3 cases of people infected with bird flu in China
Yesterday China announced three cases of bird flu. All three of them are in the plague-prone areas of Hunan and Anhui provinces.
Yesterday China announced three cases of bird flu. All three of them are in the plague-prone areas of Hunan and Anhui provinces.
The World Health Organization said all three people were infected with the H5N1 bird flu strain and two died. The two victims were a 12-year-old girl (in Hunan Province) and a female worker working in the 24-year-old poultry industry (in Anhui province).
The third case of infection is a little girl, the sister of a 9-year-old boy who was infected but recovered.
The Chinese government is also conducting tests for a worker in the symptomatic poultry industry in Liaoning province (where there are four outbreaks).
In this situation, experts fear that the possibility of a variant of the avian flu strain that can be easily transmitted from human to human is becoming a reality. The reason is that because the poultry population is very large in this country, the habit of living with poultry of the people and China is the gateway of migrating birds.
Workers are organizing bactericidal in Liaoning province, China
KINH LUAN (According to AP)
- More cases of H7N9 infection in China
- 3 people suspect bird flu in China
- WHO confirmed cases of bird flu spread from person to person
- The whole world is worried about outbreaks of bird flu?
- China recommended that WHO support bird flu testing
- Warning of H7N9 flu from China may spread to Vietnam
- 20 people died from H7N9 in China
- Bird flu spreads in Europe
- China: 30% of people infected with H7N9 have died
- Indonesia: Two more people infected with bird flu
March 2012: Launching H5N1 vaccine for poultry Experts comment on the mysterious gradual disappearance of the Delta variant in Japan Danger of the two Delta . branch variants 2020 pandemic flu attack humans? China successfully prepared the vaccine against H7N9 Scientists develop Covid-19 bait from healthy cells H7N9 can spread among family members Is flu B dangerous?