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Avian Influenza

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Avian Influenza. Chuck Wright, RMO. American Embassy Jakarta. September 27,2005 ... http://jakarta.usembassy.gov/ http://www.cdc.gov/flu/avian/ http://www.wpro. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Avian Influenza


1
Avian Influenza
  • Chuck Wright, RMO
  • American Embassy Jakarta
  • September 27,2005

2
Picture of Chickens
3
What is Influenza (also called Flu)?
  • The flu is a contagious respiratory illness
    caused by influenza viruses. It can cause mild to
    severe illness, and at times can lead to death.
  • Every year in the United States, on average
  • 5 to 20 of the population gets the flu
  • more than 200,000 people are hospitalized from
    flu complications, and
  • about 36,000 people die from flu.

4
Flu
  • Flu is not the common cold that produces runny
    nose, cough, low grade fever.
  • Flu occurs at certain times of the year in the
    Northern and Southern Hemispheres and year round
    in the Tropics

5
Symptoms of Flu
  • Symptoms of flu include
  • fever (usually high)
  • headache
  • extreme tiredness
  • dry cough
  • sore throat
  • runny or stuffy nose
  • muscle aches
  • Stomach symptoms, such as nausea, vomiting, and
    diarrhea, also can occur but are more common in
    children than adults

6
Bird Flu Cartoon
7
Complications of Flu
  • Complications of flu can include bacterial
    pneumonia, dehydration, and worsening of chronic
    medical conditions, such as congestive heart
    failure, asthma, or diabetes. Children may get
    sinus problems and ear infections.

8
How Flu Spreads
  • Flu viruses spread in respiratory droplets caused
    by coughing and sneezing. They usually spread
    from person to person, though sometimes people
    become infected by touching something with flu
    viruses on it and then touching their mouth or
    nose. Most healthy adults may be able to infect
    others beginning 1 day before symptoms develop
    and up to 5 days after becoming sick.
  • That means that you can pass on the flu to
    someone else before you know you are sick, as
    well as while you are sick.

9
Cartoon
10
Preventing the Flu Get Vaccinated
  • The "flu shot" -- an inactivated vaccine
    (containing killed virus) that is given with a
    needle. The flu shot is approved for use in
    people older than 6 months, including healthy
    people and people with chronic medical
    conditions.

11
Influenza Pandemics During the 20th Century
  • 1918-19, "Spanish flu," A (H1N1), caused the
    highest number of known influenza deaths more
    than 500,000 people died in the United States,
    and up to 50 million people may have died
    worldwide. Many people died within the first few
    days after infection, and others died of
    complications later. Nearly half of those who
    died were young, healthy adults. Influenza A
    (H1N1) viruses still circulate today after being
    introduced again into the human population in the
    1970s.
  • 1957-58, "Asian flu," A (H2N2), caused about
    70,000 deaths in the United States. First
    identified in China in late February 1957, the
    Asian flu spread to the United States by June
    1957.
  • 1968-69, " Hong Kong flu," A (H3N2), caused
    about 34,000 deaths in the United States. This
    virus was first detected in Hong Kong in early
    1968 and spread to the United States later that
    year. Influenza A (H3N2) viruses still circulate
    today.
  • Both the 1957-58 and 1968-69 pandemics were
    caused by viruses containing a combination of
    genes from a human influenza virus and an avian
    influenza virus. The origin of the 1918-19
    pandemic virus is not clear.

12
Pandemic A Worldwide Outbreak of Influenza
  • An influenza pandemic is a global outbreak of
    disease that occurs when a new influenza A virus
    appears or emerges in the human population,
    causes serious illness, and then spreads easily
    from person to person worldwide.
  • Pandemics are different from seasonal outbreaks
    or epidemics of influenza. Seasonal outbreaks
    are caused by subtypes of influenza viruses that
    are already in existence among people, whereas
    pandemic outbreaks are caused by new subtypes or
    by subtypes that have never circulated among
    people or that have not circulated among people
    for a long time.
  • Past influenza pandemics have led to high levels
    of illness, death, social disruption, and
    economic loss.

13
Flu Travel Pic
14
What is Avian Flu?
  • Avian Flu is the bird version of our Human Flu.
    The current one is designated H5N1.
  • These flu viruses occur naturally among birds.
    Wild birds worldwide carry the viruses in their
    intestines, but usually do not get sick from
    them.
  • However, bird flu is very contagious among birds
    and can make some domesticated birds, including
    chickens, ducks, and turkeys, very sick and kill
    them.

15
How are bird flu viruses different from human flu
viruses?
  • When we talk about bird flu viruses, we are
    referring to those flu A subtypes that continue
    to occur mainly in birds. They do not usually
    infect humans, even though we know they can do
    so.
  • When we talk about human flu viruses we are
    referring to those subtypes that occur widely in
    humans. There are only three known subtypes of
    human flu viruses (H1N1, H1N2, and H3N2) it is
    likely that some genetic parts of current human
    flu A viruses came from birds originally.
  • Flu A viruses are constantly changing, and they
    might adapt over time to infect and spread among
    humans.

