear Dr Nabarro say the same sort of thing again," WHO influenza spokesman Dick Thompson told a news briefing.


The UN health agency said it has warned countries to prepare for a death toll of up to 7.4 million.

The 1918-19 'Spanish flu' outbreak, the most lethal flu pandemic so far recorded, claimed 50 million lives, far more than the 15 million killed in the First World War.

But the flu has jumped the barrier of human-to-human transmission.

"There have been four, maybe five cases of humans getting it from other humans," Thompson told Gulf News from the organisation's Geneva headquarters.

"All of these have been in Asia. But it is important to note that it was not passed on to more humans. The chain ended at those four or five who caught it."

The world has coped with pandemics before, Thompson said.

Seasonal flu normally kills up to 500,000 in any year


Story here

Saturday, October 01, 2005

Experts ponder the bird flu question while WHO tones down scare

Posted on : Sat, 01 Oct 2005 19:02:00 GMT | Author : Emma Price

After Dr. David Nabarro of the World Health Organisation put the probable toll of the next pandemic at 150 million at UN headquarters news conference, a flurry of media briefings have sought to assuage the alarm raised by countries fearing the crippling effect of the disease on their economies.

A WHO influenza spokesman even suggested, "We're not going to know how lethal the next pandemic is going to be until the pandemic begins", while health groups suggested that the flu's human strain could be identified within a few days of outbreak. WHO Australia's Influenza Collaboration Centre Director, Ian Gust, also went further to say that post-identification the vaccine would take only about a couple of months for production, while suggesting that some prototypes were being tested on humans.

Most health researchers agree with Gust that should the strain be a known one, it would be just two months before the vaccine's mass production would start. He put down vaccine production to “a matter of either hours of a couple of days”, and timed from when manufacturers are given seed virus “ it's only six or eight weeks before the first and new batches come out every few days thereafter”. Unlike the WHO suggested rapid pandemic that harm 150 million before being caught, Gust suggested the bird flu pandemic could have a slow start, giving medical workers time to produce the vaccine in sufficient quantities.

While the probability of another flu pandemic is definite, the inability to say when or how much it will affect humankind and whether the H5N1 strain could be the originator are posing a problem for researchers and health planners alike. But what they are keen to do is ensure that the world is prepared for the possibility as pandemics historically have infected 25 to 30 percent of the population with very severely handicapping effects on economies. Marc Lipsitch, Harvard School of Public Health Professor of Epidemiology told the ABC News, “We can't predict what a virus we've never seen will do”.

With the recent cases of human strains of bird flu, having appeared to solely have spread through the bird route rather than from human-to-human, researchers like Lipstitch say, “In order to become a pandemic, it will have to change…And we don't know what that changed strain will do”. While WHO itself is torn between saying 7.4 million will be affected the big 150 million figure, history indicates such large worldwide deaths are not totally out of the hat. But ever since the historical 1918, 1957 and 1968 pandemics, Medicine has significantly advanced making detection and vaccine production much faster than before. Given that most of the 65 people killed by the bird flu virus in Asia since 2003, contracted the disease from sick birds, there is hope that vaccine would produced quickly to counter the disease's spread. Already there are indications that countries in a bid to be prepared are already beginning to produce the vaccines, which should become more widely available sometime next year.