Avian Flu

March 9, 2006
By Senator Charles Grassley:

There have been accusations that the shipping of day-old poultry could spread avian influenza. I have received information from Avian Health Veterinarians and they have informed me that avian influenza is not an egg transmitted disease.

There are no reports of day-old poultry from infected breeders being infected with avian influenza when they hatch.

Poultry health specialists have been examining the vertical transmission, or parents-to-chicks via the egg of avian influenza, for more than 30 years. Studies looking at the avian influenza have consistently failed to reveal evidence of avian influenza virus infections in newly hatched chicks from infected parent flocks.

This clearly shows that day-old poultry are not likely to be naturally infected. So the risk of transmitting avian influenza through shipment of day-old poultry is not an issue.


Indonesia Reports 42nd Human Bird Flu Death
Main Category: Bird Flu / Avian Flu News
Article Date: 16 Jul 2006 - 6:00am (PDT)


A 44-year-old man has died as a result of bird flu infection, say authorities in Indonesia. 
The man was from eastern Jakarta. He was hospitalized on 10 July with a temperature, breathing problems and a bad cough. Authorities said the man had been in close contact with live poultry. Local tests indicated he died of H5N1 avian flu infection. As with all local confirmed tests,
samples have been sent on to a WHO recognized laboratory in Hong Kong for final confirmation. This last case will bring Indonesia equal to Vietnam regarding total human bird flu deaths.
Thirty people have died so far in Indonesia this year alone, while not one confirmed death has been reported in
Vietnam (this year). As Indonesia's efforts to combat the bird flu spread have not been organized in a uniform,
systematic way, experts say it is most likely the virus will thrive in the country for many years to come.
Authorities in Indonesia have been reluctant to organize mass culls of poultry in areas where infections have been found because of the
huge costs involved in compensating farmers and smallholders. It is now a foregone conclusion among the scientific community that the virulent H5N1 bird flu virus strain will
eventually mutate into a more human transmissible form. For the moment, H5N1 cannot infect humans easily.
For it to spread easily from human-to-human it will need to mutate. In order to mutate, it will most likely infect a human
who has the normal flu. The bird flu virus could exchange genetic information with the normal human
flu virus and gain its ability to transmit easily from human-to-human. If, or when this happens, we could
be facing a serious pandemic. How serious the pandemic is depends on how virulent the new, mutated virus is. The reason why humans cannot catch bird flu easily is that it needs to get deep down in the human lung to make a
person ill. In order to do that a person must have a large cluster of H5N1 around him/her for some of them to
get deep down. H5N1 does not infect the human upper-respiratory tract. Precisely for this reason humans
cannot infect other humans easily. An infected person who coughs and/or sneezes does not expel many bird flu viruses because they are
too deep down. For H5N1 to spread easily among humans it will need to mutate so that it
infects the upper-respiratory tract.
On the positive side, upper-respiratory tract infections are easier to treat
than lower-respiratory tract infections. Hopefully, if and when the virus mutates, even though there may be
many more human infections, each one will be easier to treat and survival rates will be much higher than they currently are. Written by: Christian Nordqvist Editor: Medical News Today