
Human Health Hazards
2006 - Special Section: Avian Influenza
Farm Sanctuary addresses Strategies for Managing Avian Influenza
to the USDA, November 9, 2005
USDA's
response to Farm Sanctuary's concerns, January 20, 2006
Bird
flu drug probe after 18 teenage deaths in Japan
JAPANESE health authorities are investigating a flu medicine
that is also available in Australia after a teenager jumped
11 storeys to his death after taking the drug. It was the
18th juvenile fatality linked to Tamiflu in 17 months.
Factory
Farms Fueling Avian Flu, Say Researchers
UN efforts to control the spread of avian flu in the developing
world could actually do more harm than good, warns a new study.
Bird
flu is linked to global trade in poultry
Most of the scattered bird flu outbreaks so far this year
probably can be traced to illegal or improper trade in poultry,
scientists believe. This probably includes recent outbreaks
in Nigeria and Egypt as well as the large outbreak on a turkey
farm in England.
Britain
Culls 159,000 Turkeys in Outbreak of H5N1 Bird Flu
Britain's first case of H5N1 avian influenza has been confirmed
by government veterinarians. At least 2,500 turkeys died of
the disease last week at a farm in Suffolk. The Bernard Matthews
farm near Upper Holton held 159,000 turkeys housed in 22 sheds,
all of which have now been culled to prevent further spread
of the highly pathogenic disease.
Deadly
Bird Flu Confirmed in British Turkeys
British authorities confirmed Saturday that an outbreak of
bird flu discovered among turkeys at a poultry farm in eastern
Britain had been caused by the deadly A(H5N1) strain, which
has killed humans in other parts of the world.
DEADLY
H5N1 MAY BE BREWING IN CATS
The discovery, announced last week, that the H5N1 bird flu
virus is widespread in cats in locations across Indonesia
has, according to this story, refocused attention on the danger
that the deadly virus could be mutating into a form that can
infect humans far more easily.
Bird
Flu Resurfaces in Vietnam
Bird flu is popping up after a yearlong hiatus in Vietnam
and elsewhere in Asia, and experts are warning now is the
time for the H5N1 virus to flourish. The big question: Just
how far will it go this winter?
Website
for Dr. Michael Greger's groundbreaking book, Bird Flu:
A Virus of Our Own Hatching
Provides lengthy excerpts from Greger's book,
which is a timely account of the history and progression of
bird flu, with implications for the future. This website also
provides viewers with multiple credible resources on bird
flu.
Bird
flu virus 'still smoldering,' U.S. expert says
A year ago, headlines were screaming about a looming disaster:
the rapid spread of bird flu across two-thirds of the globe.
The H5N1 strain of the virus was killing more than half its
human victims. Experts were urging the government to stockpile
medicine and experimental vaccines.
Poultry
trade likely route for bird flu to Americas, experts say
The H5N1 strain of bird flu is most likely to enter North
America through infected poultry trade, researchers say.
U.S.
looking in wrong place for bird flu, new study says
Birds from Latin America not from the north
are most likely to bring deadly bird flu to the United States,
researchers said Monday, suggesting the government might miss
the H5N1 virus because biologists have been looking in the
wrong direction.
Senators
Slam Voluntary Bird Flu Testing
"It is surprising that USDA does not have a program that
monitors and collects data on what testing is taking place,"
the senators wrote in a letter to Agriculture Secretary Mike
Johanns....We are deeply concerned that the agency has waited
until this year to begin to develop a comprehensive surveillance
plan for avian influenza, which will not be complete until
October....Consequently, some states are adequately prepared,
while others are not prepared and do not even have avian influenza
response plans," the senators wrote.
Spain
Confirms Its First Case of Bird Flu
Spain has recorded its first case of H5N1 bird flu, the Agriculture
Ministry said Friday. The deadly strain was found in a water
fowl in a marsh area outside the northern city of Vitoria.
