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A man previously infected with the H7N9 bird flu virus in Zhoukou, Henan province, has recovered and was discharged from a hospital on Tuesday. Jin Yuequan / For China Daily |
Vaccines are 'not recommended' at present, says WHO expert
Taiwan confirmed the first case of H7N9 bird flu outside the Chinese mainland on Wednesday, and World Health Organization experts investigating the disease in China said the same day it was "one of the most lethal influenza viruses" seen so far.
Health authorities in Taiwan said the victim is a 53-year-old male who returned on Tuesday from Suzhou, Jiangsu province, via Shanghai. The man had a fever, cough and a running nose when he arrived at Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport, and was sent directly to a hospital for tests where he was confirmed to have H7N9.
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By 4 pm Wednesday, one person diagnosed earlier in Jiangsu province died, but no new case of H7N9 infection was reported on the Chinese mainland, which has confirmed 108 cases and 23 deaths since the first infections were announced on March 31.
"This is definitely one of the most lethal influenza viruses we have seen so far," said Keiji Fukuda, a leading flu expert from the World Health Organization, who has led a team on a five-day visit to China to study H7N9.
Fukuda told a news conference on Wednesday that the H7N9 virus was more easily transmissible from poultry to human than the more common H5N1 strain of bird flu, which has killed more than 360 people worldwide since 2003.
Experts had previously remarked on the "affinity" of H7N9 for humans.
"When we look at influenza viruses, this is an unusually dangerous virus," Fukuda said, but he added: "We are really at the beginning of our understanding."
The experts, here on invitation from the National Health and Family Planning Commission, released their findings on Wednesday after a joint assessment of the virus with their counterparts in Beijing and Shanghai.
The WHO, however, does not recommend the production of vaccines.
"Over the past three weeks some potential vaccines have been developed. They are being developed just in case. Right now, there is no recommendation to go ahead and produce vaccines against this virus," said Nancy Cox, director of the WHO Collaborating Center for Surveillance in Atlanta.
Yang Weizhong, deputy director of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said: "We know very little about immunity against this virus and how this virus causes diseases. We are planning to develop vaccines against it. But my personal experience tells me it will be difficult and will take a long time to succeed."
Experts also said human infection of H7N9 is highly likely to have originated from live poultry markets.
"According to the evidence that we've got, birds infected by the virus, especially poultry, and the environment contaminated by the virus are the most likely sources of infection," said Fukuda from the WHO.
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"On April 6, Shanghai rapidly closed down the live poultry markets. It's been very encouraging to see that almost immediately there was a decline in the detection of new cases. The cases that did occur all occurred in the next week (after the shutdown), which were within the incubation period of the virus," she said. "The evidence suggests that closing down live poultry markets is an effective way to reduce the risk of infection."
Shanghai confirmed its first case of a human infected with H7N9 on March 30, and had been reporting sporadic cases of infection almost every day since the beginning of April.
However, all the cases reported showed related symptoms before April 13. The city has not reported a newly diagnosed case for four consecutive days.
Other cities, including Nanjing and Hangzhou, also closed down their live poultry markets.
Kelso said it is important to see if there is a similar decline of new cases in these areas in the coming weeks.
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