Bird flu kills 20 in China
Date April 22, 2013 - 6:28AM
A seven-year-old girl who had Beijing's first human case of H7N9 bird flu with her parents as she prepares to go home from Ditan hospital in Beijing on April 17. Photo: AFP
The death toll from a new strain of bird flu in China has reached 20, with dozens infected, state media reports, as experts say there is no evidence so far of human-to-human transmission.
The H7N9 virus has been detected in 102 people, mostly in eastern China, including 20 cases which proved fatal, Xinhua news agency said on Sunday after the latest daily update from the National Health and Family Planning Commission.
A total of 33 infections, including 11 deaths, have been reported in the eastern commercial centre of Shanghai.
This picture taken on April 16, 2013 shows a seller sleeping next to a cage in a poultry market in Guiyang, southwest China's Guizhou province. Photo: AFP
The Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention had earlier said 40 per cent of patients with H7N9 had not come into contact with poultry, raising questions about how people are becoming infected.
It also emerged the virus had spread among family members in Shanghai, raising fears it was passing between humans.
But the World Health Organisation has said there was ‘‘no evidence of ongoing human-to-human transmission’’.
Breathing more easily ... H7N9 bird flu patient, surnamed Jia (C), is escorted from a hospital upon her recovery in Hangzhou, east China's Zhejiang Province last week. Experts from the UN's health agency have downplayed fears of a pandemic. Photo: AFP
Referring to those cases on Friday, WHO representative Michael O’Leary said investigators were trying to determine whether there had been human-to-human transmission between family members.
‘‘The primary focus of the investigation is to determine whether this is in fact spreading at a lower level among humans. But there is no evidence for that so far except in these very rare instances,’’ he said.
A team of international health experts is on a week-long mission in Beijing and Shanghai to investigate the virus, for which no vaccine currently exists.
Taiwan said on Sunday it had received H7N9 specimens from China as the island battles to avoid the epidemic.
‘‘The virus could be used in producing vaccines and diagnosis,’’ said Liu Shih-hao of the Centers for Disease Control in Taiwan.
AFP