State
tracking down 1,000 baby geese and ducks for destruction
The recent shipping disaster involving 1,000 baby ducks and
geese underscores the pure folly in the current system that
allows baby birds to be shipped as postal mail (Utah
tracking down 1,000 baby geese and ducks for destruction,
June 23), and it highlights why we should oppose U.S. Senator
Charles Grassleys legislation, S. 2395, to force the
U.S. Postal Service to continue shipping baby birds in the
mail.
U.N.
expert talks of bird flu, world health
If you're wealthier, you're healthier. I am concerned that
the drivers of inequity globally are today pretty strong,
and if poor people are sick, they stay poor. It's a vicious
spiral. So people who want to improve the state of global
health need to also be champions of the cause of equity.
US
lacks surveillance for bird flu in poultry: USDA
The United States does not have adequate measures in place
to survey and monitor for avian influenza, including the deadly
H5N1 strain that has killed 130 people overseas, the Agriculture
Department's inspector general said on Tuesday.
Bird
flu could close military cemeteries
Taps could be silenced for veterans who die during a bird
flu outbreak. The Department of Veterans Affairs foresees
closing the 120 national cemeteries in a pandemic because
of staffing shortages, leaving families the option of delaying
burial or seeking interment elsewhere.
Avian
flu found in P.E.I. Last
A case of H5 avian flu has been confirmed in a gosling in
western P.E.I. by the Atlantic Veterinary College. Dr. Lamont
Sweet, P.E.I.'s chief health officer, said in a news release
there is no evidence the virus can be transmitted by eating
poultry products, but anyone in contact with poultry needs
to take special care.
Failure
to tackle flu in birds threatens Indonesias human population
Efforts by Indonesia to combat H5N1 avian flu outbreaks in
the human population are being hampered by the difficulty
in detecting and stamping out the disease in poultry, says
an epidemiologist at the World Health Organization.
Earthquake
survivors at risk for bird flu
Earthquake survivors sleep inside a chicken shed at Bobokan
Tempel village in the earthquake-hit Bantul, Indonesia, Saturday,
June 3, 2006. Bird flu could threaten survivors of Indonesia's
earthquake, an aid agency warned, after finding people whose
homes were destroyed staying in dung-smeared chicken sheds.
A strong aftershock sent panicked survivors running into the
streets early Saturday.
Amid
bird flu, activists plead for humane US culling
Horrified by reports from Asia of chickens being set on fire
or buried alive in plastic bags, U.S. animal welfare groups
are gearing up with trepidation for the arrival of bird flu
and the probability of mass killings to contain it.
Eat
to Live: Duck-and-goose lock-up
The Périgord pastures are strangely empty this
year. In this corner of South West France, devoted almost
exclusively to the goose and duck liver trade, the view along
the roadside fields usually presents a wing-to-wing waddle
of earthbound birds.
Wild
Animal Trade Plays Role in Bird Flu Spread, Scientists Say
The legal and illegal trade of wild birds is playing a role
in spreading the H5N1 avian flu virus that's killed 127 people,
scientists said.
Wisconsin
Lab Leads Bird Flu Campaign
An unconventional border patrol in the Midwest is watching
for a dangerous migrant that may be trying to enter the country
thousands of miles away. On Wednesday, agents will start searching
their first detainees wild birds from Alaska that may
be harboring bird flu.
Bird
Flu Case May Be First Double Jump
It is a "definite possibility" that the virus jumped
more than once inside a family cluster, said Maria Cheng,
a spokeswoman for the W.H.O. in Geneva.
Lab
Prepares for Bird Flu Testing
Inside an Agriculture Department building known as C-3, four
young chickens strut nervously in their cage. They are part
of the government's network of defense against deadly bird
flu.
Seven
Indonesian Bird Flu Cases Linked to Patients
All seven people infected with bird flu in a cluster of Indonesian
cases can be linked to other patients, according to disease
trackers investigating possible human-to-human transmission
of the H5N1 virus. A team of international experts has been
unable to find animals that might have infected the people,
the World Health Organization said in a statement today.
