*Vietnam reports more bird flu in poultry*
25 May 2007 10:37:51 GMT
Source: Reuters
HANOI, May 25 (Reuters) - Bird flu has struck poultry in two more places
in northern Vietnam, officials said on Friday, two days after reporting
the first human case in a year and a half.
Tests on ducks and chickens at poultry farms in the port city of
Haiphong and in Bac Giang province showed they were infected with the
H5N1 virus, the Animal Health Department said.
The department also said there had been fresh outbreaks in the
previously hit northern provinces of Quang Ninh and Nam Dinh, killing
ducks and chickens that had not been vaccinated.
International public health authorities describe Vietnam's mass poultry
vaccination programme and other measures as a model for keeping the
virus at bay for the past 18 months.
But on Wednesday it recorded the first human case since November 2005
when a man from Vinh Phuc province near the capital, Hanoi, was found to
have contracted H5N1 after he helped slaughter chickens at a friend's
wedding.
The World Health Organisation said it was working with the government to
investigate the case and the WHO needed to verify the virus sample. It
said finding the suspected patient was not alarming if it was an
isolated case.
The Animal Health Department said the Agriculture Ministry had ordered
provincial animal health authorities to step up efforts to stamp out the
disease including swift anti-bird flu vaccination for all poultry.
The H5N1 virus has killed 42 people in the Southeast Asian country since
it resurfaced in Asia in late 2003.
The virus returned to poultry in the south late last year and earlier
this year. Last month, the WHO urged Vietnam to accelerate poultry
vaccination and target more ducks.
Vietnam has so far this year vaccinated 120.8 million poultry in 60 out
of its 64 provinces, officials said.
Apart from killing birds that have not been vaccinated, the spread of
the virus in May at the beginning of summer is unusual because experts
had previously said it thrived best in cool temperatures and weakened in
warmer weather.