WHO Official: Virus Is Mutating Rapidly

 

# 862

 

With the APEC conference drawing to a close, we get this report from Australia, warning that the H5N1 virus is rapidly mutating and poses a `very real' threat.

 

 

 

 

 

Deadly flu virus mutating rapidly: WHO
By Tamara McLean

The deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu is mutating unpredictably and at a rapid pace, a senior WHO official has warned Asia Pacific health ministers.

 

APEC health ministers have wrapped their two-day Sydney meeting with a pledge to address the "very real" threat of a global pandemic of bird flu or human influenza.

 

The commitment came after a World Health Organisation (WHO) presentation urging vigilance in the face of unpredictable changes in the H5N1 virus, which poses the biggest current threat.

 

Dr Shigeru Omi, WHO Regional Director for the Western Pacific, told ministers and senior delegates from the 21 nations the virus was rapidly evolving.

 

"The virus is already entrenched, embedded in this part of the world and ... it has been very, very unstable and changeable," Dr Omi said after the meeting.

 

"If we put (these two points) together it's a very clear indication that we have to remain vigilant."

 

The Indonesian strain has infected 309 people since 2003, killing 188, but Dr Omi warned that what was once two distinct grades had now spilt into four sub-groups.

 

"And I would not be surprised if we end up with more sub-classes in the years to come," he said.

 

Current mutations have not necessarily increased the likelihood of human-to-human transmission, but it proved the virus was "risky".

 

"The longer the virus lasts, the more chance such a mutation will occur," Dr Omi said. "It's simple mathematics."

 

Federal Health Minister Tony Abbott said given its unpredictability, it was vital H5N1 was closely monitored as it evolved.

 

"That means it's very important to have rapid virus sharing because the threat of pandemic remains very real," Mr Abbott said.

 

(cont.)

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