The
Birds
Crying fowl: A talk with 'City of Quartz' author Davis on
another disaster in the making. As Hurricane Katrina revealed,
these days natural disasters have plenty of human accomplices.
Before Katrina flooded the Gulf Coast and the headlines, another
"natural" menaceavian fluhad begun to
surface in the media. Since 1997, the influenza strain H5N1
has killed dozens in Asia and forced the mass slaughter of
chickens.
Human
Bird Flu Appears in Djibouti, First in Horn of Africa
Djibouti is the latest country to report the appearance of
highly pathogenic avian influenza in humans, according to
the World Health Organization (WHO), with a May 12 account
of illness in a 2-year-old girl.
In
Austria, Way of Life Is Clipped by Bird Flu
Yet in this small, rural country of about 8 million people,
the influenza has cut a broad swath: in agriculture, sparking
fights between free-range chicken farmers and factory farmers;
in social life, adding to the isolation of the elderly who
used to meet to feed migratory birds; and in society, bringing
to the fore the primitive fears of disease that have long
troubled civilizations.
Migrating
Birds Didn't Carry Flu
Migratory birds that flew to Africa last fall, then back over
Europe in recent weeks, did not carry the deadly flu virus.
Report
Blames Flu on Industrial Poultry Farms Not Backyard Birds
Small-scale poultry farming and wild birds are being unfairly
blamed for the bird flu crisis now affecting large parts of
the world, according to a new report from an international
nongovernmental organization based in Barcelona. The report
says initiatives are multiplying to ban outdoor poultry, squeeze
out small producers and restock farms with genetically modified
chickens.
Summit
on flu nation's largest
State and federal officials walked a shaky tightrope Friday
hoping to encourage preparedness without striking fear in
the masses during the nation's lar-gest pandemic flu summit
this year.
Bird
flu should not be used as excuse for animal cruelty
Its ironic to hear Tom Silvas 1.4 million hen
operation described as looking more like a prison than
a farm
Chicken
firms giving poultry to food banks
Fears about avian flu have dramatically cut chicken exports,
creating a bonanza for the food depositories that serve the
nation's poor and hungry.
British
consumers fear no fowl despite bird flu
A bird flu outbreak at a handful of English farms has had
no impact on sales of chicken and other poultry products in
Britain even though investigators cannot rule out the possibility
that more farms are involved.
Bird
Flu Movie: Fact Or Fiction?
The scenario as portrayed on the ABC movie "Fatal Contact:
Bird Flu In America" on Tuesday night is, by design,
frightening.
Facing
the bird flu threat
Silvas chickens pump out 1.4 million eggs a day, but
his operation looks more like a prison than a farm.
Poll
Shows Fear of Bird Flu Widespread
Their expectations shaken by Katrina, Americans are divided
over whether the government is likely to do a good job handling
the bird flu if it reaches the U.S., a poll finds.
U.S.
to allow processed poultry shipments from China
Poultry processed in China will be allowed to enter the United
States despite outbreaks of deadly bird flu in China, the
Bush administration said Thursday.
A
tourism mecca, Hawaii preps for flu
Hawaii, both tourist mecca and western gateway to the nation,
is ahead of many states in preparing for a possible global
flu epidemic.
Alaska
Natives likely to be exposed to bird flu
Alaska Natives may be the the most likely people in North
America to be exposed to the avian flu virus because they
depend for food on wild migratory birds from Asia, a health
care expert said on Thursday
Nine
poultry farmers commit suicide in India
Nine poultry farmers in India have killed themselves and more
are facing a grim future after bird flu slashed demand for
chicken meat, an industry group said on Wednesday.
Worldwide
Wetland Restoration Could Reduce Bird Flu Threat
The loss of wetlands around the world is forcing wild birds
that may have avian influenza onto alternative sites like
farm ponds and paddy fields, where they come into contact
with chickens, ducks, and geese, finds a new report commissioned
by the United Nations Environment Programme.
