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WHO Reports Eleven Suspected Human Bird Flu Cases in Azerbaijan

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  • WHO Reports Eleven Suspected Human Bird Flu Cases in Azerbaijan

    Armenpress

    WHO REPORTS ELEVEN SUSPECTED HUMAN BIRD FLU CASES IN AZERBAIJAN

    GENEVA, MARCH 10, ARMENPRESS: Eleven suspected
    human cases of the highly pathogenic H5N1 bird flu
    virus, three of them fatal, are under investigation in
    Azerbaijan, the World Health Organization said
    Thursday. Maria Cheng, spokeswoman for the UN health
    agency, was quoted by ÀFÐ as saying that the suspected
    victims, including eight members of a single family,
    all came from the same village near the Azerbaijani
    capital Baku.
    "It is possible that they caught H5N1, because we
    already know that poultry were hit by the virus in
    neighboring areas," said Cheng. Flocks belonging to
    the patients had also been infected, but experts had
    yet to identify by what, she added. Samples from the
    suspected human victims were being sent to a
    WHO-accredited laboratory in London to establish
    whether they had the H5N1 virus, Cheng said. The
    results could be available in 24 hours or within two
    weeks, depending on the sample quality, she noted.
    On Sunday, Azerbaijani authorities said they were
    investigating whether the deaths of two young children
    in the republic were caused by bird flu. The two
    children were part of a family whose six members had
    been hospitalized with suspected pneumonia. Several
    days earlier, Azerbaijani authorities had said that
    the H5N1 virus had hit poultry flocks, and ordered the
    slaughter of half a million birds. Since it resurfaced
    in 2003, the virus has infected 175 people in seven
    countries and killed 96 of them, according to the WHO.

    H5N1 spreads from birds to people in close
    proximity, but experts fear that it could mutate into
    a form that transmits easily among humans, leading to
    a global pandemic that could claim millions of lives.
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