News1 min ago
Mutation of Bird Flu
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No best answer has yet been selected by lilposhgirl. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.like all flu viruses bird flu is bound to mutate. it may mutate to a form readily transmittable to humans, or it may not. if it becomes readily transmittable it may retain or increase its virulence, or it may become weaker. today's mass movement of people will ensure that a transmittable variation will be spread rapidly around the globe, and a large proportion of the population will be exposed to it. not everyone will be susceptible, nor will all those who contract it be affected in the same way.
in a nutshell, whatever happens will happen, and we will have very little control. so there's not much point in worrying.
There is absolutely nothing to worry about as the situation stands at the moment- the current H5N1 strain that has been in the news, has only been transmitted to humans working in close contact with infected birds. There have been no cases of human to human transmission, which is what the WHO and health experts are watching for.
In order for this to happen, genetic material from the avian strain would need to mix in the same cell with a human flu strain ( ie, someone would have to be infected with bird flu and human flu at the same time-(or in a pig, as they can support both bird and human strains)) to form a completely new strain for which there is no circulating immunity.
As and when this may happen, then we should be concerned- until then, not at all.
They damn well remember SARS in Toronto undercovers!
There was a lot of very hard work all over the planet that stopped that from getting here and killing hundreds of thousands of people!
But as Scubadiver says I wouldn't panic about bird flu too much yet - Unless you have shares in Bernard Matthews that is
I was on the WHO website last night looking at the info on this recent outbreak. There have been similar "cluster" outbreaks in the past- the problem with this one is the person who was the initial exposure case and who died first- their body was cremated without being typed for any flu virus. While there appears to be no direct contact between subsequent infected family members and infected birds, they are still looking for this link.
They have typed the virus strain that has infected the remaining family members and this shows no apparent mutation. This would suggest unless they HAVE come into contact with an infected bird, then the unmutated H5N1 strain has suddenly become transmissable between humans, which seems very unlikely.
I'd still say there is nothing to worry about at this stage.
Philby-the cluster of 7 family members (1 initial contact plus 6 later) that you are referring to are in Northern Sumatra, Indonesia. According to today's reports (25th) several of the family sold fruit and veg at a local market where slaughter of live birds occurred.
This is thought to have been the probable route of contamination and as of yet, there is no definate evidence to say that human to human transmission has occurred.
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