[Interesting in the fact that she mentioned it.]
Last Updated: 2009-05-15 9:00:25 -0400 (Reuters Health)
* Warns newly-discovered strain may have global implications
* Parts of Southeast Asia seen at particular threat
By Stephanie Nebehay
GENEVA (Reuters) - The World Health Organisation warned on Friday against a false sense of security from waning and apparently mild outbreaks of H1N1 flu, saying the worst may not be over.
WHO Director-General Margaret Chan, who raised the United Nations agency's pandemic alert to the second-highest level, said there remained "great uncertainty" about the strain that could pose particular threats in Southeast Asia.
"We are meeting at a time of crisis that could have global implications," she told an intergovernmental meeting on pandemic preparedness at the WHO's Geneva headquarters.
The meeting is tackling the sensitive question of virus sharing, in which countries provide biological specimens to the international community for use by pharmaceutical companies and vaccine makers who are formulating jab ingredients.
At the height of fears about bird flu, Indonesia had refused to share H5N1 virus samples without guarantees that any vaccines developed from them would be made available to poorer countries at an affordable price.
GlaxoSmithKline, Sanofi-Aventis, Novartis, Baxter International and other pharmaceutical companies others are awaiting WHO guidance about whether to start mass-producing vaccines to fight H1N1, which may force them to cut production of seasonal flu shots.
Chan said she would make a recommendation soon about the appropriate balance between the types of jabs.
"We are moving on two tracks to ensure some security for seasonal vaccine and at the same time kick-starting early scientific work for pandemic vaccine," she told the session.
MILD SYMPTOMS
The WHO chief commended countries with H1N1 infections for their "timely sharing of samples for risk assessment and making seed vaccine," saying that starting point for larger production of jabs could be ready by the end of this month.
And another top official, acting WHO director-general Keiji Fukuda, said there had been "rapid, widespread sharing of specimens" to date.
Participants in the two-day WHO meeting are seeking to reach agreement on standards for transparency, trust, and sovereignty related to virus sample sharing, an issue that is also expected to dominate next week's annual World Health Assembly in Geneva.
"I hope the end result is something really balanced that we can use for a long time," Fukuda said.
-snip-
But Chan stressed that important risks remain.
She said the WHO is closely watching parts of Southeast Asia that saw large outbreaks of H5N1 avian flu -- a virus that can be deadly when it passes from birds to humans, but has not spread easily between people to date.
A mixture of H5N1 and H1N1 viruses could have a big impact, she said, while stressing: "I am not saying it will happen."
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