Cat
bird flu risks 'overlooked'
It is vital to restrict the spread of bird flu in cats in
order to protect human health, scientists warn....cats might
form a bridge to man since they often live in close domestic
contact - in the same way that nursing a sick pet bird has
been shown to do.
Britain
Confirms Bird Flu Found in Scottish Swan
A swan found dead in eastern Scotland is the first recorded
case of the deadly strain of bird flu in a wild bird in Britain.
Article
on Bird Flu Criticizes Effort to Monitor Cats and Dogs
Five leading European scientists think officials should better
monitor cats, dogs and other carnivores for their possible
role in transmitting avian influenza.
Doubt
Cast on Stockpile of a Vaccine for Bird Flu
Scientists report that a [Avian flu] vaccine would only protect
about half the people who receive it, and could not be made
in sufficient quantity.
FROM
THE CHICKENS' PERSPECTIVE, THE SKY REALLY IS FALLING
The disease is self-limiting in wild birds." But when
a new virus gets into a barn packed with thousands of young
chickens that have been genetically selected for their plump
breasts rather than their ability to survive in the wild,
it leaps from bird to bird, mutating slightly each time, and
sometimes morphs into a lethal strain...
Bird-Flu
Pandemic Would Likely Start in California
If a bird-flu pandemic does hit the United States, it may
well start in California and spread across the country in
just two to four weeks.
Fowl
play: The poultry industry's central role in the bird flu
crisisBackyard
or free-range poultry are not fuelling the current wave of
bird flu outbreaks stalking large parts of the world. The
deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu is essentially a problem of
industrial poultry practices.
Bird
Flu Defies Control Efforts
The culling of flocks has failed to slow the rapid spread
of the virus, due in North America this year. Vaccination
of poultry is under study.
FDA
bans use of anti-viral flu drugs in poultry
The Food and Drug Administration Monday banned the use of
anti-viral influenza drugs in chickens, turkeys and ducks
in order to keep the drugs effective for use in humans.
Don't
blame the wild birds
Those of us who have been studying avian influenza and other
bird diseases for decades, when few people beside pet owners
and the poultry industry cared, are dismayed that voices of
reason are being drowned out with regard to the role played
by wild birds in the spread of the H5N1 virus.
Key
West chickens may run afoul of bird-flu fears
They've survived hurricanes, hawks, pellet guns, poison, politicians
and naughty boys. But now, after ranging free for more than
50 years, the chickens of Key West may finally have met an
enemy they can't outsmart: avian flu paranoia.
Donald
Rumsfeld makes $5m killing on bird flu drug
Donald
Rumsfeld has made a killing out of bird flu. The US Defence
Secretary has made more than $5m (£2.9m) in capital
gains from selling shares in the biotechnology firm that discovered
and developed Tamiflu, the drug being bought in massive amounts
by Governments to treat a possible human pandemic of the disease.
INDUSTRY
CAUSED THE FLU; WHY BLAME WILD BIRDS?
Not just
in India, industrial poultry is the cause of the spread of
the bird flu outbreak worldwide.
The
price of cheap chicken is bird flu
CHICKEN HAS never been cheaper. A whole one can be bought
for little more than the price of a Starbucks cup of coffee.
But the industrial farming methods that make ever-cheaper
chicken possible may also have created the lethal strain of
bird flu virus, H5N1, that threatens to set off a global pandemic.
Bird
Flu Found in Weasel-Like Animal
A German lab has found the H5N1 bird flu virus in a weasel-like
animal called a stone marten, officials said Thursday, marking
the disease's spread to another mammal species beyond cats.
U.S.
stepping up efforts to fight bird flu
A deadly strain of bird flu could appear in the United States
in the next few months as wild birds migrate from infected
nations, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said
Thursday.
