World Health Organization experts are urging countries to
enforce bird flu outbreaks in poultry surveillance.
The announcement follows Pakistan's first human bird flu
fatality and Burma's first reported human case of bird flu. As Naomi Martig
reports from VOA's Asia News Center in Hong Kong, concern is also growing that
as colder weather sweeps through much of the northern hemisphere, so will cases
of the potentially deadly virus.
The World Health Organization says the bird flu virus is
likely to become more prevalent in the coming months, because just as people
are prone to sickness in cold weather, so are birds.
Malik Peiris teaches microbiology at Hong Kong University.
He was part of a team that in 2003 provided the first genetic map of the bird
flu virus and its mutations. He says more temperate parts of the world will see
increased transmission of the virus.
Bird flu has killed more than 200 people, mostly in Asia,
since 2003. The two countries with the greatest number of human cases are
Indonesia and Vietnam.
Hans Troedssan, spokesman for the World Health
Organization's Beijing office, says the WHO is urging health workers to be
alert, including those in countries where there have been few cases of bird
flu.
Japan, Malaysia and Vietnam are among the countries that
have been praised for efficiently dealing with bird flu outbreaks in poultry.
But Troedssan warns that complacency is greatest in countries that have had the
most success containing the virus.
The majority of people infected by bird flu contracted the
virus from sick poultry. But there have been cases of human transmission.
Peiris says experts are concerned the virus could mutate into a form easily
passed between people.
"The most worrying thing is that if the virus does
adapt to human transmission and causes a pandemic, the severity of human
disease could be catastrophic," Peiris said. "It could be much worse
even than the 1918 pandemic. And I think that is why we have to take it
seriously."
The World Health Organization has sent medical teams to
Pakistan to investigate the possibility of human-to-human transmission in the
country's first human cases of bird flu. At least five of the eight people
infected are from the same family.