Egypt, Indonesia report recent H5N1 outbreaks
Nov 21, 2011 (CIDRAP News) – Egypt reported five H5N1 avian
influenza outbreaks in October, and the latest disease surveillance from
Indonesia suggests that the highest incidence is in Bali, where three human
fatal infections were recently reported, according to an overview from the
United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).
The Egyptian H5N1 outbreaks struck four governorates: Beheira,
Fayoum, Gharbia, and Giza. The event in Beheira occurred at a farm where poultry
was vaccinated against H5N1. The other four outbreaks affected unvaccinated
backyard or rooftop poultry, according to the FAO.
In Indonesia, disease surveillance authorities said Bali had the
highest incidence of villages affected by highly pathogenic avian flu in
September, at 5.6 per 1,000, followed by Central Sulawesi (4.3 per 1,000), West
Sulawesi (3.1), West Kalimantan (3.1), and South Sulawesi (2.8) provinces. The
figures are from the Participatory Disease Surveillance and Response program,
which covers 29 of the country's 33 provinces.
In October, the H5N1 virus killed three Bali residents, a
29-year-old woman and two of her children, a 5-year-old girl and a 10-year-old
boy. Poultry in the family's household had died before the woman and her
children got sick.
Outbreaks were also reported in two villages in East Nusa Tenggara
province, the FAO reported.
More recently, the virus struck poultry in three subdistricts in
South Sulawesi province, killing about 14,000 birds, according to a local media
report cited on Nov 19 by Bird Flu Information Corner, a Web message board
operated by Kobe University in Japan and Airlangga University in Indonesia.
The FAO overview of the latest H5N1 outbreaks also includes
detections in Vietnam and Iran, which had been previously reported to the World
Organization for Animal Health.
So far this year, 14 countries have reported H5N1 outbreaks,
according to a chart in the FAO report.
H5N1 is endemic in a handful of countries, including China,
Vietnam, Indonesia, Bangladesh, India, and Egypt.
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