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WHO-ADB Outbreak Team Leader Urges Continued Vigilance on Avian FluHANOI, VIET NAM (19 March 2004) – The leader of a special outbreak response team set up jointly by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Asian Development Bank (ADB) today urged Viet Nam to show continued vigilance against avian flu. In his first mission as team leader, epidemiologist Dr. Richard Brown is working with the Pasteur Institute in Ho Chi Minh City assisting Vietnamese colleagues in examining the issues arising from the disease. “Infection of humans with avian strains of influenza had never been described until 1997 and this is the first time so many cases have been seen,” Dr. Brown said. “For this reason, a real opportunity exists to learn more about the disease and to begin to understand why some people become infected, while others that appear to be at risk don't. “The main risk is that as long as there continues to be avian influenza in the region, there is still the potential for outbreaks. For this reason, countries need to strengthen surveillance, maintain vigilance, and have robust contingency plans ready.” Dr.
Brown said that there is a danger of more outbreaks if chicken farms
are repopulated too soon. “As long as there are sick animals,
there is the possibility of human cases or a new form of the virus,”
he added. Over the next three years, the team will work in the region to:
At the Pasteur Institute, Dr. Brown is supporting epidemiological studies undertaken by Vietnamese experts on the country’s 22 laboratory confirmed cases in humans. At least 15 people are confirmed to have died from the virus in Viet Nam, along with seven in Thailand The outbreak of avian influenza in Viet Nam and the region in the last few months has had a significant impact on the rural economy, particularly hurting poor rural households who have been hit by loss of household income from poultry, rising market prices for alternative protein sources, and loss of job opportunities. In
Viet Nam, the bird flu has led to the culling of 38 million chickens
and fowl, accounting for 15% of the total poultry stock. ADB responded
to the Government’s initial request for support through the
immediate provision of US$50,000 grant assistance to buy 15,000
sets of personal protection equipment for frontline workers involved
in the culling of affected chickens in some of the worst affected
provinces. The equipment was handed over to the Ministry of Agriculture
and Rural Development on 9 February. In a letter to Le Duc Thuy, Governor of the State Bank of Viet Nam last week, Bradford Philips, Country Director of ADB’s Viet Nam Resident Mission, congratulated the Government on its efforts to contain the avian influenza outbreak and assist affected farmers. While the outbreak of H5N1 virus may have been contained, with some provinces being declared free of the virus, ADB strongly endorses the Government’s emphasis on maintaining careful monitoring and surveillance systems to prevent any reemergence of the virus. ADB
is dedicated to reducing poverty in the Asia and Pacific region
through pro-poor sustainable economic growth, social development,
and good governance. Established in 1966, it is owned by 63 members
– 45 from the region. In 2003, it approved loans and technical
assistance worth US$6.1 billion and US$177 million, respectively,
of which
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