Govt
Beefs Up Efforts to Look for Bird Flu
The strain, which has been spreading rapidly in Asia and parts
of Europe and Africa could show up in wild birds in the Americas
soon, Dr. David Nabarro, the head of the U.N.'s bird flu project,
said Wednesday. "I think it's within the next six to
12 months," he said. "And who knows - we've been
wrong on other things, it may be earlier." Nabarro reiterated
the World Health Organization's warning that "there will
be a pandemic sooner or later" in humans, perhaps due
to H5N1, or perhaps another influenza virus, and it could
start any time.
Austrian
Cats Test Positive for Bird Flu
Several cats have tested positive for the deadly strain of
bird flu in Austria's first reported case of the disease spreading
to an animal other than a bird, state authorities said Monday.
Foie
Gras Endangered Due to Bird Flu Fears
Wings flap, feathers fly and, in a flash, the needle sinks
into the fleshy snow-white neck of another of Benoit Descorps'
35,000 ducks.
Deadly
bird flu virus spreads to southeast France
France announced on Sunday a new case of the deadly H5N1 strain
of bird flu in a wild duck in the east of the country, while
another test on a wild swan showed the virus had spread several
hundred kilometres to the south.
Bird
flu spreads to Poland as Austria cats infected
Avian flu extended its spread across Europe as Poland confirmed
on Monday that two dead swans had the virulent H5N1 virus
and Austria reported that several cats had been infected.
Drumstick
not so tasty it justifies pandemic, says vegetarian U.S. doctor
Charlie Fidelman, Montreal Gazette
Stop bird flu before it invades North America by excising
poultry from your plate, a vegetarian physician said Tuesday.
Chickens
to be gassed in bird flu outbreak rehearsal
The date and exact place of the exercises has not been given
yet. What is known is that the exercises involving special
bird flu services will take place in southern Poland. A thousand
healthy chickens will be killed with carbon dioxide at a yet
unspecified poultry farm. This is not a cruel whim but a grim
necessity, argues Grzegorz Kawiecki, representing the veterinary
authorities for southern Poland.
Factory
farms blamed for spread of bird flu
Factory farming and the international poultry trade are largely
responsible for the spread of bird flu, and wild birds are
being unfairly blamed for the disease
Veg
restaurants benefiting from bird flu
The incidence of bird flu has made people aware that diseases
in animals like the mad cow disease or the bird flu can affect
humans, if the diseased animals are consumed by them.
IN
PILE OF WASTE, MD. SCIENTISTS DIG UP A RESPONSE TO BIRD FLU
"It's as much of an art as science," said Nathaniel
Tablante, associate professor of poultry health at the University
of Maryland. Tablante has spent the past three years studying
the possibilities of recycling chickens. His office in College
Park is overflowing with chicken paraphernalia: clocks, paintings,
cartoons, even a little chicken statue made by his daughter
after she learned about his job. But Tablante said he has
no sentimental feelings for chickens.
India
begins bird flu cull
Indian health officials and farm workers have begun culling
hundreds of thousands of chickens in a bid to stave off the
spread of the H5N1 bird flu virus.
EU
farm ministers discuss bird flu aid measures
European Union farm ministers are meeting on Monday to discuss
the issue of state aid to the poultry sector as bird flu spreads
among wild birds across Europe. Under current rules, Brussels
can co-finance 50 per cent of the cost of any required culling
of birds or destruction of eggs.
Reality
takes wing over bird flu
"Intensively-farmed poultry provide ideal conditions
for the evolution of highly lethal forms"
Italy
fights to contain bird flu
Italian health officials have announced a range of emergency
measures after the country's first discovery of the deadly
H5N1 strain of the bird flu virus.
Europe
taking steps to fend off avian flu
Swan deaths, risk from migratory birds intensify concern
European governments are bolstering their guard against bird
flu, faced with a growing number of dead swans and the risk
that migratory birds - which begin returning north next month
- could bring the disease from Africa.
EU
battens down hatches as bird flu hits meat sales
The arrival of bird flu in the European Union prompted governments
across the region on Monday to bolster their defences against
the deadly H5N1 virus as farmers braced for a plunge in poultry
consumption.
