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Bird flu No. 1 Health Threat in World, CDC Chief Warns
By Seattle Times News Services
February 22, 2005
Dr. Julie Gerberding is director of the CDC.
CDC: Avian influenza
WASHINGTON * Avian flu poses the single biggest health threat to the world
right now, and health officials may not yet have all the tools they need
to
fight it, the head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
said yesterday.
"This is a very ominous situation for the globe," CDC Director Dr. Julie
Gerberding told a meeting of the American Association for the Advancement
of
Science. Scientists expect that the virus, which has swept through poultry
in Asia, will mutate to become as deadly and infectious as the flu viruses
that killed millions of people during three pandemics of the 20th century.
Gerberding became the latest public-health official to sound the alarm
over
bird flu. World Health Organization officials have predicted that if the
virus develops into a form capable of spreading among humans, in the most
optimistic scenario 2 million to 7 million people would die worldwide, and
the toll could potentially reach 100 million.
The 1918 pandemic killed 20 million to 40 million people worldwide,
including more than 500,000 in the United States.
In 1957, a pandemic caused 70,000 deaths in the United States, and the
1968
pandemic killed 34,000.
Vaccine efforts are still focused on garden-variety influenza, which kills
36,000 Americans every year, and it would be impossible, in case of an
avian-flu epidemic, to switch gears quickly to make a special avian-flu
vaccine, Gerberding said.
In Asia, there already have been a number of deaths among people who
caught
the flu from chickens or ducks. The mortality rate is very high * about 72
percent of identified patients, Gerberding said. There also have been
documented cases of this strain of flu being transferred from person to
person, but the outbreak was not sustained, she said.
"We are expecting more human cases over the next few weeks because this is
high season for avian influenza in that part of the world," Gerberding
said.
Although cases of human-to-human transmission have been rare, "our
assessment is that this is a very high threat. ... You may see the
emergence
of a new strain to which the human population has no immunity."
The CDC chief said her agency is getting ready for a possible pandemic
next
year. A special flu team, organized last year, continues to monitor the
spread of the avian flu and to analyze the strains as they appear.
The government has ordered 2 million doses of vaccine that would protect
against the known strains of avian flu. Gerberding said this would give
manufacturers a head start on making the shots that would be needed to
combat a U.S. epidemic.
But at the same time, the agency is helping to produce the 180 million or
so
doses of regular flu shots needed annually. Gerberding said the timeline
for
producing the regular vaccine yearly is very tight, with little room for
problems. To produce a new vaccine in response to the sudden emergence of
an
avian-flu bug would require an extraordinary new effort, she said.
"We don't now have the capacity to do both," she said.
Material from The Seattle Times archive and the CDC Web site is included
in
this report.
Copyright © 2005 The Seattle Times Company
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