China: H5N1 Patient `Improving'

 

# 1332

 

 

Bad news has always been slow to come out of China, and so it is difficult to judge the full impact of the story, currently filling the news, of the father-son cluster of H5N1 from Jiangsu.   

 

We've seen H2H transmission before, albeit limited in scope and duration.  The number of these incidents is in dispute, with `2 or 3' generally being  publicly acknowledged by the WHO, but that number may well be higher.

 

The truth is . . . we don't know what the truth is.

 

Far too often the full details of these outbreaks never see the light of day.   What we end up with are `official releases', particularly from countries like China and Indonesia, that have been sanitized for our protection.  

 

Hopefully the story of the father `improving' is true.

 

For now, the official report has no other contacts exhibiting signs of infection, and no indication how this father-son tandem became infected.   

 

This from the Strait Times.

 

 

 

Dec 8, 2007

Father of bird flu victim recovering: China

 

BEIJING - THE father of a Chinese man who died from the H5N1 strain of bird flu this month was recovering on Saturday after he was infected with the same virus, the official Xinhua news agency said.

 

The 52-year-old man surnamed Lu from Nanjing, capital of the eastern coastal province Jiangsu, was feverish with the H5N1 strain on Monday but 'showed signs of improvement', Xinhua said, quoting unidentified bird flu prevention experts.

 

There was nothing 'unusual' with people who had had close contact with Lu, Xinhua said without giving further details.

 

This latest case raises troublesome questions about how the man was infected.

 

Humans can contract H5N1 from close contact with infected birds, but scientists fear the disease could mutate into a version that spreads from person-to-person, risking wider outbreaks or even a global pandemic.

 

Mr Lu's 24-year-old son died last Sunday from the same disease, making the question of how these two infections occurred especially important.

 

Xinhua had earlier reported that the son had had no contact with dead poultry and there had been no reported poultry outbreak in Jiangsu province.

 

It was unknown whether contact with infected poultry had been confirmed in either of the infections.

 

The 24-year-old man's death was the first case in China since June and brought the death toll from the disease to 17.

 

With the world's biggest poultry population and millions of backyard birds roaming free, China is at the centre of the fight against bird flu.

 

The Ministry of Health said the World Health Organisation had been notified of the latest case. -- REUTERS

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