Bird flu in China: six new cases of deadly H5N6 discovered

Mr.Cyan

The Living Force
FOTCM Member
Bird flu is back in China :

http://www.scmp.com/news/china/society/article/1898973/bird-flu-china-six-new-cases-deadly-h5n6-discovered

China has reported six new cases of deadly H5N6 avian flu – three of them in Guangdong – but the virus has not mutated to a human-to-human transmission, according to local officials.

H5N6 attacked lung tissue rapidly and was likely to be deadlier than the H7N9 strain detected in previous years, Guangzhou Daily reported yesterday.

All three of the H5N6 patients in Guangdong had contact with live poultry or had been to live poultry markets, the report said.

A 40-year-old woman from Zhaoqing (肇慶) is the latest case.

READ MORE - Chinese woman dies in Shenzhen after catching highly contagious H5N6 strain of bird flu virus

She was pregnant when she was diagnosed with the virus on January 1. Doctors performed a caesarean section and the patient remained in severe condition in a hospital intensive care unit.

A 26-year-old woman from Shenzhen’s Baoan district was diagnosed with the virus on December 29, three days after her symptoms emerged. She had bought a live duck from a local market and died on December 30.

The first H5N6 case in Guangdong, a 58-year-old man from Panyu district in Guangzhou, was recorded on December 15.

He tested positive for the virus after buying a chicken at a wet market but recovered after nearly a month of treatment.

No person in close contact with any of the patients had tested positive for H5N6, the report said.

One of the remaining three H5N6 cases was reported in Sichuan (四川) and the other two in Yunnan (雲南) province.
 
H7 Strain of bird flu detected in Hong Kong :

Live chicken supply suspended in Hong Kong after sample tests positive for bird flu virus

http://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/health-environment/article/1965394/live-chicken-supply-suspended-hong-kong-after

The city will suspend its live chicken supply on Sunday after a bird faeces sample from a Tuen Mun market tested positive for H7 bird flu virus, the Post has learnt.

A source said the sample was taken from Yan Oi Market last month. As a result of the finding, there may be a cull of all the live chickens in the Cheung Sha Wan Temporary Wholesale Poultry Market.

The Post learnt that the government had not made a final decision on how long the suspension would last, but normal government practice is that a 21-day suspension should follow the discovery of bird flu viruses.

It remains unclear which type of H7 virus was found in the sample. The government had not made any official announcement or replied to a Post request for comments.
 
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