16
Instances of Avian Influenza Infections in Humans
  • H5N1, Hong Kong, 1997 Avian influenza A (H5N1)
    infections occurred in both poultry and humans.
    This was the first time an avian influenza virus
    had ever been found to transmit directly from
    birds to humans. During this outbreak, 18 people
    were hospitalized and six of them died. To
    control the outbreak, authorities killed about
    1.5 million chickens to remove the source of the
    virus.
  • H9N2, China and Hong Kong, 1999 Avian influenza
    A H9N2 illness was confirmed in two children.
    Both patients recovered, and no additional cases
    were confirmed.
  • H7N2, Virginia, 2002 Following an outbreak of
    H7N2 among poultry in the Shenandoah Valley
    poultry production area, one person was found to
    have serologic evidence of infection with H7N2.
  • H5N1, China and Hong Kong, 2003 Two cases of
    avian influenza A (H5N1) infection occurred among
    members of a Hong Kong family that had traveled
    to China. One person recovered, the other died.
  • H7N7, Netherlands, 2003 The Netherlands
    reported outbreaks of influenza A (H7N7) in
    poultry on several farms. Later, infections were
    reported among pigs and humans. In total, 89
    people were confirmed to have H7N7 influenza
    virus infection associated with this poultry
    outbreak. These cases occurred mostly among
    poultry workers.
  • H9N2, Hong Kong, 2003 H9N2 infection was
    confirmed in a child in Hong Kong. The child was
    hospitalized but recovered.
  • H7N2, New York, 2003 In November 2003, a patient
    with serious underlying medical conditions was
    admitted to a hospital in New York with
    respiratory symptoms. One of the initial
    laboratory tests identified an influenza A virus
    that was thought to be H1N1. The patient
    recovered and went home after a few weeks.
    Subsequent confirmatory tests conducted in March
    2004 showed that the patient had been infected
    with an H7N2 avian influenza virus
  • H5N1, Thailand and Vietnam, 2004
  • H7N3 in Canada , 2004 In February 2004, human
    infections of H7N3 among poultry workers were
    associated with an H7N3 outbreak among poultry.
    The H7N3-associated illnesses consisted of eye
    infections.
  • H5N1, Thailand and Vietnam, 2004 and 2005
    Beginning in late June 2004, new lethal outbreaks
    of H5N1 among poultry were reported by several
    countries in Asia. The new outbreaks of H5N1 in
    poultry in Asia were followed by renewed sporadic
    reporting of human cases of H5N1 infection in
    Vietnam and Thailand beginning in August and
    continuing into 2005. Of particular note is one
    isolated instance of probable limited
    human-to-human transmission occurring in Thailand
    in September.

17
Symptoms of Avian Influenza in Humans
  • The reported symptoms of avian influenza in
    humans have ranged from typical influenza-like
    symptoms (e.g., fever, cough, sore throat, and
    muscle aches) to eye infections (conjunctivitis),
    pneumonia, acute respiratory distress, viral
    pneumonia, and other severe and life-threatening
    complications.

18
Transmission of Influenza A Viruses Between
Animals and People
  • Influenza A viruses are found in many different
    animals, including ducks, chickens, pigs, whales,
    horses, and seals.
  • Avian influenza viruses may be transmitted to
    humans in two main ways
  • Directly from birds or from avian
    virus-contaminated environments to people.
  • Through an intermediate host, such as a pig.

19
Bird Flu Cartoon
20
How Influenza Viruses Change Drift and Shift
  • Influenza viruses can change in two different
    ways.
  • One type is called "antigenic drift," which
    occurs through small changes in the virus that
    happen continually over time. Antigenic drift
    produces new virus strains that may not be
    recognized by antibodies to earlier influenza
    strains.
  • The other type of change is called "antigenic
    shift." Antigenic shift is an abrupt, major
    change in the influenza A viruses, resulting in a
    new influenza virus that can infect humans and
    has a hemagglutinin protein or hemagglutinin and
    neuraminidase protein combination that has not
    been seen in humans for many years.
  • Influenza viruses are changing by antigenic drift
    all the time, but antigenic shift happens only
    occasionally.

21
The Worry?
  • That the H5N1 virus will mutate into a person to
    person transmissible version and spread.
  • The virus can share genetic material with a human
    flu virus through reassortment and become more
    virulent
  • Pigs could be the intermediary host (receptors
    for both avian and human flu).
  • No one knows if this will happen.

22
What is the risk to humans from the H5N1 virus in
Asia?
  • The H5N1 virus does not usually infect humans.
  • So far, spread of H5N1 virus from person to
    person has been rare and spread has not continued
    beyond one person.

