Flu Pandemic Inevitable,
Plans Needed Urgently -WHO
Every country in the world must come
up urgently with a plan to deal with an inevitable influenza pandemic
likely to be triggered by the bird flu virus that hit Asia this
year, a top global health expert said.
"I believe we are closer now to
a pandemic than at any time in recent years," said Shigeru Omi,
regional director for the Western Region of the World Health Organization
(WHO).
"No country will be spared once
it becomes a pandemic," he told a news conference.
"History has taught us that influenza
pandemics occur on a regular cycle, with one appearing every 20
to 30 years. On this basis, the next one is overdue," he said
at a conference of 13 Asian health ministers trying to figure
out how to avoid one.
"We believe a pandemic is highly
likely unless intensified international efforts are made to take
control of the situation," he said of the H5N1 avian flu virus,
which has defied efforts to eradicate it in several Asian countries,
including Thailand.
The Spanish flu pandemic of 1918
and 1919 killed upwards of 20 million people and WHO experts say
the next could infect up to 30 percent of the world's more than
6 billion people and kill up to 7 million of them.
Omi said that to stave that off,
the world would have to cooperate closely by sharing information
promptly and openly on the virus -- such as how it spreads, why
it hits children more easily than adults and how quickly it is
mutating.
Secrecy in China last year helped
the deadly SARS virus spread to many other countries before it
could be brought under control and Beijing has also been accused
of hiding the extent of its AIDS epidemic.
"Vaccine will protect you from
the disease and reduce the impact individually. But vaccination
alone will not prevent this outbreak," Omi said.
"Each country has to come up with
a plan because, as I said, a pandemic, it will happen."
HUGE HUMAN TOLL
Two U.S. firms are working on a
vaccine, but neither is likely to have one ready until March,
well after the cooler Asian season in which bird flu thrives best.
The H5N1 virus, which has already
killed 20 Vietnamese and 12 Thais, arrived in Asia about a year
ago, probably spread by migrating birds, especially wild fowl
heading to warmer climes at the onset of the northern winter.
Governments have slaughtered tens
of millions of poultry in a bid to eradicate it but WHO experts
say it is now probably a permanent fixture.
The wild birds, which can carry
the virus without falling ill, are flying south through Asia to
escape the northern winter and, in an alarming development, domesticated
ducks are showing they too can have the virus without showing
it, Omi said.
Experts say a pandemic will emerge
from an animal, most probably a pig, which can harbor both flu
viruses that affect humans and the avian flu variety. The two
would mate and produce a virus to which people have no immunity,
they say.
That has not happened yet, but
Omi said the geographical spread and the impact of the H5N1 virus
was unprecedented and had struck animals such as tigers and domesticated
cats not previously known to be susceptible to avian flu viruses.
"We have found that the virus is
resilient, very, very versatile," Omi said.
The Asian health ministers -- from
Brunei, Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Laos, Japan, South Korea,
Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam
-- promised they would make plans for a pandemic and cooperate
to stave it off.
In a joint statement at the end
of the two-day meeting, they pledged to work together to develop
vaccines, diagnostic tests for humans and research urgently needed
to provide more information on the virus.
Reference
Source 89
November 26, 2004
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