Iraqi
Government Tries to Prevent Bird Flu Outbreak
The Iraqi government is killing hundreds of thousands of chickens
in northeastern Iraq in an attempt to avert a widespread outbreak
of bird flu in the region.
Nigerian
Bird Flu Outbreak Means No Country is Immune
Thousands of chickens have died in northern Nigeria this month,
and now the bird flu may have appeared in the city of Lagos.
Chicken sellers say that about 200 birds have died from unknown
causes in Lagos state markets within the week.
Deadly
bird flu found in Nigeria
The deadly H5N1 bird flu virus has been detected on a large
commercial chicken farm in Nigeria - the first reported outbreak
in Africa, the World Organization for Animal Health said Wednesday.
More
bird flu in Nigeria alarms WHO
The deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu has been found in two more
Nigerian states, the Agricultural Ministry said Thursday.
Bird
Flu and Chicken Factory Farms: Profit Bonanza for US Agribusiness
Look to the giant chicken jails or chicken factory
farms around the world as a more likely source for emerging
Bird Flu viruses, not to small peasant chicken farmers, and
we might be closer to the truth.
First
Iraqi Bird Flu Death Confirmed
Iraqi and United Nations health officials confirmed yesterday
that a teenage girl who died two weeks ago was a victim of
the deadly H5N1 strain of avian influenza.
Live
Poultry Markets Raise Bird Flu Fears
The odor is the first clue, a sharp barnyard smell that seems
out of place on a stretch of the Lower East Side near a Burger
King and a Dunkin' Donuts. Hand-lettered signs advertise in
English, Spanish and Chinese: live chickens, ducks, quail,
pheasants.
Avian
Influenza Response
H5N1 Avian Influenza updates by the U.S. Agency for International
Developments (USAID) international response to Avian
Influenza with a summary of confirmed cases to date, news
and actions.
Bird
flu virus could spill over to Africa and Europe in springtime
Fighting the disease in animals is crucial to win the battle
against the virus.
Neal
Barnard: Fight avian flu by boycotting chicken
FATMA OZCAN surely deserved better. Hastily wrapped in a body
bag and buried by torchlight, 12-year-old Fatma recently became
the fourth Turkish child to die of the deadly H5N1 strain
of avian influenza, or "bird flu." Without a miracle,
she will not be the last.
Bird
Flu Reports Multiply in Turkey, Faster Than Expected
A flurry of new reports of avian influenza in humans and animals
emerged Sunday from various parts of Turkey, and international
health officials said they had come to believe that the disease
had been simmering in the eastern part of the country for
months, even though it was reported there only in late December.
Turkish
bird flu 'may be endemic'
"The virus may be spreading despite the control measures
already taken," Juan Lubroth, senior FAO animal health
office, said....Meanwhile Germany's Agricultural Minister
Horst Seehofer said Wednesday that Germany "very likely"
will require all birds be kept indoors to prevent bird flu
in the country.
Turkey
Now Has 15 Human Cases of Bird Flu
Preliminary tests showed five more people in Turkey have been
infected with the deadly strain of bird flu that already killed
two teenage siblings, officials said Monday as Indonesia and
China each reported a new case.
WHO Confirms Deadly Bird Flu in Turkey
Teenage siblings who died of bird flu in Turkey were the first
humans outside East Asia to succumb to the deadly H5N1 strain
Scientists
look to other species for some human flu answers
People aren't the only ones who can get hit with the flu.
The influenza virus can infect a range of animals, including
chickens, pigs, whales, dogs, horses, ferrets and seals.
Chicken
dung used to feed fish may help spread bird flu
December 28, 2005 Independent News
Pigs
also at risk if deadly bird flu reaches U.S
December 23, 2005 Reuters
Legacy
of farming methods comes home to roost
December 5, 2005 The Sydney Morning Herald
Who
pays for avian influenza?
November 15, 2005 Herald Media
The
spreading bird-flu menace reaches Europe
October 20, 2005
Liquid
manure spills into Black River
August 12, 2005 News 10
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