23
How is bird flu in humans treated?
  • Studies suggest that the prescription medicines
    approved for human flu viruses would work in
    preventing bird flu infection in humans. However,
    flu viruses can become resistant to these drugs,
    so these medications may not always work.

24
Bird Flu Cartoon
25
Graph from USAID August 2005
26
Avian Influenza in Indonesia
  • Confirmed in birds in 2003
  • Expanding epidemic in birds during 2004
  • Found among many species of birds and mammals
    (pigs) during 2004 and 2005
  • Human infections confirmed in July, August and
    September 2005
  • No current evidence of efficient and sustained
    transmission among humans

27
60 of Indonesians live on Java Bali
28
Confirmed H5N1 in Bird Populations
29
NAMRU-2 Influenza Surveillance Network
Established Sites
Expanded Sites (to rural clinics)
30
Where are we now?
31
Flu and Media
32
How is infection with H5N1 virus in humans
treated?
  • The H5N1 virus currently infecting birds in Asia
    that has caused human illness and death is
    resistant to amantadine and rimantadine, two
    antiviral medications commonly used for
    influenza.
  • Two other antiviral medications, oseltamavir
    (Tamiflu) and zanamavir, would probably work to
    treat flu caused by the H5N1 virus, though
    studies still need to be done to prove that they
    work.

33
Is there a vaccine to protect humans from H5N1
virus?
  • There currently is no vaccine to protect humans
    against the H5N1 virus that is being seen in
    Asia.
  • However, vaccine development efforts are under
    way. Research studies to test a vaccine to
    protect humans against H5N1 virus began in April
    2005. (Researchers are also working on a vaccine
    against H9N2, another bird flu virus subtype.)

34
Recommendations
  • Avoid all contact with poultry (e.g., chickens,
    ducks, geese, pigeons, quail) or any wild birds,
    and avoid settings where H5N1-infected poultry
    may be present, such as commercial or backyard
    poultry farms and live poultry markets. Do not
    eat uncooked or undercooked poultry or poultry
    products, including dishes made with uncooked
    poultry blood.
  • As with other infectious illnesses, one of the
    most important preventive practices is careful
    and frequent handwashing. Cleaning your hands
    often, using either soap and water (or waterless,
    alcohol-based hand rubs when soap is not
    available and hands are not visibly soiled),
    removes potentially infectious materials from
    your skin and helps prevent disease transmission.
  • CDC does not recommend the routine use of masks
    or other personal protective equipment while in
    public areas.

35
Get a Flu Shot
  • Prevents flu (but not Avian Flu) and thus keeps
    you healthy and avoids a disease that can look
    like Avian Flu
  • Less loss of time from work
  • Less chance that Avian Flu will mix with Human Flu

36
When to get the Flu Shot
  • Embassy is giving it to all FSNs, their spouses
    and children around Oct 23rd.
  • Embassy Americans can get it in the Health Unit
    once it arrives (watch for an announcement).
  • Non Embassy employees consult your doctor (SOS
    has it).

37
Food Hygiene
  • Separate raw meat from cooked or ready-to-eat
    foods. Do not use the same chopping board or the
    same knife for preparing raw meat and cooked or
    ready-to-eat foods.
  • Do not handle either raw or cooked foods without
    washing your hands in between.
  • Do not place cooked meat back on the same plate
    or surface it was on before it was cooked.
  • All foods from poultry, including eggs and
    poultry blood, should be cooked thoroughly. Egg
    yolks should not be runny or liquid. Because
    influenza viruses are destroyed by heat, the
    cooking temperature for poultry meat should reach
    70C (158 F).
  • Wash egg shells in soapy water before handling
    and cooking, and wash your hands afterwards.
  • Do not use raw or soft-boiled eggs in foods that
    will not be cooked.
  • After handling raw poultry or eggs, wash your
    hands and all surfaces and utensils thoroughly
    with soap and water.

38
IF You Have Been Exposed
  • Monitor your health for 10 days.
  • If you become ill with fever and develop a cough
    or difficulty breathing, or if you develop any
    illness during this 10-day period, consult a
    health-care provider. Before you visit a
    health-care setting, tell the provider the
    following 1) your symptoms 2) if you have had
    direct poultry contact, and 3) where you
    traveled. The U.S. embassy or consulate also can
    provide names and addresses of local physicians.
  • Do not travel while sick, and limit contact with
    others as much as possible to help prevent the
    spread of any infectious illness.

39
Tamiflu
  • The Embassy has this medication and can provide
    it to employees who are infected or exposed.
  • Non-Embassy employees should contact their doctor
    about how to access a supply if they are infected

40
Sources of Information
  • http//jakarta.usembassy.gov/
  • http//www.cdc.gov/flu/avian/
  • http//www.wpro.who.int/avian_flu/

41
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