China bird flu cases now at 102
By Melissa Gray and Paul Armstrong, CNN
updated 11:24 PM EDT, Sun April 21, 2013
An H7N9 bird flu patient walks in
the corridor of a hospital after his recovery and approval for discharge
in Bozhou, in central China's Anhui Province, on Friday, April 19.
China has reported 83 cases of H7N9 avian influenza. Seventeen people
have died from the virus which, while common in birds, hadn't been
detected in humans before the first cases were reported in March.
Bird flu scare spreads in China
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STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- The cases include 20 deaths, and 102 infection cases
- Seventy patients are hospitalized with the virus
- The new strain wasn't known until three weeks ago
- International experts in China to monitor the H7N9 strain
(CNN) -- The number of bird flu cases in China jumped Sunday to 102, including 20 deaths, the World Health Organization announced.
Seventy patients remain hospitalized with the virus. The WHO said there is still no evidence of human-to-human transmission.
So far the virus has
mainly affected eastern China, with 11 deaths and 33 infection cases
reported in Shanghai, 24 cases, including three deaths, in Jiangsu
Province, 38 cases, including five deaths, in Zhejiang Province, while
Anhui Province has confirmed three cases, with one ending in death.
Further afield, four
people -- including one in Beijing in northern China and three in
central Henan Province -- have tested positive for the H7N9 virus.
The current strain of bird flu, H7N9, was not detected in humans until last month.
Map: Bird flu spread
A team of international experts are currently in China conducting a week-long assessment of the virus, the WHO said on Friday.
"Right now it is still an
animal virus that rarely infects humans," Dr. Michael O'Leary, the head
of the WHO's office in Beijing, told reporters.
On Thursday, the central
government suspended wild bird sales to try to prevent the spread of the
virus, although many questions remain as to the source of infection. It
follows a ban on live poultry trading in affected provinces. A large
number of birds h
ave also been slaughtered, state-run Xinhua said.
O'Leary said there was
legitimate reason for concern about the new virus, but suggested it was
premature to begin mass culling of poultry.
"I eat chicken every day," O'Leary said with a laugh. "Chicken is of no concern at all."
Until March, the virus had only been present in birds, which is why they've become the focus of the investigation.
However, 40% of patients
with H7N9 had not come into contact with poultry, according to the
Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention.
Authorities are continuing to monitor more than 1,000 people who have come into close contact with confirmed cases.
CNN's Miriam Falco and Hilary Whiteman contributed to this report.
end quote from:
I'm hoping this doesn't turn into a pandemic like the Flu at the end of World War I. More American soldiers died from the flu than died in the war.
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